Mary Shelley’s FRANKENSTEIN Gets New Life With Netflix Tie-In Edition

Guillermo del Toro's adaptation hits Netflix this winter.
Oscar Isaac as Victor Frankenstein in FRANKENSTEIN directed by Guillermo del Toro. (Credit: Ken Woroner / Netflix)
Oscar Isaac as Victor Frankenstein in FRANKENSTEIN (Credit: Ken Woroner / Netflix)

For those of you that missed reading Mary Shelleyโ€™s seminal science-fiction novel in high school, Netflix is offering a new incentive to get readers into the classic. The streamer has partnered with Penguin Random House to release a new paperback and e-book edition of Frankenstein, in honor of Guillermo del Toroโ€™s new adaptation that hits Netflix this winter. 

The new edition features an introduction by del Toro himself, along with new cover art inspired by the film. Displaying a Creature clearly inspired by Jacob Elordiโ€™s take on the character, the new cover reflects less of the green, Boris Karloff-created monster weโ€™re more familiar with, and more of what Shelley wrote in the text itself: a creature created from the most beautiful parts of man in Victor Frankensteinโ€™s attempt to achieve godlike perfection. 

Clearly, that didnโ€™t work, but the Creature on the cover is certainly more attractive than what weโ€™re used to โ€” at least compared to the โ€œNetflix filmโ€ sticker gracing the two-hundred year old novel that invented modern science-fiction. 

Mary Shelleyโ€™s Frankenstein was originally published in 1818, after a competition in 1816 between her, her husband Percy Bysshe Shelley, Lord Byron, and John Polidori inspired the gruesome tale of a man who drops out of medical school to play god. (This competition also produced Polidoriโ€™s pre-Dracula story The Vampyre.) After a revised edition in 1831 was published, the novel quickly became a part of the fabric of literary history, inspiring numerous stage plays, novels, comics, and of course, films

Netflixโ€™s new take on the story stars Oscar Isaac as Victor Frankenstein, alongside Mia Goth, Christoph Waltz, Ralph Ineson, and Felix Kammerer. Panโ€™s Labyrinth director del Toro helms the film from a script he wrote based on Shelley's novel, with producers Gary Ungar, Scott Stuber, and J. Miles Dale. This new adaptation joins a list of over four hundred films and three hundred TV episodes that have featured Frankensteinโ€™s Monster in some way, a gang that also includes James Whaleโ€™s classic, as well as Young Frankenstein, The Monster Squad, Van Helsing, and more. 

Penguin Random Houseโ€™s new edition of Frankenstein hits shelves on October 28. Check out the new cover below:

FRANKENSTEIN Netflix tie-in cover (Credit: Penguin Random House)
FRANKENSTEIN Netflix tie-in cover (Credit: Penguin Random House)