Samantha Ellis publishes a piece in The Guardian trying to explain why Wuthering Heights is not "the greatest love story of all time" but something much more complex, troublesome and brilliant:The most astonishing thing about the first trailer for ...
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"BrontëBlog" - 5 new articles

  1. "The greatest story about what we think love is like when we haven’t experienced it"
  2. The New Woman
  3. The world that inspired Wuthering Heights
  4. House of the Damned
  5. A man from Germany stood in Nancy’s room and cried
  6. More Recent Articles

"The greatest story about what we think love is like when we haven’t experienced it"

Samantha Ellis publishes a piece in The Guardian trying to explain why Wuthering Heights is not "the greatest love story of all time" but something much more complex, troublesome and brilliant:
The most astonishing thing about the first trailer for Emerald Fennell’s Wuthering Heights is not the extreme closeup of dough being kneaded into submission. It’s not that in the lead roles Margot Robbie is blonde and 35, and Jacob Elordi is white, when Emily Brontë described Cathy as a teen brunette and Heathcliff as “a dark-skinned gypsy”.  (...)
The most astonishing thing is that the trailer says Wuthering Heights is “the greatest love story of all time”. Which is almost exactly how the 1939 Laurence Olivier and Merle Oberon film was trailed – as “the greatest love story of our time … or any time!” Have we learned nothing? I am not talking about the fact that (like Oberon’s!) Robbie’s wedding dress is white, which is not period-correct. This has exercised many people on the internet. I’m more worried about the fact that almost a century since Olivier’s film, we are still calling it a love story – a great one! The greatest! It’s being released the day before Valentine’s Day! – when what actually happens is that Cathy rejects Heathcliff because she’s a snob, and he turns into a psychopath. (...)
It’s true it’s low on laughs. It’s no romcom. Instead of a meet-cute there’s Cathy’s father bringing home a ragged orphan he’s found starving on the streets of Liverpool. The boy-loses-girl part is all there, but the boy-gets-girl ending never quite happens. The real question is whether it’s too brutal for the screen – Andrea Arnold’s raw, stripped-down 2011 version is probably the closest to the book’s dark energy, and even she stuck to the first half of the book.
There’s so much cruelty. Heathcliff is abused by Cathy’s brother Hindley. He then goads Hindley into drinking himself to death, takes his house and abuses Hindley’s son. He tricks Cathy’s sister-in-law into marriage, beats her, calls her a slut, hangs her dog and gaslights her, insisting this is what she wants. Cathy is too narcissistic to care about any of this. So even ignoring her death and the second half of the novel, it’s a lot. If Fennell continues to the (bittersweet) end she’ll have to deal with Heathcliff abusing his own son and Cathy’s daughter, forcing them to marry, and renting Cathy’s marital home to a middle-aged fop who slashes a ghost girl’s wrists with broken glass. (In a frame narrative. The complexity of the plot is another reason it’s a nightmare to adapt.) (...)
 Perhaps it’s not the greatest love story of all time, our time or any time, but is the greatest story about what we think love is like when we haven’t experienced it.
Keighley News celebrates one of the highlights of the Brontë year, the reopening of the Brontë Birthplace:
The house at Thornton opened to the public for the first time in its 200-year history in March.
Contributions from more than 700 individual investors – together with grants from Bradford 2025 UK City of Culture, and the Community Ownership, National Lottery Heritage and Rural England Prosperity funds – led to the property being bought and placed under the care of Brontë Birthplace Ltd, a community benefit society.
An extensive renovation was carried out ahead of the public launch.
And the official opening of the building – as a museum and education centre, with facilities for overnight stays in the historical rooms – was performed in May by Her Majesty Queen Camilla.
Whilst the Brontë siblings are inexorably associated with Haworth – where they lived and drew inspiration for their work from the surrounding moorland – Charlotte, Branwell, Emily and Anne were all born at the house in Thornton.
Brontë Birthplace fundraising co-ordinator, Nigel West, says: "This is an amazing story of Bradford 2025 UK City of Culture using its legacy funding and then 770 members contributing – and the formation of a community benefit society – that will protect the Birthplace for the community.
"This was the most important heritage opening anywhere in the UK in 2025, and it is as significant to this country as Shakespeare's birthplace." (Alistair Shand)

Also in Great British Life.

