
Ch 1: #victorschildhood #popsmarriesayoungone #helpingthepoor #adoptingyoungelizabeth #thatwasntweird #givinghertovictor #victoriscreepy #thattracks #staytuned #hashtagbrigade
JenlovesJT47 Ooh I‘d like to join! 10h
BarkingMadRead @JenlovesJT47 I‘ll add you! 10h
BarkingMadRead @bookwormjillk @mcctrish @bklover @peanutnine @kwmg40 @rubyslippersreads @dabbe @willaful @crinoline_laphroaig @lapreader @kao @thearomaofbooks @seabreeze_reader @sparklemn @librarybelle @clare-dragonfly @elizamarie @bookwormahn @roary47 @elizamarie @jenlovesjt47 10h
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JenlovesJT47 Thank you, reading chapter 1 now! 10h
Bookwormjillk Hello Flowers in the Attic how off putting. I know, a different time. 9h
JenlovesJT47 Hmm that last sentence in the chapter was a tad bit creepy, no? 😳 #obsessed 9h
Clare-Dragonfly Apparently Beaufort is the name to use for men who make terrible money choices. 9h
BarkingMadRead @Clare-Dragonfly 🤣🤣 9h
ElizaMarie @Clare-Dragonfly 🎯 6h
dabbe #mytwocents Two versions of FRANKENSTEIN were published: one in 1818, and one in 1831. The more popular one is the 1831 version. In that one, Elizabeth is “adopted“, but in the 1818 version, she was Alphonse's niece and Victor's real cousin. By 1831, Shelley had experienced the death of two children and her husband, which gave her a more pessimistic view on the story and made her more morally cautious. She also softened Victor's character. 5h
Clare-Dragonfly @dabbe I wondered which version I had—Project Gutenberg wasn‘t clear! Now I know I have the 1831 text. What an interesting change. Thank you! 3h
dabbe @Clare-Dragonfly I hoped the Elizabeth distinction would help! Not a lot of issues list the publication date! No idea why. 😍 3h
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