The Brontë Society voices objections to windfarm proposals in The Telegraph & Argus and Keighley News:The Bronte Society’s response was given to the recent statutory consultation CEP held on the proposals. The society said while they have a ...
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"BrontëBlog" - 5 new articles

  1. “‘The curiosity is only legitimate when the house of a great writer or the country in which it is set adds something to our understanding of his books."
  2. Brontë: The World Without in Ontario
  3. Tabby, John, Haworth and Banagher
  4. Pretty Special
  5. Storytelling at the Fringe: Sophie Hatfield and Paulina Vallence in Haworth
  6. More Recent Articles

“‘The curiosity is only legitimate when the house of a great writer or the country in which it is set adds something to our understanding of his books."

The Brontë Society voices objections to windfarm proposals in The Telegraph & Argus and Keighley News:
The Bronte Society’s response was given to the recent statutory consultation CEP held on the proposals.
The society said while they have a commitment to environmental sustainability and renewable energy, they “are strongly opposed to this development” with concerns about the Preliminary Environmental Information Report (PEIR) – a key document in the consultation on the impact of the development on moorland.
Reporting details of objections on the Parsonage Museum’s social media, they said: “The PEIR does not contain the baseline evidence for any assessment of the effect on Bronte heritage of the proposal and simply claims that ‘effects on the Bronte-related landscape are minor and not significant.’
“We strongly dispute this claim: the moorland between Haworth and Hebden Bridge allows the literary tourist to physically travel through the landscapes of the Brontes’ imaginations and the worlds of their novels and poetry.
“This link between the Bronte texts and the surrounding landscape was noted by Virginia Woolf when she visited Haworth in 1904:
” ‘I do not know whether pilgrimages to the shrines of famous men ought not to be condemned as sentimental journeys.
“‘It is better to read Carlyle in your own study chair than to visit the sound-proof room and pore over the manuscripts at Chelsea.
“‘The curiosity is only legitimate when the house of a great writer or the country in which it is set adds something to our understanding of his books.
“This justification you have for a pilgrimage to the home and country of Charlotte Brontë and her sisters.'”
“Woolf, along with the 70,000 visitors who visit the Brontë Parsonage Museum from across the world each year, clearly understood the inseparable connection between the local landscape and the Brontës, a connection which cannot be dismissed,” said the society. (John Greenwood)
Collider praises Mexican Gothic by Silvia Moreno-García:
'The Last of Us' Meets 'Wuthering Heights' in This Near-Perfect Gothic Book. (...)
Gothic novels will always be popular. Some of literature's all-time greatest efforts belong to the Gothic genre, from the seminal horror of Dracula to the timeless romance of Jane Eyre. (...)
As the title implies, Mexican Gothic borrows from the rich tradition of Gothic stories to a T. There's a large, tetric manor, High Place, haunted by the ghosts of generations past and very much modeled after the genre's best-known mansions: think of Wuthering Heights, Thornfield Hall, or Manderley. (...)
The Gothic genre has always dealt with themes of class and status. In classics like Wuthering Heights and Jane Eyre, class plays a major role in the central romances between Heathcliff and Cathy and Jane and Mr. Rochester. The differences in standing, background, and prospects complicate the relationship between these couples, allowing the Brontë sisters to provide some very sharp observations that remain relevant almost two centuries later. (David Caballero)
Araminta Hall, the author of Unrealable Narrator, fittingly chooses her favourite novels with unreliable narrators for CrimeReads:
Wuthering Heights by Emily Brontë
 Emily Bronte made a very interesting choice when choosing the narrators of this novel and it has always felt like one of the most important aspects of the story to me. Cathy’s servant Nelly Dean tells the story, but it is written down by Mr Lockwood who is renting the house where Cathy once lived. Both arrive with their own biases, Nelly because she was once from the same class as Cathy and then became her servant, and Lockwood, who feels outside the long established families who rule this part of the Yorkshire moors.
The layers of unreliability run throughout, Nelly often not hearing or knowing everything that happened between Cathy and Heathcliffe and Lockwood often interpreting. And the brilliance of this lies in the fact that Wuthering Heights is a novel about being an outsider, so who better to tell it than two outsiders with their own scores to settle, just like Heathcliff.
The Statesman quotes Jane Eyre in an article about gerontocracy:
Old men may remember what Charlotte Brontë wrote: “I do not think, sir, you have any right to command me, merely because you are older than I, or because you have seen more of the world than I have; your claim to superiority depends on the use you have made of your time and experience.” (Devendra Saksena)
The Yorkshire Evening Post lists villages near Leeds "perfect for a Yorkshire walk in nature":
 Haworth, West Yorkshire
Over in Bradford, Haworth is a beauty spot best-known as the home of the Brontë sisters. The Yorkshire Moors that surround the village can be seen both in Wuthering Heights and Jane Eyre. (Jennifer Cartwright)
Several newspapers announce local editions of the Most Wuthering Heights Day Ever: Wagga Wagga Council News, The Press (New Zealand), RTÉ (Ireland), The Stratford Observer

