Wales Online recommends the '5 'best ever' period dramas perfect for fans of Call the Midwife and Downton Abbey' includingJane EyreOriginally broadcast in 2006, this screen adaptation of Charlotte Brontë's novel charts the journey of its title ...
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"BrontëBlog" - 5 new articles

  1. Excellent casting
  2. The Chateau on Sunset
  3. Most Wuthering Heights Day Ever in Edinburgh
  4. Jane Eyre Convention (play) in London
  5. A lot of trouble putting it down between chapters
  6. More Recent Articles

Excellent casting

Wales Online recommends the '5 'best ever' period dramas perfect for fans of Call the Midwife and Downton Abbey' including
Jane Eyre
Originally broadcast in 2006, this screen adaptation of Charlotte Brontë's novel charts the journey of its title character as she becomes an orphan and battles to forge a brighter future.
Across four episodes, the programme takes viewers on a magnificent expedition through this timeless tale, starring Ruth Wilson in the titular role alongside Toby Stephens as Edward Rochester.
The two gradually fall for one another despite his peculiar conduct and the enigmatic noises she hears echoing through the residence.
It said: "A wonderful adaptation of this classic. The casting is excellent; Ruth makes a delightful and intriguing Jane, and Toby Stephens is an utterly fantastic Rochester.
"This is a compelling series; each episode leaves you anxious to see the next. The set designers and costume designers have excelled themselves, and the lighting in particular is superb." (Angie Quinn)
Times Now has an article on 'Why Wuthering Heights Is Not A Love Story, No Matter What People Say'. Book Club has an AI-generated article on '8 Best Classic Books You Must Read In 2026' including Wuthering Heights.
   

The Chateau on Sunset

This retelling of Jane Eyre has appeared recently in the newsround and is already available:
by Natasha Lester
ISBN 9780593726556
Published by Ballantine Books
June 02, 2026

A sheltered young woman living at the Chateau Marmont falls under the spell of a scandalous, secretive man as all of Hollywood’s glamour swirls around her—a stunning feminist reimagining of Jane Eyre from the New York Times bestselling author of The Paris Seamstress.

“A clever, compelling midcentury Gothic . . . a can’t-miss read for the madwoman in all of us.”—Layne Fargo, bestselling author of The Favorites.

In 1957, newly orphaned Aria Jones is sent to live with her aunt, a fading star who hides away in Hollywood’s infamous Chateau Marmont. There, two aspiring actresses, Calliope and Flitter, take the grieving Aria under their wing.
But the Marmont isn’t meant for small girls with big hearts, and Aria’s first few nights reveal an insidious secret that continues to haunt her as she grows up in the hotel’s halls, where the bright lights of Hollywood cast even darker shadows. If Aria can just stay invisible and invite no trouble as she saves money, then she can leave the Marmont and live life on her own terms—alone but free.
Her carefully laid plans fall apart when the hotel is bought by Theo Winchester, a reclusive rock star turned unexpected caretaker of his daughter, Adele, and unlike any man Aria has met before. To earn the last bit of money she needs to escape, Aria becomes Adele’s tutor, which brings Aria closer to Theo and ignites a passion she never expected.
Suddenly, Aria finds herself wondering if she still wants to remain invisible—and if inviting trouble is a risk she’s willing to take to pursue what she truly desires.

   

Most Wuthering Heights Day Ever in Edinburgh

Daily Mail and others report on Edinburgh's Most Wuthering Heights Day Ever yesterday.
She famously sang ‘it’s me, I’m Cathy’ in her hit song Wuthering Heights.
But passers-by could be forgiven for wondering which one was the real Kate Bush as hundreds of fans wearing red gathered on Edinburgh’s Meadows to recreate the dance from the 1978 chart-topper. 
The annual gathering is part of the global Most Wuthering Heights Day Ever, with this the fifth time it has taken place in Edinburgh.
One previous participant has been quoted as saying: ‘It takes a certain kind of person to want to frolic in a field dressed like Kate Bush – a bunch of eccentric people celebrating a wonderfully British icon.’ (Emma Newlands)
Edinburgh News shares a video.

The Nerd Daily has a Q&A with writer Eliza Knight.
The one that made you want to become an author: Jane Eyre by Charlotte Brontë (Elise Dumpleton)
Yesterday marked the anniversary of the death of Patrick Brontë and AnneBrontë.org had a post about it.
   

Jane Eyre Convention (play) in London

A chance to see Jane Eyre Convention in London, before it premieres at the Edinburgh Fringe in August:
Theatre Caddis Presents
by Eleanor Zeal, directed by Danielle Arkwright
June 9-13
The Bread & Roses Theatre
68 Clapham Manor Street, Clapham SW4 6DZ, London

Jane Eyre aficionados meet in a community hall in West Norwood to reenact their favourite novel. They fight unashamedly over the best lines examining their own neuroses and histories as they go, eventually reaching the end. Opportunities for audience to join in and feel real, potentially therapeutic  emotions.
   

