Charlotte Brontë, an influential figure in European and Victorian literature, was born in Thornton upon West Yorkshire, England in April 1816. She was the third of six children to Patrick Brontë, an Irish Anglican clergyman, and Maria Branwell. In 1820, the family moved to Haworth, a remote town on the Yorkshire moors, where Charlotte spent most of her life. After her mother's death in 1821, her aunt, Elizabeth Branwell, moved in to help care for the children.
Brontë's experiences at the Clergy Daughters' School at Cowan Bridge in Lancashire had a profound impact on her. The school's harsh conditions led to the death of her two elder sisters, Maria and Elizabeth, from tuberculosis in 1825. This tragedy prompted her father to withdraw Charlotte and her remaining siblings from the school. The siblings then continued their education at home, which led to their extraordinary creative development. They invented a world called 'Angria' and created stories, poetry, and plays based on it. Brontë's burst of creativity during this period was a result of their isolation and dependence on each other for entertainment and education.
Charlotte Brontë's literary career began in earnest after she left Roe Head school in Mirfield in 1832. She had already written her novella The Green Dwarf under the name of Wellesley while at school. In 1835, she returned to Roe Head as a teacher, using her wages to pay for Emily and Anne's education. She left Roe Head in 1838 to become a governess to the Sidgewick family, a position she held until 1839. In 1842, she went to Brussels with her sister Emily to study languages, and again worked as a teacher there. Charlotte's first novel, The Professor, was rejected by several publishers and was not published until 1857. However, her second novel, Jane Eyre, was published in 1847 and achieved immediate success. Brontë's two other novels, Shirley and Villette, were also published during her lifetime. Charlotte Brontë died in March 1855, leaving behind a legacy of groundbreaking literature.
Standalone Novels
#
Title
Year
Goodreads
Amazon
1
Jane Eyre
1847
2
Shirley
1849
3
Villette
1853
4
The Professor
1857
5
Emma
1860
Short Stories/Novellas
#
Title
Year
Goodreads
Amazon
1
The Green Dwarf
1830
2
The Spell
1830
3
Tales of the Islanders
1830
4
My Angria And The Angrians
1830
5
The Secret & Lily Hart
1830
6
The Foundling
1830
7
Mina Laury
1838
8
Tales of Angria
1839
9
Legends of Angria
1933
10
Stancliffe's Hotel
2003
11
The Secret
2006
Non-Fiction Books
#
Title
Year
Goodreads
Amazon
1
Selected Letters
2007
Poetry Collections
#
Title
Year
Goodreads
Amazon
1
The Complete Poems of Charlotte Bronte
1923
Women Writers of the World Books
#
Title
Year
Goodreads
Amazon
1
Castle Rackrent (By: Maria Edgeworth)
1800
2
Agnes Grey (By: Anne Brontë)
1847
3
Villette
1853
4
The House of Mirth (By: Edith Wharton)
1905
5
Passing (By: Nella Larsen)
1929
6
The Diary of A Young Girl / The Diary of Anne Frank (By: Anne Frank)
2022
7
The Story of My Life: Hellen Keller (By: Hellen Keller)
2024
8
The Devil´s Pool (By: George Sand)
2024
9
Harriet Jacobs - Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl (By: Harriet Jacobs)
2024
10
Anna Howard Shaw - The Story of a Pioneer (By: Anna Howard Shaw)
2024
11
Jane Addams - Twenty Years at Hull-House (By: Jane Addams)
2024
12
The Yellow Wallpaper (By: Charlotte P. Gilman)
2025
13
Indiana (By: George Sand)
2025
14
The Letters of Emily Dickinson (By: Martha Dickinson Biachi)
2025
15
Old Indians Legends (By: Zitkála-Šá)
2025
16
Autobiography of Alice B. Toklas - Gertrude Stein (By: Gertrude Stein)