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Exposing Hollywood's anti-German agenda

I'm not ashamed to be religious or a liberal

'Beat Me with a Stick' Elmo and other great toys

Making a difference: why I do what I do

Telemarketing ban has ended a great pastime

I don't rule the world, and that's fine with me

Making the journey from prejudice to understanding

There's no comparing genocide and killing geese

All that's left is an empty feeling

An unrequited love for some really neat words

Foster dads offer hands and hearts ... for the time being.

Thanksgiving dinner and other forms of ritual madness.

Zen and the art of not getting run over by a Mack truck

A lifetime of regrets as another year goes down the tubes

Reform Party Convention ends in shoot-out

Virtual immortality isn't all it's cracked up to be

Insider's look at the Republican National Convention turns up many surprises

Car Repair for Dummies, Part One: This is a Car

Sadness marks the passing of a beloved mattress

At last, something worse than 'Jane Eyre'

Every town has a story. Tombstone has a fixation.

Forget the Trekkies, the real nutcases are on the Luce

Chalk one up for the faceless restaurant customers

Feeling sick? Maybe it's time to get a shave.

Guest Writer: Toto, I don't think we're in Mayberry anymore

Guest Writer: The need for speed

Does this mean we won't get free popcorn anymore?

Out of the way, Martha Stewart -- I'm in the kitchen now

How I'm surviving my brush with 'Jane Eyre'

First blizzard of the year evokes frivolous memories, no deep thoughts

Isn't it time to jump on the bandwagon with the Real Thing?

Forward this column and you can turn e-mail into $300!

Trips to the moon, disaster figure in mildew prognostications

True confessions (more or less) of a closet survivalist

Who understands what dreams may come?

Hey, everyone, look -- it's an elephant!

Wouldn't 'Senator Learn' have a nice ring?

To my little girl: while you're sleeping . . .

Special Report: Entering the Baby Zone

Battling the suburban white whale

Wanted: Politician to tackle key issues

Something else to worry about this fall

Wanted: Dumber Mice and Better Mouse Traps

One More Stop on the Road to Adulthood

Follow the fashion leads of the journalist from Krypton

This is why naming children by committee never caught on

Psoriasis may be ugly, but at least it doesn't leave scars

Another casualty of the ancient family curse

Quest for baby names too big to handle

How the seniors taught me to get down

And don't forget your scarf when you go inside

Guest Writer: No room for Paradise as vandals force Dew Drop Inn to close

The samba of the mad Vulcan

Maybe I could be directed by Spielberg

The aliens in Rhode Island don't want you to read this

Voice of nostalgia is a call to destruction

My wife is having the baby, but I look pregnant

The end of the world as we know it

Run for the hills - Y2K’s a’comin’ fast

What's in a name? Shakespeare had no idea

Don't waste your energy on the 'gas out'

Career choice leaves a lasting mark

One Easter leftover, hold the ham please

 
  How I'm surviving my brush with 'Jane Eyre'

It probably is not politically correct to admit to this, but I like to read classic literature.

No, strike that. I like to read -- period. It's one of the few things my first-grade teacher did for me that I appreciate.

When I have a book in my hands, it's impossible to get my complete attention. Even as I express annoyance at being disturbed, half my mind is wondering about the book's deeper meanings and the other half is wondering what will happen next. Only the smallest portion handles the occasional nodding and grunting to convince whoever's speaking to me that they have my rapt attention.

I've loved literature ever since I learned to appreciate the differences between "Crime and Punishment" and "Encyclopedia Brown and the Case of the Disgusting Sneakers." My bookshelf is lined end-to-end with volumes with tongue-twister titles like "The Brothers Karamazov," "The Nibelungenlied" and "The Orkneyinga Saga." (Plus "Dr. Who and the Loch Ness Monster.")

Fortunately, I am married to someone who shares my bibliophilia. Although Niki does not read as quickly as I do -- I once read Gaston Leroux's "The Phantom of the Opera" in two evenings, something it would take her more than a week to finish -- she enjoys the chance to curl up with a good book and lose herself in another world for a while.

Shortly after we married, we made it our custom to read a book together each night before we go to sleep. Traditions like Thanksgiving dinner, family reunions and spilling a glass of milk on the Easter dinner are all very important, but we wanted to add our own tradition to the mix. So we threw out the television (how I wish that were literally true) as the locus of our family evenings, and replaced it with reading.

