The Invisible Girl by Mary Shelley (1833): A Review
Oh boy, where do I start with "The Invisible Girl"? Picture this: a secret engagement, an angry guardian with anger management issues, an evil aunt and heartbroken lovers (one almost dead). Talk about checking all the Gothic cliché boxes!
And what's with this recurring theme? "Let's take in an orphan and then act SHOCKED when they fall in love with our child!" Hello? Have these guardians ever read a single romantic and gothic story, especially by Mary Shelley? Maybe dating options were limited in the 1800s England.
The biggest plot twist? This so-called "ghost story" contains exactly zero actual ghosts! False advertising at its finest! Maybe I would've enjoyed it more if everyone ended up haunted, cursed, or dramatically plunging off a cliff. But no—we get a happy ending instead. How disappointingly... pleasant.
And what's with this recurring theme? "Let's take in an orphan and then act SHOCKED when they fall in love with our child!" Hello? Have these guardians ever read a single romantic and gothic story, especially by Mary Shelley? Maybe dating options were limited in the 1800s England.
The biggest plot twist? This so-called "ghost story" contains exactly zero actual ghosts! False advertising at its finest! Maybe I would've enjoyed it more if everyone ended up haunted, cursed, or dramatically plunging off a cliff. But no—we get a happy ending instead. How disappointingly... pleasant.
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