The Guardian has an article on the reading antics of gen Z.
The “sad girl” genre isn’t limited to angsty females. The singer Harry Styles has been pictured carrying Didion while the reading habits of the actors Timothée Chalamet (28) and Jacob Elordi (26) have earned them the moniker of the Brontë Bros. (Chloe Mac Donnell)
Early Bird Books has an article on 'The Depressing Love Triangle of the Romantics' which begins as follows:
Unhappy love triangles have always played a starring role in the realm of Gothic literature. Think of Emily Bronte’s 1847 Wuthering Heights and the legendary tug-of-war over Catherine Earnshaw between a well-meaning neighbor and the mysterious, destructive rogue hell-bent on having her and her inheritance all to himself. (E.R. Zarevich)
Great British Life points to 'Perfect proposals spots on the Yorkshire coast this February'.
If your romantic dreams incline towards the wily and windy, you’ll find plenty of suitable moorland settings between Whitby and Scarborough. OK, we’re bending the rules a little here – Yorkshire’s most famous romantic novel, Wuthering Heights, was of course set on the moors around the Brontës’ Haworth home in West Yorkshire. (Gemma Rio)
According to
Times of India,
Jane Eyre is one of the '10 most romantic books to gift on Valentine's Day' while
Times Now News lists both Catherine and Heathcliff and Jane Eyre and Mr Rochester as part of the '10 most loved iconic lovers from English literature'.
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