Wuthering Heights: Including Introductory Essays by Virginia Woolf and Charlotte Brontë

Wuthering Heights: Including Introductory Essays by Virginia Woolf and Charlotte Brontë

by Emily Brontë
Wuthering Heights: Including Introductory Essays by Virginia Woolf and Charlotte Brontë

Wuthering Heights: Including Introductory Essays by Virginia Woolf and Charlotte Brontë

by Emily Brontë

eBook

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Overview

The only novel published by Emily Brontë, “Wuthering Heights” is the story of Catherine Earnshaw and Heathcliff, a young man adopted into Catherine’s family when he was just a boy. After Catherine’s father dies, her brother Hindley bullies and torments Heathcliff incessantly. Due to this and wrongly thinking that his love for Catherine is unrequited, Heathcliff leaves Wuthering Heights, returning a year later a wealthy man with revenge on this mind. A veritable classic of English literature, “Wuthering Heights” constitutes a must-read for all fans of the novel form and would make for a worthy addition to any collection. Emily Jane Brontë (1818 – 1848) was an English poet and novelist most famous her masterpiece, “Wuthering Heights”. She belonged to the world-famous Brontë literary family, and was one of the four surviving siblings along with her sisters Charlotte and Anne. Many vintage books such as this are increasingly scarce and expensive. It is with this in mind that we are republishing this classic volume now in an affordable, modern, high-quality edition complete with a biography of Emily Brontë by G. K. Chesterton, and an essay by Virginia Woolf on the Brontë family home, Haworth.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781528781992
Publisher: Read Books Ltd.
Publication date: 11/22/2018
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 364
File size: 4 MB

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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