A letter written by Charlotte Brontë to an aspiring author has sold for £11,250 at an auction in London.We are hoping the UK buyer turns out to be the Brontë Society or someone very generous and willing to return it home. EDIT: we now have confirmation that the UK buyer was actually the Brontë Society so the letter will be going back home.
The three-page letter was written in 1852 to a Miss Holmes, who had sent the novelist a copy of a manuscript she had written.
In the letter, Ms Brontë talks about her experiences of working as a governess and how it inspired her most famous work Jane Eyre.
Auctioneers Bonhams said the letter was bought by a UK buyer.
Simon Roberts, manuscript expert at the auctioneers, said the letter has been in the hands of a private collector for a number of years.
He said: "Anything written by Charlotte Brontë is an event, and it's a letter that hasn't been seen for many, many years.
"To have a chance to own anything by any of them is always an event."
The previous item is about over £11,000 paid for a letter handwritten by a mere 'chick-lit' author, at least according to KSL:
Often referred to as “romance novels,” “chick-lit,” or “girly books,” the popularity of women’s literature has reached a fever pitch. With a healthy blend of old authors (Jane Austen, Charlotte Brontë) and new authors (Stephenie Meyer), it’s hard for anyone — readers and publishers alike — to ignore the craze. But some wonder if there is any negative side effects that come with the territory.We wonder if the anonymous reviewer knew his/her words would be used to describe Charlotte Brontë's novels for instance. Many of those aspect certainly don't apply.
“Some aspects of a good romance novel is fast-paced action, humor, some slight heart tugging, overcoming odds, steamy scenes and a powerful heroine,” says a top-reviewer at goodreads.com, a social networking book-review website that boasts more than 5.2 million members. (Alex Hairston)
The Daily Thompson discusses Jane Eyre (making very valid points regarding the not-chick-lit stance) while *malins bokblogg* posts in Swedish about the Classical Comics adaptation and Bookshelves of Doom focuses on the 2011 screen adaptation. Une vie à lire discusses Jane Eyre and Wide Sargasso Sea in French. Here Comes the Sun posts about Wuthering Heights.
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