Libreriamo (Italy) devotes a piece to the poem To Imagination by Emily Brontë. Britain on Page and Screen posts about some locations of Wuthering Heights 2026.
   

Brontë: The World Without in Ontario

A new production of Jordi Mand's Brontë: The World Without in Scarborough, Ontario, Canada:
by Jordi Mand
Directed by Helen Juvonen
Jul 16, 2026 - Aug 2, 2026
Guild Festival Theatre, 201 Guildwood Pkwy, Scarborough, ON M1E, Canada,

Brontë: The World Without offers a glimpse into the lives of the three famous sisters, ​presenting an intimate look at their relationships, their artistic struggles, the pressure of family responsibilities, and the sisterhood that helped them achieve greatness. The play illuminates how their experiences echo those of the heroines who live on in their beloved and unforgettable novels such as Jane Eyre and Wuthering Heights. 
A must-see for Brontë fans, Brontë: The World Without is an unflinching portrait of family, artistry, and what it means to strive for success in a world that often denies women the right to dream. 
This play is based on the real lives of the Brontë sisters, which includes references to real events in their lives, such as mentions of death, suicide, and substance abuse. Please visit the box office if you would like more details on the content of the show.
   

Tabby, John, Haworth and Banagher

Two Brontë alerts. One in Haworth and the other in Banagher, Ireland:
Bradford Heritage Festival
Brontë Parsonage Museum
Thu 16 Jul 11:00am /2:00pm

The year is 1848. 
Join Tabbitha Ackroyd (Brontë servant and confidante) and John Brown (grave digger and tippler) for their tour of Haworth. See the sights and get the gossip. Be introduced to doctors and lady novelists, maiden aunts and sewage inspectors. Keep your eyes peeled and you might spot a Brontë…
This event brings history to life through characters and stories the Brontës knew. 
It is an outside promenade performance beginning at the Brontë Parsonage Museum and taking place in the churchyard and the top of Main Street. 
This performance will last approximately 50 mins and is suitable for all ages.
The Banagher Brontë Group is holding a social gathering on Thursday week, July 16, in Corrigan's Corner Pub at 9pm.
The evening will begin with a special showing of 'Arthur & Charlotte: A Victorian Romance Remembered' which was performed in Tullamore in December 2019 by the Banagher Martello Tower Players.
The performance, which relates the romance between Arthur Bell Nicholls and his wife Charlotte Brontë, was filmed by Maebh O' Regan and features many well known Banagher faces.
Two eminent Brontë scholars, Ann Dinsdale and Sharon Wright will be in attendance as they are paying a short visit to Banagher en route to the Killkee Brontë Festival the following weekend.
A few more details from the Banagher Bronté Group News section:
Last call for this coming Friday night’s Banagher Brontë Group annual quiz in Seán Corrigan’s Corner Pub at 9 p.m.
Ray Flannery has prepared an array of interesting, humorous and challenging questions so it will be a night to enjoy.
Tables for teams of four are €40 each.
Many thanks to Nigel West who has donated a print of the Thornton Brontë Birthplace, value €125 for our raffle.
   