Express visits Haworth, "the gorgeous little village with the UK's best high street".
Haworth is the kind of village that makes you want to slow down and take it all in. Nestled on the edge of the Yorkshire moors, it’s best known as the home of the Brontë sisters, whose novels immortalised the windswept landscape. But the village itself has a story worth exploring, a mix of literary history, industrial heritage, and small-town charm that feels genuine and unpolished.
The village grew around the textile industry in the 18th and 19th centuries. Many of its stone houses were built for workers in the local mills, and the streets still echo that past. Cobbled lanes twist between stone cottages and independent shops, and while tourism has increased over the years, Haworth retains an authenticity that makes it feel like a lived-in place rather than a museum. Today, the Brontë Parsonage Museum sits at the top of the main street, a constant reminder of the village’s literary fame, while the moors beyond provide the dramatic backdrop that inspired Wuthering Heights and Jane Eyre. (...)
It’s easy to see why the Brontës found the surrounding landscape so inspiring: dramatic without being forbidding, wild but still inviting. (...)
After dinner, I walked uphill toward the Brontë Parsonage Museum. The street narrows as it rises, with stone cottages gradually giving way to more open space.
Even without entering the museum, wandering around the gardens and the lane leading up to it is evocative. Low walls, rough grass, and flower beds frame the house, while beyond the gate the moors roll endlessly into the distance.
It’s easy to imagine the Brontës pacing these paths, their minds wandering as far as the open land before them. (Aditi Rane)

The Craven Herald & Pioneer coincidentally also has an article about how the Old Post Office in Haworth has been named the cosiest place to eat by The Yorkshireman. 

The Jerusalem Post reviews the latest novel by John Irving, Queen Esther:
Meanwhile, Irving returns to his signature subjects: circumcision, tattoos, wrestling, and the endless possibilities of sexual attraction and intercourse. He examines works by the Bronte sisters, Charles Dickens, Arthur Schnitzler, and Anne Frank, the films High Noon and The Seventh Seal, and songs by Bob Dylan. (Glenn C. Altschuler)

The photographer James Glossop shares his favourite images of 2025 in The Times, including one of a Northern Ballet’s performance of Jane Eyre on March 20, 2025.

SWR (Germany) interviews the writer Anjet Daanje, who now publishes the German translation of her novel Het lied van ooievaar en dromedaris:
Das Lied von Storch und Dromedar“ ist ein multiperspektivischer Roman, der durch Emily Brontës doppeltes Erzählen im Roman „Sturmhöhe“ inspiriert wurde.
Dadurch wirkt Daanjes Erzählen wie ein postmodernes Puzzle und besitzt zugleich die Eleganz eines englischen Gesellschaftsromans.
Anjet Daanje sagt: „Man könnte sagen, dass dies das gemeinsame Lied von elf Personen ist. Die elf Kapitel bilden zusammen eine Art Gedicht, also ein Lied. Der ganze Roman ist ein bisschen wie ein Musikstück angelegt. Mit Themen, die variiert werden.“
Zum Beispiel Geschwisterbeziehungen. Klavierspiel. Oder der Umgang mit Zeit.
„Ich sehe „Das Lied“ aber auch als Ballade. Früher wurden Balladen gesungen, um Geschichten zu erzählen. Und das macht Anjet in diesem Buch sehr stark. Und das nennt sie dann ein „Lied“, sagt Anton Scheepstra.
Daanjes Ballade umfasst drei Jahrhunderte. Sie beginnt in England, geht weiter unter Auswanderern in den USA, macht im Ersten Weltkrieg einen Abstecher nach Frankreich, im Zweiten Weltkrieg nach England und kehrt am Ende geradezu heim nach Groningen.
„Das letzte Kapitel spielt in den Niederlanden. Das hatte ich zuerst gar nicht vor", berichtet Daanje. „Ich dachte eher an England. Aber dann recherchierte ich zu Glockentürmen und dachte: Die gibt es auch bei uns. Warum den Roman also nicht in den Niederlanden abrunden?“ (Katharina Borchardt) (Translation)

And of course, Wuthering Heights 2026, features in many list of the films to watch next year: The Tab, Evoke, Glamour, Breaking News, The Journal, Soap Central, Elle, ForbesEuronews, Time Out... The Times of India includes Emily Brontë in a list of haunting lines from books and classics.

AnneBrontë.org posts about the Patrick-Maria wedding preparations in 1812.

