Deadline has a video interview with Jacob Elordi in which he discusses his role as Heathcliff.
Yesterday the BBC celebrated Dame Jacqueline Wilson's 80th birthday by listing some facts about her. As you might imagine, Jacqueline really likes to read - she owns over 15,000 books! Some of her favourites include Jane Eyre by Charlotte Bronte and Ballet Shoes by Noel Streatfeild.
Jane Eyre is also one of '7 Books Perfect for a Rainy Weekend', a list which some AI generated for BookClub.
Here's how York Dispatch describes the film The Housemaid (apart from trashy): “The Housemaid” is like “Gaslight” meets “Jane Eyre,” with a dash of “Rebecca,” with all the various roles lightly scrambled, and a much sexier, nastier streak than any of those mannered mindbenders. (Gayle Eubank)
On day four of its Twelve Days of Brontë Christmas, AnneBrontë.org features the Brontës' dogs.
The new issue of Brontë Studies (Volume 50 Issue 4, October 2025) is available online. We provide you with the table of contents and abstracts:
Foreword
pp 349-350 Author: Chevalier, Tracy
Introduction: Charlotte Brontë's Little Book
pp 351-359 Author: O'Callaghan, Dr. Claire
Charlotte's Little Book
Second Series of the ‘Young Men’s Magazine’, Number Second for September 1830
pp 360-388 Author: O'Callaghan, Dr. Claire
Little Essays
Bidding on Charlotte Brontë
pp 389-391 Author: Dinsdale, Ann
What Are Those Words Worth? Forms of Upcycling, Downcycling and Salvage in the ‘Young Men’s Magazine’, The Tenant of Wildfell Hall and Shirley
pp. 392-402 Author: Heritage, Barbara
Abstract:
Despite their humble origins, the Brontës’ ‘little books’ have achieved an iconic status and now command astronomical sums. This article describes how one such manuscript, the September 1830 issue of the ‘Second Series of the Young Men’s Magazine’, provides new evidence for long patterns of recycling in the works of the Brontës. Starting with an examination of the physical materials salvaged for Charlotte Brontë’s miniature book, this study discusses another form of creative reuse: the interpolation of lines from Wordsworth’s ‘A Night-Piece’ in the story ‘A Letter from Lord Charles Wellesley’. Charlotte and her sister Anne continued to draw on ‘A Night-Piece’ in Shirley (1849) and The Tenant of Wildfell Hall (1848). Even as Wordsworth’s poem invests their writings with cultural capital, more intangible values become apparent, notably an ethics of care for nature and others that stands in contrast to harmful, extractive practices. Charlotte’s propensity for creative salvage illuminates a greater purpose at work in her writing: a desire to preserve a literary and environmental landscape both under threat.
‘That burning clime’: Charlotte Brontë’s Little Book and Jane Eyre
pp. 403-417 Author: O'Callaghan, Claire
Abstract:
This new and original essay takes a close look at the relationship between Charlotte Brontë’s ‘A Letter from Lord Charles Wellesley’, her first creative piece in the newly recovered September 1830 issue of the ‘Second Series of the Young Men’s Magazine’ and her beloved novel, Jane Eyre (1847). It argues that the portrayal of fire, bed burning and unexplained voices in Wellesley’s story provides an origin point for Brontë’s later representation of the same motifs in Jane Eyre. It therefore problematises the idea that Charlotte's portrayal of the burning bed in Jane Eyre was directly inspired by her brother’s drunken behaviour. By contextualising the intertextual connection between these fictions in relation to Charlotte's experiments with genre, this article provides the first analysis of this newly published manuscript and its relationship with her debut novel. The recovered piece of Brontë juvenilia, it argues, expands our understanding of Charlotte Brontë as an author.
A Gothic Apprenticeship
pp. 418-428 Author: Marsden, Simon
Abstract:
In Charlotte Brontë’s juvenilia, we see a young writer learning by imitation and experimentation the conventions and themes of Gothic fiction. ‘A Letter from Lord Charles Wellesley’, one of the stories in the newly-transcribed ‘Young Men’s Magazine’ of September 1830, reveals Charlotte’s enthusiasm for Gothic intrigue and mystery. Although her engagement with the Gothic became more subtle and nuanced in her mature fiction, these early stories give us insights into both the development of her understanding of the genre and of her early enjoyment of its excessiveness and sensationalism. Charlotte’s juvenilia provides clear evidence that she already understood not only the Gothic’s conventions but also something of its political aspects and investment in ideas of the sublime. This article examines ‘A Letter from Lord Charles Wellesley’ alongside another of Charlotte’s early Gothic tales, ‘An Adventure in Ireland’, and traces the legacies of these early genre explorations into the Gothic realism of Villette (1853).
