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An exploration into the similarity and differences between Mary Shellys Frankenstein and John Steinbecks Of Mice and Men
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- Thu Jul 11 2002

... An exploration into the similarity and differences between Mary Shelly's 'Frankenstein' and John Steinbeck's 'Of Mice and Men' Mary Shelley, born August 30, 1797, was a prominent, though often overlooked, literary figure during the romantic Era of English Literature. She was the only child of Mary Wollstonecraft, the famous feminist, and William Godwin, a philosopher and novelist. She was also the wife of the poet Percy Bysshe Shelley. Mary's parents were shapers of the Romantic sensibility and the revolutionary ideas of the left wing. Mary, Shelley, Byron, and Keats were principle figures in Romanticism's second generation. Whereas the poets died young in the 1820's, Mary lived through the Romantic era into the Victorian. Mary was born during the eighth year of the French Revolution. "She entered the world like the heroine of a Gothic tale: conceived in a secret amour, her birth heralded by storms and portents, attended by tragic drama,














