What to Read First: A Reader's Guide to Unfamiliar Literature
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A Good Place To Start

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The Tenant of Wildfell Hall 1
Agnes Grey 1

A Bad Place To Start

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The Tenant of Wildfell Hall 1

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Categorization is odious. There is tremendous overlap among genres. These pigeonholes are offered only as a convenience.

Anne Brontė

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Please consider recommending where to begin reading this author, or where not to. A few words about your experiences reading this author and why you make the recommendations you do will be helpful to other users. If you are the author or have studied this author extensively, please say so.

bookbug December 12th, 2005 11:59 AM PST

Definitely read "Agnes Grey" first. It is a better book.

vitawallace January 27th, 2006 10:37 PM PST

For some reason I've never been able to read Agnes Grey, even though I love the Tenant of Wildfell Hall. You may be quite right about it being a better book, and I'll try it again!

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FROM www.bibliomania.com

Charlotte (1816-55)
Emily Jane (1818-48)
Anne (1820-49)

The lives of the Bront? sisters has been the subject of public interest and speculation since the sad early deaths of Emily and Anne shortly after their brother Branwell This was only heightened by third literary sister Charlotte's comments in the years that followed and the spate of biographies analysing them that appear to this day. The progress of their legend reflects the change in attitude towards literary biography in the years that have followed: from cautious, slightly reverential and respectful discussion through scandalised revelations, towards feminist revisionism and new interpretations even nearly one and a half centuries after their deaths. Through this process, the respect given to the different sisters and their works has altered dramatically, and notably Emily and her single novel, Wuthering Heights are given the most adulation now, where once Charlotte was seen as the most talented of the sisters. Their works were published initially under the names Ellis (Emily), Currer (Charlotte) and Acton (Anne) Bell, due to the fact that it was considered unseemly at the time for women to write and publish books. The interest in their real identities and the possibility that they were in fact all one and the same woman was initially used as a publicity tool to their great chagrin.

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