Frankenstein’s New Game “The Wanderer: Frankenstein’s Creature”

wanderer_frankensteins_creatureMary Shelley’s Frankenstein story continues to inspire new iterations. Soon to come, beginning this Halloween to a mobile or game screen is The Wanderer: Frankenstein’s Creature, a narrative exploration/adventure game from developer La Belle Games and French TV network ARTE France. The game invites players to take the point of view of the Frankenstein creature and write their own take of the story journey of Mary Wollstonecraft’s Shelley famous novel, where the choices made in the course of the game will affect the ending.

This world of the gothic story is designed with bright and vibrant colors with a universe based on 18th Century Paintings. The background landscapes change over the course of play with a soundtrack to lend an emotional tone to the creature’s journey. The experience is to draw the played into a wanderlust feeling of discovery drawn from the classic original novel.

Through the creature you travel across Europe in an introspective quest of self-discovery. You begin as a created being with no concept if you are good or evil. You wander the land with no memory and no past, where the evolving landscapes based on the emotions of discovery blend reality and fiction as your encounters with humankind shape a future destiny from the choices you make> of your experiences. You cannot escape learning and accepting where you came from as you meet humans and make life and death choices. Some experiences will be pleasant joys and some bitter brutal sorrow, but each station of growth brings you closer to the truth of your existence and tells your ending.

In a prequel game, you play 18-year-old Mary at the villa by Lake Geneva in the well-known  ghost story dare with Lord Byron, Percy and Claire by the fireside. You have to speak up and tell your own story in a room full of famous romantic detractors. Perhaps rather inspired by the beginning of the Bride of Frankenstein movie version, you start with the gothic summer before beginning your journey.

The Wanderer: Frankenstein’s Creature launches October 31, 2019 and will be downloadable from Steam, coming to Switch, PC, Android, and iOS.
Official Wanderer: Frankenstein’s Creature site here ARTE.

Youtube Wanderer Game Trailer

Secret Memoirs of Mary Shelley  – E-Book

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Mary Shelley Reincarnated for Disney as Shelley Marie

Shelley Marie Disneyland Holloween Light ShowMary Shelley continues to make her mark since being rediscovered a couple of years ago now. She has made it as the lead in a movie, a book about her life, an audiobook, a comic book character alongside Elvira, as the star of an off-broadway musical, a teenage PBS science detective and now reincarnated under a slightly flipped name of Shelley Marie, as a showhost character for Disneyland.

As the majorette domo for a new holiday themed show at the Disney California Adventure park, Shelley Marie stars in “Villainous!” a new light and water “World of Color” show for this Halloween season.

Disney has long been known for the “princess” in various forms, but the powergirl phenomenon continues with the rise of the Disney “anti-princess” a character with a shade of the dark side, and the idea that no one is ever all good and that evil doesn’t have to be “bad”. The young character of Shelley Marie, acknowledged as a play on the name of the author of Frankenstein, is described as a celebration of the individual and that normal doesn’t mean one size fits all.

As the star of the theme park show, Shelley Marie is a regular kid, a preteen who admires some of the fantasy land’s other larger than life characters, the form-shifting of Maleficent, the spellbinding prowess of the Evil Queen from “Snow White”, and the charismatic drama of the Shadow Man from “The Princess and the Frog.”

Shelley Marie’s fashion style is rather a mash of Lydia from “Beetlejuice” meets Wednesday from “The Addams Family”, but less Goth and more vivid colors, created by Disney animator Eric Goldberg, who is best known for his work on the Genie of Disney’s “Aladdin” and “Moana”.

The 20 minute long light show premieres at the Anaheim based park on Sept. 17 leading up to Halloween. Though, unlike her most verbally expressive namesake, Shelley Marie doesn’t speak, yet. Disney might add some vocal tones to her exaggerated facial expressions of rolling her eyes when confronted by a spooky villain, but no deliberations on life and death.

The question remains if this is a one-off appearance for the dark-toned preteen, or will she find her way into a show or movie of her own. Time will tell.

