This post was written in response to the Insecure Writer’s Support Group monthly (first Wednesday of every month) blog hop to where writers express thoughts, doubts, and concerns about our profession. By the way, all writers are invited to join in!
Let’s rock the neurotic writing world! Our Twitter handle is @TheIWSG and hashtag is #IWSG
Have my readers’ responses surprised me? Definitely!
I have over a hundred written reviews on Amazon, and over two hundred reviews on Goodreads, which may not seem like a lot, but it never ceases to amaze me. The fact that so many readers, people I don’t know and who may never have heard of me, a relatively little known author, in a vast ocean of millions of books and writers, have been motivated to read my books and taken the trouble to write a review, amazes me.
I feel encouraged by the good reviews, which fortunately account for the majority, and that used to surprise me when I started publishing, seven years ago, in 2014, because I was very insecure!
I used to feel upset when I got a negative review, again, because I was very insecure, but now I’m less insecure and I appreciate them too, because some are useful, and at least they all count as reviews!
At first, I was surprised that so many readers disliked my novel because they thought I had treated Mr Rochester too harshly. In my defense, I’d say I didn’t lock him in a windowless attic, or make him suffer any physical torture! He lived a good life, with his wife and son, even though he went back to some of his old ways.
I mean, locking your wife in an attic in dire conditions, hidden from everyone (in spite of being a moneyed heiress), and pretending you’re single to the point of intending bigamy (until your wedding was interrupted at the altar) with an innocent nineteen-year-old, is pretty objectionable behaviour, even for 19th century standards.
On the other hand, I can appreciate the fact that Mr Rochester has been an icon of passionate love, aka the brooding Byronic hero/lover, who is brought to his feet due to the love of a ‘good’ woman, for almost 200 years, but that’s due to an erroneous interpretation of Jane Eyre by Charlotte Bronte.
Jane Eyre is the protagonist the reader should root for, not Rochester. Jane is the independent, resourceful and single-minded nineteen-year-old woman who stood up to a manipulative rake and won him over on her terms, with her money (Spoiler alert: at the end of the novel she becomes an heiress herself), once he was a widower, and once she had made her way in the world working and living on her own, a feat not all women achieve, even nowadays.
I’d love to continue to be surprised by my readers, and I hope to surprise them too with more novels. I started by writing The Eyre Hall which will become The Eyre Hall Series shortly, as two new novels, Blood Moon at Eyre Hall and Thunder Moon at Eyre Hall are coming soon!
Take a look at my provisional banner, I’m still making changes and adapting the covers. Do you like them?

If you’d like to read or reread Jane Eyre, I’m posting one chapter a week, every Friday, in flash fiction, directly from the original novel, for readers who prefer to read an abridged version, here, just click on the banner below:

Hi,
I know the feeling. I am humbled by every review that I received. The fact that the reader took the time to write their thoughts down is humbling.
I wish you the very best.
Shalom aleichem,
Pat G @ EverythingMustChange
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Hi Pat,
Thanks for dropping by and commenting. Yes, reviews take a few minutes to write and they’re an invaluable gift to writers.
Have a great day💗
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Your books sound amazing! Jane Eyre was the first classic book I tackled in high school. I remember I was so surprised by how good it was. And although Rochester does come off as a tad creepy at times, I’m rooting for Jane the whole time.
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That’s a good amount of reviews! I’m glad your books are getting love.
J Lenni Dorner (he/him 👨🏽 or 🧑🏽 they/them) ~ Co-host of the #AtoZchallenge, OperationAwesome6 Debut Author Interviewer, Reference& Speculative Fiction Author
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Thank you! Book one was published seven years ago, so it’s been a while. I hope there will be renewed interest when the two new books in the series are published soon.
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Glad to hear you’re getting good reviews. I’m intrigued by your blog and your books. Happy IWSG day.
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Ah now that’s a take on Rochester that I hadn’t considered, but makes perfect sense!
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I know it’s not fair to judge Victorians by contemporary standards, but even so, his behaviour even shocked his contemporaries, although no legal action was taken against him, for the intended bigamy or the incarceration/kidnapping of his wife, who, by the way, remained in the attic until her death the following year. Shocking when you think these things really happened, and even worse.
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Your banner is great, Luccia! I’ve heard other authors say they learn from some negative reviews – glad you are feeling better about the occasional review like that and congratulations on receiving so many reviews!
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