When Love Stories Get It Right š©·
Howdy yāall š¤
The other week I sat down with my husband to watch the 2011 adaptation of Jane Eyre. By far one of my favourite novels. Now, heās not that into period dramas where people from yesteryear speak as if theyāre constantly writing an instruction manual.
But I was surprised, he watched it from start to finish without (well, almost without) cracking his usual witty remarks. Honestly, his commentary usually makes me laugh, but this was a first for him.
As adaptations go, I think it was really well done. Then again, I love this novel to bits, so maybe Iām biased. A few moons ago I reread it and got hooked all over again. Iām a sucker for a slow-burn romance and a brave, uncompromising heroine and Charlotte BrontĆ« delivered beautifully.
Now, if youāre not into mushy love stories, donāt worry. This isnāt one. At least not in the unimaginative way you might expect. Jane, our protagonist, is an orphan who endures more than her fair share of hardship. Yet she builds a life for herself and becomes the governess of a young girl in a not-so-modest castle. Thatās where she meets her employer⦠and so begins what many might call the ālove story.ā
But hereās what I love: Janeās life doesnāt begin or end with romance. Love is part of her story, not all of it. Sheās a no-nonsense young woman who knows her worth and refuses to settle for less, no matter her circumstances. BrontĆ« knows exactly how to pull readers into that world and her charactersā mindset, making you feel like youāre sparring alongside them in their games of wit and double meaning.
She knows what sheās doing. And so does Jane.
If you havenāt read Jane Eyre, I really hope you give it a shot. I used to revisit it every autumn, and it never lost its magic. Sigh.
Would you pick it up? Or does it sound a bit too āmushy-mushyā for your taste? Iād love to hear your thoughts.
See you later, alligator šš©·
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