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Mistress Elvira Parties with Mary Shelley!

elvira_monster_partyTV horror schlock hostess and pop icon, Elvira: Mistress of the Dark is emerging from the TV history crypt to adorn the pages of a new line of comic books and graphic novels. Dynamite Entertainment is producing the series to begin with a four issue set. The new tales of the gothic glam girl with the crackling wit and her creepy friends come from writer David Avallone (Bettie Page, Twilight Zone) and artist Dave Acosta (Doc Savage) will be showing up in comic book store in July.

The announcement states the case, “The series starts when The Mistress of the Dark has become unstuck in time and crashes Mary Shelley’s monster weekend, beginning an epic journey through horror history, stalked by the most terrifying nightmare to ever walk the Earth.” The release says “no spoilers” but the cover art suggests a hipster Frankenstein as a green Frankie Avalon with his vampire friends in a Beach Blanket Bingo sort of Monster Mash. (Okay, forgive the 60s culture references, but if Ready Player One can play the same game with 80’s… why not Elvira).

Actress-writer Cassandra Peterson, who portrayed the pulchritudinous Mistress of the Dark states, “I’m thrilled to partner with Dynamite! I’ve been working hand in hand with them over the past year to put together the best comic series possible.  Elvira’s new dark adventures continue starting this July!”

For those, perhaps internationally, unfamiliar with her, “Elvira, Mistress of the Dark” was the first horror host ever to be syndicated nationally on television in the U.S., usually playing in late night when TV still ended in screen snow noise about 2 in the morning. She has morphed over time into one of the more outrageous characters in popular culture. Her reign as ‘Queen of Halloween’ now spans thirty-five years and includes two nationally syndicated television series, two feature films (Elvira, Mistress of the Dark and Elvira’s Haunted Hills), an IMAX movie and two motion control rides. She has appeared in TV commercials, music CDs, written four books and licensed products from pinball machines, and action figures to beer and perfume.

According to writer David Avallone, “I really want to capture the essence of what Cassandra Peterson created. The story is a horror tale (or a quartet of connected horror tales) with a nightmarish villain and danger and action… but at its center is this wise-cracking, plucky, sexy, unflappable heroine.”

This project reteams the two Davids, Avallone and his frequent collaborator Acosta, who have worked on multiple projects together including “Doc Savage: Ring of Fire”, “Twilight Zone / The Shadow” and a story in the Love is Love anthology that raised money for the Pulse Nightclub shooting victims.

Secret Memoirs of Mary Shelley  – E-Book

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Mary Shelley gets to theaters in the U.S.

elle_fanning_as_mary_shelley_movieMary Shelley, the film version of the Frankenstein author’s story, directed by Haifaa Al-Mansour and starring Elle Fanning as Mary Shelley arrives at theaters in America on May 25th, 2018, from IFC Films. The film which we’ve been following from its inception a few years ago under the title “A Storm in the Stars”, to its premiere at the Toronto Film Festival has taken the long road of an independent film production to the big screen,  released in the UK in 2017.

The movie, an Irish production, filmed on location in Dublin standing in for London, and in Luxemburg for the Geneva Villa Diodati scenes tells the story of teenage Mary dreaming of writing, finding inspiration when she meets the dreamy Percy Shelley. Mary soon becomes pregnant with his child, a daughter who tragically dies. They are outcast by polite society and visit Lord Byron and John Polidori at the Villa Diodati in Lake Geneva, where the stormy night ghost contest story gives birth to the Frankenstein monster story. Then, Mary struggles to find a publisher and to get the credit for her creation.

The film also stars Douglas Booth, Bel Powley, Maisie Williams, Joanne Froggatt and Stephen Dillane. The original script was by Emma Jenson with Al Mansour as additional writing. Ruth Coad and Amy Baer produced.

