Shirley (Wordsworth Classics)

by Charlotte Brontë
Shirley (Wordsworth Classics)
book data
646 ratings, 3.57 average rating, 49 reviews (more data...)
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published
April 1st 1993 (first published 1849) by Wordsworth Editions Ltd

binding
Paperback, 496 pages

isbn
1853260649   (isbn13: 9781853260643)

description

Following the tremendous popular success of Jane Eyre, which earned her lifelong notoriety as a moral revolutionary, Charlotte Brontë vowed to w...more






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other reviews (showing 1-20 of 1070)



Friend the Girl
bookshelves: yearly-reread
Read in October, 2008
recommends it for: anyone who loves a good Napoleonic love epic
Ahh, Shirley . . . I must read this book once a year, because it affects me so profoundly when I do read it. Though the heroine of Shirley is actually named Caroline, and she isn't a swashbuckling dame or a fiery temptress or really even anything remarkable, she makes for a remarkable read and is surrounded by brilliant people and events. It's a chaotic time in England during the height of the Napoleonic Wars and timid Caroline's world is turned upside-down, but the events that rea...more
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Megan
09/07/08

Read in July, 2008
I loved this book!! In it there are two different romances being told, where both women are quite in love, but both are having trouble 'securing' (for lack of a better word) the man they are in love with. There is quite a lot of discussion about relationships, what someone is willing to endure for love, what to do if love doesn't work out (ie how does one resolve to live a single life and come to terms with that).

There is also a lot about men's motives and actions.

I found it quite ha...more
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Siria
07/04/08

bookshelves: 19th-century, british-fiction
Read in January, 1995
Shirley has a much wider scope than Jane Eyre, expanding outwards to encompass not just the complexities of personal relationships, but the social upheavals which wracked the North of England during the Napoleonic Wars. It's as forthright a work in favour of women's independence as ever Jane Eyre was. The kind of hemmed-in lives which ...more
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Abigail
bookshelves: literature-classics
Read in October, 1988
recommends it for: Charlotte Brontë Fans / Readers Who Like 19th Century Novels with Social Commentary
Charlotte Brontë, perhaps best known for her more gothic novels, Jane Eyre and Villette, here turns her attention to the broader economic and social upheavals of the nineteenth century, offering a critique of both class and gender relations.

Set in Yorkshire during the Napoleonic Wars, Shirley is centered upon the story of two young women, wealthy heiress Shirley Keeldar, and Caroline Helstone, the orphaned niece of the local vicar. The seemingly hopeless love quadrangl...more
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Deborah
bookshelves: gave-up
Read in January, 2006
recommends it for: historians, Victorian England fans, Bronte fans
In the village of Gomersal in England, I recently visited the "Red House" the home of the Taylor family where Charlotte Bronte often visited. Charlotte was close friends with Mary Taylor the daughter in the family. Mary Taylor was a very independent woman for the times and must have influenced Charlotte Bronte very much. The book was based on the Taylor family, woolen cloth merchants who were the Yorks in the book. The description of the family and also others in the village was said t...more
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Jodi
09/05/07

Read in April, 2006
Charlotte wrote and finished this book under death's shadow. I believe she stopped at the two-thirds point, when first her brother and then her two sisters died of consumption in a year and a half's time. When she picked it up again, she was alone with her widowed father, Patrick - now the sole survivor of his six children. She had also just "outed" herself as a woman to the reading public who loved her first novel, "Jane Eyre."

Where "Jane Eyre" has a momentum ...more
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Alex
07/13/07

bookshelves: currently-reading
Read in July, 2007
recommends it for: People who like Charlotte Brontë.
So I am currently on the second volume, out of three, in Shirley. I was walking through Gere Library, saw it and picked it out, I guess I may have pick it up because I read and enjoyed Jane Eyre, also by Charlotte Brontë. At first, it took me a while to get started on reading it, but as I got along, I found the I got really hooked on how Brontë is able to paint such a vivid picture with words, I felt as though I could physically see what the characters and surroundings loo...more
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Laura
04/01/08

Read in March, 2008
I loved "Jane Eyre" so I recently decided to read Charlotte Bronte's other works. Unfortunately, I found "Shirley" to be overly wordy and boring at times (very unlike "Jane Eyre" which is full of action and passion--things are always happening). The story doesn't pick up until several chapters in and it was a struggle to get myself to continue reading that far. There are a lot of references to 19th century British politics and politicians, which I don't know much...more
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Liora
05/31/08

Wow, this is really interesting and surprisingly neglected Bronte novel. It interweaves cultural history, Bronte's kind of romance and the most explicit feminist views I've seen in a Victorian novel in a very rich and interesting way. It's as wonderful as Jane Eyre and Wuthering Heights, but has more cultural history that is engaging on other levels. The Luddite rebellions are also interestingly represented, although of course, Bronte is really writing about the Chartist Movement. Caroline Helst...more
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rinabeana
Read in July, 2004
I'd have to say that compared to Jane Eyre and Villette, Shirley took the longest to get into, but after a while I really enjoyed it. I read somewhere that it's not a romance, but whatever! Not one couple, but two! YAY! There was certainly a lot more social commentary than I'm used to and since I know nothing about British history during the Napoleonic wars, I had to rely on the notes quite a bit. Overall I really liked it. I really identified with Caroline (one of the centr...more
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Erum
09/16/07

Read in January, 2007

"Better to try all things and find all empty, than to try nothing and leave your life a blank."

