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5thCLASS_1_96_jg:Layout 1 5/3/12 17:37 Page 67


Howtohandleavampire The fictional Count Dracula inspired terror in people and left a trail of blood and destruction in his wake. But there are ways of dealing with vampires. Keeping garlic in a room is one way of warding off a vampire and making the sign of the cross is sure to send a vampire scurrying away. But if you really want to end the reign of a vampire, plunging a wooden stake into its heart is what’s needed.


Still not sure whether you’re dealing with a vampire or not? Get your suspect to look in the mirror and if he or she has no reflection, you know you’ve got the real thing! Reach for your garlic and your stake!


MaryShelley Mary Shelley was born in London in 1797. Both her parents were writers and from an early age Mary mixed with her parents’ literary friends. When she was 16 years old, she ran away to France with the poet, Percy Bysshe Shelley, and married him two years later. Mary had four children, but three of them died very young. The death of her first child affected Mary deeply, and it is thought this may have shaped her first and greatest book, Frankenstein.


Frankenstein This tells the story of Victor Frankenstein, a medical student, who used various parts taken from dead bodies to create a living creature. Mary first got the idea for the book while staying as a guest of the poet, Lord Byron, at Lake Geneva in Switzerland. During her stay, Byron challenged each of his guests to write a ghost story and Frankenstein was the result.


After her husband’s death in 1822, Mary Shelley returned to England. She continued to write, publishing five more novels, as well as books on biography and travel. She also edited some of her husband’s poems. None of her later works, however, were as successful as her great horror story, Frankenstein.


1. Many cultures have stories about monsters (think of the Cyclops, the Abominable Snowman, the Minotaur, the Kelpie). Choose one and find out what you can about it.


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