31 July 2010

Jane Eyre by Charlotte Bronte



Jane Eyre is a novel written by Charlotte Bronte, whose pen name at the time was Currer Bell. We are drawn into the book from Jane being a child, whose parents died and who lives with her aunt and uncle. We are scared for her when she is locked in a room for getting into a fight with her cousin. Soon after this terrifying episode, Jane makes her way to a school where she stays for years first as a student and then a teacher. From there, Jane makes her way to the house of Mr Rochester to be a governess for a young girl.

This book is absolutely amazing, probably one of the best and more relateable ones from its era. Jane is an amazing character and a believable woman living in a society where women were still regarded as property. Mr Rochester is painted (in my opinion) as less likeable. His rich lifestyle and his past seem to have taught him to think only about himself and to act out when things do not go his way. Despite this, it is Jane who gets the final say about their relationship, which I liked. All of the characters were well developed throughout the book and as Jane becomes a more self-sufficient young woman, we begin to see a real personality come through.

Of all the classics we are told to read in high school, this one will probably ring the most bells for me. The intrigue woven into the story from the start as well as the complex character development makes it a stellar read and the language unlike so many other books of the same era is uncomplicated.

06 July 2010

Monster by Allan Hall



On the one hand, I was surprised by some of this book. The cover and the taglines on the cover made me think it would just be rehashing of the undoubted evils of Fritzl's well-known crimes. However, it firstly focused on Fritzl's upbringing and his early involvement with the law, as well as his relationship with his wife and the eventual decline into the story we all know so well. The beginning of the book has a special focus on the contribution that growing up in Nazi-occupied Austria had on the path Fritzl took, as well as his apparent admiration on Adolf Hitler. He offers no evidence or explanation to measure the actual influence of the historical period or "national socialism" in general upon Fritzl's personality or even upon his crimes. However, he continues the comparison to Nazi Germany and occupied Europe throughout and compares the trapping of Elisabeth and her children in the basement to concentration camps. It is obvious here that Hall has taken advantage of the part of Europe where this happened to make a tenuous at best connection.

The author also turns an already shocking story into a narrative from the mind of Fritzl. He was not interviewed for this book and his thoughts on entering the basement he built for the first time would surely not be known to a tabloid journalist. It seems here that Hall is adding unknown, unneeded detail to add excitement to his story. However, the interviews conducted with friends, family members and tenants of the building in which Fritzl and his family left and in which he imprisoned his daughter and their children were a helpful and informative addition.

A point I liked about this book was the focus put on Elisabeth as a survivor rather than a victim. Continually, Hall refers to the amazing fact of her survival and her care for her children who she tried to give as normal life as possible under impossible circumstances. Some of the words used to describe those Fritzl imprisoned range from insensitive to cruel, however, which lends no credibility to the author. His writing is also nothing to be raved about and attempts at best to preserve the image of this book as one about an "evil" man. It is probably one of the worst written non-fiction books I have read in awhile but its subject made it interesting and no doubt a quick seller.