Reviews for the film have been mixed. To sample a few – Fanning gives an earnest performance, though perhaps a little miscast, while Tom Sturrage as Byron chews the furniture, and Booth as Shelley pouts and broods, a traditional period biopic flavor trying hard to be modern. The film does make a mark for inclusion, written by a woman, directed by a woman, and produced by women, and adds a decided feminist cant to the story around whether Mary would get the credit for writing her story. Shelley comes off as a bit of a cad, not revealing he’s married until after they get involved, but in fact Mary went into the relationship with her eyes open and she had already met his wife. Though, he does arrive at a saving bit of honor in the perfunctory, tied-in-a-bow ending. Beautifully photographed by David Ungaro, with moody atmospheric production design by Paki Smith, the film is a little more intent on stating its theme, than illuminating the complex characters and relationships which make up this world. Still room for more.

Secret Memoirs of Mary Shelley  – E-Book

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Helping Frankenstein – The Game

Helping Frankenstein Game ArtIt’s alive! Frankenstein rises again on an Iphone near you, or in your hand. Anroid, too. “Helping Frankenstein” a newly released game from Sweden based game developer Peeking Peacock lets you play assistant to Dr. Frankenstein in creating a creature from dead bodies! There are a few differences in this version than in Mary Shelley’s novel. First, the “doctor: here is an attractive young woman in lab coat, Ms. Frankenstein, and the main player character is the hunchbacked assistant Igor, of the movie world.

Players of the game take on the role of Igor, who has just lost his previous job due to a work conflict with an angry mob with wooden stakes. You, as Igor, will now assist the young Ms. Frankenstein in her latest experiment, to create life, but first she needs a body to be dug from the graveyard, then be assembled piece-by piece. According to the game description “the church is not so keen on this ‘bring-people-back-to-life-thing’ and will try to stop you with all means necessary.” So the player must overcome the obstacles, which also include the local law and other characters who will try to “get in your way, or maybe help you out, as you progress towards your goal.”

The game features cartoon-style graphics with point-and-tap gameplay and some apparently intentional “poor attempts at humor” along the way. The game and the price are a lower cost adventure to while away some time while waiting in line, or the while story line can be played in one long session.

Here’s a vimeo trailer of Helping Frankenstein trailer

Mary Shelley might be appalled at the prospect of the hunchback in her story, as she suffered paralysis and disability herself, but she would probably applaud the female “doctor” as both she and her mother revered education for woman.

Secret Memoirs of Mary Shelley  – E-Book

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Can a Computer Write Scary Stories? Shelley AI

As Artificial Intelligence advances, after the development of natural language learning could writing be far behind? AI programs have now long been combining words and sentences to create what seem like language. You only had to try to read some web entries to notice this. But the act of creating a story by digital means has been one of the goals of Artificial Intelligence, as telling a story had been one of the dividing lines between man and machine. The MIT Media Lab which has previous created a photo program for making scary faces, has now taken the next step. They have built an AI program called “Shelley”, named after Mary Shelley, the author of Frankenstein, that can take human input ideas and write horror stories.

The researchers trained the Shelley program by feeding her 140,000 classic horror stories collected from r/nosleep that she might learn the logic and can now write her own stories geared to this particular genre. And Shelley was made to exist only in a lab, but to interact with human collaborators on Twitter.

Artificial Intelligence has a long tail connection to the real Mary Shelley. The first computer program ever written was devised by Ada Lovelace, a mathematician and creator of the first machine algorithm, the step-daughter of her friend and companion in horror story lore, Lord Byron.

Shelley, the world’s first collaborative AI Horror Writer made her appearance in October of 2017. To work with Shelley, she produces a snippet of story line on her Twitter account, humans add to the thread and the program writes a horror story with the collaborator, with the story intended to join the first AI-Human anthology. One caution for those who might be seeking riches and fame & fortune by collaborating with MIT’s Shelley, she owns the copyright of the stories created, unlike her namesake progenitor who is much more generous in that regard.

Secret Memoirs of Mary Shelley  – E-Book

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Frankenstein & Mary Shelley Books 2018

With the 200th Anniversary year upon us, a number of new books and takes on the Frankenstein story and Mary Shelley biographies have made their appearance, from indie publishers, self-publishing and mainstream.

