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Agnes Grey: With a Memoir of Her Sisters by Charlotte Bronte (Penguin Popular Classics)

Agnes Grey: With a Memoir of Her Sisters by Charlotte Bronte (Penguin Popular Classics)
By Anne Brontë

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Product Description

When her family becomes impoverished after a disasterous financial speculation, Agnes Grey determines to find work as a governess. This is a personal perspective on the desperate position of unmarried, educated women in Victorian society. Agnes Grey is undoubtedtedly a deeply personal novel, in which Anne Bronte views on the 'contemporary' issue of the treatment of governesses, as well as her passionate religious sympathies, find very deliberate expression; but she also touches on issues of moral behaviour, moral responsibility, and individual integrity and its survival.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #129445 in Books
  • Published on: 2007-09-27
  • Original language: English
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 320 pages

Customer Reviews

Really really NICE5
I can't believe no-one has reviewed Anne's book. Better than The Tenant and easily better than Shirley, as good as Villette, this is such an over-looked book, as she is an over-looked Bronte sister. She wasn't as vocal as Charlotte, or as tragic as Emily, but she was a good poet and writer. Agnes Grey is a sharply observed potrait of what Anne knew best - being a Governess in a rich family - and maybe falling in love with a curate. She finishes the fiction off happily, and who can't wish that she had been able to marry her Mr Weston in real life too. There are no mad wives in the attic, or ghosts at the window, so I suppose that people think it's boring. But it's not. I don't really know why I like it, it is like a comfort read and is highly recommended when you want a rest from the tragic and the dramatic.

A tender and honest book5
In “Agnes Grey” the narrator reveals to us a world of cruelty, neglect and frivolity disguised by wealth and refined manners. Although she is treated unfairly by the rich families for which she works as a governess, Agnes remains self-confident and firm in her beliefs. The intense passion characteristic of Charlotte’s and Emily’s works is replaced here by accuracy in describing very personal feelings and the showing of pure honesty. Anne Brontë has given us a book that will charm any reader sensitive enough to explore the heart of a good, persevering young woman.

Cecilia, 14 years old

A nice book, but not too exciting3
I suppose 'quaint' is the word that best describes 'Agnes Grey.' I enjoyed reading it, it is to all extents and purposes a sweet book, it revolves around the career of a victorian governess, Agnes Grey, who takes up work in a couple of houses and experiences the troubles connected with that life. Anne Bronte draws on her experience working as a governess to create a realistic and intriguing look into the life of governesses and into what kind of people the children of the aristocracy at the time were like. Attached to the book is what I can only describe as a token romance, in which Anne falls in love with the local clegyman and the inevitable marriage proposal finishes the book after it looks as if he has gone from her life forever. (You might think I'm spoiling the plot there, but really, you can spot what will happen a mile off.)

Whilst it is a nice book, and you wont regret reading it over the course of the couple of evenings it will take, it reads more like Anne Bronte's diary than a novel, it's little more than a series of events with a token romance attached to make it into a novel. It also lacks the character depth and emotion that you can find in the works of Emily and Charlotte Bronte. But nevertheless, I would still reccommend this, although dont expect anything more than a 'nice' story.