The Telegraph and Argus reports that,
Hotel operators have shown “significant interest” in opening in Bradford, a councillor has claimed. [...]
“The wider District has huge potential in the hosting market, and if you look at the recent purchase of the Brontë birthplace as an example, you can really see places like that helping to satisfy that experiential accommodation demand.” (Chris Young)
Why not? That’s what I kept asking myself about “The Artful Dodger,” a new series that plucks two characters out of Charles Dickens’s “Oliver Twist” and drops them into an Australian buddy comedy. It’s a little like borrowing Jane Eyre and Mr. Rochester for a cozy little rom-com, or placing Holden Caulfield in the middle of a college sex romp. But: Why not? (Matthew Gilbert)
Dr Maisha Wester offers fresh readings of Wuthering Heights and Jane Eyre – the Byronic anti-heroes (Heathcliff, Rochester) are not romantic idols but demonstrate behaviour – violent, controlling – more rooted in horror. (Helen Tope)
We Are Teachers uses an example from
Jane Eyre as an 'Engaging Personification Example That Brings Writing To Life'.
“A waft of wind came sweeping down the laurel-walk, and trembled through the boughs of the chestnut: it wandered away—away—to an indefinite distance—it died.” –Jane Eyre by Charlotte Brontë (Jill Staake)
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