There are a whole variety of stage productions at theaters large and small, from stagings of the original story adaptations to the more fanciful, including the puppet show version. The “Mary Shelley” movie should make an appearance in theaters in 2018 and Universal Cable Productions has announced a new untitled TV series project from Adam Simon and Robert Masello in which Mary Shelley is to play a part along with other 19th Century authors like Robert Louis Stevenson, Bram Stoker and H.G. Wells, in a reimagined “secret society of authors” monsterfest set in Victorian England. Mrs. Shelley has already appeared in the “Frankenstein Chronicles”, the London murder series, going into its second season.

Here is a list of some of the books recently released or soon to come.

Monster: The Early Life of Mary Shelley – by Mark Arnold

Frankenstein: The 1818 Text by Mary Shelley with and introductions – by Charlotte Gordon

Romantic Outlaws: The Extraordinary Lives of Mary Wollstonecraft and Mary Shelley – by Charlotte Gordon

Daughter of Earth and Water: Biography of Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley – by Noel Gerson

The Complete Frankenstein: 200 Year Edition: 1818 and 1831 Versions

In Search of Mary Shelley: The Girl Who Wrote Frankenstein – By Fiona Sampson

Mary’s Monster: Live, Madness, and How Mary Shelley Created Frankenstein – by Lita Judge

Mary Shelley and the Rights of the Child: Political Philosophy in “Frankenstein” – by Eileen Hunt Bonning

Mary Shelley: The Strange True Tale of Frankenstein’s Creator – by Catherine Reef

Frankenstein: Annotated for Scientists, Engineers, and Creators of All Kinds – by Mary Shelley and David H. Guston

The Determined Heart: The Tale of Mary Shelley and Her Frankenstein – by Antoinette May

Mary, Who Wrote Frankenstein – by Linda Baily (Author) Julia Sarda (Illustrator) A Picture Book!

Son of Terror: Frankenstein Continued, A Sequel – by William A Chanler

And of course…

Secret Memoirs of Mary Shelley  – E-Book

Secret Memoirs of Mary Shelley: Frankenstein Diaries – Paperback

Secret Memoirs of Mary Shelley: Frankenstein Diaries – Audiobook

Frankenstein Head Transplant

Is Mary Shelley’s nightmare vision about to become real?

frankenstein_head_transplant1A business magazine and a few others have reported a story about an upcoming attempt at the first human head transplant. An Italian neurosurgeon, Sergio Canavero, intends sometime in 2017 to attempt to sew the head of a living patient onto the body of a brain dead patient. The procedure is to be in China.

The Italian doctor explained his procedure in detail. The operation will entail cutting into the spinal cord injury and cutting away the segments of the damaged cord of the body donor, then replacing the missing portions with a spinal cord and head from a patient, then fusing the two portions together. The fusion would be accomplished using polyethylene glycol (PEG), essentially a bio glue. Then, electricity would be applied to the fused connection to encourage the cells to stimulate the fibers to merge, to complete the world’s first “full-body” transplant.

The doctor claims he had the idea of spinal fusion for a decade before reading Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein novel and got the light bulb idea of adding electricity to the procedure.

“Electricity has the power to speed up regrowth,” the doctor has said. “Bing bang bong you have the solution to spinal cord fusion”. So, like all fields of human endeavor, the next leap comes in the spark of inspiration, if only someone had thought of putting bolts in a patient’s neck and applying some lighting, you’d have the solution to reanimating dead tissue!

According to the Business Insider story, Dr. Canavero is calling his procedure HEAVEN, short for Head Anastomosis Venture. He claims to have succeeded in the process by reconnecting the spinal cord of a dog, then mice, splicing two heads on a laboratory mouse, performing this multiple times.

Dr. Canavero claims to have gotten the idea for using electricity only after reading the novel. But Mary Shelley’s novel never mentions electricity, or how it might be applied. She only mentions “some powerful engine”. The book is extraordinarily devoid of detail in the process. The idea it was electricity she was referring to, was later supposition, which may well have come from the ideas of using electricity to animate tissue of dead frogs, promoted by another Italian, Luigi Galvani. Though, for a bio neurosurgeon to only come to the idea of the role electrical energy plays in the human spinal cord, by reading a 200 year-old novel, seems, well, novel.

