
The daughter of the celebrated Parisian actress Céline Varens, Adèle is a homesick, forlorn eight-year-old when she is first brought to Thornfield Hall by Edward Fairfax Rochester, her mother's former lover and -- though the grand estate's brooding lord refuses to acknowledge it -- quite possibly Adèle's father. Lonely and ill at ease in the cold, unfamiliar English countryside, the sad, precocious child longs to return to the glitter of Paris... and to the arms of the mother who has been lost to her. But a small ray of sunshine brightens her eternal gloom when a stranger arrives to school and care for her: a mousy and serious yet intensely loving young governess named Jane Eyre.As the years pass, Adèle watches with wonder as an unexpected romance blossoms between her governess and her guardian -- even as her curiosity leads her deeper into the shadowy manor, toward the dark and terrible secret that is locked away in a high garret. And on Jane and Rochester's planned wedding day, it is Adèle who is instrumental in bringing about the fiery catastrophe that shatters her "family" and sends her fleeing, frightened and alone, back to France.But Paris is no longer the glamorous ideal she remembers. Intent on finding her mother, Adèle is soon lost in a world of sham sparkle and ruthless exploiters. Yet her will remains strong as she grows and learns, determined to follow her solitary odyssey to its inevitable conclusion, as she -- like Jane Eyre and the tormented Edward Rochester -- searches for salvation and love amid the ruins of misfortune.A novel of wondrous imagination and vivid intensity, Emma Tennant's Adèle brilliantly captures the nuances and spirit of the cherished classic that inspired it, while being a bold and original literary work that stands firmly and gloriously on its own.
Adèle Varens struggles to find her identity and a sense of belonging after being uprooted from her Parisian life to the isolated, mysterious Thornfield Hall. As the ward of the enigmatic Edward Rochester, she navigates the cold English countryside while observing the complex relationship between her guardian and her governess, Jane Eyre. The narrative follows Adèle from her childhood at Thornfield through the catastrophic fire that forces her return to France, where she must confront the harsh realities of her mother's past. The story is presented as a character-driven exploration of a peripheral figure from a classic text, utilizing a retrospective perspective to examine the consequences of secrets and abandonment.
Readers frequently highlight the author's ability to inhabit the voice of a character often overlooked in the original source material. Discussion often centers on the effectiveness of the narrative in bridging the gap between the events of Thornfield Hall and Adèle's later life in France. Critics note that the prose maintains a tone consistent with the Victorian era while providing a fresh perspective on the motivations of Rochester and Jane Eyre. The balance between character development and the atmospheric setting is often cited as a primary strength of the work. Readers appreciate how the book functions as both a companion piece and an independent narrative regarding the search for personal identity.
Page Count:
240
Publication Date:
2002-11-26
Publisher:
William Morrow
ISBN-10:
0060004541
ISBN-13:
9780060004545
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