Wuthering Heights

In a comment on her post
Book Review: Wuthering Heights by Emily Brontë of 1st July, the excellent reviewer https://bvitelli2002.wordpress.com

knowing full well what the answer was likely to be, asked me whether I had a copy in my library.

I therefore offer

as an accompaniment to Barbara’s review.

As usual images may be enlarged when accessing the gallery. Charles Keeping’s lithographs suit the mood of the book very well.

This afternoon I watched the Wimbledon Tennis men’s match between Carlos Alcaraz and Frances Tiafoe followed by the women’s game between Emma Raducanu and Maria Sakkari. Before the latter match had finished we dined on bowls of rice, noodles, and prawns from bowls on our knees in front of the TV. I drank more Malbec.

65 comments

          1. I’m generally not a re-reader and am always impressed by those who read certain books once per year or have read most of their books multiple times.

          2. That has generally been my practice, too, but recently I have been occasionally prompted to do so. This was an example.

  1. Of course you have a copy! 🙂 The illustrations in your volume are dramatic, but I’m not sure if I like them. I went over the Book Club Mom’s blog to read her review.

  2. I must admit I( read a few classics when i was younger (inn the junior versions) but I soon discovered Biggles, and my tastes in reading matter changed ( I will not use the term “literature” for my preferred reading material.) 😉

  3. My family was cheering for Alcarez and I was rooting for Tiafo. I really thought he would come through.
    Wuthering Heights, what a classic!!

  4. I have enjoyed this novel in its own right – teaching it to modern teenagers was not easy – and appreciated the film. For me, books are mostly better than films.

  5. Thank you, Derrick! I’m so glad you’re sharing the illustrations from your copy. A book like this needs images to feed our imaginations. We watched a replay of Alcarez and Tiafoe. It was exciting to see Alcarez play, but I was cheering for our American Tiafoe too 🙂

  6. Wuthering heights. What an amazing coincidence. We’re in Colombia at my sister-in-law’s. It’s very cold and damp and rainy and wet… I told my sister-in-law, her place was like “Wuthering height.” I had to look up the title in Spanish.
    One more classic I’ve never read. I’ll order it on Amazon after the holiday…
    Take care Derrick.

      1. Will order it on Amazon when we go back. I suspect I might like the atmosphere, the places, as a testimony of how people lived. It’s what I often get from any book.

  7. I remember reading this a few years ago – a brilliantly haunting work of literature. The illustrations look absolutely stunning – thank you for sharing!

  8. Hmmmm … I’d love to have been there sharing “bowls of rice, noodles, and prawns from bowls on our knees” with you!!

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