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Sunday, November 30, 2025

Sunday, November 30, 2025 12:27 pm by M. in , , , , ,    No comments
We agree mostly with what Country Life has to say about Wuthering Heights 2026:
I get it. Really, I do. Literature imprints upon my heart as much as the next person. I am an author after all, and a romantic one at that. I am prone to attaching myself to lines from poetry or prose in ways that sometimes make me believe they are speaking directly to me. I have even been tempted to tattoo them onto my skin, a permanent etching as if that might mean more, that I might be able to absorb them entirely. And yet, I cannot bring myself to really believe that Emily Brontë, an exceptional woman who took huge, beautiful risks in her work, would really be turning over in her grave at the very idea of Jacob Elordi tightening breathless Barbie’s corset. (...)
I do not think that any of us are able to accurately guess what Brontë’s reaction might be to any of the many adaptations of her work. However, I do wonder whether she might have been just a little excited by what contemporary female artists are now making of her work and what women are now allowed to conceive and create. Perhaps she might even be delighted that her story was still being consumed by new audiences, generation after generation falling for new Heathcliffs and new Cathys while the moors remain the same — wild, barren, hostile places within which dark and all-consuming love stories still take place.
I cannot bring myself to feel too concerned that younger audiences may see this film and consider it the definitive Wuthering Heights (although I highly doubt that will be the case). (...)
Whether you agree with her or not on her casting choices, this much is true: it is all art. When Brontë wrote Wuthering Heights, I would be surprised if she viewed it as a sacred text designed to be preserved forever. When an artist puts work out into the world they release it. It no longer belongs to them; not really. You cannot manage the way people hear your words, view your images or listen to your songs. You cannot control their emotions or correct them. You create, you perfect — and then you let it go to take on new meaning. If you’re lucky it resonates not just with one person, but with many over generations; perhaps even a century and a half later you will still inspire people to make something new. And maybe you wouldn’t like it, but it’s all art, and nothing is sacred.
May we always be surprised, shocked, appalled and bewildered by art. I hope we’re having this conversation again in another 100 years and another 100 after that. Wuthering Heights is ours, Fennell’s and of course, Charli XCX’s to do with what we please and if some people don’t like it, the original is waiting untouched for them to return to, anytime they like. (Laura Kay)

Many other websites still repeat the same yadda-yadda about Wuthering Heights 2026: VanidadL'Officiel, Startefacts, TV CentralHola, Tuttotek...

The Yorkshire Post goes to Lothersdale: "The remote Yorkshire village which inspired Charlotte Brontë"
While working as a governess for some “unmanageable cubs” in 1839, Charlotte Brontë lived in Lothersdale at Stone Gappe.
Her employer, the then owner of the three-storey five bay property south of Stansfield Brow which dates to 1725, Charlotte’s is said to have resembled her character Edward Rochester in Jane Eyre. (Stuart Minting)
Also in The Yorkshire Post, an inspiring story with some connection to the Brontës that you may not know:
So too undiscovered stories of charity when I was researching the Brontës for what for me must be the highlight of the year to welcome the Queen to open the Brontë birthplace in Thornton saved for the nation and now celebrated as the humble beginnings of greatness.
Who would have thought when I penned the phrase Be More Brontë to encourage the same resolute determination in young people that three budding writers had shown that Camilla would be the first person to write those words within it’s walls?
Giving from others bought it for future generations but also brought stories of giving during the Brontë sisters lifetimes to the fore.
For example, did you know that the ruined farmhouse at Top Withins that inspired Emily Brontë’s Wuthering Heights was actually a part of charitable giving in its own right even before the three sisters and their brother roamed the moors?
Money from it’s rent fed and clothed poor children. And now in modern day it forms the centre piece for Wuthering Heights day when charities benefit from the recreation of Kate Bush’s famous dance on the birthday she shares with Emily Brontë and is celebrated each year on July 30th.
Add to that the fact that Patrick’s Brontë’s first major curacy at St Peter’s Church in Hartshead, just a few days before Christmas, handed out thick wooden fabric to the women to sew warm clothes for their children particularly during the luddite uprisings when cottage weavers were losing their homes and their livelihood and you will see why charity was a centre piece of giving as much then as now. (Christa Aykroyd)
ChicpChick shares a TikTok clip of History Hit's Death in the Parsonage: The Brontës, where Anne Brontë's bloodstained handkerchief is displayed:
The Brontës may feel mythic now, but artifacts like this demonstrate that behind every great work is a human life that once held fear, hope, pain, and passion. (Emily Chan)
Community Reporter reports her new readings:
Contrasting my previous picks is “Jane Eyre,” a classic by Charlotte Brontë that has sat on my shelf for three years and I have attempted to read twice (third time’s the charm?). Jane Eyre tells the story of its namesake in first-person, beginning with Jane’s abusive childhood and staying with her throughout her education and early adult life. I picked this one up again and found that I had a much better grasp on the language and concept of the book, and decided to try it once more. (Beatrice Cosgrove)
Gramilano interviews the opera singer Ekaterina Bakanova:
What is your favourite film?
Jane Eyre and Inception.
Espido Freire, in the radio show Cuerpos Especiales (Europa FM, Spain), analyses the song Tu Cuerpo en Braille by Nil Moliner:
Espido Freire está feliz con el tema que le ha tocado esta semana en Cuerpos especiales. La escritora se ha puesto romántica al analizar Tu cuerpo en braille de Nil Moliner, una canción a la que encuentra bastantes paralelismos con Cumbres Borrascosas de Emilie (sic) Brönte. El protagonista musical es el primo hermano de Heathcliff. "Los dos se quedaron traumatizados en la misma noche de tormenta", ha explicado. (Translation)

Keighley News reports the top 10  Keighley-area attractions according to Tripadvisor which incldude the Brontë Parsonage Museum, the Brontë waterfall, Top Withens and Haworth Parish Church.

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