This is the last week of the Wuthering Heights Read Along hosted by Jill at Fizzy Thoughts. I only made it through Chapter 15. What happened?
The story just didn't hold my interest. Every time I tired to get back into it, I realized the words were not sticking. I was reading but not comprehending. My thoughts seemed to be elsewhere.
I do plan to finish Wuthering Heights and post a review; in time. I'm glad I made an attempt at the book. It's hard for me, however, to not complete something I started..
Thanks to Jill I learned more about Emily Bronte too. This also helped in my appreciation of The Brontes Went To Woolworths which I recently reviewed. A favorite line from that book is when Emily announces her new novel, "Swithering Depths." How appropriate.
Heathcliff and the Heights will have to wait for now. I have a feeling we'll meet again.
What's the last book you started and never completed? Do you think you'll come back to it later?
My posts on Wuthering Heights are here:
Wuthering Heights: Chapters 10-15
Wuthering Heights: Chapters 4-9
Wuthering Heights: Chapters 1-3
Joining me on The Wuthering Heights Read Along are the following friends:
Showing posts with label Read Along. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Read Along. Show all posts
Wednesday, June 16, 2010
Wednesday, May 5, 2010
Wuthering Heights, Chapters 10-15
We're back IN THE HEIGHTS for another installment. I'm reading along with Jill at Fizzy Thoughts and other friends. My reports are averaging bi-weekly so today I have six chapters from Wuthering Heights to share.
We have an interesting narrator in our friend Nelly the housekeeper. As she relays the facts I keep wondering about her honesty. Does she have something against Catherine? Who wouldn't?
Heathcliff has arrived at the ball like Cinderella (although he looks nothing like her). His childhood resembled hers as he was reduced to the role of a servant by Hindley, the ugly foster brother. Now Heathcliff's back after three years and looks like a fine gentlemen with money. I wonder what happened to change his circumstances?
If only Heathcliff had stayed long enough to hear Catherine express her love for him. Perhaps he would have swept her away in his arms and lived happily ever after. Happiness, however, is not part of the Wuthering Heights experience.
Edgar is not amused to have Heathcliff back and tells the delighted Catherine she must choose. She does what any good drama queen would do and becomes hysterical, taking on the role of "victim" (is there a shrink in the Heights?) and decides she's dying. Pregnant, yes.
Meanwhile Isabella becomes attracted to Heathcliff (not good) and they elope. Poor Edgar! I do feel sorry for him because he's the true victim (and Isabella too). Edgar takes care of Catherine when she would rather be with Heathcliff. And now Heathcliff has positioned himself as "brother-in-law" by eloping with Isabella. Oy.
Heathcliff also is getting even with Hindley and moves back to Wuthering Heights. He eventually becomes master of the house as Hindley has lost control through gambling.
As we end this segment, Heathcliff rushes back to Catherine and there's passion between them! Edgar comes home and Catherine urges Heathcliff to stay (why not?). Party time.
Joining me on the Wuthering Heights read-along are the following:
Labels:
Classics,
Fiction,
Read Along
Wednesday, April 21, 2010
Wuthering Heights, Chapters 4-9
"Its power is absolutely Titanic: from the first page to the last it reads like the intellectual throes of a giant...one of the most unpleasant books ever written...we stand in amaze at the almost incredible fact that it was written by a slim country girl who could have passed in the crowd as an insignificant person..." (a review of Wuthering Heights written by George Barnett Smith, Poets and Novelists, 1875).
Welcome to week three of the Wuthering Heights read-along hosted by Jill at Fizzy Thoughts. This is the second week I've been with the group and my first time ever reading Wuthering Heights by Emily Bronte.
It took me awhile to figure out how people are related. Housekeeper Nelly Dean gave the family history at Lockwood's request.
Young Catherine who lives at Wuthering Heights is the daughter of the woman Heathcliff grew up with. Her name was Catherine too (wow, confusing!) and her brother was Hindley. And to complete the family drama, Hareton, the young man at Wuthering Heights, is Hindley's son.
