The Independent reviews Anne Donovan's novel
Being Emily (you can check our review
here):
In her mother's absence, an overwhelming weight hangs over the house where the sixth-former Fiona is charged with caring for her younger twin sisters and their depressed father. Fiona seeks comfort in fantasies about the life of her heroine, Emily Brontë, and there are many intriguing lines of reference between Wuthering Heights and Being Emily, from a dead mother to a devastating romance. Fiona develops a relationship with the pensive Jas, a Sikh boy who is also something of an outsider and knows about grief. But, on meeting Jas's elder brother, the enchanting musician Amrik, Fiona feels a splinter of ice in her heart toward Jas and a spark of attraction for Amrik.
Donovan writes, in Glaswegian dialect, with an idiosyncratic and beguiling prose style that was so powerful in her debut novel, Buddha Da, which was shortlisted for the Whitbread and Orange prizes. She handles characters and plot with both toughness and tenderness, and depicts the pains and pleasures borne by the developing female artist. (Anita Sethi)
Elaine Showalter's A Jury of Her Peers is reviewed today in
The Columbus Dispatch:
She traces trends, such as the influence of "Jane Eyre mania" on a generation of writers, and ranges throughout the country, uncovering a number of novels by 19th- century white Southern women who haven't been studied as much as many other writers. (Margaret Quamme)
The
Evansville Courier & Press alerts us to a talk at the local library:
"Jane Eyre" by Charlotte Bronte, Wednesday, noon, Red Bank Branch Library, 120 S. Red Bank Road, Evansville, IN (428-8399) (Charles Sutton)
Several Haworth visitors have posted their pictures and impressions on their blogs:
Just Another Innocent Abroad and
Erik's York Travels or youtube:
divareza. Finally,
A Casa dos Pensadores talks about Wuthering Heights in Portuguese.
Categories: Alert, Books, Haworth, Jane Eyre, Wuthering Heights
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