Wide Sargasso Sea: A Novel (Norton Paperback Fiction)
Wide Sargasso Sea: A Novel (Norton Paperback Fiction) The fortieth anniversary reissue of the best-selling “tour de force” (Walter Allen, New York Times Book Review).
Jean Rhys’s reputation was made upon the publication of this passionate and heartbreaking novel, in which she brings into the light one of fiction’s most mysterious characters: the madwoman in the attic from Charlotte Bront ‘s Jane Eyre.
A sensual and protected young woman, Antoinette Cosway grows upin the lush natural world of the Caribbean. She is sold intomarriage to the coldhearted and prideful Rochester, who succumbsto his need for money and his lust. Yet he will make her pay forher ancestors’ sins of slaveholding, excessive drinking, and nihilistic despair by enslaving her as a prisoner in his bleak English home.
In this best-selling novel Rhys portrays a society so driven by hatred, so skewed in its sexual relations, that it can literally drive a woman out of her mind.
Customer Review: moods as varied as the skies over the West Indies
With her vivid imaginative skills, Jean Rhys offers us the tale of “Bertha” Rochester, the madwoman in the attic of “Jane Eyre.” The skies of the West Indies are an ever-changing backdrop in this moody novel of fear, memory, and desire. Rhys’ style challenges the reader to “fill in the blanks” many times throughout, making necessary intuitive connections to amplify her sometimes sparse prose. What could have been merely a lightweight story of “love and greed in the tropics” turns into an engaging, beautifully unfolding narrative laden with mystery and sadness.
Customer Review: Greatest tragedy in the world: loss of three trees in North Carolina for the purpose of the novel
I bought this novel with anticipation of a thrilling story and a dramatic yet suspenseful story. What I got was a boring love story followed by an atrocious climb to a lackluster climax. The story is narrator from opposing views, mainly the Creole protagonist, Antionnette, yet also from a Colonialist whose name is never mentioned. Why the name was never mentioned is unclear, obviously to try and give a sense of imagination and creativity to the story (EPIC FAIL). Characters are introduced randomly and seemingly without a purpose in the novel. The racism towards English is evident in Rhys obsession towards depicting them as soulless colonial butchers when this is obviously not the case. The novel is simply a silly novel, not bad, but silly. The love story seemingly falls apart out of nowhere, there is no cohesion to the story and the characters seemingly were created out of a Jamacain woman’s desire for a popular story. The climax of the novel is pointless and silly, the story translating to England out of nowhere. There is no point to the novel, as it should never have been written. This is the most racist and atrociously silly novel I have ever read. Couldn’t stop laughing after I read it.
Tags: Fiction book, Cheap Fiction book, Literature book, Literature and Fiction book, Cheap Literature book