Originally published in 1857 by Arthur Bells Nicholls
My edition: The Kindle edition! There’s not a
pretty paperback edition, unfortunately.
WHEN
I Discovered This Classic
I actually bought one of those
cheap little Wordsworth paperbacks a really long time ago as I liked the sound
of it, but I was too intimidated by reading a Brontë so I gave it away again.
WHY
I Chose to Read It
I’m aiming to finish the rest of
the Brontës’ novels this year and this is one of the three I have left. And the
shortest of them!
WHAT
Makes It a Classic
It’s by Charlotte Brontë! It was
her first novel, but wasn’t accepted for publication and didn’t make it onto
shelves until after Charlotte had died. It was inspired by Charlotte’s time
being a governess in Brussels when she fell in love with the master of the
house.
WHAT
I Thought of This Classic
I’m going to be honest here: I didn’t
like it. The only reason I carried on with The
Professor was my determination to read all of the books by the Brontë
sisters.
This novel is just kinda boring. So
very little happens and the characters have nothing to hold onto. I don’t even
think anything really happened in the entire first half of the novel other than
William suffering under his tyrannical brother and moving to Brussels. And even
then he just spent a lot of time recounting (largely uninteresting)
conversations with the teachers he works with. And all in French! I know it was
standard that those who would be reading novels in the 1800s would know French
as well, but come on. I spent far too much time using the really terrible
Kindle translator and it didn’t help with the reading experience.
There was nothing about him, M.
Pelet, Mademoiselle Reuter or Frances that had anything to grip onto, to like
or develop affection for. There was no drama or miscommunication, it was just there.
Before I read The Professor I was
surprised that it was a forgotten Bronte, and a forgotten classic, but now I get
it. I’m not usually this negative about the books I review, but I can't think
of anything I liked or even admired in this novel.
I have read that lots of themes
that Charlotte employs in The Professor are
improved and expanded on in Vilette, her
final novel. That, I've heard is wonderful. I love this quote from George
Eliot:
“I am only just returned to a
sense of real wonder about me, for I have been reading ‘Vilette’”
I still have hope that I’ll
eventually love something by Charlotte Bronte and my money is on Vilette. Though I have heard that Shirley puts the main focus on female
friendship which is a rare occurrence in nineteenth-century literature. I have
hope.
WILL
It Stay a Classic
Though I doubt it’ll ever be as
acclaimed as Jane Eyre, or even Villette, it’s still a Charlotte Brontë
novel, so yes, I think it will.
WHO
I’d Recommend it To
- Those dedicated to Charlotte
Brontë.
- Those determined to read all of
the Brontës’ bibliography.
Sophie
I really want to read this one. I've read Jane Eyre and Villette. :)
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