Pretty Special

The Guardian talks about the community free-enter scheme in Chatsworth House:
When Kate, a 47-year-old contract worker came face to face with Charlotte Brontë’s handwriting while visiting Chatsworth House, the avid reader, who counts Jane Eyre as her favourite book, struggled to contain her excitement.
“I had a little bit of a moment,” she said. “I just thought: ‘Wow, that was actually Charlotte Brontë’s writing there on that page.’ That was pretty special.” (Aamna Mohdin)
She refers to the exhibition House of Stories: Tales from the Chatsworth Library (21 March 2026 –4 October 2026), where a letter from Charlotte Brontë to Elizabeth Gaskell (August 27th, 1850) is displayed. The letter is preserved at Chatsworth Library and has a curious history:
That sense of personal connection appears again in a letter from Elizabeth Gaskell to the 6th Duke of Devonshire, written after her visit to Chatsworth in 1857.
In it, she thanks the Duke for his hospitality and encloses as a gift a letter she had received from Charlotte Brontë, which she described as the most interesting she had ever received from her. It was not something she would have parted with lightly.
More on that visit and why the Duke of Devonshire could be interested in a letter by Charlotte Brontë:
We can only speculate on what they discussed, but the Duke had strong literary interests and only the previous month had made a visit to see Patrick Brontë in Haworth. Gaskell’s famous biography of her friend Charlotte Brontë had appeared earlier in 1857. It was received with much praise, but Gaskell also faced a barrage of complaints from people who felt they had been misrepresented in the book – and in two cases legal action was threatened. She had therefore spent a stressful summer revising it for a new, third edition.
From the outset, her biography provoked fascination with the lives of Charlotte Brontë and her sisters, and in subsequent years more and more literary tourists made the journey to Haworth to see where they had lived and written their novels. It seems the Duke of Devonshire was amongst the earliest of these literary pilgrims – probably prompted by Gaskell’s book.
The morning after their dinner, Gaskell sat down in her room to write the letter in which she so vividly described her visit, using ‘a delicious pen’. She confessed that she had no idea where she was supposed to go for breakfast ‘in this wilderness of a palace of a house’.
However, she and Meta successfully made their way home in the end, and Gaskell wrote a thank-you letter to the Duke for his hospitality; she also thanked him for his ‘sympathizing words’, suggesting she confided in him some of the troubles she had experienced over her biography of Charlotte Brontë. Enclosed with the letter was a precious gift for the Duke: ‘I have the greatest pleasure in the world in sending you the enclosed letter from Charlotte Brontë to me [which] I have chosen out as being, in my opinion, the most interesting I ever received from her, and consequently the one I like best to offer to your Grace.’
The first novel of Marian Yee, 4 Janes, is discussed in The Brookline News:
4 Janes” is a reimagining of Charlotte Brontë’s classic novel “Jane Eyre.” In this version there are four different parallel lives that the titular character might have had if she had taken another path. These alternate possibilities span space and time taking Jane to India, Burma (now Myanmar) and Vietnam. Over the wider geography, each thread remains rooted in the original character’s maternal love and grief. 
While the literary classic takes place on the weather-torn moors of Northern England, the inspiration for “4 Janes” was born on a trip to Vietnam. In Huế, a city in the center of the country, Yee and her husband came across a bookstall where the shopkeeper was intently focused on a novel. 
“What was so interesting was that she was reading an abridged copy of ‘Jane Eyre’ to teach herself English,” says Yee. “I was so interested in that very unexpected juxtaposition, because Jane Eyre is this iconic Western classic and I didn’t expect to see it in central Vietnam in this context.” 
From there, the possibilities seemed endless. By resetting the novel within a global framework, Yee is able to examine the complex history between East and West as well as the internal turmoil experienced by Jane. (...)
 The early feminist angle of “Jane Eyre” also makes it primed for reinterpretation. 
“People often think of her as a kind of a proto-feminist before feminism as a term came up,” says Yee. “She’s this very resilient, very strong, very courageous person and she’s had a difficult life but she manages to overcome her difficulties through her own intelligence and her wits.”  (...)
Yee hopes her novel inspires readers to pick up the original “Jane Eyre” and to explore the themes of empowerment that extend through both books. They serve as a reminder that classical literature, including Brontë’s novel, still have much to teach modern audiences. 
Yee says, “I hope readers take away the inspiration of a heroine who learns to rely on herself, regains independence, learns resilience, respects herself and her decisions and takes life on her own terms, including her love life.” (Celina Colby)
New Humanist meets novelists exploring "sexual fantasies of midlife women":
Even Cathy, the teenage heroine of Emily Brontë’s Wuthering Heights has been recast as mid-30s Margot Robbie in a lust-fest fever dream directed by 40-year-old Emerald Fennell. (Nicola Cutcher)
Expansión (Spain) recaps the Brontë story with particular focus on talent recognition:
Durante años hemos repetido casi automáticamente que falta talento. Sin embargo, el informe Hidden Workers elaborado por Joseph Fuller y su equipo en Harvard Business School plantea preguntas incómodas: ¿y si el problema no fuera la ausencia de talento, sino nuestra incapacidad para reconocerlo? ¿Y si nuestros propios procesos de selección, promoción y desarrollo estuvieran dejando fuera a personas perfectamente capaces de aportar valor simplemente porque no responden al perfil esperado? Las hermanas Brontë nos recuerdan que el talento necesita disciplina, curiosidad y trabajo. Pero también ecosistemas donde crecer, personas que crean en él y líderes capaces de mirar más allá de los prejuicios. (Adela Balderas) (Translation)
La Razón (Spain) centers on Charlotte Brontë's biography and how her work, particularly Jane Eyre, reflects it. Pity, the umlaut is in the wrong place.
Releyendo estos días «Jane Eyre», uno de esos novelones a los que el tiempo no consigue envejecer, no puedo evitar evocar la figura de su autora, Charlotte Brontë. Saber quién fue, asomarse a su vida y conocer las heridas que la acompañaron permite regresar a sus páginas con otros ojos. Charlotte Brontë medía poco más de metro cuarenta; sus vestidos, guantes y zapatos conservados hoy en Haworth parecen casi los de una niña. Pero dentro de aquel cuerpo diminuto había una voz que la Inglaterra victoriana no estaba preparada para escuchar. (...) (José María Zavala) (Translation)

