Wuthering Heights (Prestwick House Literary Touchstone Press Series)

Wuthering Heights (Prestwick House Literary Touchstone Press Series)

by Emily Brontë
Wuthering Heights (Prestwick House Literary Touchstone Press Series)

Wuthering Heights (Prestwick House Literary Touchstone Press Series)

by Emily Brontë

Paperback(New Edition)

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Overview

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 Brontë’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.

This Prestwick House Literary Touchstone Edition includes a glossary and reader’s notes to help the modern reader contend with Brontë’s complex characters and vocabulary. We hope that Prestwick House Literary Touchstone Editions will make your reading more enjoyable and perhaps more meaningful.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781580493949
Publisher: Prestwick House, Incorporated
Publication date: 01/28/2005
Series: Prestwick House Literary Touchstone Press
Edition description: New Edition
Pages: 307
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 8.90(h) x 0.70(d)

About the Author

Emily Brontë was born in 1818, the daughter of a curate. She was the most enigmatic of the three famous novelist sisters. Losing her mother very early in her life and following her elder sister Charlotte to school, she found life away from the Haworth parsonage extremely hard. Her time as a teacher at Law Hill School near Halifax was similarly trying. Homesickness drew her back to the moors and the life of a reclusive author. It was there, in 1848, that she died of tuberculosis just months after her brother Branwell. Few of her papers survive and her reputation is based on a few surviving poems and one novel, Wuthering Heights.
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