Wuthering Heights

Paperback, 351 pages

English language

Published Jan. 19, 1965 by Dell.

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3 stars (11 reviews)

WUTHERING HEIGHTS is perhaps the most tempestuous love story, and Catherine Earnshaw and Heathcliff the most star-crossed lovers, in all of English literature. Their story begins when Heathcliff, a half-starved Liverpool waif, is brought into Cathy's home by her father. The tender attachment that binds them in childhood increases over the years, and grows into a devouring passion that destroys one generation and nearly wrecks a second before exhausting itself in death. Th? tragedy of their ill-fated love is told with an intensity that borders OF .mysticism, and in the visionary scheme of the author's astounding imagination, WUTHERING HEIGHTS reaches a power of expression unique in romantic literature.

200 editions

reviewed Wuthering Heights by Emily Brontë (Oxford world's classics)

Review of 'Wuthering Heights' on 'Goodreads'

2 stars

Until 3/4 of the way through I was highly tempted to dismiss this book with a two word review: "Histrionic nonsense." At about that point, however, I was struck by a resemblance to a superficially altogether different genre of literature - no, not the oft noted influence of the wildly popular only a few decades previously, Gothick novel - but a genre I have never heard mentioned in relation to Emily Bronte: Greek Tragedy.

The overwrought, intense, oppressive insanity of almost all the principal characters, the death of one of them at the half-way point, the feeling that everything is going according to the demented will of some external force out to amuse itself, the violently destructive internal relations of a family, all speak to me of the tone and temper of those plays about people such as Oedipus, Electra and Cassandra. To me this explains the histrionics, cruelty, structure …