The Economic Times (India) announces the OTT release of Wuthering Heights 2026 in India. BookClub publishes an AI article about novels everyone knows, and few people read; the LLM model includes Jane Eyre in the list.

   

Storytelling at the Fringe: Sophie Hatfield and Paulina Vallence in Haworth

More Yorkshire Festivals events, both happening in Haworth:
Part of the Bradford Heritage Festival and taking place in the Brontë Parsonage Museum:
Wed 15 July, 10am-4pm
The Servant's Room, Brontë Parsonage Museum

Listen to Sophia Hatfield’s entertaining take on local stories and folklore - with music, costume and props! Drop in during your Museum visit!
And part of the Haworth Festival and taking place in the Old School Rooms, just across the street of the Parsonage, a new chance to watch Pauline Vallance's What the Brontës did at the Fringe:
July 15 @ 2:00 pm - 4:00 pm
The Old School Rooms, Church Street, Haworth, BD22 8DR

The world famous Brontë Sisters cope with nightclubs, TV adaptations and life events - with original songs and a kicking bonnet.
This show "brings Charlotte to life" in the very place where she had her wedding reception! It imagines her coping with the modern day Edinburgh Fringe, yet also deals with real life events, all illustrated with original songs, accompanied by harp.
Written and performed by singer/songwriter and lifelong Brontë fan Pauline Vallance, this show has been described as "having heart as well as laughs" and "the highlight of my trip to Haworth". It has been presented in Haworth, at the Morecambe, Dundee and Wandsworth Fringes and at Patrick Brontë's Homeland.
   

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