• how little do you know me The return of Alphonse Frankenstein to the narrative center of the novel brings with
    it the vexed tension between father and son observed in the early chapters when Victor
    was an adolescent. Victor's silence here, of course, is of no advantage in bringing
    Alphonse to a better understanding of his by-now adult scion. Perhaps the son's reticence
    is meant not just to mark his fear that the truth of his guilt would not be countenanced
    by his father but also to implicate this strained history between them.