My Plain Jane

· HarperCollins
4.2
6 reviews
Ebook
480
Pages
Eligible
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About this ebook

Move over, Charlotte Brontë. The authors of the New York Times bestselling My Lady Jane put an irreverent spin on Jane Eyre—a fantastical tale of mischief, romance, and supernatural mayhem perfect for fans of The Princess Bride or A Gentleman’s Guide to Vice and Virtue.

You may think you know the story. Penniless orphan Jane Eyre begins a new life as a governess at Thornfield Hall, where she meets one dark, brooding Mr. Rochester—and, Reader, she marries him. Or does she?

Prepare for an adventure of Gothic proportions, in which all is not as it seems, a certain gentleman is hiding more than skeletons in his closets, and one orphan Jane Eyre, aspiring author Charlotte Brontë, and supernatural investigator Alexander Blackwood are about to be drawn together on the most epic ghost hunt this side of Wuthering Heights.

Ratings and reviews

4.2
6 reviews
Ritu Nair
November 30, 2018
Much like My Lady Jane, this book is a comic retelling with paranormal elements; where My Lady Jane was a historical retelling, this one is the retelling of Jane Eyre, and adds a fourth wall element to it. You don’t need to have read either My Lady Jane or Jane Eyre to follow this one, but having an idea of the barebones plot of the latter is a good thing while going into this one, if only to catch the inside jokes. Much like My Lady Jane, this one is told by the Lady Janies aka the three authors of this series, and they tell it much like as if you were sitting and having tea with them. It is a fun-filled retelling, lots of anachronistic jokes, and some deliberate bending of history. In My Plain Jane, we have three POVs – Jane Eyre, Charlotte Bronte, and Alexander Blackwood (who is a ghostbuster-esque agent). If you are wondering how the author met her character, in this story, the Jane is a teacher-friend of hers from whom the young teen Charlotte derives inspiration from. Much like the original, Jane falls for Rochester and all, but there are several marked differences: there are ghosts in this book, which have their own canon in this universe. The addition of ghosts allows for the plot to have an extended story, with Helen (Jane’s childhood friend) still hanging around in ghost form to deliver snarky commentary, a royal coup being planned with the aid of ghosts, and an interesting twist in the Rochester family history. The addition of Alexander as a ghostbuster (I will call him that because this joke is made in the novel) is hilarious, because at first it seems like he will be a love interest for Jane, but then he isn’t. Charlotte is a young rebel, who wants to be a writer but just can’t decide what exactly she wants to write. Both of them also have a funny habit of carrying around a notebook in which they constantly write things. The character of Jane is much like the Jane of the original, only she actually gets a backbone after that betrayal. She is also able to see ghosts, much like Alexander, and Helen is her secret companion. She initially hates on Alexander because she thinks he is tormenting the ghosts, and he keeps attempting to recruit her for his organization, which is where the main plot of the story comes into play. Meanwhile, Charlotte and her younger brother Branwell are his assistants, who are helping him with his mission, and later on they all thwart a power grab by a Duke. The story is a bundle of laughs, that goes without saying. There are constant jokes, snarky comments and little wink-wink inside jokes thrown in, so it is entertaining throughout. I found myself laughing quite frequently throughout the book, and also going ‘awwww’ at the romance (not the one you are thinking). The authors also change things around, like introducing burlap sacks and stuff, and a lot of contemporary references – there are jokes calling out The Princess Bride, Jane Austen novels, Harry Potter, the current US administration, and also frequent jokes about propriety and fashion in that era. There is also a sneak appearance of the characters from My Lady Jane. Basically, it is a delight to catch all these references too. However, there was one aspect in which this did not match up to My Lady Jane. That book had an airtight plot, but this one, in the retelling forgoes explaining much of the original story. You see, with the twist delivered in this book, it doesn’t match what happens in the first half of it. The time when Rochester’s was being threatened by his wife, and who even stabbed her brother? – yeah, that does not fit with what is revealed later on. There is no motivation given as to why she would do such a thing, or even if it was someone else instead who did it. So, while the book overall is very entertaining, I felt like that plot-hole kind of made it fail as a retelling. In short, this is an entertaining book, for those who love comedy mixed in with dashing adventures, and a sprinkle of pop culture references. It just needed to connect as a retelling to the original story.
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Breana Pietrosanti
July 21, 2018
My Lady Jane is one of my favorite books of last year. But this felt like a flop. The humor worked so well in MLJ and just felt gimmicky this time around. I don't know if that's because you have the masterpiece that is Jane Eyre looming like a shadow over this and MLJ has no literary base, or some other reason. And every reference to another work felt like plagiarism over parody here, especially The Princess Bride ones.
1 person found this review helpful
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Anil Das
April 23, 2022
AAA BOSS NETWORK
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About the author

The Lady Janies are made up of New York Times bestselling authors Brodi Ashton, Cynthia Hand, and Jodi Meadows. They first met in 2012, when their publishers sent them on a book tour together, and they hit it off so well they decided to write My Lady Jane so they could go on book tours together all the time. Between the three of them they’ve written more than twenty published novels, a bunch of novellas, a handful of short stories, and a couple of really bad poems. They’re friends. They’re writers. They’re fixing history by rewriting one sad story at a time. Learn more at ladyjanies.com.

The Lady Janies are made up of New York Times bestselling authors Brodi Ashton, Cynthia Hand, and Jodi Meadows. They first met in 2012, when their publishers sent them on a book tour together, and they hit it off so well they decided to write My Lady Jane so they could go on book tours together all the time. Between the three of them they’ve written more than twenty published novels, a bunch of novellas, a handful of short stories, and a couple of really bad poems. They’re friends. They’re writers. They’re fixing history by rewriting one sad story at a time. Learn more at ladyjanies.com.

The Lady Janies are made up of New York Times bestselling authors Brodi Ashton, Cynthia Hand, and Jodi Meadows. They first met in 2012, when their publishers sent them on a book tour together, and they hit it off so well they decided to write My Lady Jane so they could go on book tours together all the time. Between the three of them they’ve written more than twenty published novels, a bunch of novellas, a handful of short stories, and a couple of really bad poems. They’re friends. They’re writers. They’re fixing history by rewriting one sad story at a time. Learn more at ladyjanies.com.

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