I have finished "Jane Eyre". I was sparked to re-read it after watching it on PBS the past two Sunday evenings.
Goodness, what a difference age makes in reading. I do believe that the first time I read it, Jane seemed old to me. I must have been young. Mr. Rochester, in those days, seemed a horror. Now my heart pines for a blind guy with only one hand.
THGGM and I have many long conversations. We do. But, as I told him yesterday, I don't believe we have EVER had a conversation as long as those of Jane and Edward. EVER. I'm not sure that I even find that sad (somehow i don't think jane ever said 'edward, is there a point to this? and if so, are you planning to get to it, like, soon?).
Now I'm planning to re-read "Wuthering Heights". I didn't like that book either. Heathcliff seemed a dolt to me.
What was with the Bronte sisters? I cannot imagine what THEIR conversations would have been like.
Someone needs to write a book titled "Dinner with the Brontes". I wonder just how long it took them to get to the point. 'Pass the salt' could very well cover several pages.
Then I might have to move on to Jane Austin. I WANT to like Jane Austin's books, but I don't. Now that I am old, might I like them? I know that it didn't help that I read from my collection of classics only when I had a major flu, or something that kept me down for long periods of time.
Perhaps a fevered brow does not bode well with reading Austin. Time will tell.
Now, if I could only find some moors in which to roam.
Oh, and a raving lunatic. That's a must have. I've room for one in my attic.
(okay. i might just have to say 'no' to wuthering heights. now that i have that stupid heathcliff cartoon music stuck in my head!)
If you haven't read (jumping here to non-fiction) "North to the Orient" by Anne Morrow Lindbergh, get thee to a bookstore! I found my copy in the clearance section at Barnes and Noble for two dollars.
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5 comments:
"Now my heart pines for a blind guy with only one hand."
Oh, that made me laugh and laugh! I loved that book while I was a teenager and I still watch my dvd of the George C. Scott version (many people hate it, but I love it). Anyway, thanks for the laugh this morning! Blessings, Debra
(somehow i don't think jane ever said 'edward, is there a point to this? and if so, are you planning to get to it, like, soon?).
I LOVE your sense of humor!! I think age really does make a difference in how we look at everything. Like the long awaited "knight in shining armor" that will bring all the romantic fantasies to life! I think someone shot his horse!!
Thanks for the laugh!
Hope
Jane Austin was one of the few authors I liked when I had to read books in high school. Maybe you'd enjoy her now. As for Jane Eyre, perhaps I should read it again. I might possibly like it now.
I never read classics when I was young. I don't even remember reading them in school except for The Scarlet Letter and a little Shakespeare.
I have, however, developed a great love of Jane Austin in recent years - except for Mansfield Park...I really didn't like Mansfield Park.
Wuthering Heights was just weird. Heathcliff was a total freak and if I was Catherine I would have run as far as my feet would take me the first chance I got. I've never read Jane Eyre, but people keep telling me I should, so maybe I'll pick it up one of these days...after I've read the 52 other books on my reading list. :)
I can't stand Jane Austen - I think I ought to but I can't.
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