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* ''The Frankenstein Papers'' by FredSaberhagen: In the end, the "monster" is revealed to be [[spoiler:an alien who lost his memory from a lightning strike]]. I found it good, but rather weird; there had been hints that Frankenstein couldn't reanimate the dead, but I never saw ''that'' coming. I was halfway out the driveway when I realized that when the original book was written, [[spoiler:''it was science fiction''.]] Which makes it pure brilliance that the author uses [[spoiler:a modern science fiction trope (eg, aliens)]] in his rendition. -@/PomRania
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* ''The Frankenstein Papers'' by FredSaberhagen: Creator/FredSaberhagen: In the end, the "monster" is revealed to be [[spoiler:an alien who lost his memory from a lightning strike]]. I found it good, but rather weird; there had been hints that Frankenstein couldn't reanimate the dead, but I never saw ''that'' coming. I was halfway out the driveway when I realized that when the original book was written, [[spoiler:''it was science fiction''.]] Which makes it pure brilliance that the author uses [[spoiler:a modern science fiction trope (eg, aliens)]] in his rendition. -@/PomRania
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Changed line(s) 2 (click to see context) from:
* ''The Frankenstein Papers'' by FredSaberhagen: In the end, the "monster" is revealed to be [[spoiler:an alien who lost his memory from a lightning strike]]. I found it good, but rather weird; there had been hints that Frankenstein couldn't reanimate the dead, but I never saw ''that'' coming. I was halfway out the driveway when I realized that when the original book was written, [[spoiler:''it was science fiction''.]] Which makes it pure brilliance that the author uses [[spoiler:a modern science fiction trope (eg, aliens)]] in his rendition. -PomRania
to:
* ''The Frankenstein Papers'' by FredSaberhagen: In the end, the "monster" is revealed to be [[spoiler:an alien who lost his memory from a lightning strike]]. I found it good, but rather weird; there had been hints that Frankenstein couldn't reanimate the dead, but I never saw ''that'' coming. I was halfway out the driveway when I realized that when the original book was written, [[spoiler:''it was science fiction''.]] Which makes it pure brilliance that the author uses [[spoiler:a modern science fiction trope (eg, aliens)]] in his rendition. -PomRania-@/PomRania