I just reread Jane Eyre (by Charlotte Bronte!) and loved it, think it’s deservedly one of the Great Books, with a wonderful young heroine. I also just coincidentally read Decelerate Blue by Adam Rapp, that among other things advocates for the reading of Whole Books, (surprise, surprise), not abbreviated versions of books, like Reader’s Digest books, but also implicitly not comics adaptations of books.
So, you ask, is there any use in a graphic novel version of Jane Eyre, given that--if we agree it is a good book, and not just because it is a “classic”--we want everyone to read the original, and several movie versions? There’s already more than 2000 editions of the book listed on Goodreads!
I say pretty much yes, and not just because I am a comics guy, because this is pretty good comics, capturing the main story, and is decently illustrated. Since it appears to be directed toward a tween audience, I think it is good there is a list of characters in the back, several useful appendices to help people to get into it, to entice people to read the original. And that is what can happen here with struggling readers; this graphic version can help scaffold students’ reading to help them get into Bronte’s text. And I think there are terrible graphic versions of books that dumb down the book, but this isn’t one.
I don’t love the illustration style, but especially hate that they do not list the illustrator or any of the illustration team, if there is one. That shows the publisher’s disrespect for the very enterprise they hope kids will endorse! The dialogue isn’t always enough Bronte, but the story really does capture some of the excitement of the story and Jane’s character, I mean it! I had very low expectations when I picked this up at the library, but it is a pretty good adaptation, really.