There is more than some passing evidence that this story may be a hoax, created as a viral marketing campaign for the release of 2015 video game, “Metal Gear Solid 5: Phantom Pain”, which caused an internet stir at the time, but the very real Dr. Canavero insists he is not associated with the game. If the transplant surgery is a success, then we can all read the book again to see what other secrets it might hold for modern science.

Frankenstein As London Serial Killer

“Frankenstein Chronicles” Stalks America – Update – Now available on Netflix

It was announced at the MIP television conference in Cannes that the UK based ITV limited series “Frankenstein Chronicles” had been picked up by the A&E network for broadcast in the U.S., but with changes to that network, never quite made it. It has now been picked up by Netflix.

The original six episode show created by Benjamin Ross and Barry Langford, reimagines the Frankenstein story as a London set murder-mystery, with Police Inspector John Marlott, played by Sean Bean (now perhaps most known for his too-soon execution on “Game of Thrones”), following the trail of a gang of opium smugglers who discovers a grotesque sewn-together body floating in the Thames River. The discovery leads him into an investigation of the dark underground of early 19th Century Georgian London, where presumably Dr. Frankenstein is experimenting, acquiring body parts from bodysnatchers and missing prostitutes. The miniseries follows the detective on a hunt for the mutilator discovering a horror greater than he can imagine.

The series was filmed in Belfast, Northern Ireland, where Game of Thrones production is based, with the harbor city environs doubling for period London. This is the third television iteration of the Frankenstein legend to show in the US. The monster and his creator have been a part of the “Penny Dreadful” series on Showtime for a couple of seasons, and Fox TV is soon to launch its modern detective show once titled “Frankenstein Code” with a reanimated dead cop, but have retitled the show “Lookinglass”, dropping the legendary horror name in an increasingly crowded field, but making spelling a bit more challenging.

The suggestion for the idea of the Baron Frankenstein as London serial killer likely comes from a fairly brief section in the Mary Shelley novel where the monster of his creation has demanded that the student-scientist Frankenstein create a mate for him, and while on his travels, stopping in London, Frankenstein mentions that he attempted to gather “the materials” necessary for this task. In the novel, this effort is not detailed, but obviously in this case “materials” to create a female version of his creature would require body parts, and female parts in particular, with prostitutes the most handy of fresh subjects, combining a bit of Jack the Ripper with the Frankenstein mythos.

The body Inspector Marlott finds in the river is a small one, like a child, so the suggestion might be that Frankenstein is trying to create a family for the monster which rules him, or perhaps a replacement for his own son, murdered by the monster. We have likely a whole series of clues to follow before the revelation. Police “Inspectors” didn’t quite yet investigate crimes in Georgian London, with an organized police force not appearing until Victoria ascended the throne, but perhaps that will be part of the Frankenstein Chronicles story. It is unclear at this point whether this will be a one-off series, or more misadventures are intended, but with Sean Bean’s habit of getting killed-off too soon, maybe it’s just the six-parts.

The crime drama also stars Anna Maxwell Martin, Charlie Creed-Miles, Ed Stoppard, Elliot Cowan, Hugh O’Conor, and Kate Dickie. Seasons One and Two premiered on Netflix February 20, 2018

Frankenstein In Switzerland

Follow the travels of Mary Shelley, Percy Shelly and Lord Byron in Switzerland

Villa Diodati Plate Overlooking Lake Geneva

Villa Diodati on Lake Geneva

Most people casually familiar with Frankenstein who have not read the novel, usually seem to get the idea that the creator of the monster was German and the events happened there. This mostly comes from the movie and the name, with lots of Bavarian costumed villagers carrying pitchforks on a Hollywood backlot. Though for anyone truly familiar with Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley’s novel of “Frankenstein: or, The Modern Prometheus” know that Victor Frankenstein was from Geneva, Switzerland, and many events of the story take place in and around the Lake Geneva region of southern Switzerland. And curiously, though the name is German in origin, Geneva is in French speaking Switzerland, so the added confusion.

