Wuthering Heights - Literary Touchstone Edition


Book Description

This Prestwick House Literary Touchstone Edition? includes a glossary and reader's notes to help the modern reader contend with Bronte's complex characters and vocabulary. We hope that Prestwick House Literary Touchstone Editions? will make your reading more enjoyable and perhaps more meaningful. A midnight storm rages around lonely Wuthering Heights, and a miserable ghost claws at the window. We are taken backwards in time, to the beginning of the story of the Earnshaws and Lintons: the separation of spiritual twins, the bitter, repeated clashes, and the doom that seems inescapable for these two families. The tale unravels in a bleak environment that seems hostile to human life and love. But the savagery at work outside is nothing compared to the cruelty the characters inflict upon one another. Wuthering Heights illustrates the violent ruin of passionate natures as few other novels have.Solitude, pain, and loss were all part of Emily Bronte's own life. In creating her 1847 masterpiece, she drew upon her childhood experiences in an isolated English home much like Wuthering Heights. But she also relied upon her brilliant imagination and a superb talent for detail to depict the finest nuances of her characters? language, gestures, and dress.




Wuthering Heights


Book Description




Wuthering Heights


Book Description

Wuthering Heights by Emily Bronte. Perhaps the most haunting and tormented love story ever written, Wuthering Heights is the tale of the troubled orphan Heathcliff and his doomed love for Catherine Earnshaw.Published in 1847, the year before Emily Bronte's death at the age of thirty, Wuthering Heights has proved to be one of the nineteenth century's most popular yet disturbing masterpieces. The windswept moors are the unforgettable setting of this tale of the love between the foundling Heathcliff and his wealthy benefactor's daughter, Catherine. Through Catherine's betrayal of Heathcliff and his bitter vengeance, their mythic passion haunts the next generation even after their deaths. Incorporating elements of many genres-from gothic novels and ghost stories to poetic allegory-and transcending them all, Wuthering Heights is a mystifying and powerful tour de force.




Wuthering Heights


Book Description

Somber tale of consuming passions and vengeance — played out amid the lonely English moors — recounts the turbulent and tempestuous love story of Cathy and Heathcliff. Poignant and compelling.




Wuthering Heights (Illustrated)


Book Description

This illustrated edition of "Wuthering Heights" includes: Illustrations of objects and places mentioned in the novel. Wuthering Heights is an 1847 novel by Emily Brontë, initially published under her pen name Ellis Bell. It concerns two families of the landed gentry living on the West Yorkshire moors, the Earnshaws and the Lintons, and their turbulent relationships with Earnshaw's foster son, Heathcliff. The novel was influenced by Romanticism and Gothic fiction.




Wuthering Heights


Book Description

Considered lurid and shocking by mid-19th-century standards, Wuthering Heights was initially thought to be such a publishing risk that its author, Emily Brontë, was asked to pay some of the publication costs. A somber tale of consuming passions and vengeance played out against the lonely moors of northern England, the book proved to be one of the most enduring classics of English literature. The turbulent and tempestuous love story of Cathy and Heathcliff spans two generations -- from the time Heathcliff, a strange, coarse young boy, is brought to live on the Earnshaws' windswept estate, through Cathy's marriage to Edgar Linton and Heathcliff's plans for revenge, to Cathy's death years later and the eventual union of the surviving Earnshaw and Linton heirs. A masterpiece of imaginative fiction, Wuthering Heights (the author's only novel) remains as poignant and compelling today as it was when first published in 1847.




Wuthering Heights in Plain and Simple English (Includes Study Guide, Complete Unabridged Book, Historical Context, Biography And


Book Description

Emily Brontë’s “Wuthering Heights” is considered one of the greatest novels ever wrote. It also can be difficult to understand--it is loaded with themes, imagery, and symbols. If you need a little help understanding it, let BookCaps help with this study guide. Along with chapter-by-chapter summaries and analysis, this book features the full text of Brontë's classic novel is also included. BookCap Study Guides are not meant to be purchased as alternatives to reading the book.




Wuthering Heights (Wisehouse Classics Edition)


Book Description

The English poet and painter Dante Gabriel Rossetti referred to it as "A fiend of a book - an incredible monster [...] The action is laid in hell, - only it seems places and people have English names there."




WUTHERING HEIGHTS


Book Description

- This book contains custom design elements for each chapter. Wuthering Heights is Emily Brontë's first and only published novel, and is known for it tremendous and far-reaching influence. Lockwood, the new tenant of Thrushcross Grange, situated on the dreary Yorkshire moors, is forced to seek shelter one night at his landlord’s home - Wuthering Heights. There he discovers the history of the turbulent events that took place years before. What unfolds is the tale of the intense love between the social outcast Heathcliff and Catherine Earnshaw. Catherine is forced to choose between passionate, tortured Heathcliff and gentle, well-bred Edgar Linton. As Heathcliff's bitterness and retaliation at his betrayal is visited upon the next generation, their innocent heirs must struggle to escape the legacy of the past.




Wuthering Heights (Annotated & Illustrated) Unabridged Edition With Summaries and Character Index


Book Description

Wuthering Heights is a novel by Emily Brontë. Brontë's only finished novel, it was written between October 1845 and June 1846. After Emily's death, Charlotte edited the manuscript of Wuthering Heights and arranged for the edited version to be second edition in 1850. The novel also explores the effects of envy, nostalgia, pessimism and resentment.Wuthering Heights contains elements of gothic fiction.