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Characters from Novels

Across
John Proctor’s wife. She fired Abigail when she discovered that her husband was having an affair with Abigail.
He was a drug dealer and didn't want Other Wes to get into that lifestyle. Although he made it his mission to encourage positive decisions for Other Wes, he made a negative impact because Wes just wanted to be like him.
A blind old man with whom The Creature seeks friendship.
He was Wes's best friend. He attended the private school with Wes and was a great influence on Wes towards school work ethic.
Reverend Parris’s niece. She was once the servant for the Proctor household, but Elizabeth Proctor fired her after she discovered that she was having an affair with her husband.
A local farmer who lives just outside town; Elizabeth Proctor’s husband. A stern, harsh-tongued man, he hates hypocrisy. Nevertheless, he has a hidden sin—his affair with Abigail Williams—that proves his downfall.
Dies of scarlet fever when Victor is still very young; makes Victor promise to wed Elizabeth.
Studying in Ingolstadt, He discovers the secret of life and creates an intelligent but grotesque monster, from whom he recoils in horror. He keeps his creation of the monster a secret, feeling increasingly guilty and ashamed as he realizes how helpless he is to prevent the monster from ruining his life and the lives of others.
He was the security guard at the jewelry store robbed by Tony and Other Wes. He was shot and killed by Tony after pursuing them prior the robbery.
Francis Nurse’s wife. A wise, sensible, and upright woman, held in tremendous regard by most of the Salem community.
Reverend Parris’s black slave from Barbados.
An elderly but feisty farmer in Salem, famous for his tendency to file lawsuits.
A young minister reputed to be an expert on witchcraft. Reverend Hale is called in to Salem to examine Parris’s daughter Betty.
The narrator of the story. Wes grew up in West Baltimore and lost his father at a young age. He grew up in a low-income family and struggled in the early years of his life to stay on a positive path. Wes attended Valley Forge Military School for high school and junior college. He later attended Johns Hopkins University.
Victor’s boyhood friend, who nurses Victor back to health in Ingolstadt. After working unhappily for his father, Henry begins to follow in Victor’s footsteps as a scientist. His cheerfulness counters Victor’s moroseness.
Down
The minister of Salem’s church. He is a paranoid, power-hungry, yet oddly self-pitying figure.
A young girl adopted into the Frankenstein household while Victor is growing up. She is blamed and executed for William’s murder, which is actually committed by the monster.
Last name of the professor of chemistry at Ingolstadt.
The servant in the Proctor household and a member of Abigail’s group of girls. She is a timid girl, easily influenced by those around her, who tried unsuccessfully to expose the hoax and ultimately recanted her confession.
The mother of Other Wes's first and second children. She only has custody of one of her children.
The eight-foot-tall, hideously ugly creation of Victor. Intelligent and sensitive, the monster attempts to integrate himself into human social patterns, but all who see him shun him. His feeling of abandonment compels him to seek revenge against his creator.
Victor’s youngest brother and the darling of the Frankenstein family. The monster strangles him in the woods outside Geneva in order to hurt Victor for abandoning him.
The deputy governor of Massachusetts and the presiding judge at the witch trials
He was the head of Valley Forge when Wes attended the school.
Wes's mother. She encouraged Wes to stay on a positive path and worked hard to support her family after her husband died. Suffered from an abusive relationship prior to her second marriage.
Other Wes's mother. She struggled to complete her education, due to financial problems. She had Other Wes at an early age and tried her best to keep him making wise decisions.
An orphan, four to five years younger than Victor, whom the Frankensteins adopt and arrange a marriage for. She embodies the novel’s motif of passive women, as she waits patiently for Victor’s attention.
Grew up in West Baltimore and struggled throughout his early life with drug dealing. His alcoholic father was never present and that contributed to some of the bad decisions he made. Today he is serving a life sentence in prison for a murder during a robbery.
The Arctic seafarer whose letters open and close Frankenstein.
He was one of the kids in Wes's neighborhood. A drug runner and got Wes in trouble for tagging. He stayed in drug dealing and eventually went to prison.