Violence in Charlotte Brontë’s ‘A Letter from Lord Charles Wellesley’: Influence, Representation, Resurrection
pp. 429-439 Author: Franklin, Sophie
Abstract:
Charlotte Brontë was drawn to violence from an early age. Her unpublished, and later published, writings are full of bloody fights, blazing fires and emotional intensities. By paying close attention to the scenes of brutality in ‘A Letter from Lord Charles Wellesley’, one of the stories in the 1830 Little Book presented here, this essay traces the many returns of violence in Charlotte’s literary oeuvre through three central concerns: influence, representation and resurrection. The essay begins with a consideration of the impact of Thomas De Quincey’s ‘On Murder Considered as One of the Fine Arts’ (1827) on Charlotte’s aesthetics of violence, before moving on to a discussion of her numerous experimentations with graphic and implicit depictions of brutality in both her early and mature work. The essay concludes with an exploration of Charlotte’s fascination with raising characters from the dead and ultimately argues for the centrality of violence to her literary development.
Dreaming Exiles in Charlotte Brontë’s ‘The Midnight Song’
pp. 440-451 Author: Regis, Amber K.
Abstract:
Charlotte Brontë’s poem ‘The Midnight Song’ appears in the second issue of the second series of the ‘Young Men’s Magazine’. This Little Book, created in miniature to be a fitting object for the toy soldiers that inspired the siblings’ collaborative storytelling, was acquired by the Brontë Parsonage Museum in 2019. This article enjoys the privilege of being the first to offer a critical account of ‘The Midnight Song’ to celebrate its first publication. It considers Charlotte’s delineation of the exile, expatriate and dreamer, figures who represent different but related ways of knowing and perceiving the world. As the poem unfolds, Charlotte inhabits these subject positions simultaneously, identifying their privileges and testing their limits. In so doing, she hones her understanding of the writer’s craft and creative power, revealing at just fourteen years of age a remarkable self-assurance when wielding her pen. In turn, the poem proves prophetic, for here Charlotte plays with the tropes of un/belonging, dis/connection and mis/communication that recur throughout her oeuvre.
‘The Globe in Glass Town: Mobilities, Textual and Terrestrial
pp. 452-463 Author: Ross, Shawna
Abstract:
This article argues that the newly-transcribed September 1830 issue of the Brontës’ ‘Young Men’s Magazine’ reveals Charlotte Brontë’s incipient global consciousness as an adolescent writer. This consciousness emerges from Charlotte’s use of travel as a theme that unites the issue’s tonally and generically disparate contributions. Within and across the issue’s Gothic tale, Romantic poem, continental travelogue, notices and advertisements, Charlotte develops a series of intertextual bonds that connect the characters’ geographical mobility to the circulations of books, letters and magazines. To contextualise these intersecting images of textual and personal mobility, this article situates them alongside travel imagery in Charlotte’s earlier and later writings and visual artworks. Doing so illuminates not only the young author’s increasingly sophisticated ability to deploy travel as a trope to generate drama and convey character but also her authorial self-awareness that the circulation of a text is an integral part of the text itself.
The Dandy in the Pink Waistcoat: Charlotte Brontë’s ‘Journal of a Frenchman’
pp. 307-320 Author: Wynne, Deborah
Abstract:
This essay considers Charlotte Brontë’s serialised ‘Journal of a Frenchman’ in the September 1830 issue of the second series of the ‘Young Men’s Magazine’. It discusses the representation of Parisian life, demonstrating how this missing fragment fits into the series and the wider context of Charlotte’s engagement with the French language and Blackwood’s Edinburgh Magazine, the latter providing the inspiration for many aspects of the Frenchman’s account of his life.
