Description Shelley\'s mold-breaking and genre-creating Frankenstein hasn\'t been out of print since its first publication in 1818, though the story of science and dark melodrama has been reconfigured and reanimated many times over the years--in shadowy cinematic style in the 1930s; comedic, loveable boob-tube style in the 1960s; marvelously illustrated comic form in the 1970s; and even as a sweet treat children\'s cereal, evoking grunts and laughter, rather than shrieks.
Description Shelley\'s mold-breaking and genre-creating Frankenstein hasn\'t been out of print since its first publication in 1818, though the story of science and dark melodrama has been reconfigured and reanimated many times over the years--in shadowy cinematic style in the 1930s; comedic, loveable boob-tube style in the 1960s; marvelously illustrated comic form in the 1970s; and even as a sweet treat children\'s cereal, evoking grunts and laughter, rather than shrieks