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1.84k reviews for:

Villette

Charlotte Brontë

3.71 AVERAGE


As a Bronte aficionado, I am ashamed that I have never read this book up until now. It is beautifully written and psychologically complicated. It is one of the most anomalous 19th century novels I have ever encountered. I still don’t know entirely what to make of it... its narrator so perceptive, so sensitive, and yet so detached at times in her narration. The supporting characters are more complex and well rounded than those in Jane Eyre in many cases, and the encounter with the Professor’s family could have been a scene in a Gothic novel. Yet, these scenes and characters stand in contrast to the workaday setting and multiple scenes in a girl’s school. If I were to give three words to describe this book, I would say deep, perplexing, and enigmatic. But highly recommended.

Jane Eyre over Vilette but Lucy over Jane

While I found this novel fascinating, its reticent first person narrator, Lucy Snowe, way before her time, the (hidden? unavowed?) theme of female desire tantalizingly alluded to, the sea voyage motif and vague critique of capitalism and working opportunities for lower Middle Class women also intellectually stimulating and abstractly engrossing, I never once found the narrative engaging my heart of feelings in the slightest. This is rather remarkable, for, as I read, I found myself both propelled forward with abstract interest and yet indifferent, bored, even pained to be reading on. The small events here--the most demure and subtle two romances in the history of literature perhaps, were just not in any way emotionally engaging. The characters are very well depicted and yet wholly unremarkable. So, while the novel is very well written and its choices--the reticent narrator who leaves off telling us of momentous things in order to tell us about (or even tease us subtly with allusions to) mundane and unavowable things for nearly 600 pages is a test of one's emotional patience. Villette's most interesting aspect, to me, is what it manages (for 600 pages!) not to say--that women have sexual desire and dare not say so or ever act as if they do. That, as a means of constructing a narrative, is both brilliant and utterly mad--fascinating and dry as dust at the same time.

It was a little better in the last volume--for reasons I will pass over so as not to give spoilers. Perhaps my failing as a reader lies in my maleness (lack of identification with Lucy--although she does all she can not to garner our empathy, as Mrs. Gaskell noted) and the time gap between Ms. Bronte and myself. Still, beyond one particularly well written set piece scene, I found Villette to be the weakest of all of the three sisters' novels.
challenging mysterious slow-paced
Plot or Character Driven: Character

This was one of those books where everything finally clicked for me in the final chapters (just in time for me to become quietly devastated by the last chapter).

This is Charlotte Brontë's most ambitious and complex work - there are so many layers to this in its character work and storytelling. Jane Eyre and Shirley simply can not compete.
emotional reflective sad slow-paced
Plot or Character Driven: A mix
Strong character development: Complicated
Loveable characters: Complicated
Diverse cast of characters: No
Flaws of characters a main focus: Yes
challenging dark emotional reflective slow-paced
Plot or Character Driven: A mix
Strong character development: Yes
Loveable characters: Yes
Diverse cast of characters: Yes
Flaws of characters a main focus: Yes

If you thought Jane Eyre was depressing... think again. Meet Lucy Snowe, a character obstinate in her misery, and yet equally determined to find a way to survive independently. Confusing, dry, and deeply sad, with most of the dialogue entirely in French, this is not an easy read.
And despite these things... I loved it. It was brilliant. Lucy shrouds herself almost entirely from the reader; we never understand the childhood that caused her lingering emotional trauma and depression. Her inner self is almost entirely hidden from those around her, and even with our glimpse into her psyche, also hidden from the reader. We get only brief flashes of her true nature-- and she is not easy to love. But still she deserves independence, security, and happiness, as we all do.
challenging dark emotional hopeful mysterious reflective sad tense slow-paced
Plot or Character Driven: Character
Strong character development: Yes
Loveable characters: No
Diverse cast of characters: No
Flaws of characters a main focus: Yes
challenging dark reflective sad tense slow-paced
Plot or Character Driven: Character
Strong character development: Complicated
Loveable characters: No
Diverse cast of characters: No
Flaws of characters a main focus: Yes

It's frequently stated that Charlotte Bronte was not a fan of Jane Austen, but who is Genevra Fanshawe if not Lydia Bennet?