Many fans of the story are familiar a bit with the story of the beginnings of Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley’s novel of Frankenstein, related in a later edition introduction to the book, telling of the summer of 1816, when Mary Godwin, Percy Byssche Shelley, and Lord Byron, along with travelling companions John Polidori and Claire Clairmont gathered on the shores of Lake Geneva at a villa rented by Byron, and the contest to tell a scare story, but there is far more to discover in Switzerland than a single rental villa from long ago.

Those fascinated with the origins of the most famous monster story and the inspirations of the Romantics, the authors of the late 18th and early 19th Century who came to Switzerland to discover the still pristine wonders, might follow the clues left buried in the pages. Many of the passages in the Frankenstein novel are taken almost directly from the journals of the Shelleys’ travels.

Rousseau Plaque Geneva

Jean-Jacques Rousseau Birth House Geneva

A tour to follow the romantics might start in Geneva. The founders of the Romanticism movement in English literature were inspired by Genevan author Jean-Jacques Rousseau whose “Julie, or The New Heloise” based on a then “modern” retelling of the French legend of Abelard and Heloise, which Rousseau sets in scenes around Lake Geneva, attracted the likes of Byron and the Shelleys.

The Villa Diodati in the upscale Cologny suburb of Geneva where Byron stayed and the ghost story contest legend originated is not open to tourists, but is a private residence. But nearby, is the Bodmer Library, with a collection of rare books and manuscripts, which would have fascinated the Shelleys. While Mary and Claire stayed behind (Mary had brought her infant son and Claire was pregnant) Byron and Percy Shelley sailed a boat around the lake, visiting the castle of the Chateau Chillon and sites around Montreux (Clarens) and Vevey. Just as they did, you can visit the most famous castle in Switzerland and taste the wines of the 500 year old vineyards of the Lavaux Region.

Chateau Chillon Montreux

Chateau Chillon Lake Geneva

Byron and Shelley stopped at Ouchy in Lausanne where now the Lake Geneva Cruise boats depart for cruises of beautiful Lake Leman. Byron began his story of the Prisoner of Chillon while they stayed in the Hotel d’Angleterre in Ouchy, now commemorated with a plaque and a partner hotel of the neighboring Beau Rivage Palace Hotel. The Shelleys stayed at the Hotel d’Angleterre in Geneva (Secheron) before meeting up with Byron. The original of that one is gone, but an historic luxury hotel of the same name, for its English tourist visitors on the Grand Tour, remains about a block from where the original stood. Lord Byron also paid several visits to the literary salons of Madame de Stael, a nemesis of Napoleon and a renowned author herself, at her Chateau Coppet, which is open to the public.

Mary Shelley took many of the inspirations for the settings of her novel from the environs of Geneva. The murder of Victor Frankenstein’s son, William, by the monster he created she set on the Plaine de Plainpalais, where an art statue of the creature now stands, affectionately named “Frankie”. She chose this location because of its connection to Rousseau, when even then a monument to him was located there for its part in the uprising of the common man. The Frankenstein family house she set within the town of Belrive (Collogne-Bellerive), on the south shore of the lake, a short distance from where the Shelleys’ rented a house to be near Lord Byron’s rental at Villa Diodati in Cologny.

   “It was completely dark when I arrived in the environs of Geneva; the gates of the town were already shut; and I was obliged to pass the night at Secheron, a village at the distance of half a league from the city. The sky was serene; and, as I was unable to rest, I resolved to visit the spot where my poor William had been murdered. As I could not pass through the town, I was obliged to cross the lake in a boat to arrive at Plainpalais. During this short voyage I saw the lightning playing on the summit of Mont Blanc in the most beautiful figures… the thunder burst with a terrific crash over my head. It was echoed from Saleve, the Juras, and the Alps of Savoy…” Frankenstein

She wrote of the creature in the snowy mountains of the Mont Blanc range and Chamonix, where the creature hid with a local village farm family and Victor Frankenstein would search for his creation.

