Analysis and Review of Jane Eyre by Charlotte Bronte
Analysis and Review of Jane Eyre by Charlotte Bronte
I read the book Jane Eyre by Charlotte Bronte. I personally didn’t find this book interesting or appealing in any way. If I read for pleasure, which I don’t, this would not be the type of book that I would choose to read. I prefer murder mysteries and books that I can relate to more. I found this book very depressing, not that murders are happy, and I also thought that this book brought out a lot of bad things that happen to people in this world and the struggles they have to overcome. Another reason I didn’t find this book appealing was the fact that the middle of the book was very slow and it was hard for me to continue. When I do read, I want to be able to look forward to reading more, not having to make myself. The beginning and end were more interesting and suspenseful but the middle was quite boring.
Although I didn’t enjoy this book to the fullest, there were some things that I could pick out that the book covered and explained well. For example, the issues that Jane went through in the book were trials and tribulations that do happen in everyday life. They don’t happen to me but I’m sure they relate to other people in some ways.
A good example of from the book that some people could relate to is the relationship between Jane and Mr. Rochester. Jane takes up a post governess at Thornfield Hall, which is were she meets Mr. Rochester. Mr. Rochester had a wife that no one really knew about because she had some mental problems. “She was kept in very close confinement, ma’am; people even for some years was not absolutely certain of her existence. No one saw her: they only knew by rumor that such a person was at the Hall; and who or what she was it was difficult to conjecture,” said Mr. Edward (page 474, paragraph 3). During the time of Jane’s stay at the Thornfield Hall, the two end up falling in love with each other. Their love is secret throughout the book until the very end. When Jane and Mr. Rochester are around other people, they act no differently than...