Southern Living has one of those lists..."Classic Books Everyone Should Read in Their Lifetime":
Jane Eyre
Charlotte Brontë brings to life Jane Eyre's titular heroine through a vivid internal world, one as dynamic as the wild English landscape, but one often at odds with the social strictures of the novel's early-19th century setting.
(...) Wuthering Heights
In Wuthering Heights, Emily Brontë presents a world of conflicts, frictions between families, passions, and attachments—especially those of Catherine Earnshaw and the tortured Heathcliff—across an untamed landscape. (Caroline Rogers and Rebecca Angel Baer)
Lost in Theatreland reviews
Kate Butch: Wuthering Shites as seen at the current Edinburgh Fringe:
Whilst the momentum of the show tapers toward the end, and something more is needed with the latter half of the show to match the success of the first half, it is still a raucously funny hour. Butch’s vocals are stunning, and she displays incredible falsetto as she attempts to sing part of “Wuthering Heights” in Bush’s key. (Amy Rye)
TVGuide announces that Wuthering Heights 1998 will be on Talking Pictures TV next August 17, 21.05 h. AnneBrontë.org describes the opening of the Brontë Parsonage Museum in Haworth on August 4, 1928, detailing the event's significance, attendees, and speeches. It then compares the museum's past to its present state, highlighting recent acquisitions and exhibitions.
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