Title: The Tenant of Wildfell Hall
Author: Anne Bronte
Narrated by: Piers Wehner & Katy Carmichael
Publisher: Naxos
Audiobooks
Length:
Approximately 20 hours and 29 minutes
Source: Checked
out with Hoopla through the Kewaunee Public Library. Thank-you!
Have you ever heard of Anne Bronte? Have you ever read any of her novels?
I read all of the Bronte novels written by Charlotte,
Emily, and Anne back in high school and college. I enjoyed them all, but I was surprised at
how well I loved Anne’s novels. She is
the lesser-known Bronte and not nearly talked about as much as Charlotte or
Emily. I think this is a shame as I
truthfully enjoy The Tenant of Wildfell Hall more than Wuthering Heights. I think it’s just as good as her
sisters. Unfortunately, Charlotte held The
Tenant of Wildfell Hall back from being published again while she was alive. It was considered a scandalous book for its
time as it dealt with alcoholism, marital strife, and a woman leaving her
husband and supporting herself. In the
twentieth century, this book has been reexamined and is considered one of the earliest
feminist novels.
The Tenant of Wildfell Hall was the JASNA Northwoods book
club pick for our June meeting that was rescheduled for August. I finished this book the beginning of June and
was ready to discuss it, but I wasn’t finished with the second book so I am
glad for the extra time.
The Tenant of Wildfell Hall is a story within a
story. The story starts with a young gentleman
farmer named Gilbert Markham writing a series of letters to a friend that
describe how a mysterious young widow, Helen Graham, has moved to the
neighborhood with her small son. She
supports herself as an artist. Gilbert
finds himself falling in love with her, but she becomes the talk of the
neighborhood as various rumors abound. Helen
gives Gilbert her diary to discover her true past. In it, Gilbert discovers that Helen is still
a married woman. She married Arthur Huntingdon
for love, but he soon slips into a life of alcoholism and womanizing. He uses Helen’s money to fund his lifestyle. Helen
tries to make her life work, but when she finds Arthur getting their son drunk
and trying to lead him into a dissolute life, she knows it is time to
leave. The book flips back in the final
third to Gilbert’s point of view. Will Helen and Gilbert get their happy
ending?
I really liked how forward-thinking Helen was with her
questioning of why boys were educated on the ways of the world while girls were
not. I like her posing the question of why aren’t women better prepared for the
world and how to handle it? Why were
they left in a state of naivety? It was also forward thinking to have Helen
leave her husband and try to support herself.
The framing device with Gilbert was okay. It felt like Gilbert’s side of the story
could have been edited down. I liked how
the beginning of the story was like a Jane Austen novel. I didn’t really feel Gilbert and Helen’s love
story. I don’t think Gilbert was Helen’s equal,
especially when he mistakenly beat up her brother in a jealous rage.
I liked how this story was one of what happens if you
actually marry the Byronic hero from Wuthering Heights or Jane Eyre . . . . or
the bad boys from Austen like Willoughby or Wickham. The man who was so charming in the beginning,
is an impossible husband to live with.
It was interesting to think about.
It also makes me wonder, how much of the story was based on Anne’s
brother Branwell? Or was it based on
things she saw as a governess? It made
me really think about the lack of options women had at the time and how they
could be stuck in a truly terrible situation.
Piers Wehner & Katy Carmichael were both good
narrators. Wehner narrated the Gilbert
letters while Carmichael narrated Helen’s letters. It was a very interesting audiobook. I liked comparing sections to my book as
well.
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