Jane Eyre

"Do you think, because I am poor, obscure, plain, and little, I am soulless and heartless? You think wrong!"

A story of resilience, longing, and self‑respect, Jane Eyre (1847) is a powerful and passionate depiction of a young woman's search for equality, love and the freedom to determine her own fate.

Growing up under the cruelty of her aunt and the harsh conditions of Lowood School, the plain but fiercely independent Jane Eyre survives through sheer strength of character. When she takes a position as a governess at the isolated Thornfield Hall, she finds herself drawn to her employer, the cynical and brooding Edward Rochester.

As their unconventional bond deepens into a passionate love, Jane's quest for belonging is shattered by a dark secret. Forced to choose between her heart and her integrity, Jane must flee into the unknown to discover if a woman of no fortune can ever truly be free.

Born in Yorkshire as the third of six children to an Anglican curate, Charlotte Brontë (1816–1855) grew up in the isolated parsonage of Haworth on the edge of the wild Yorkshire moors. After a childhood spent creating elaborate imaginary worlds with her siblings, Charlotte worked as a governess and teacher—experiences that would later serve as inspiration for her novels.

In 1847, writing under the masculine pseudonym Currer Bell, she published Jane Eyre to immediate and sensational success. Brontë went on to write Shirley and Villette, works that moved away from Gothic romance toward social commentary and deep psychological realism, and in which she continued her exploration of independence, desire, and the constraints placed on women's lives. Though her career was brief—she died aged just thirty-eight—her influence has been profound, securing her place as one of the central voices of English literature.

Om den här boken

"Do you think, because I am poor, obscure, plain, and little, I am soulless and heartless? You think wrong!"

A story of resilience, longing, and self‑respect, Jane Eyre (1847) is a powerful and passionate depiction of a young woman's search for equality, love and the freedom to determine her own fate.

Growing up under the cruelty of her aunt and the harsh conditions of Lowood School, the plain but fiercely independent Jane Eyre survives through sheer strength of character. When she takes a position as a governess at the isolated Thornfield Hall, she finds herself drawn to her employer, the cynical and brooding Edward Rochester.

As their unconventional bond deepens into a passionate love, Jane's quest for belonging is shattered by a dark secret. Forced to choose between her heart and her integrity, Jane must flee into the unknown to discover if a woman of no fortune can ever truly be free.

Born in Yorkshire as the third of six children to an Anglican curate, Charlotte Brontë (1816–1855) grew up in the isolated parsonage of Haworth on the edge of the wild Yorkshire moors. After a childhood spent creating elaborate imaginary worlds with her siblings, Charlotte worked as a governess and teacher—experiences that would later serve as inspiration for her novels.

In 1847, writing under the masculine pseudonym Currer Bell, she published Jane Eyre to immediate and sensational success. Brontë went on to write Shirley and Villette, works that moved away from Gothic romance toward social commentary and deep psychological realism, and in which she continued her exploration of independence, desire, and the constraints placed on women's lives. Though her career was brief—she died aged just thirty-eight—her influence has been profound, securing her place as one of the central voices of English literature.

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