Young Catherine who lives at Wuthering Heights is the daughter of the woman Heathcliff grew up with. Her name was Catherine too (wow, confusing!) and her brother was Hindley. And to complete the family drama, Hareton, the young man at Wuthering Heights, is Hindley's son.
Catherine could have married Heathcliff, her soul mate, but opted for another guy instead. Okay, so why is her daughter living with Heathcliff? And Harton is the son of the man who mistreated Heathcliff. Why is he at Wuthering Heights too? I guess I have to read further.
Heathcliff's childhood was rocky. He was an orphan living in poverty who was brought to live with Catherine and Hindley by their father. When he first arrived, Heathcliff was referred to as "it." That could give any kid a complex. The Master came to love Heathcliff more than his son. Heathcliff's status changed again when the Master died and the son (Hindley) took charge. Hindley reduced Heathcliff's role to that of a servant.
I felt sorry for Heathcliff but a comment from the Housekeeper made me think otherwise, "He complained so seldom...I really thought him not vindictive...I was deceived completely..."
I felt sorry for Heathcliff but a comment from the Housekeeper made me think otherwise, "He complained so seldom...I really thought him not vindictive...I was deceived completely..."
Do you think Catherine haunts Wuthering Heights or does Lockwood have an active imagination?
Joining me on this read-along are the following friends:
Opening quote from the Barnes and Noble Classics Edition of Wuthering Heights.
Labels:
Fiction,
Read Along
Wednesday, April 14, 2010
Wuthering Heights, Chapters 1-3
My friends think I'm into classic literature when they see Wuthering Heights by Emily Bronte on the coffee table. But then I have to confess to them that it's my first time with the book. Yes, I'm a novice "Height-er."
In my 50 plus years I've managed to avoid Wuthering Heights by Emily Bronte. On the surface this, "most original tale of thwarted desire and heartbreak in the English language," never appealed to me.
Jill at Fizzy Thoughts is hosting a read-along for the book and inspired me to give it a try. My task is to read three chapters each week and write a report on Wednesdays. The read-along began last week so I'm already behind. I plan another post in the next week to catch up.
The text I'm using is Barnes and Noble Classics with an introduction by Daphne Merkin. It has footnotes for every chapter and a translation of the Yorkshire dialect spoken by some of the characters.
Chapters One to Three: My Summary and View
Guess who's coming to dinner? To Heathcliff's dismay it's his new tenant, Lockwood (and our narrator). To make matters worse, Lockwood cannot return to his home some four miles away due to snow. (This is 1801 and there's no GPS to guide him back).
Heathcliff would rather turn him loose on the Yorkshire moors to fend for himself. Instead he reluctantly gives Lockwood a room at Wuthering Heights but strange things happen. After reading a 25 year old diary in his room belonging to Catherine Earnshaw, a ghost appears in the night and Lockwood's screams wake up the house.
Heathcliff barges in and when Lockwood announces the ghost's name as Catherine Linton (how many Catherine's are there?) it stirs up strong emotions and grief in Heathcliff that Lockwood cannot explain. (I think there's a good story here).
It hasn't been a fun evening for Lockwood. He can't figure out how people are related to each other at Wuthering Heights and they aren't very interested in helping him. Plus, he suffered a dog attack.
There's a young lady who is Heathcliff's daughter-in-law and a young man named Hareton Earnshaw (same last name as the person who owned the diary). Rounding out the "happy" household" is an older man named Joseph.
The diary sheds some light on Heathcliff as a young man. Sounds like he didn't fit in. I'm not surprised considering his dark and gloomy demeanor.
Labels:
Fiction,
Read Along
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Ho'ola'i na manu i ke aheahe
"The birds poise quietly in the gentle breeze."
Said of those who are at peace with the world, undisturbed and contented.
Said of those who are at peace with the world, undisturbed and contented.