Since we married in 1998, Niki and I have read more than a dozen books in this way, but as much as I enjoy recent books like Neil Gaiman and Terry Pratchett's "Good Omens," I can't deny my love of classic Western literature. We now are enjoying Charlotte Brontė's "Jane Eyre."

No, that's not quite right. Niki is enjoying it. She's dragged me kicking and screaming through every page so far.

How on earth this book came to be regarded as a classic of Western literature, I don't know. Shakespeare's plays -- those are classics. The Bible -- that's a classic. "Le Morte d'Arthur" -- not especially well-written in parts or entirely original, but a classic nonetheless.

"Jane Eyre." I'm not even sure why this book is still in print.

I'll admit that "Jane Eyre" does fit the definition I had for classic literature back during high school: It's so boring I've fallen asleep reading it. The key distinction between "Jane Eyre" and other, great works of literature is that "Jane Eyre" hasn't required an English teacher to make it boring. It's had that effect all on its own.

"Jane Eyre" is a book that in the 80-plus pages we have read has gone absolutely nowhere. The author makes her point that life as a 12-year-old orphan girl in 19th-century England is awful and grim so well that I've taken to spicing up the writing with comments like, "Oh! Horror! Woe! Life stinks!"

"Jane Eyre" tells the story of a girl named, appropriately enough, Jane Eyre. The book begins at her aunt's house, called Goatshead or something similarly silly, where she has no friends and is routinely mistreated by her cousins and her aunt. (Woe, horror, alas!) Her mother, father and uncle all have died, apparently, because life is unfair. (Woe, horror, apocalypse.)

From there it just goes downhill. After 40 pages of cheap melodrama worse than anything I've seen on television, it looks like Jane's life is about to improve when she gets packed off to school. Unfortunately, the school she attends is run by someone named Broccoliburst who hates the world because he has such an ugly name, and he embarrasses her early in her stay at the school.

The only consolation Jane has is her friend, a little urchin named Helen Ragamuffin. During their first real conversation as friends, Helen starts waxing poetic about the Christian doctrine of the Resurrection, only to end her impassioned speech with a cough.

"Oh woe! Horror!" I cried, when Niki read that part. "Helen Ragamuffin has tuberculosis and is going to die! Horror! She's Jane's only friend and she's about to die! Oh, alack the day!"

Niki burst out laughing. I had predicted Helen's fate accurately at the first clue we were given of it.

Niki read the book back in high school and insists it's good. If it's such a good book, I want to know, why do the deaths of half the girls at the school get a one-paragraph summary? "Oh, and by the way, during that summer, half the girls died from typhoid fever." Um, yeah. Sure. Albert Camus' "The Plague" chronicles the course of disease in a much more interesting manner.

My younger brother, Steve, read "Jane Eyre" back in college for an English literature class he took as a requirement for all prospective veterinary medicine students. I guess the thinking is, if you can survive reading boring books like these, you can survive the textbooks at vet school too.

Like Niki, Steve insists the book is good, and said that when Jane gets her job as a governess -- the part we're about to start -- it really takes off as some sort of mystery.

Gee, I don't know. Isn't 85 pages a little long to introduce the plot? Give me Encyclopedia Brown any day. He not only reaches the mystery in the first two paragraphs, he solves it in five pages.

Now the English-speaking world is replete with intellectual achievement, if for no other reason than it includes so many people. In the United States alone, we have schools ranging from community colleges to state universities to Ivy League institutions. Moreover, there are at least thousands of talented, aspiring writers. With all this knowledge and talent available, it shouldn't be that hard to improve the book.

I've made a number of critiques so far, so I won't repeat them, but I will make one final comment: By the time Jane Eyre reaches her new school, most readers are desperate for some action.

I have found in my own creative writing that the best action sequences involve large tractor trailers, out-of-control school buses and crash-landing 747s. If Charlotte Brontė had thought to throw one of these at Jane's school, her book would have become a lot more interesting and would belong to a superior genre of literature.

David Learn is managing editor of the Hillsborough Beacon. Permission is given to forward this article, but please leave this notice intact.

"Scarred for Life" is written by David Learn, Copyright © 1999 - 2002 and appears here by permission. All technical content of this site is Copyright © 1999 - 2002 by Blair Learn.