Yesterday's blunder(s) of the day came courtesy of Radio 4's Nick Robinson as reported by Daily Mail. It is a truth universally acknowledged, that a man without possession of the facts, will get a telling off from his wife. And so it proved for Nick Robinson on Tuesday, who earned the ire of Today programme listeners – and his wife – for seemingly mixing up the author Jane Austen, on the 250th anniversary of her birth, with another literary heroine. While discussing Jane Austen Day with his co-presenter Anna Foster, Robinson, 62, said he was 'game' to do a live action reading of her works on the Today Programme and would even don some historical clothes for the occasion. But he seemed to confuse the Pride and Prejudice author with Emily Brontë, as he added: 'I will pop out and get my Heathcliff costume'. He was soon inundated with complaints informing the presenter, who earns £410,000 for his work at the BBC, that Heathcliff was in fact a central character of Emily Brontë's 1847 novel Wuthering Heights. The author Adrian Hilton said: 'I'm still trying to work out why for a recital of Jane Austen, Nick Robinson said he would 'pop out and get my Heathcliff'. Does he think she wrote Wuthering Heights?' Later in the show, Robinson said that one woman in his household was particularly displeased with his mistake revealing that Pippa Robinson, his wife of 34 years, had been in touch. He said: 'My wife has texted me, along with quite a lot of other people who've messaged, saying 'Don't dress as Heathcliff, you fool!' Robinson later made a further blunder when he told listeners: 'I should just say that when we're focusing on BBC standards, can you imagine someone on Jane Austen Day would then promise to dress up as a Charlotte Brontë character?' Mixing up Charlotte, who wrote Jane Eyre, with her young sister Emily. Robinson then appeared to mock US President Donald Trump's lawsuit against the BBC, when he apologised for the gaffe and said: 'If there is a Jane Austen charity, I promise to pay five billion dollars in compensation to them for the offence that I have caused to them and all her supporters.' (Grant Tucker)
Bustle talks about books with Felicity Jones, who makes a great point about new adaptations of classics. There’s one film Felicity Jones can’t wait to see next year: Wuthering Heights. “If you are going to do a classic, then it’s [about] finding a new way in,” she says. “I like the way that Emerald Fennell did that with Brideshead Revisited with Saltburn. She takes quite a classic story and then spins it and makes it alienating a little bit.” Evelyn Waugh’s 1945 classic is one of Jones’s favorite novels — Emily Brontë’s Wuthering Heights is too; more on that later — and the 42-year-old actress increasingly finds herself reading to find “stories that can potentially work on screen.” The key, she says, is finding the why. “You’ve got to find the: Well, what is the reason to tell it now? What is the modernity in it that we need to do it? Otherwise, what’s the point?” [...] Her third pick, Wuthering Heights by Emily Brontë, nearly didn’t make the list. “I really like the Brontë Sisters and I was actually torn between Wuthering Heights or Jane Eyre,” she says. “There’s always a brutality to their writing. There’s an emotional intensity. It’s so impassioned, and there’s a real toughness to it.” She continues: “Growing up in the moors with that intense family and then the environment they were in, it’s just so unforgiving,” she says. “They managed to distill all of that into their work, particularly in Wuthering Heights. I just was really quite captivated by the book from quite a young age for that reason.” (Charlotte Owen)
Cosmopolitan looks forward to 'The 20 Most Anticipated Movies of 2026' including "Wuthering Heights" Release date: February 13, 2026 Everybody's eyes are on Emerald Fennell's upcoming adaptation of Emily Brontë's gothic romance for two overarching reasons. One, Fennell's movies tend to be divisive. Two, if there's one thing that people love to do it's critique film adaptations of classic literature to death. Remember the hoopla over that Persuasian [sic] with Dakota Johnson? The knives are out to pick apart everything from the casting of Margot Robbie and Jacob Elordi as Cathy and Heathcliff to the costuming and the scare quotes in the title. Some points are valid, others more tedious. But all chatter is good chatter, right? (Leah Marilla Thomas)
Purewow comments on the '12 Classics [that] Ruled the Charts Last Year' and one of them was 3. Wuthering Heights by Emily Brontë If Wuthering Heights only flew onto your radar because of Emerald Fennell's upcoming adaptation, may I humbly recommend the source material? Where Austen was vivacious and playful, the Brontë sisters were gothic in the extremes—deaths, secret wives, lonely moores—but still managed to deliver some of the most romantic lines ever. Example: "Be with me always—take any form—drive me mad! Only do not leave me in this abyss, where I cannot find you!" Swoon. That line alone made me want to pardon Heathcliff. Brontë's most enduring work is a tragic story about love and loss as lovers grasp across a social divide, anchored by a boiling quest for vengeance. (Marissa Wu)