   

The New Woman

A new scholarly Brontë-related paper in Spanish:
Gerard Hidalgo Izquierdo, Universidad de Córdoba
Esferas Literarias, n.º 8, diciembre de 2025, pp. 100-15, doi:10.21071/elrl.i8.18630.

La época victoriana fue un periodo de prosperidad y desarrollo para las escritoras británicas. Muchas de ellas criticaron la moral y los valores victorianos a través de sus obras. Las mujeres empezaron a rebelarse contra las normas establecidas por la sociedad, y la literatura femenina comenzó a desarrollarse como una forma de combatir el patriarcado. Posteriormente, a finales del siglo XIX, Sarah Grand acuñó el concepto de La Nueva Mujer. Sin embargo, en este trabajo sostengo que este concepto puede encontrarse previamente en la literatura victoriana temprana. De este modo, este trabajo propone analizar los personajes femeninos en Mary Barton (1848) y La Inquilina de Wildfell Hall (1848) que representan a la Nueva Mujer, y cómo Elizabeth Gaskell y Anne Brontë crean personajes femeninos que desafían los estándares sociales victorianos.
   

The world that inspired Wuthering Heights

Lots of sites are listing the must-see films of 2026 with Wuthering Heights in their selections. Here are just a few: Newsweek, BBC, Yahoo! Entertainment, The Argus, etc.

Edhat takes a different approach and lists 'The Top Screen-Inspired Travel Destinations In 2026' including
Yorkshire, UK
The dales and moors of Yorkshire are a well-established muse for writers and visual artists. Most recently, the region has served as the romantic location for “Wuthering Heights” and “Downton Abbey: The Grand Finale.” The North Yorkshire Moors Railway and the Yorkshire Dales make appearances in both and are a must-see when visiting. Make sure to squeeze in a visit to the Brontë Parsonage Museum, where the Brontë family lived from 1820 to 1861. The historic space offers fascinating insight into the lives of the three Brontë sisters and the world that inspired “Wuthering Heights. (Jeanette D. Moses)
Forbes (Spain) looks into the profitability of adapting classics.

Girls' Life lists '5 Literary Classics That *Still* Hit Different', including
Jane Eyre by Charlotte Brontë
Jane Eyre is more than a gothic romance—it’s a revolutionary tale of a woman refusing to be anyone’s shadow. Orphaned, headstrong and fiercely moral, Jane challenges the rigid rules of Victorian society with every choice she makes. Thornfield Hall is full of secrets, but the real shocker isn’t the locked rooms or the mysterious master—it’s Jane herself, daring to demand respect, love and autonomy on her own terms. Brontë’s novel breaks conventions by giving a voice to a heroine who thinks, feels and acts for herself, weaving themes of gender, class and morality into a story that is as thrilling and dark as it is emotionally rich. A story of courage, desire and moral reckoning, it still feels daring and modern centuries after it was written.
   

House of the Damned

Wuthering Heights 2026 is not the only Wuthering Heights film adaptation that will premiere in 2026. ScaryContent Productions begins a series of 'gowns and gore' films with an independent horror film inspired in Emily Brontë's.novel:
Year: 2026
Genre: Supernatural Horror
Director: Rebecca J. Matthews
Producer: Rebecca J. Matthews
Starring: Elle O‘Hara, Sky Cheema, Ross Townsend Green, Anna Coupe, Nicola Wright, Catherine Wippell

Synopsis: Wuthering Heights - House of the Damned is a gothic, haunting, and supernatural adaptation that brings the dark soul of Emily Bronté’s novel to the fore. An unsuspecting visitor, Mr. Lockwood, arrives at the isolated, unsettling Wuthering Heights. Trapped by a storm, he discovers the mansion is plagued by the hostile and vengeful spirit of Catherine, the previous mistress of the household. Driven by obsession, her lover Heathcliff bends to the ghost’s will, leading him to commit cold-blooded murder. As Lockwood's dangerous curiosity spirals, he must escape this cursed nightmare before he becomes the spirit’s next victim.
On the Instagram accounts of Elle O'Hara, Becca Hirani (aka Rebbeca J. Matthews), EMRJ Entertainment and many other members of the crew and cast, you can find many stills of the shooting and the film itself.
   

