Answer Block
Quotes from when the monster kills someone in Frankenstein are lines that frame the act, the monster’s state of mind, or the immediate aftermath. These quotes often highlight the novel’s core tension between creation and responsibility. They also expose the cyclical nature of harm when empathy is missing.
Next step: Pull 2-3 relevant quote lines from your text and label each with the monster’s stated or implied emotion in that moment.
Key Takeaways
- The monster’s kill quotes directly respond to Victor’s repeated rejections
- Each kill targets someone close to Victor to inflict maximum emotional pain
- These quotes reveal the monster’s loss of faith in human (and creator) goodness
- They tie to the novel’s theme of accountability for one’s actions
20-Minute Plan and 60-Minute Plan
20-minute plan
- Locate 2 quotes linked to the monster’s kills in your class edition of Frankenstein
- For each quote, write a 1-sentence explanation of how it ties to Victor’s failures
- Draft one discussion question to ask your class about the monster’s motives
60-minute plan
- Compile all quotes tied to the monster’s kills in your text (4-6 total)
- Group quotes by theme: grief, revenge, or broken connection
- Write a 3-sentence thesis that argues the monster’s kills are a direct result of Victor’s neglect
- Outline 2 body paragraphs to support that thesis, using one quote per paragraph
3-Step Study Plan
1. Quote Mapping
Action: Go through your text and highlight every quote tied to the monster’s kill actions
Output: A labeled list of quotes with corresponding character relationships (e.g., victim’s link to Victor)
2. Motive Analysis
Action: For each quote, write 2 adjectives describing the monster’s emotion, then link it to a prior action by Victor
Output: A 1-page chart pairing quotes, emotions, and Victor’s triggering actions
3. Thematic Linking
Action: Connect each quote group to one novel theme (e.g., responsibility, isolation)
Output: A set of flashcards with quotes on one side and thematic connections on the other