Walton does not kill the monster in Mary Shelley's book "Frankenstein" because he realizes that the creature is in intense emotional pain and suffering due to the rejection and loneliness it has experienced. Walton understands the complexities of the situation and the deeper humanity of the monster, ultimately choosing to show compassion rather than resorting to violence.
Mary Shelly authored Frankenstein. The book was first published in 1818 anonymously in England. In 1823 the book was published again in France with Shelly as the author. A common error is that Frankenstein was the name of the monster, buy it was actually name of the scientist who created the monster.
Mary Shelley was having a nightmare, in which she saw a mad scientist who makes a monster and she transformed the story into a book
He wasn't Frankenstein was a character in a book, Frankenstein's Monster by Mary Shelley.
frankinstien is a book witen in 1818 by Mary Shelley. were in the book Frankenstein was a scientist who created a monster out off pieces of dead bodies.
Mary Shelley's first novel was "Frankenstein", which is about a crazy scientist who invented a monster and he didn't think of the consequences. I was just studying this book in English a few weeks ago. ;)
Mary Shelley is not the name of the book but the name of the author of such books as Frankenstein and The Last Man. The rest of this answer assumes that we are talking about the novel Frankenstein. The duty in the book is shared with both Victor's and Captain Walton of the ship that takes him in at the start of the novel Also the creature has a chapter or two where he is the narrator.
Mary Shelley's mother was writer and philosopher ,Mary Wollstonecraft
Mary Shelley was 20 years old when she wrote her first book, "Frankenstein".
1818
Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley-- the author of Frankenstein.
In the original novel by Mary Shelley, published in 1818, the man who creates a monster is named Victor Frankenstein. His creation has no name, symbolizing that he has no soul, no family, no identity. In many renditions of the story -- starting with plays just a few years after the novel and including the 1931 film starring Boris Karloff -- the creature has no name. But almost immediately, as if to fill in the void, the name "Frankenstein" was used to name the monster. Read more about the twists and turns of the monster's name in Susan Tyler Hitchcock's book, Frankenstein: A Cultural History.
Mary Shelley authored the novel called Frankenstein. Her book was published in 1818, anonymously.