A man from Germany stood in Nancy’s room and cried

The Telegraph and Argus features the Brontë Birthplace, a place for which 2025, with its Bradford City of Culture, has been quite a year.
The team at the Brontë Birthplace is celebrating a year that saw the historic house opened as a visitor centre.
The Market Street house, where Charlotte, Emily, Anne and Branwell Brontë were born, opened to the public for the first time in its 200-year history, following a major renovation. Funding from more than 700 investors, together with grants from Bradford 2025, the Community Ownership Fund, National Lottery Heritage Fund and the Rural England Prosperity Fund led to the house being purchased and placed in the care of Brontë Birthplace Limited.
In May, Queen Camilla officially opened the Birthplace as a visitor and education centre, with a cafe and overnight stay facilities. The Be More Brontë campaign was launched, to inspire children to take on new life challenges.
In May, Queen Camilla officially opened the Birthplace as a visitor and education centre, with a cafe and overnight stay facilities. The Be More Brontë campaign was launched, to inspire children to take on new life challenges.
Fundraising Co-ordinator Nigel West says: “It is an amazing story of Bradford City of Culture 2025, using their legacy funding, then 770 members contributing and the formation of a Community Benefit Society that will protect the Birthplace for the community. It is the most important heritage opening anywhere in the UK this year and as significant to this country as Shakespeare’s birthplace.”
A range of events at the house this year has included author talks, educational workshops and theatre performances. Next year the team plans to build on the work and success of 2025. Adds Nigel: “This year has been a dream come true for everyone involved in the Birthplace project. We can’t wait to see what 2026 will hold for this amazing little house which has provided a lasting legacy for Thornton, Bradford and Brontë fans worldwide.”
On a recent visit to Brontë Birthplace, I’m met by education officer Charlotte Jones, who has held a school workshop that morning. Charlotte is an excellent guide; a mine of information about the house, and Thornton, when the young Brontë family lived there, from 1815-1820. Market Street, she explains, was then the main road linking Bradford to Halifax, surrounded by moorland. Thornton’s landmark viaduct, and many of its houses, had yet to be built.
We begin the tour in the hallway, with original staircase. When the Brontës lived here it was a busy household - home to Patrick, young curate of Thornton’s Bell Chapel, his wife Maria and their six children. You can almost hear them running downstairs and through the rooms.
In the parlour stands a desk beneath a portrait of Patrick, who had two books published while living here. This room, furnished in Regency style, with the original fireplace, was where Maria entertained friends from the village.
Items found in the house during last year’s renovation are displayed in a cabinet, including handwritten homework, which had slipped behind a skirting board, by a girl who once lived there - she returned to the house this year, Charlotte revealed - a Corgi toy box and animal bones from when the property was a butcher’s shop, with slaughterhouse at the back.
The display reflects the history of the village, when its mills and houses were built in the mid-1800s. Pointing out a laudanum bottle, Charlotte tells of a Board of Health inspector in Thornton, horrified to find mothers giving their children opium as “infants preservative”.
There’s an 1812 workhouse coin, a pair of child’s clogs, spectacles and, in one display case, things that would have been dear to Maria, including a lace shawl and kid leather gloves. “Maria gets a bit lost in the family’s story, especially in Haworth. This house was her domain,” said Charlotte.
At the back is the kitchen, with original flagstones discovered by builders during the renovation, and the old wooden ceiling. The back stairs tell the story of Nancy De Garrs, selected by Patrick from the Bradford School of Industry, which trained girls for jobs in service. Nancy, 13, was nursemaid to the children and her sister Sarah, 12 was employed to help her. Nancy later became cook and housekeeper.
“It is in this room where the children would’ve got under their feet, and where they told them stories,” says Charlotte. “We know now that early years learning is so important. Both Nancy and Sarah were so influential on the Brontës, yet they get so little recognition.”
Upstairs, in Nancy and Sarah’s room, are dressing-up clothes and toys for today’s children to play with. “We do ‘laundry with Sarah De Garrs’ with school groups and quill and ink sessions,” says Charlotte.
The three main bedrooms are now available to stay in. Charlotte’s room is where the children slept. “This is the only room in the world that all the Brontës slept in,” says Charlotte. “We think there may have been a dressing-room here, as there were reports of Patrick seen at the window shaving.”
Emily’s bedroom was Patrick and Maria’s room, and Anne’s room is at the end of the landing, in the extension built after the Brontës’ time. At the original window, now restored, it is said the children could be seen, looking out for Patrick coming home. Each bedroom is beautifully furnished, with an en-suite bathroom.
