• I have communicated to him without disguise

    Candor is an important character trait in the novel, and it is to Walton's credit
    that he so naturally evinces it. His openness will elicit a similar frankness from
    Victor Frankenstein, who for the first time in his existence will tell his entire
    story. But that narration, then, raises a serious problem. Not only are there many
    signs of instability in it, the major one being Victor's wish to revise it even as
    it goes along (Walton, and note); but his earlier lack of candor with his family and
    friends is akin to dishonesty, which, if so common a practice throughout his mature
    life, must raise serious doubts about the truthfulness of the narration that comprises
    the bulk of this novel.