Rating:  Summary: Heartbreaking...but you'll live Review: The novel is a compassionate one in which different feelings and characteristics occur at different times but all show different versions of Jane--which is quite impressive. The language is beautifully woven, showing the character's feelings and giving way to shocking occurrances. The tale is not quite original but it does strike the heart--showing society at the time while weaving the tale--the plots just grasp you harder and harder within each chapter--like glue, if you don't try to get out of it, you can't get out--carefully developing the plot with questions, the language, and subtle events that makes the book--not quite original--but giving it a place of its own in the romance genre, getting better and better every time. It is really quite the satisfying experience. Personally, I--not being a picky person--don't have a problem with the printing. The story is enough to change your life if you can be easily shaken by such fictional romance.
Rating:  Summary: Jane Eyre....for kids? Review: This is a really great book, however not for young kids. i read this book when i was in 7th grade. Being above my reading level i thought i could handle a book like it. To my dismay this book did not statisfy me. To a girl in 7th grade i found it hard to relate to and very wordy. I reread it this year i am a senior in High school and i found my interest in the book had changed i found ways in which i could relate. bottom line...dont make your kids read it!
Rating:  Summary: Hard to put down Review: This book, like my title says, was hard for me to put down. I just became so inthralled in the book and its characters. You become, early on, compassionate to Jane's pain, hopeful with Jane's encounter with Mr. Rochester, afraid for her when she meets with a ghastly face, and so on and so forth. At times I almost didn't want Jane with Mr. Rochester, but in the end he won me over. Their love is unique, it was very nurturing and longing, but love nonetheless. I recommend this book to anyone who likes a good love story with a little suspense all throughout.
Rating:  Summary: A classic Review: I have read this book several times, on different occasions, and ech time I've enjoyed it immensely. This is one of those classic stories that will stay with you forever. It appears simple on the surface, but underneath it are well-thought out passages. Bronte is a superb artist, weaving her two main characters, each suffering in their life, into a tapestry of love. Each so different from each other, yet each needing the other desparately. I recommend this book highly.
Rating:  Summary: Ugh. Review: Boring, boring book. I wish my profs hadn't made me read this. It has tarnished my writing ability. Now I will have to read some Peake to revive it.
Rating:  Summary: Immature and uneven. Review: One friend who prefers Charlotte Bronte to Jane Austen told me she would feel claustrophobic in the latter's world. And it does seem to be the common view that Jane Eyre is more liberated and complex than Austen's leading female characters. However, that is not my view. First, though, I must give the author credit for creating a childhood so realistic, so painfully vivid, that one cannot help but be moved by the first chapters. Jane Eyre the child is the quintessential homely loner in the corner with her book. Immediately one feels Jane Eyre *is* Charlotte Bronte, but it is terribly dangerous to take the autobiographical route in the discussion of a work. So this is no critique of the author's own life. Jane Eyre, however, becomes a self-righteous do-gooder, and the narrator provides all the stepping stones for her preachy little journey. She is wonderfully kind to the people who are horrible to her-- but we are oh-so aware of how much *better* she is than these ogres. And we know someday-- according to something in the Scriptures-- she shall be rewarded. Of course, a handsome, refined man of Jane Austen's world is not her final reward. She yearns for a rough, rugged, physically unattractive man-- though he of course has his eyes on a pretty young woman. This is a fantastic Romantic tale which may always win over teenage readers. It's just unfortunate that Bronte's moral view and understanding of human nature did not extend beyond this adolescent world. For instance, we must have the monster in the attic who was once the beautiful temptress from a sunny isle. This heavy-handed way with moral imagery is a sad weakness in Bronte's novel, a novel which begins with so much promise when the heroine is a tortured young girl. As a matter of fact, this book is the only instance in all of classic literature in which I prefer the movie (with Orson Welles and Joan Fontaine) to the original. On the screen we do miss Bronte's beautiful language, though like most novelists of the 19th century, she doesn't know when to leave well enough alone. Many readers enjoy the Gothic darkness of her language-- and imagery-- but clarity is the key to prose, no matter how many would wallow in a murky stew of sound and meaning. This is a Classic, for once that label is applied nothing will remove it. Yet for me it is a classic example of an inadequate style and moral point of view, both typical of Bronte's era.
Rating:  Summary: Jane Eyre is a fascinating role model Review: Charlotte Bronte's Jane Eyre is a heroine that possesses independence, intelligence, and inner beauty. This is a fascinating novel that goes beyond the ordinary, trite, misconceptions of "love." Jane Eyre's experiences prevail upon the reader so strongly, that one feels as if one has learned a great deal upon finishing this novel. It is also much better written than most modern-day novels we see today. If you enjoy other novels from Emily Bronte or Jane Austen, you will no doubt enjoy this one.
Rating:  Summary: PERFECT Review: OH GOSH! This is the best! I'm thirteen, and I had just recently finnished Wuthering Heights when I decided to pick this up. I loved it so much! It's a really intense, frightening, startling, & romantic story, one that I think everyone should know about! So anyways, Jane starts out as a little girl of ten, and lives an unhappy life with her dreadful aunt. She is sent away to Lowood, a school of which she attends for eight more years. After two years of teaching there, she decides she needs a change. Jane is accepted to be a governess at Thornfield Hall, and then she meets Mr. Rochester! The good part starts! The two form a strong friendship, and go through the terrors of Thornfield's mystery villian together. Then, they fall in love. But, a secret that surrounds Rochester seperates Jane from him, and then she leaves. She finds long-lost family, and is proposed an offer of marraige by St. John, who wanted her to be a missionary with him. Well, does Jane accept? Or return to her beloved Mr. Rochester? Find out for yourself, and read this fantastic novel!
Rating:  Summary: more than a love story Review: Jane Eyre is more than a love story; it demonstrates a noble way of life. Jane herself is an amazing character because she has an independence that allows her to move on and take responsibility for her own happiness no matter what happens to her. I first read this as a teenager and still think of Jane as the ultimate role model.
Rating:  Summary: Jane Eyre Review: "To prolong doubt was to prolong hope." - Jane Eyre How true! This book displays an almost unusual scenario. An orphan thrown into a tumultuous life and endures to find a man above her social ranking to love. What is more interesting that neither contain perfect beauty in the eyes of a passing stranger. Jane Eyre is the perfect example of love emitting from internal thoughts and experiences rather than exterior imagery. One would think the story to be a simple one, but it is so much more than the ordinary love story! Yes, Jane Eyre and Mr Rochester, the wealthy employer, do fall in love. However, it is the dramatic turn in the story that touches the reader most. What does happen in the end to these oh-so-real characters? At times, it seems very unpredictable. The story is worth the time of reading the book. It is unlike any other!
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