Andrea reviewed Wide Sargasso Sea by Jean Rhys
Review of 'Wide Sargasso Sea' on Goodreads
5 stars
A validation that Rochester is forever a dick, and imperialism destroys people.
Hardcover, 189 pages
English language
Published Jan. 1, 1966 by Buccaneer Books.
"Novel by Jean Rhys, published in 1966. A well-received work of fiction, it takes its theme from the novel Jane Eyre by Charlotte Bronte. The book details the life of Antoinette Mason (known in Jane Eyre as Bertha), a West Indian who marries an unnamed man in Jamaica and returns with him to his home in England. Locked in a loveless marriage and settled in an inhospitable climate, Antoinette goes mad and is frequently violent. Her husband confines her to the attic of his house at Thornfield. Only he and Grace Poole, the attendant he has hired to care for her, know of Antoinette's existence. The reader gradually learns that Antoinette's unnamed husband is Mr. Rochester, later to become the beloved of Jane Eyre. Much of the action of the novel takes place in the West Indies. The first and third sections are narrated by Antoinette, the middle section by …
"Novel by Jean Rhys, published in 1966. A well-received work of fiction, it takes its theme from the novel Jane Eyre by Charlotte Bronte. The book details the life of Antoinette Mason (known in Jane Eyre as Bertha), a West Indian who marries an unnamed man in Jamaica and returns with him to his home in England. Locked in a loveless marriage and settled in an inhospitable climate, Antoinette goes mad and is frequently violent. Her husband confines her to the attic of his house at Thornfield. Only he and Grace Poole, the attendant he has hired to care for her, know of Antoinette's existence. The reader gradually learns that Antoinette's unnamed husband is Mr. Rochester, later to become the beloved of Jane Eyre. Much of the action of the novel takes place in the West Indies. The first and third sections are narrated by Antoinette, the middle section by her husband."
A validation that Rochester is forever a dick, and imperialism destroys people.
A novel that twists and turns suddenly in how you understand the perspective of the characters. I read this without a knowledge of Jane Eyre and the original characters, and found it alone a compelling study on character and prejudice. Excellent writing throughout.
This is a prequel written 120 years later that shows the perspective and backstory of an enigmatic character, Berta Mason, from a classic novel, Jayne Eyre.
I didn’t read Jane Eyre.
However I’ve read some Gothic (Southern) novels with enigmatic characters who play the foil to the main character’s grand plan.
Charles Bon shows up at the richest planter in Mississippi mansion on Christmas Eve in 1860 and it all goes south for the Sutpen’s after that in Faulkner’s Absalom, Absalom.
The narrator’s speculate how much of chance meeting Henry, his half brother and 10 years his junior at a tiny law school in the Mississippi wilderness. How far did Charles’ mother, Eulalia, (Thomas first wife of mixed race ancestry in the West Indies) go to setup the encounter that would be foil to Thomas grand plan?
In Jayne Eyre, Bertha Mason, spoils Jayne’s plan to marry Mr Rochester - …
This is a prequel written 120 years later that shows the perspective and backstory of an enigmatic character, Berta Mason, from a classic novel, Jayne Eyre.
I didn’t read Jane Eyre.
However I’ve read some Gothic (Southern) novels with enigmatic characters who play the foil to the main character’s grand plan.
Charles Bon shows up at the richest planter in Mississippi mansion on Christmas Eve in 1860 and it all goes south for the Sutpen’s after that in Faulkner’s Absalom, Absalom.
The narrator’s speculate how much of chance meeting Henry, his half brother and 10 years his junior at a tiny law school in the Mississippi wilderness. How far did Charles’ mother, Eulalia, (Thomas first wife of mixed race ancestry in the West Indies) go to setup the encounter that would be foil to Thomas grand plan?
In Jayne Eyre, Bertha Mason, spoils Jayne’s plan to marry Mr Rochester - Bertha is Rochester’s Creole first wife whom he marries in Jamaica and ultimately brings back to England where he locks her up in the attic.
Wide Sargasso Sea is Bertha’s story. Her tumultuous childhood, which saw her family fall from riches to rags only to get it back through her mother marriage to a cold man, which drives her mother insane. Bertha has one last shot at the good life - her rushed into marriage to Rochester.
The honeymoon doesn’t go so well.
In Jane Eyre, Wide Sargasso Sea, and Absalom, Absalom the grand house, which represents everything terrible about the patriarchy and the power of that time is burnt to the ground.
Its seems it’s best to destroy the past and move on.
Stunning subversion of Jane Eyre, but also a wonderful novel in its own right. The prose is powerful and uncompromising.