Wide Sargasso Sea

by Jean Rhys
Wide Sargasso Sea
book data
3370 ratings, 3.58 average rating, 388 reviews (more data...)
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published
January 1999 (first published 1966) by Buccaneer Books

binding
Hardcover, 192 pages

isbn
1568497296   (isbn13: 9781568497297)

description
In 1966 Jean Rhys reemerged after a long silence with a novel called Wide Sargasso Sea. Rhys had enjoyed minor literary success in the 1920s an...more






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other reviews (showing 1-20 of 4381)



Jessica
bookshelves: 1001, bookclub, fiction
Read in July, 2002
I have read several books over the past year that were inspired by or offered different viewpoints on other books and stories. These included "The Red Tent", "Wicked", "The Hours", and most recently "Wide Sargasso Sea." I have enjoyed reading all of them and love seeing new perspectives on classic tales. "Wide Sargasso Sea" is Jean Rhys' take on Bronte's "Jane Eyre". However, instead of focusing on Jane Eyre, Ryhs instead turns the lens...more
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Alison
01/27/08

bookshelves: alltime100novel, contemporaryfiction, modernlibrary100best
Read in February, 2008
recommends it for: anyone interested in West Indies culture/politics; Jane Eyreites
This is a must-read for anyone who's read and enjoyed "Jane Eyre." It's the story of Bertha...Mr. Rochester's first wife. This short novel (around 100 pages) is divided into three parts.

Part I tells the story of Bertha's childhood in the West Indies from her own point of view. It outlines her relationship to her mother, her few aquaintances, and her homeland.

Part II is from the point of view of Bertha's new husband (an unnamed Mr. Rochester) and details his reaction to dis...more
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Xio
07/18/08

bookshelves: femaleauthors
I am still processing this short novel and am unwilling to say too much about it while under its influence.

Rhys is, was more than a talented storyteller, she had a very keen notion of in/justice and what kind of living narrative can drive a person to means and ends.

If wanting a comparison, I would be forced to point to Franz Fanon or the poetry of Aime Cesaire. The similarities are immediately evident, I suppose.
-------------------------------------

So I've read much of the comme...more
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Inder
09/02/08

bookshelves: 1001-books, 20th-century, colonial-postcolonial, fiction, read-2008, summer-reading, women
Read in September, 2008
recommends it for: If you have read Jane Eyre, you must read this too. If you haven't read Jane Eyre, don't bother.
*** This review contains spoilers for the book Jane Eyre, and because Wide Sargasso Sea is based on Jane Eyre, there are some spoilers for this book as well. However, I imagine that most readers, like me, know the basic premise of both books before they start reading. Thus, I am not hiding my review.***

Haunting and lovely and very dark. A troubling book about passion, obsession, lust, and deep loneliness, written by a woman who ought to know. This is "Caribbean goth...more
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Amelie
05/08/07

Read in January, 2007
This book was incredible, lyrical, subversive, and engaging. I particularly enjoyed analysing it for my English HL Paper II, what with the suggestion of Rochester and Antoinette's marriage as an essentially colonialist encounter, and the use of symbols that linked Antoinette's experience to Jane's.
I've never actually read Jane Eyre, and I don't think I ever will...when I heard some innocent middle schoolers discussing how much of a monster Bertha was, and "ugly", too, I totally had ...more
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Kathryn
Read in February, 2007
An amazing book, but be very careful if you adore Jane Eyre——you will never feel the same way about Jane or Rochester again.

The book is pretty good in its own right: a beautiful sense of place, interesting narrative style, but it's the way it completely recasts Jane Eyre that makes this a must-read for Brit lit lovers.

And somehow it feels very honest too. I read this and then instantly grabbed Jane Eyre to read Rochester's description of his early married life, and it made me sick! ...more
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Ginnie
05/16/08

bookshelves: fiction, women
Few books have affected me this deeply. It is a very moving account of Antoinette/Bertha's spiral into madness. As a reader you become absorbed; feel her pain as she realises that happiness will always elude her. You really do not have to have read Jane Eyre, in order to enjoy this but having it in your reading memory will give Wide Sargasso Sea an added dimension. Bronte does not give a voice to the mad woman in the attic, leaving us little possibility to understand her. Rhys give...more
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Kelly
03/01/08

bookshelves: brit-lit, fiction
recommends it for: people who loved Jane Eyre or love the gothic genre
The entire point and purpose of this novel is the atmosphere and the mood that it creates both in the minds of the character and the reader. That's really what I felt was the most accomplished thing here. It was very gothic, but managed not to feel antiquated or like all we needed was a few vampires and we had an Anne Rice novel. Rhys makes you feel the scents, the breezes and the raging emotions of the west indies that she is presenting, and I always love that in a novel.

