


Jane Eyre is one of those novels that doesn't just tell a story — it gets under your skin. Charlotte Brontë published it in 1847, and it has never gone out of print since, because Jane's voice — plain-spoken, fiercely independent, and quietly radical — still speaks directly to the reader who has ever felt overlooked and known, with absolute certainty, that she wasn't.
This illustrated map traces every place Jane visits across the novel. Brontë used fictional names, but their real-life inspirations in Yorkshire and beyond are shown — alongside an illustrated chart of the novel's main characters. Published by Literary Maps, created by map illustrator Martin Thelander, who makes detailed illustrated maps for classic books with places appearing in the order they're mentioned in the text.
The kind of thing you unfold next to a re-read and never quite put away.