Crane began writing
The Monster in June 1897 while living in
Oxted, England with his longtime partner
Cora Taylor. Despite his previous success—
The Red Badge of Courage had gone through 14 printings in the United States and six in England—Crane was running out of money. To survive financially, he worked at a feverish pitch, writing prolifically for both the English and the American markets. He later remarked that he wrote
The Monster "under the spur of great need", as he desperately required funds. In August of that year, Crane and Cora were injured in a carriage accident while visiting friend
Harold Frederic and his mistress Kate Lyon in Homefield,
Kenley; after a week of recuperation, they followed the couple on vacation to Ireland, where Crane finished the story.
The Monster was Crane's first story to feature the fictional town of Whilomville; it would eventually serve as the setting of 14 stories, 13 of which would appear in the 1900 anthology
Whilomville Stories. The town was based on
Port Jervis, New York, where the author lived from the age of six to eleven. Although Crane and his mother relocated to
Asbury Park, New Jersey in 1880, until 1896 he frequently stayed with his older brother and Port Jervis resident
William Howe Crane. Crane admitted to his publishers that while he readily used Port Jervis as inspiration while writing
The Monster, he was anxious to ensure that the residents of his previous hometown did not recognize themselves in the fictional Whilomville. While Crane biographer
Thomas Beer claimed to trace the prototype of Henry Johnson to a Port Jervis
teamster named Levi Hume, Crane's niece, Edna Crane Sidbury, believed the character and his disfigurement were influenced by a local waste collector whose face was damaged by cancer. In
Black Frankenstein: The Making of an American Metaphor, author Elizabeth Young theorized that Crane may also have been inspired by popular
freak show attractions such as
Zip the Pinhead, whose real name was William Henry Johnson, and
Joseph Merrick, the Elephant Man. It is also possible that Crane found thematic inspiration in
Henrik Ibsen's
An Enemy of the People; although first published in 1882, the play—about a physician who finds himself ostracized by his community—first became popular in the United States in the mid-1890s. Modern critics have connected the novella's themes of racial division to a violent episode in Port Jervis' history. On June 2, 1892, an African-American man named
Robert Lewis was
lynched for allegedly assaulting a local white woman. On his way to the Port Jervis jail, Lewis was set upon by a mob of several hundred white men who dragged him through the town, beat him and hanged him from a tree. Although Stephen Crane was not present, there were detailed accounts published in both the
Port Jervis Gazette and the
New-York Tribune, and Crane contributed to the
Tribune at the time. Of the 1,134 reported lynchings throughout the United States between 1882 and 1899, Lewis was the only black man to be lynched in New York. Crane initially sent his manuscript of more than 21,000 words to ''
McClure's, along with several other works including "The Bride Comes to Yellow Sky", but it remained unpublished for nearly a year. After McClure's
eventual rejection, The Monster
appeared in the August 1898 issue of Harper's Magazine with illustrations by Peter Newell. A year later, it was published in the United States by Harper & Brothers Publishers in a collection titled The Monster and Other Stories'', which included two other works by Crane, "
The Blue Hotel" and "
His New Mittens". The first British edition, which added an additional four stories, was published in 1901. ==Plot summary==