Title: Wuthering Heights: With an Introduction and
Student Guide (As Told by Emily Bronte) and Bonus Material by Lord Byron and
Alison Larkin
Author: Emily Bronte with bonus material by Lord
Byron and Alison Larkin
Narrated by: Alison Larkin, Andrew Wincott
Publisher: Alison
Larkin Presents
Length:
Approximately 14 hours and 41 minutes
Source: Review copy from Alison Larkin Presents. Thank-you!
Are you planning on going to see the new Wuthering Heights movie? It’s on my list, but I am probably going to wait until it comes to streaming.
Lockwood is a new tenant at Thrushcross Grange in Yorkshire, England. Due to weather, he is forced to take shelter at the neighboring estate, Wuthering Heights, the home of his landlord, Heathcliff. He meets the curious inhabitants. The housekeeper at Thrushcross Grange, Nelly, is able to fill him in on the history of the two families. Heathcliff was a foundling who was raised with the Earnshaw siblings, Catherine and Hindley. When Mr. Earnshaw dies, he is treated poorly by Hindley. Heathcliff fell in love with Catherine, but she chooses to marry their neighbor, Edgar Linton of Thrushcross Grange. Heathcliff spends his life exacting revenge.
My thoughts on this classic novel:
· I read Wuthering Heights for The Classic Buddy read for January @Dees.reads. I didn’t finish the book up until February, but I had read it a few other times in my life, so I still enjoyed the group discussion which largely focused on what terrible people the characters were and how it is not a very romantic book.
· Alison Larkin is a wonderful narrator of this audiobook. She does different distinct voices for all the different characters. She is one of my favorite audiobook narrators. She wrote the introduction and study guide at the end. It was very interesting and puts the book into context. A poem by Lord Byron was also included.
· Wuthering Heights is a classic as it looked at childhood trauma and how that trauma could impact a person throughout their life. Heathcliff takes this trauma and turns it to vengeance on every person he thinks has wronged him, including the one person he loved the most in this world. He continues this vengeance on the next generation. Luckily, the book shows that the trauma cycle can be broken, and the next generation can have a new chance. I think most movies miss the entire point of this book as they focus on the “romance” and most don’t even show the entire second half of the novel.
· This was Emily Bronte’s only novel. This novel was different than most Victorian novels of the day which were morality tales. This Gothic novel had a Byronic hero and intense passionate feelings.
· I always think of Hindley as an all-bad character, but on this reread, I was reminded that he truly loved his wife Frances and fell apart after her death.
· It seemed that many of the characters in this novel had mental health problems. It made me wonder if a lot of the characters could be helped in current times with therapists and modern medicine. What mental health problems did Emily see within her own family or neighbors that inspired this book? I also think it’s based a lot on her brother Branwell with his excessive drinking, sleeping with his employer’s wife, etc., but it could have been others as well.
· Wuthering Heights is a strange novel. Cathy and Heathcliff are terrible selfish people who do not think about the impact their actions have on everyone else around them.
· SPOILER ALERT: I have always wondered – how does Cathy will herself to death? Does she starve herself to death? SPOILER END
· The book has an interesting narration as it is a story within a story. It starts and ends with Mr. Lockwood telling the story and then Nelly Dean taking over for the entire middle section of the story.
· I wish Heathcliff would have left and never came back. Catherine, Edgar, and Isabella were happy before his return. Poor Mr. Earnshaw didn’t realize that he was destroying his family for generations by bringing Heathcliff home. Heathcliff clings to his hate and bitterness and is a terrible person.
· Why is this book considered a great romance? I don’t think Heathcliff really loves Cahterine. He is obsessed with her but is toxic and would rather destroy her and her family than accept that she has moved on without him.
· Why didn’t Nelly keep Edgar informed sooner on Young Catherine’s shenanigans?
· I had gotten about the lawyer’s duplicity. He was paid off by Heathcliff not to make it to Edgar’s side before his death.
· Everyone is too alone out there on the moor. They really needed to socialize with more people.
· Even though I disliked pretty much everyone in this book, I couldn’t stop reading it.
Favorite Quotes:
“He's more myself than I am. Whatever our souls are made of, his and mine are the same.”
“Be with me always - take any form - drive me mad! only do not leave me in this abyss, where I cannot find you! Oh, God! it is unutterable! I cannot live without my life! I cannot live without my soul!”
“My love for Linton is like the foliage in the woods: time will change it, I'm well aware, as winter changes the trees. My love for Heathcliff resembles the eternal rocks beneath: a source of little visible delight, but necessary. Nelly, I am Heathcliff! He's always, always in my mind: not as a pleasure, any more than I am always a pleasure to myself, but as my own being.”
Overall, Wuthering
Heights by Emily Bronte is an unforgettable beautifully written classic that
shines a lot on how early trauma can impact lives through generations.








