The Times Walks gives directions and tips for a Haworth and Brontë Moors walk:
See the sisters’ notebooks and dresses in the Brontë Parsonage Museum,
Haworth; then walk over the bleak, beautiful moors by way of Brontë
Bridge and Waterfall to the moody ruin of Top Withens farmhouse
(“Wuthering Heights”). Loop back to Haworth via Ponden Hall
(“Thrushcross Grange”). (Christopher Somerville)
The Hindu praises Jean Rhys's
Wide Sargasso Sea:
Long before this parasitic mode of writing became
widespread, Jean Rhys, a writer of dark talent, wrote “Wide Sargasso
Sea”. It tells the story of Antoinette Bertha Mason of the West Indies,
whom Charlotte Brontë fans instantly recognize as Rochester’s first wife
in “Jane Eyre”, confined in his mansion’s attic rooms by day and
wreaking havoc downstairs by night.
When I read “
Jane
Eyre” for the first time, or even the fifth time, I lamented the
existence of that madwoman. If Jane had run off with Rochester, I felt,
he would not have ended up a blind amputee. As I matured, I appreciated
her more upright refusal to live with a married man: it showed
self-respect, and she acquired some sensible cousins and a hefty legacy
besides. When we deconstructed the novel in Eng Lit, I was taught that
Jane effectively castrated Rochester, turning him from a masterful,
aspiring bigamist into a manageable half-cripple, before joining her
fate to his.
(Read more) (Latha Anantharaman)
Imelda Marsden publishes a letter in the
Spenborough Guardian describing some of the local events celebrating the bicentenary of the Luddite attacks in the zone:
On Saturday morning there was the unveiling of the Luddite statue at Sparrow Park, Liversedge.
The
Spen Valley Civic Society had worked very hard over six years to create
this, so well done to them. The Rev Patrick Brontë would have been
proud of them.
Guests then went to the reception at the Shears pub
where the Luddites had met to plan their attacks in 1812. Well done to
the landlord Paul Black and his staff – who were dressed in costume –
and their Luddite beer.
On Saturday afternoon we were at Holly
Bank school (formerly Roe Head where the Brontë sisters had attended) in
Mirfield, where I presented Two talks with a Difference. One
was with William Carwright, aka David Pinder dressed as Cartwright, the
Rawfolds mill owner, about his mill being attacked by the Luddites.
After the interval the next speaker, who was supposed to talk about
Charlotte Brontë’s novel Shirley, which features the Luddites’
attacks, was held up at Skipton Castle, so retired teacher Barbara Lumb
came to the rescue and talked about the novel. Barbara’s book on the
Spen Valley is to come out later this year. A Brontë descendant of Rev
Patrick Brontë’s sister, Sarah, was present.
Financial Times lists several properties with literary connections for sale. Including Ponden Hall:
Ponden Hall, West Yorkshire, UK, £950,000
Where High up on the Pennine Way, around four miles from Keighley and 181 miles north of London.
What A six-bedroom Grade II* listed detached manor
house with two-bedroom annex and far-reaching views across the Yorkshire
moors. The main body of the house was built in 1634 by the Heaton
family. The current owners have restored the property and installed
underfloor heating throughout, keeping its period features, including
the library, once described as “the finest library in the West Riding”.
Why Emily Brontë visited and read in Ponden Hall’s library. It is believed to be the model for Thrushcross Grange in Brontë’s Wuthering Heights. (Emma Mahony)
According to the
Yorkshire Post nerds cannot read classics. That was not always the case in the past:
I was always impressed by the way 40s film producer Val Lewton managed
to insert a degree of subtle literacy into the schlocky projects he was
handed by those above him.
