Emily Bront 's only novel, written in a Yorkshire parsonage, published under a male pseudonym, and dead within a year of publication at twenty-nine. Wuthering Heights is one of the most extraordinary works in the English language.
Set on the Yorkshire moors, the novel follows two landowning families and their turbulent relationships with Heathcliff, a mysterious foster son of unknown origin. The love between Heathcliff and Catherine is not romantic in any comfortable sense: it is elemental, destructive, and cannot be contained by life or death. Driven by obsessive love, possession, and revenge that spans generations, the story unfolds through dark passion and cruelty.
The narrative structure, layered through multiple tellers, creates deliberate disorientation. Nelly Dean tells Lockwood, who tells us, and neither is entirely reliable. The moor is as much a character as any human. No Victorian novel is stranger, and few works of English literature have generated such passionate devotion.
This Long Form Press edition presents Bront 's complete and unabridged text in a beautifully typeset B-format paperback, designed for readers who take literature seriously.
Related Subjects
0 - 2 Years 13 - 17 Years 9 - 12 Years BookTok Classics Fiction Literature & Fiction RomanceIt's always fun to see how books get adapted for the screen. But sometimes, this happens before we've had the chance to read the source material. Or maybe we just want to reread a book before we watch. Here are 22 of the books behind the buzziest new and upcoming book-to-screen adaptations.
Twilight is turning twenty! Next month, the annual Forever Twilight in Forks Festival will be marking the milestone with an extra special celebration featuring celebrity appearances, a Q&A and book signing with author Stephenie Meyer, and other special events. Are you a Twihard? Or maybe Twi-curious? Read on to learn more.
As we welcome the month ahead, we're shining a light on notable and acclaimed July-born authors. We're delighted to celebrate them and their beloved works of fiction, nonfiction, poetry, theater, and more.
Welcome to Morally Grey fiction, where motives are ambiguous, intentions are ambivalent, and every flaw has a corresponding virtue! Morally Grey characters exist in many genres of fiction, but today, we'll be covering three: Fantasy, Thrillers, and Romance. Read on for book recommendations and more on the latest nuanced, dynamic trope added to our collection.