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Monday, September 24, 2012

New App Lets Readers Create Their Own ‘Frankenstein’

Mary Shelley’s 1818 novel, “Frankenstein,” has had more incarnations than a graveyard zombie. Now readers can take part in the storytelling.

Best-selling author Dave Morris has created a new interactive book, called “Frankenstein,” that puts readers inside Victor Frankenstein’s lab as the mad scientist attempts to create a new species of man, Homo Incusus.

A Conversation With Frankenstein

Unlike other interactive book apps, you can’t completely change the outcome of the book.

“There is one section where you are actually experiencing the monster’s first days and months of life.”
–Dave Morris, graphic novelist

Instead, the app places the reader in conversations with Frankenstein as his story unfolds. The mad scientist acts as a guide, and readers can offer advice, comfort or condemnation.

“The characters are reacting to your choices and developing along the lines that you are influencing them,” Morris explained to Here & Now‘s Robin Young.

Understanding Frankenstein

For most of the book, the reader tags along as Victor Frankenstein’s confidante, but Morris also wants to help people understand the creature itself.

“There is one section where you are actually experiencing the monster’s first days and months of life, which I did to expose you to the horrors of being a newly created creature with no idea of what was going on in the world,” Morris said.

Ultimately, Morris wanted to make Frankenstein more accessible to readers than Shelley’s original novel.

“It’s philosophically interesting to read Frankenstein, but readers don’t find it enjoyable,” Morris said.

Morris tries to flesh out characters more than Shelley did to make the story more interesting.

But what really sets this “Frankenstein” apart from others is that each reader creates a new version of the novel.

“When you complete the book, you can give it to someone else and that would be your version of the novel,” Morris said.

The app is only iOS right now, but Dave Morris writes “We’re going to rectify that in just a few weeks. I’m putting finishing touches to the epub3 and Kindle versions, which should be out by mid-November.”

Guest:

  • Dave Morris, graphic novelist

We welcome comments from all of our listeners. Post below. Please stay on topic and be civil. Comments may be moderated by us, but you are solely responsible for the content of your comments.

  • Dermot

    I have this app and have read it right through,  it is an excellent adaptation with  great atmosphere and tension. I believe that Dave Morris is the writer and creative mind behind the project, but not a graphic artist as stated. Although the artwork is excellent I think the images are all based on actual historical anatomical drawings.

    • Jryan Bur

      Hi Dermot, thanks for your interest. We’ve made the change. Dave also wrote to us to say that he is not a graphic artist, but a graphic novelist.
      -Jill Ryan, H&N

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