Lewton was the guy who was told to make a movie called I Walked with a Zombie. He did, and borrowed wholesale the plot from Jane Eyre,
transplanting it to a far-off land and smothering the whole film in
voodoo. The studio chiefs loved it. So did Lewton. They hadn’t read the
book; had probably never heard about it, but they had the horror flick
they wanted. And Lewton had quietly triumphed. (Tony Earnshaw)
ABC Radio National (Australia) interviews the writer Andrew Motion about his book
Silver: Return to Treasure Island:
So I thought, casting my mind around the sequels and prequels that work and thinking, for instance, about Tom Stoppard's play Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead, which gives us a very interesting take on the Hamlet story, or Jean Rhys's wonderful novel Wide Sargasso Sea which is about the first Mrs Rochester in Jane Eyre,
that they gave me a kind of pointer, which is to say that if I took a
big step away from the original book I would solve this problem of
competing with something that I was likely to lose in competition with
and thereby to create something that was a sort of homage and certainly
respectful towards it, but that stood at a significant distance from it
by moving the whole story on a generation, as you said. (Interview by Michael Cathcart)
Manila Journal (Philippines) discusses the success of the soap opera
Walang Hanggan in the Philippines:
Locally, the hit soap “Walang Hanggan” on ABS-CBN is also about revenge, with Dawn Zulueta and Coco Martin taking revenge on the people who oppressed them, notably Helen Gamboa.
The
peg for this was Emily Brontë’s “Wuthering Heights”, which has had
several film and TV versions before (there’s a new one coming one with
the lead character, Heathcliff, now played by a black actor). Even
locally, it’s been done before as “Hihintayin Kita sa Langit” and “The
Promise.” (Mario Bautista)
Boldsky traces the origins of the Gothic style:
To put it in simple words, melodramatic mystery novels were called
Gothic novels. Horror and anticlimactic endings were the defining
elements of this kind of literature. 'The Castle Of Otranto' was the
first example. Many un-put-downable horror stories from the likes of Ann
Radcliffe and the Brontë sisters followed. Gothic literature was looked
down upon (that is why the name 'Gothic') as a source of cheap
entertainment and weak story telling. But it has given us classics like
'Wuthering Heights' and 'Jane Eyre'. (Anwesha B Chatterjee)
Le Nouvel Observateur (France) publishes an article about the Brontës and Haworth:
Leur nom est partout. C'est dans un taxi de la compagnie Brontë que nous
avons parcouru la distance qui sépare Haworth de la gare de Keighley,
dans le nord de l'Angleterre; Haworth où le visiteur peut louer le
cottage Les Hauts de Hurlevent, commander un repas indien à La Brontë
Balti House ou boire un Earl Grey dans l'un des salons de thé Ye
Olde Brontë. (Read more) (Translation)
The Nashville Scene announces that yesterday's screening of
Wuthering Heights 2011 at the Nashville Film Festival was cancelled;
The Times recommends the Amazon Kindle app for iPhone to be able to read, among others,
Wuthering Heights;
Cher Parrow pinned on Pinterest a
Jane Eyre book cover with a brief comment of the book;
Le Nove Muse (in Italian) reviews Juliet Gael's
Romancing Miss Brontë;
Vivre de Lecture (in French) posts about
Wuthering Heights;
Steven Arntson,
Haphazard Hollingsworth and
Anacronía y Muselina (in Spanish) post about
Jane Eyre which is also read by
Wes in Bako;
Slutterhouse 5 has created a poem using words Emily Brontë wrote;
Chillibite,
CJG Gazeta,
Dziennik Polski,
TVP,
Tygodnik Powszechny,
artPapier,
Dziennik,
Kafeteria (all in Polish) and
Волжская Коммуна (in Russian) reviews
Wuthering Heights 2011;
Cinemax announces that the release of the film in Portugal will be on May 10th;
The Phantom Paragrapher reviews
The Flight of Gemma Hardy;
Parra Reads posts about a recent book club meeting about
Agnes Grey;
Kakav je film? (in Serbian) and
MissCristinaMonica discuss
Jane Eyre 2011;
artPapier and
Gazeta Wyborcza review
The Tenant of Wildfell Hall in Polish;
Lady Nimuë of the Lake uploads to Flickr pictures of herself in a Catherine Earnshaw custom;
Brontë Weather Project posts about TB and the weather and
Città della Spezia (in Italian) talks about Desy Giuffré's novel
Io Sono Heathcliff.
Finally,
Sharon's Garden of Book Reviews,
Meaghan Walsh Gerard,
In the Country,
Chapter 77,
Anneographies,
Arainfinitum,
Lakeside Musing,
the Brontë Sisters,
Regando mi cactus,
Cose da Libri,
Leituras Brontëanas,
whizzbang,
The Dandelion Chronicles and even
Roger Ebert's Twitter join Charlotte Brontë's birthday celebrations.
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