This
review, by Richard Labonte, appeared in his column
“Bookmarks” for April 2007 — it was published in many
gay papers, including San
Francisco Bay Times, In
Newsweekly (Boston), and gmax (South
Africa).
The Man Who Wrote
Frankenstein by John Lauritsen Pagan Press, 232 pages,
$16.95 paper
According to this exercise in enthusiastic
scholarship, Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley didn't write Frankenstein.
Her husband, the poet Percy Bysshe Shelley, did — and independent
scholar Lauritsen has the footnotes to prove it. The first edition of
the gothic classic was published in 1818, ascribed to
“Anonymous”; Mary's name popped up on a revised second
edition, published in 1823, the year after the poet's death; her
presumed authorship was cemented with 1831's bowdlerized edition, the
one most of us have read. Lauritsen can be pedantic at times, but his
spirited dissection of the “Mary Shelley myth” is
convincing, as is his defense of the novel's literary virtues. But
prime proof for Lauritsen that Mary isn't the author of the iconic
novel stems from his well-reasoned assertion that male love is its
dominant theme. Reading “gay” into the story of a monster
and the man who created him isn't much of a stretch, really, and the
author of this hobbyhorse study is quite limber about it.