Anyone else partaking in the #TolkienBirthdayToast? At 9 pm, I'll have the tagged book in one hand and a whisky in the other! #TheProfessor #BooksAndBooze
Anyone else partaking in the #TolkienBirthdayToast? At 9 pm, I'll have the tagged book in one hand and a whisky in the other! #TheProfessor #BooksAndBooze
Day 25 - #Professor #AcrossApril
#TheProfessor #CathyPerkins
I read and enjoyed this in 2012!
Happy Birthday to Charlotte Brontë ?????
#JaneEyre #HappyBirthday #CharlotteBronte #Villette #TheProfessor #book #books #bookcollection #bookcollector #bookcase #bookcases #bookcover #bookcovers #bookcoverdesign #bookcoverdesigner #bookclub #bookclubs #bookvibe #bookvibes #bookvsfilm #bookvsmovie #bookbag #bookbags #bookbinding #bookbeau #bookblog #bookblogger #bookbackpack #bookbackpacks #Classics #Fiction #Romance #HistoricalFiction ???
It's Monday noon and I am setting my stopwatch.
Goal - 30 hours of reading by Friday midnight
#24B4Extend brought to you by @SumisBooks and @Andrew65
Continuing with #theProfessor on audio while I cook lunch
I have mixed feelings for the book, essentially an unusual love story from a male‘s perspective. I haven‘t read Villette, so can‘t see any connections. The sometimes moralising narrative of William was tiresome, & the partial dialogues in French with no translations was inconvenient. In spite of these, & also the prejudices against Catholics & non-English nationals, 👇
#theprofessor
It‘s clear this is Charlotte‘s first effort at writing a novel, but you can see the seeds of her talent in the way she crafts sentences. I do think the story of a teacher in Brussels is stronger when she reworks it from the female point of view in Villette.
The main character is a bit insufferable and annoying. The romance fell flat for me as I never understood what Frances saw in him. Regardless, it‘s Brontë, so it‘s worth reading. #theprofessor
A fuzzy image of Edward Dulac's illustration for #TheProfessor. Frances at her aunt's grave.
This book is not my (or anyone's) favourite Charlotte Bronte novel. The story is stunted by our narrator, the not-very-likable William (who never feels quite real.) Even he knows Frances is the star but we are stuck with his perspective. We only get to see her through him. The story is much better as Villette! That said, the ending surprised me. ⬇️
A lovers' meetup in a graveyard. Just one of the reasons I love Charlotte Bronte! 🖤👻
I tried to find pictures of the Protestant cemetery in Brussels. Apparently it's gone. But I did find this interesting post about Charlotte's connection to it. #theprofessor
Http://BrusselsBronte.blogspot.com/2008/12/ongoing-brussels-research.html?m=1
Charlotte Bronte's first novel, published posthumously, is both imperfect & intriguing. The themes that begin to crystallise her later work, Villette (& to some degree Jane Eyre) are evident here. She uses a male protagonist & the representation is heartfelt but also a bit of a caricature; her writing is beautiful & the obsession with freedom, meaningful work, & love as a meeting of minds, bodies, & souls is one that I've always loved in her work.