       “I passed the bridge of Pelissier, where the ravine, which the river forms, opened before me, and I began to ascend the mountain that overhangs it. Soon after, I entered the valley of Chamounix.” Frankenstein   

Geneva is only a possible beginning of a tour. Less known, is the journey Mary Godwin and Percy Shelley made in 1814 when they eloped from London, when Mary was only 16, and ran away to Paris with Mary’s step-sister Claire Clairmont, then traveled across France to Switzerland, then up the Rhine River. This journey of the romantic tour of Mary Shelley and Percy Shelley is told in “The Frankenstein Diaries: The Secret Memoirs of Mary Shelley.

The threesome entered Switzerland from France and crossed the Jura mountains to Neuchatel (Neufchatel), where they stayed at a hotel in approximately the location of today’s Beau Rivage Neuchatel, with the same lake views the romantic travelers would have seen. Railways did not exist in 1814 and 1816, so rather than tour Switzerland by foot or horse coach, today it’s easy to visit these Switzerland sites by rail with a Swiss Pass Rail Pass. From Geneva, Neuchatel is a quick trip. Cruise the three lakes, and visit the watch-making district of La Chaux-de-Fonds in the Jura Mountains.

Lake Uri

Lake Uri at Brunnen

From Neuchatel, their path took them to Lucerne, passing through Solothurn, for a look at the cathedral. It was new at the time and they found the neo-classic formal architecture, with its crisp white marble, a bit unappealing. From Lucerne they took a boat to Brunnen where Lake Lucerne meets Lake Uri. They were fascinated by the story of William Tell and his part in the founding of Switzerland, and today you can take the Wilhelm Tell Express cruise and train route. One might pause to wonder, then, why Victor Frankenstein’s son was named William.

      “I have seen the most beautiful scenes of my own country; I have visited the lakes of Lucerne and Uri, where the snowy mountains descend almost perpendicularly to the water, casting black and impenetrable shades, which would cause a gloomy and mournful appearance were it not for the most verdant islands… I have seen this lake agitated by a tempest, when the wind tore up whirlwinds of water and gave you an idea of what the water-spout must be on the great ocean; and the waves dash with fury the base of the mountain, where the priest and his mistress were overwhelmed by an avalanche and where their dying voices are still said to be heard amid the pauses of the nightly wind; I have seen the mountains of La Valais, and the Pays de Vaud; but this country, Victor, pleases me more than all those wonders…” Frankenstein

The house where they stayed on Lake Lucerne is long gone, but Brunnen, or just down the shore, Vitznau or Weggis, offer a wonderful place to stop and explore the Lake Lucerne Riviera with the walking trails of the mountains Mary Shelley described, or the historic mountain train to Mt Rigi which would come later. When their money ran out, they took a boat back to Lucerne, admiring the chapel bridge and staying at a hotel, possibly the Wilden Mann which still exists. Then, by boat they followed the Reuss River to the Rhine, crossing the falls and on to Basel. Explore the Rhine Falls at Schaffhausen, and explore the very historic city of Basel, before getting on a plane or train back to France or continue to Germany where they traveled the Rhine River past the Castle of Frankenstein.

        “We had agreed to descend the Rhine in a boat from Strasbourg to Rotterdam, whence we might take shipping for London. During this voyage we passed many willowy islands and saw several beautiful towns. We stayed a day at Mannheim, and on the fifth from our departure from Strasbourg, arrived at Mainz. The course of the Rhine below Mainz becomes much more picturesque. The river descends rapidly and winds between hills, not high, but steep, and of beautiful forms. We saw many ruined castles standing on the edges of precipices, surrounded by black woods, high and inaccessible. This part of the Rhine, indeed, presents a singularly variegated landscape. In one spot you view rugged hills, ruined castles overlooking tremendous precipices, with the dark Rhine rushing beneath; and on the sudden turn of a promontory, flourishing vineyards with green sloping banks and a meandering river and populous towns occupy the scene…” Frankenstein

Secret Memoirs of Mary Shelley  – E-Book

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