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Avis (10)
Another sad Anne Bronte book
The sadness of the Bronte sisters continues in this book but I did enjoy it more than the other Anne Bronte book I've read..
Powerful and feminist
The Tenant of Wildfell Hall, Anne Bronte's second and final novel, is the more well-known of the two, but still not as popular as Jane Eyre and Wuthering Heights.
A feminist book read from a male perspective
Anne Bronte's novel \"The Tenant of Wildfell Hall\" exposes the extreme double standard that existed between men and women in England during the mid nineteenth century.
A good attemp
I agree, having read the book, that Gilbert was brutish and at times overyly \"girlish\" in expressing his emotions.
'You must go back with me to the autumn of 1827.'
The story of Helen Graham, her marriage to Arthur Huntingdon and her life outside the conventional role of a woman, wife and mother in the 19th century deserves a much broader contemporary readership.
Great Novel...forget the Notes
I actually prefer this novel of Anne Bronte to her sister's \"Wuthering Heights.
Far better than I expected
Now this was a surprising gem of a novel!
Almost perfect
I picked this book up thirteen years ago and finally read it last summer.
'The Tenant of Wildfell Hall' - a review
'Sick of mankind and its disgusting ways' Anne Bronte once scribbled on the back of her prayer book.
You Won't Be Able To Put It Down
In the true Bronte tradition, The Tenant of Wildfell Hall is passionately romantic.