front 1 Elizabeth Frankenstein | back 1 Victor Frankenstein’s adopted sister and his wife. |
front 2 William Frankenstein | back 2 Victor’s youngest brother and the darling of the Frankenstein family. |
front 3 Justine Moritz | back 3 A young girl adopted into the Frankenstein household while Victor is growing up. She is blamed for William's murder when in fact it was the monster that murdered him. |
front 4 Victor Frankenstein | back 4 The doomed protagonist and narrator of the main portion of the story. |
front 5 Captain Walton | back 5 The Arctic seafarer whose letters open and close Frankenstein. He records the incredible tale in a series of letters addressed to his sister, Margaret Saville, in England. |
front 6 The Creature/Monster | back 6 The eight-foot-tall, hideously ugly creation of Victor Frankenstein. His feeling of abandonment compels him to seek revenge against his creator. |
front 7 Alphonse | back 7 Victor’s father, very sympathetic toward his son. |
front 8 Felix | back 8 Exiled from France for treason against their government. De Lacey's son. |
front 9 De Lacey | back 9 Exiled from France for treason against their government. A blind old man. |
front 10 Henry Clerval | back 10 Victor’s boyhood friend, who nurses Victor back to health in Ingolstadt. His cheerfulness counters Victor’s moroseness. |
front 11 Caroline Beaufort's father | back 11 Died by natural causes |
front 12 Elizabeth's mother | back 12 Succumbed to scarlet fever |
front 13 Caroline | back 13 Succumbed to scarlet fever |
front 14 Justine Moritz father | back 14 Natural causes |
front 15 Safie's servant | back 15 Physical exertion |
front 16 Justine Moritz | back 16 Executed by hanging |
front 17 William Frankenstein | back 17 Strangled by the monster |
front 18 Henry Clerval | back 18 The monster |
front 19 Elizabeth | back 19 the Monster |
front 20 Alphonse | back 20 Grief due to Elizabeth's death |
front 21 Victor Frankenstein | back 21 Pneumonia |
front 22 The monster | back 22 Suicide by setting himself on fire |
front 23 Ingolstadt | back 23 Where Victor went to college |
front 24 Geneva | back 24 Where Victor lived. Where William was murdered. Where Justine's trial was held. Where Victor tries to make a female monster but gives up. |
front 25 Mount Montanvert | back 25 Where the monster confronts Victor and makes him listen to his story in his hut. Where he threatens Victor with an all-or-nothing attitude of make me a mate or I will destroy you. |
front 26 France, Germany, Holland, and London | back 26 Where Victor travels through when he wanted peace and quiet. |
front 27 Scotland | back 27 Where Victor destroys his second monster, and the monster tells Victor that he will be with him on his wedding night. |
front 28 Ireland | back 28 Where Victor is accused of murdering Henry Clerval. |
front 29 Paris | back 29 Where Alphonse and Victor travel to after Victor is accused of murder. Where Victor receives a letter from Elizabeth asking if he has another love. |
front 30 The inn | back 30 Where the monster strangles and kills Elizabeth and where Victor shoots at the monster and fails. Where Alphonse dies of grief. |
front 31 The Arctic Circle | back 31 Where Victor chases the monster to and where Walton finds Victor |
front 32 Where did Walton and Victor meet??? | back 32 They meet on the open sea near the North Pole because Victor was running away from his creation, the monster. |
front 33 Where did the monster and Victor meet??? | back 33 He sees his monster through some flashes of lightning in chapter 7. He meets his monster on Mount Montanvert in chapter 10. He meets his monster while making the female in chapter 20. He sees his monster after it had killed Elizabeth in chapter 23. He finally chases his monster to get revenge on him in chapter 24. |
front 34 Biblical allusions in Chapter 10 | back 34 The book of Genesis. The monster tells Victor that he, "ought to be his Adam" which refers to Adam, the first man created by God in the Bible. The monster then compares himself more closely to Satan, "a fallen angel" because his creator Victor detests him. |
front 35 Treatment of the monster | back 35 The humans treat him poorly. De Lacey treats him kindly. Victor just outright hates him. |
front 36 Does Victor learn from his mistake??? | back 36 Yes. He learned that his intelligence and power does not give him the authority to make divine judgment and that a selfish and careless life led by ambition is ruinous and miserable. |