The narrative poin...more
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Melissa
bookshelves: master-s-exam
Read in July, 2008
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.
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Capitu
02/11/08

bookshelves: 2008, chick-bookclub
Read in February, 2008
recommended to Capitu by: chicklit.com bookclub
Wide Sargasso Sea was such a pleasant surprise. It was a bookclub choice from an internet forum I enjoy, and I picked it up without much knowledge of what it was about, other than the notorious Jane Eyre connection. Fan fiction is a much older concept than many of us had previously considered. But, calling it fanfiction is too narrow a definition.
Jean Rhys novella – it is quite a short book – wrestles with the human necessity of belonging, and the dire cost of not belonging. The l...more
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leighcia
bookshelves: fiction
Read in January, 2008
I was drawn to this book when I heard about its premise—it is about Bertha, the crazy wife of Mr. Rochester who is held captive in the attic in Charlotte Bronte’s Jane Eyre. The novel explores her life in the Carribean and her subsequent existence in England, as a way of uncovering untold narratives. As fascinating the premise was, the book was disappointing. The prose was very lyrical, with a dreamy and dazed tone, which made it beautiful but also very confusing to follow. Despite the stren...more
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Tegan
04/02/08

bookshelves: school
Read in March, 2008
This book was just gorgeous. Sadly, I must admit that I haven't read Jane Eyre, but I know the story well enough (There was a summer when my mom became obsessed with the book and watched every movie version of it ever made.) and I definitely am interested in reading it after this novel. The writing style is a bit difficult to get into, but after a while the words began to flow beautifully and I just fell into the story. The imagery was very vivid and intense. Watching how completely Rochester ...more
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Gail
04/07/08

Read in April, 2008
And now for something completely different...
At first I disliked this book intensely because it wasn't what I thought it was. I'd built up some sort of idea that the book was a close reworking of "Jane Eyre".
Well.
It isn't, and I was ticked (can you say immmature?) because I was surprised and felt let down. In my anal way, I didn't just pitch the book, but kept on reading, and I'm mightily glad that I did.
"Wide Sargasso Sea" is a great book about life in the Caribbe...more
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anja
08/28/07

Read in July, 2007
After reading 'Jane Eyre' I was pretty curious to get to know the other side of the story...

The idea of og giving the 'fury in the attic' a human face and her own sad story is brilliant...it was like watching a caribian flower slowly fading away...I loved the way it was written...and yet...it didn't touch me like 'Jane Eyre'...perhaps it's because of me feeling like a have to take sides...while reading 'J.E' I fell in love with both Jane and especially Mr. Rochester...I loved his wit, his b...more
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Christina Stind
bookshelves: 1001-books-you-must-read, 2008, fiction
Read in November, 2008
This is the story of the mad woman in the attic at Thornfield, Mr. Rochester's house in Jane Eyre, Bertha - or Antoinette, as her real name is.
For this review, I will assume that people have read Jane Eyre and therefore know who the woman is - if not, don't read any further, because I'm going to tell... ;-)

Bertha is of course Mr. Rochester's first wife and this novel is told in par...more
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Chrissi
bookshelves: currently-reading
Read in March, 2007
Taken on it's own merit I think the book has a lot of value. As much as Bertha Mason needs to have her story told, I don't feel Wide Sargasso Sea does an adequate job. Rhys can't rewrite Bronte's Rochester, and that's where the whole thing falls apart. The two Rochesters seem to share little if any essence. Rhys also changes the historical time line of the novel from the original time line of Jane Eyre to her own ends.

Bottom line is, the book is good. But not for being a "rewrite" ...more
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Cari
11/21/08

bookshelves: mental-illness, personal-favs, unsettling
Read in November, 2008
recommends it for: Fans of classic literature
Though a short read at 160 pages, Wide Sargasso Sea should not be read quickly, absolutely should not be devoured in one sitting. Too much would be missed if the reader read it too quickly: the author's subtle and poignant style, the points at which various relationships change (long before the increasing menace or passionate turn makes itself painfully clear to the characters), and the beautiful, emotional tone of the overall story, among other things. This book should be read with le...more
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Amanda
07/21/07

bookshelves: college
Read in February, 2004
This novel is meant to be a preface to Charlotte Bronte's Jane Eyre and give the history of "the mad woman in the attic" as a woman raised in the Caribbean and shaped by the violent politics present there during her youth. It creates a heroine out of a mysterious figure and a villian out of a romanitc hero, turning a classic work of English literature on it's head a bit. Fascinating and one of the few books from my Caribbean lit class that I truely enjoyed.
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Deirdra
Read in January, 2002
recommends it for: Yes
Jean Rhys response to Jane Austin’s made woman in the attic, is also a story of post colonial British owned Jamaica. Rhys humanizes the main character, although can at times she be intensive to the darker Jamaican natives, I would recommend this book. This version of the book has a great collection of essays at the end.
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Trina
06/23/08

I had heard of this book for years before I read it last summer. I was stunned at how powerful it was -- an exotic but ominous setting and story in the Caribbean of the 19th century. It certainly put Jane Eyre in a different light for me!
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