• merely weaving a series of supernatural terrors

    The repetition of a note of disparagement ("merely weaving," "a mere tale") in this
    and the succeeding sentence indicate that Shelley is seeking from the first to distance
    Frankenstein from the tradition of popular gothic fiction to which, in his own adolescence,
    he had contributed two outlandish examples, Zastrozzi and St. Irvyne, both published
    in 1810.