"I believe - I daily find it proved - that we can get nothing in this world worth keeping, not so much as a principle or a conviction, except out of purifying flame, or through strengthening peril. We err; we fall; we are humbled - then we walk more carefully. We greedily eat and drink poison out of the gilded cup of vice, or from the beggar's wallet of avarice; we are sickened, de...more
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Jennifer
bookshelves: england, novels
Read in October, 2008
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.
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kika
12/22/07

Read in November, 2007
recommends it for: romantics with patience?
i read this recently for the first time and enjoyed it, though it's sort of confusing and long. most of the politics of the time were a mystery to me, and i admit i was too lazy to read many of the footnotes.
i love, though, her very particular descriptions - her acute explanations of exactly what her characters are like and what they feel. i can't think who to recommend this to - you need to have a taste for victorian plotting, which must be the karmic balance to all hollywood-style stories. ...more
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Willa
09/08/08

bookshelves: 1001
Read in May, 2008
I felt like this book took me forever to read, but I really enjoyed it all the same. It wasn't easy to get into, but once I did, I found myself caught in the spell of Bronte's masterful use of language and carried away to a world that felt very real and very relevant. I also learned a lot about the beginnings of the industrial revolution in England into the bargain!

Charlotte Bronte is a master at characterization and she doesn't disappoint here. From the main characters in the love quadrang...more
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Linda
08/21/08

Read in January, 1998
recommends it for: Bronte fans
Charlotte Brontë wrote Shirley in 1849, a time which was rife with social and economic unrest. It's the story of two friends, one wealthy (Shirley) and one poor (Caroline). Luckily, before I read Shirley, I read Elizabeth Gaskell’s, "The Life of Charlotte Bronte," and knew about where in the book Charlotte's sister, Emily, died. The first 200 pages of Shirley are the hardest to read, but once Charlotte suffered the death of her sister and best friend, the book took off. It's my theo...more
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Laura
02/26/08

bookshelves: books-i-love-and-will-always-keep-c
This is Charlotte Bronte's best novel in my opinion. It is very different from "Jane Eyre" although the male protagonist, Robert Gerard Moore, does share some of Mr. Rochester's characteristics. The Book is set during the Napoleonic wars and illustrates how the war influenced commerce, and how the slow market influenced the more rural part of England. The characters are engaging and it is definitely Bronte's social masterpiece. It is interesting to compare it to her gothic masterpi...more
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Megan
07/17/08

bookshelves: books-read-in-2008
Read in January, 2008
Synopsis
Set during the Napoleonic wars at a time of national economic struggles, Shirley is an unsentimental yet passionate depiction of conflict among classes, sexes, and generations. Struggling manufacturer Robert Moore considers marriage to the wealthy and independent Shirley Keeldar, yet his heart lies with his cousin Caroline. Shirley, meanwhile, is in love with Robert’s brother, an impoverished tutor. As industrial unrest builds to a potentially fatal pitch, can the four be reconciled?
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treva
07/15/08

Such sly story-telling! Made me thinks things were happening that turned out not to be happening at all, and also, dare I say it, made me learn some history when I did not fully set out to do so. The economic and technological situations of the era inform and shape the plot to a great extent. I think this would be a great novel to teach in a high school AP Lit course or first year uni lit course, for its readability and for the opportunity to teach a fiction work within its historical context.
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Heather
Read in June, 2006
Written directly after Jane Eyre, and in the midst of terrible family loss, Shirley is an interesting book which has two main characters and a vastly wider scope than Jane Eyre, and especially any Austen books. Once I got into it, I greatly enjoyed it. It raises some interesting questions about female independence, character, and personal definition, especially as the turn of events concludes at the end of the book. If you embark on this book, read the Introduction first; it will help!
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Jeanette
This book was really different from Jane Eyre. I really enjoyed both books. This one is much less dark, gothic, eerie, foreboding. I particularly liked the two heroines and their friendship. I thought they were admirable women and I especially liked how they were openly dissatisfied with the trapped role of women around 1800 with nothing to occupy their time or minds and few options available to them. I thought this was rather progressive of Bronte to put forward so openly.
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1001  Books You Must Read Before You Die
British Literature