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Sunday, July 07, 2024

Sunday, July 07, 2024 11:58 am by M. in , , , , ,    No comments

The possibility of a second season for My Lady Jane in ScreenRant:
While season 1 has officially exhausted the source material upon which it was based, it seems clear from [Gemma] Burgess’ comments that the show’s creative team already has ideas about where it can continue into My Lady Jane season 2 and beyond. Even though the second book, My Plain Jane, abandons the story of Lady Jane Grey and switches its focus onto a reimagined account of Charlotte Brontë's Jane Eyre, Burgess appears willing to continue Grey’s tale following her dramatic escape from execution. (TC Phillips)
The Telegraph explores the choppy waters of monster erotica: 
There was a time when the rageful and tortured antihero of Heathcliff in Emily Brontë’s Wuthering Heights was viewed as the most monstrous of characters, while the most shameful literary union was perhaps found between gamekeeper Mellors and the eponymous aristocrat in D.H. Lawrence’s 1928 Lady Chatterley’s Lover.
Also in The Telegraph UK's biggest summer rip-offs or something like that:
Another great walk is out to Haworth, there to do the Brontë sights, if you’re missing your 19th-century female novelists. (Chris Moss)

The Indian Express talks about the musical artist Kiss Nuka: 

A “voracious reader”, her imagination and ideas have roots in the books she read as a child. “I would steal books from my mother’s collection. The earliest books I remember are Roots, Fountainhead, Little Women, Wuthering Heights and The God of Small Things. (Wriddhaayan Bhattacharyya)
Classic books with the most beautiful prose in Times Now News:
Emily Brontë’s 'Wuthering Heights' is renowned for its passionate and atmospheric prose. The novel tells the tumultuous story of Heathcliff and Catherine Earnshaw, whose intense and destructive love defies social norms. Brontë’s writing is richly descriptive, capturing the wild, untamed beauty of the Yorkshire moors and the turbulent emotions of her characters. Her use of Gothic elements and her ability to evoke a sense of brooding intensity and haunting beauty make 'Wuthering Heights' a masterpiece of English literature. The novel’s lyrical and powerful language continues to captivate readers with its portrayal of love, revenge, and the supernatural. (Girish Shukla)
Another article with more Brontë-awards in The Evening Sun. AnneBrontë.org discusses Agnes Grey and its autobiographical elements, drawing parallels between the fictional narrative and Anne's real-life experiences as a governess

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