“There’s been a lot of interest in overnight stays,” says Charlotte. “We’ve had guests from Canada and Japan. A man from Germany stood in Nancy’s room and cried; he was so moved that the house was finally restored.”
The tour ends in the education area and cafe. It was a pleasure to spend an hour with Charlotte - her passion for preserving and passing on the Brontë legacy really brought the house to life.
The Brontës left Thornton in 1820 but this house still feels like a warm family home. Ahead of a new era of Brontëmania, with February’s release of Emerald Fennel’s Wuthering Heights film, starring Margot Robbie, this modest mid-terrace house is a reminder that the story of Emily, Charlotte and Anne began here in Thornton. (Emma Clayton)
Sadly, another Brontë-related property, Mary Taylor's Red House, hasn't had such a good year, and Dewsbury Reporter announces that it is to be split into three properties.
Planning permission has been granted to turn an historic building with links to the Bronte family into three properties.
The planning permission relates to the former Red House Museum in Gomersal, a Grade II* listed building which operated as a small community museum before its closure in 2016.
Listed building consent has also been granted as part of the proposals.
Under the plans, the main house will be renovated and turned into two, three-bedroom homes, and the barn will be converted into a four-bedroom home, with part of the ground floor extended.
The coach house will be renovated into ancillary accommodation for the barn.
The main house – a two-storey detached building – was originally constructed around 1660 and extensively refurbished in the 19th century.
The building has historic links to the Bronte family and is mentioned in Charlotte Bronte’s ‘Shirley’.
In the application’s decision report, the council said the site was offered for Community Asset Transfer following its closure in 2016, but that “none of the proposals received were assessed as being realistically viable.”
The site was later sold at public auction in December 2024.
On the development’s visual amenity, the decision report said: “It is considered that although there will be some alterations to the buildings, the harm this will cause will be outweighed by the building remaining in use and being restored where it otherwise may have gone into disrepair.”
No representations were received for the change of use application, however seven were received as part of the application for listed building consent.
One of these was an objection and one was a general comment. (Catherine Gannon)
Wuthering Heights 2026 is on several lists of films to look forward to next year. From MovieWeb:
'Wuthering Heights' – Feb. 13
Emerald Fennell's highly anticipated adaptation of Emily Brontë's only novel is already gearing up to be one of 2026's most swoon-worthy affairs. The trailer alone is pure cinema, with Margot Robbie and Jacob Elordi's electric chemistry leaping off the screen as the marketing reminds us that Wuthering Heights is "the greatest love story of all time." Fennell's gothic romance was primarily filmed in the rugged moorlands of the Yorkshire Dales, so viewers will get to experience the bleak landscape described in Brontë's 1847 novel backed by the avant-pop vocals of Charli XCX. As an added treat, breakout Adolescence star Owen Cooper plays Young Heathcliff, rounding out an already watchable cast that also includes The Night Agent's Hong Chau. (Josh Conrad)
For Time, it is one of 'The 38 Most Anticipated Movies of 2026'.
Wuthering Heights (Feb. 13)
The trailer for Emerald Fennell’s adaptation of Emily Brontë’s famous novel calls it “the greatest love story of all time,” perhaps an unusual way of describing the escalating abuse and trauma of the source material. This version of Wuthering Heights stars Margot Robbie as  18-year-old Catherine Earnshaw and sees Jacob Elordi further establishing his Gothic bona fides as the Byronic hero Heathcliff. (Ben Rosenstock)
SheKnows includes it on a list of '11 Book-to-Movie Adaptations to Look Forward to in 2026'.
Wuthering Heights
Because no era is complete without another attempt to make Wuthering Heights feel fresh. This new adaptation revisits Emily Jane Brontë’s classic tale of obsession, class, and deeply unhealthy romance. Expect windswept drama, brooding stares, and characters who desperately need therapy. The toxicity is the point. 
Release Date: February 14, 2026 (Kenzie Mastroe)
A letter from a reader of The Guardian on 'How to foster a love of reading in boys':
In my experience as an English teacher, despite having access to more books than ever before, schools often see books with glorified violence at the centre as “boy books”, and so fill the curriculum with this content. This does nothing to combat toxic masculinity – rather, it fosters it.
We shouldn’t patronise boys by telling them what society thinks they should become, but instead give them a bit more credit in their reading interests. I’ve had plenty of young men tearing up in my classroom when reading Jane Eyre. Encouraging kids to read this kind of book won’t solve the entire problem, but it will certainly help in making more well-rounded young men. Louis Provis, Head of English, MyEdSpace
   

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