Title: Roger Dodsworth: The Reanimated Englishman
Author: Mary Shelley
Narrator: Jonathan Dunne
Original Publication: 1826
Public Domain: Yes
Series Placement: Timeless Terrors No. 89
Description:
Roger Dodsworth: The Reanimated Englishman is a haunting example of Mary Shelley’s mastery of early Gothic horror, blending science, morality, and the uncanny. The story follows the discovery of a man preserved in ice for more than a century, and the profound consequences of restoring him to life. As Dodsworth awakens, he carries with him the manners, memories, and worldview of a bygone era—alien and dissonant in the present world.
Rather than relying on spectacle, Shelley builds unease through atmosphere, character reaction, and the philosophical weight of revival. The horror emerges not from the act of reanimation itself, but from the unsettling confrontation between past and present, and the implications of bringing something once long dead back into a world that has moved on.
Central to Roger Dodsworth is Shelley’s exploration of mortality, memory, and human ambition. The narrative probes the moral and emotional consequences of defying natural law, revealing a subtle, persistent dread that resonates long after the final page.
Narrated by Amazon-bestselling horror author Jonathan Dunne, this performance emphasizes Shelley’s quiet tension, lingering eeriness, and reflective horror. Roger Dodsworth: The Reanimated Englishman remains a striking example of early nineteenth-century Gothic fiction—where curiosity, science, and obsession intersect, and the boundaries of life and death are disturbingly blurred.























