Jane & Edward: A Modern Reimagining of Jane Eyre – Melodie Edwards Free Audiobook

Jane & Edward: A Modern Reimagining of Jane Eyre - Melodie Edwards Audiobook Free Download
Downloads
0/5 Votes: 0
Author
Melodie Edwards
Narrator
Cherlanda Estrada
Language
English
Format
MP3
Bitrate
64 Kbps
Size
244.01 MBs
Report this audiobook

Description

Written by Melodie Edwards
Read by Cherlanda Estrada
Format: MP3
Bitrate: 64 Kbps
Unabridged

Publisher: Books on Tape
Release date: March 21, 2023
Duration: 08:56:55

A reimagining of Jane Eyre, set in a modern-day law firm, is full of romance and hope as it follows the echoing heartbeats of the classic story.

A former foster kid, Jane has led a solitary life as a waitress in the suburbs, working hard to get by. Tired of years of barely scraping together a living, Jane takes classes to become a legal assistant and shortly after graduating accepts a job offer at a distinguished law firm in downtown Toronto. Everyone at the firm thinks she is destined for failure because her boss is the notoriously difficult Edward Rosen, the majority stakeholder of Rosen, Haythe & Thornfield LLP. But Jane has known far worse trials and refuses to back down when economic freedom is so close at hand.

Edward has never been able to keep an assistant—he’s too loud, too messy, too ill-tempered. There’s something about the quietly competent, delightfully sharp-witted Jane that intrigues him though. As their orbits overlap, their feelings begin to develop—first comes fondness and then something more. But when Edward’s secrets put Jane’s independence in jeopardy, she must face long-ignored ghosts from her past and decide if opening her heart is a risk worth taking.

Note—Critics felt Charlotte Brontë would be insulted by this mish-mash —
“Though none of the original story beats or characters are competently translated, Rosen’s dark secret and how it resolves is particularly nonsensical and Jane’s means of achieving independence post-reveal are insultingly regressive and give her much less dignity than her 19th-century counterpart. The book does not succeed in its own rights either, as it is very oddly paced, with key emotional beats intercut with abrupt flashbacks. Readers can take a pass on this one.”—PW

Download links