PureWow also wonders if we can have a 'Horny Lit Girl Winter'. Per The Cut, we have cruised into a "Horny Lit Girl" winter that has catapulted beloved literary works into sexy screen adaptations. Prime example: Wuthering Heights. I never knew I could look at an egg like that. But also, Frankenstein, Hamnet, The Housemaid and Hedda. Don't get me wrong—I loved Frankenstein, PureWow Editor-in-Chief Jillian Quint raved about Hamnet. But I really must ask, can we not with Horny Lit Girl winter? [...] A prime example of an upcoming adaptation would be Wuthering Heights. Thus far, media coverage has led with words like "provacative," "latex" and "steamy." As an incensed Redditor (whose sentiments were widely echoed) aptly put it: "As a person whose favourite era of literature is Victorian because of how they portrayed intensity and passion and angst and sexual tension WITHOUT explicit sex, it annoys me to no end that they just want to shock people with as much explicit stuff as possible. (I have no issue with explicit sex at all, just saying that the Victorian era was very puritanical). Also they are clearly rage marketing because people will now go to watch and see how far she has gone. It might not even be about the source material at this point." It's the last sentence that gets me. That in the tizzy of egg yolks and sweaty skin, sensual bread dough and anachronistic latex, we've lost the actual plot. Granted, the film's creators promise that provocation isn't front and center, but the general problem is that provocation is an attention hog, no matter which way you slice it. And if someone hasn't actually read Wuthering Heights, they'll lose the nuance of conversation that made Brontë's book the coarse and shocking work it was. Love, rage, abuse, grief and, importantly, the sticky questions of social class, race and England's colonial legacy. I don't want or need an orgy. I want sex to underline the connection between the characters and the emotion they feel—be it anguish, passion, fear, rage, euphoria. I want it to have a purpose instead of being the purpose. If that makes me a prude, so be it. (Marissa Wu)
AnneBrontë.org had day three of its series of posts on The Twelve Days of Brontë Christmas.
An online alert for tomorrow, December 18:
Thu 18 Dec, 7:30pm Online via Zoom
Join us in the Brontë Lounge for our final online soirée of the year, as we welcome historian, writer and illustrator Eleanor Houghton. This evening, we discuss the inspiration behind Eleanor’s upcoming book, Charlotte Brontë’s Life Through Clothes, which turns to the gowns, bonnets, corsets, boots, and mittens in Charlotte’s wardrobe for clues about the famous author’s life. The evening will be hosted by Helen Meller and, as ever, there’ll be the chance to ask questions on the night.
Even though Charlotte Brontë's take on Jane Austen has been used to criticise Austen for decades, still we would like to join in the celebrations of Jane Austen's 250th anniversary. Much that we take for granted in literature today is thanks to her and what she wrote. On Unherd, Tanya Gold has written about a trip to Bath, which she considers 'the Jane Austen theme park' and she makes an interesting point: I think of Charlotte Brontë’s criticism of Emma: “anything like warmth or enthusiasm; anything energetic, poignant, heart-felt, is utterly out of place in commending these works”. But Austen was English, and she spoke to the speechlessness of the English: Brontë was half Cornish and half Irish. There was also the North/South divide.
Slant lists 'The Best Music Videos of 2025' including 10. Charli XCX featuring John Cale, “House” (Director: Mitch Ryan) The video for Charli XCX and John Cale’s “House,” from the former’s soundtrack to the forthcoming film adaptation of Wuthering Heights, is equally as ominous as the song itself. The clip, which finds the artists roaming a dimly lit house and the surrounding woods, strikingly match cuts Charli’s dark waves with the glistening hide and black mane of a horse and the wings of a vulture, which is tethered to a bed. “I think I’m gonna die in this house,” Cale and Charli repeat with increasing intensity, as he holds her head down on a table. (Sal Cinquemani)
While Den of Geek looks towards the future and lists 'The Most Anticipated Albums of Early 2026' including Charli XCX – Wuthering Heights February 13 After the colossal success of her last record Brat, which spawned countless remixes, “Brat Summer,” and even a thinly veiled Taylor Swift diss track, Charli XCX will be back relatively quickly with her soundtrack to Emerald Fennell’s film adaptation of the Emily Brontë novel of the same name. In a Substack article announcing the record, the hard-partying chanteuse described feeling overwhelmed with creativity yet unable to create new music in Brat’s wake. That all changed when Fennell sent her a script for Wuthering Heights, allowing Charli the chance to be inspired by a pre-existing, non-personal story. She says the album will have a nostalgic, Gothic, cyclical sound reminiscent of her first album, True Romance, and cited John Cale’s description of The Velvet Underground’s sound, “elegant and brutal,” as a sonic rule of the land. She’s even teased a collaboration with the iconoclast. Time to trade that neon green for gloomy black.
Brontë Babe Blog discusses 'Identity, the Brontës, and Choosing Not to Belong' and AnneBrontë.org posts the second of his twelve days of Brontë Christmas.
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