Fleeing an unhappy past in England, penniless Lucy Snowe starts life
anew at a boarding school in cosmopolitan Villette, a stand-in for
Brussels. The mystery, jealousy, and love that she finds there give
Charlotte Brontë's final novel much of the Gothic tone and psychological
incisiveness that prompted George Eliot, Virginia Woolf, and others to
call Villette her finest work. Based on Brontë's own experiences in
Brussels and her attachment to a brilliant teacher with a strong and
eccentric personality, this superb romantic novel is an exceptional
example of how a great writer transforms the ordinary events of her life
into vivid and exciting art. Villette represents the inimitable Brontë
genius by giving us a masterful portrait of Lucy Snowe, who belongs
beside the great nineteenth-century literary heroines--and who will
strongly appeal to modern readers.
With a New Introduction by Adriana Trigiani and an Afterword by Helen
Benedict