Rothwellmaryshelley

Mary Shelley

  • Mary's parents

    Mary's parents
    Her mother was Mary Wollstonecraft. She was a feminist.
    She died when Mary was born.
    Her father was William Godwin. He was a writer.
  • Mary Shelley

    Mary Shelley
    • It's justice, not charity that the world is desiring. -
  • Time and place of birth

    Time and place of birth
    Mary Shelley was born on August 30, 1797.
    She was born in Somers Town, London, United Kingdom.
  • Marriage

    Marriage
    Mary married "Percy Bysshe Shelley", on December 30, 1816.
    He was a writer and poet.
    He died drowned.
  • Frankenstein

    Frankenstein
    Victor Frankenstein, a scientist who manages to breathe life into a being formed from pieces of corpses. Without measuring the consequences of that act, Victor creates a monster. The creature, who is rejected by him and by everyone in his path, rebels against his creator and decides to take revenge.
  • Main contribution

    She is the creator of the book that started science fiction.
    "Frankenstein" -- Great horror story of all time.
  • Creation of Frankenstein

    Creation of Frankenstein
    "Frankenstein", one of her best-known books, arose from a dream she had after accepting the bet from the writer Lord Byron to write a horror history
  • Mathilda

    Mathilda
    "Mathilda" explores the nature of sorrow, the power of love, the destruction as a consequence of defying nature, the evil power of desire.
  • Her sons

    Her sons
    She had five children with her husband "Percy Bysshe Shelley" but only one survived; "Percy Florence Shelley"
  • The last man

    The last man
    A mysterious epidemic that is sweeping through entire countries and endangering the very survival of humanity.
  • Lodore

    Lodore
    Lord Lodore, who is killed in a duel at the end of the first volume, leaving a path of legal, financial and family obstacles for the two "heroines" to solve.
  • Dead

    She died in London because of a brain tumor
    with only 53 years old, while sleeping, February 1st in 1851