A lot of trouble putting it down between chapters

Book Reporter reviews Deborah Lutz's This Dark Night:
After reading This Dark Night and having a lot of trouble putting it down between chapters, my biggest disappointment had nothing to do with how Deborah Lutz uniquely captured the essence of Emily. It was the tragic brevity of her literary subject’s life (1818-1848). (...)
What brings this unusual and ultimately tragic family into focus for 21st-century readers is Lutz’s consummate skill at weaving seemingly mundane details of everyday life into the fabric of their creative existence. Alongside the practical necessities of acquiring a Victorian education, maintaining a place in society, dealing with youthful emotions and romances, encountering illness and death, and keeping a motherless household running, Charlotte, Emily, Anne and their only brother, Branwell, lived energetically in imaginary worlds they created and wrote about together --- not only during childhood, but also well into young adulthood. 
Much of their imaginative fervor, especially Emily’s, was stirred by the climate and rugged landscape of the Yorkshire moors around their hometown of Haworth. Their intellectually liberal father, Patrick, was a local clergyman who largely home-schooled the children. He would outlive not only his wife, but all six of his offspring. 
By drawing so deeply on the real and imaginary worlds that the Brontës simultaneously inhabited, Lutz adds meaning and relevance to Emily’s poetry, which spans her entire short life: her seeming obsession with death, graves, memorials, ghosts and the supernatural; her passion for the beauty of the night sky and contemplation of the infinite; her keen eye for the subtlest changes in the flora and fauna of the moors on which she wandered at every opportunity; and her passion for the welfare of animals. She also captures Emily’s sometimes-painful transition into adolescence and adulthood, times in which she could be both an acute observer and vocal critic of human nature and relationships (platonic and erotic).
An especially endearing and often poignant element of This Dark Night is the generous amount of correspondence that Lutz includes between Emily and her sisters, friends and relatives, which not only serves to highlight the intimacy of their connections, but also brings the larger 19th-century world into their quite isolated rural environment. An important part of that wider world was the innovation of affordable rail travel that arrived in Yorkshire in time for Emily and Charlotte to journey overseas to Belgium for additional schooling, an experience that deeply influenced both their writing. (Pauline Finch)
The Telegraph lists 10 favourite literary advice-givers.
Helen Burns
Jane Eyre by Charlotte Brontë, 1847
“Life appears too short to me to be spent in nursing animosity or registering wrongs,” the dying Helen Burns advises the furiously unhappy, rebellious young Jane in the opening chapters of Charlotte Brontë’s best-known novel. Helen’s pacific world view provides both moral and spiritual guidance for Jane, as Brontë’s wayward orphaned heroine negotiates her way into adulthood.
Yet Jane also struggles to reconcile Helen’s submissive sensibility with her instinct to kick against compliance as a woman’s sexual and political lot. The unwaveringly good Helen inhabits one part of Jane, and Bertha Mason, Rochester’s “mad wife” whom he has imprisoned in the attic, the other. The genius of the novel lies in the way it holds these feminine contradictions in balance. (Claire Allfree)
 Firstpost posts a 'Gen Z review' of Wuthering Heights, the book
I love Wuthering Heights from every inch of my heart. I love it with a passion that I love very few other books, and it is easily in my top three of all time. Like many others, I’d grown up thinking it was a romantic book, the pinnacle of romance really, a story between Catherine and Heathcliff.
The first time I read it, I was fresh out of school, in that angsty period between school and university when life promises potential but everything is uncertain. In all honesty, I didn’t fully understand it, and I am almost certain I didn’t enjoy it either. I don’t remember feeling much, which in retrospect makes sense — I was in an all-girls boarding school for most of my teenage years and wasn’t particularly social enough to have formed any real romantic attachment outside of it.
I read the book emotionally unprepared, which is to say, I came to it without having loved anyone yet. No wonder I found it disappointing. Where was the adventure? The tragedy? How much time were they actually spending together? (...)
The insults in the novel were fabulous — “he’s such a cobweb, a pinch would annihilate him,” “thou saucy witch” — the characters so wickedly themselves that I found myself reading passages aloud to no one.
Nevertheless, it was the central miscommunication that undid me. Heathcliff walking away two minutes before Catherine confesses that he is “more myself than I am, whatever our souls are made of, his and mine are the same.” It is almost the 1800s version of Normal People. I remember how wretched I felt, wanting to shake him. And then Catherine dies, and Heathcliff says “I cannot live without my life, I cannot live without my soul,” and there is simply nothing to be done with that.
The thunderstorm, and the fool who loves him
Most people who read Wuthering Heights expecting a love story come away confused and slightly betrayed. This is because it is not a love story. It is a revenge tale, and once you read it that way, the fact that everyone is so comprehensively horrible to each other starts to make a great deal more sense.
The structure of the book does something interesting to the characters, particularly the first generation. The whole story reaches us third hand — Nelly Dean tells it to Lockwood, who writes it in his diary, occasionally admitting he is condensing things. Nelly herself wasn’t present for a lot of it. (Read more) (Treya Sinha)
Clara lists books you should read if you liked the film:
 'La inquilina de Wildfell Hall' de Anne Brontë
Las hermanas Brontë fueron tres: Charlotte (1816-1855), Emily (1818-1848) y Anne (1820-1849). En el mundo occidental de principios del siglo XIX, las mujeres no tenían hueco en casi ningún ámbito, y menos aún en aquello que se consideraban tareas masculinas. Las tres tenían intereses literarios y las tres publicaron sus escritos para ayudar a su padre, que era pastor, a sacar adelante a la familia. 
Con menos de 30 años, publicaron relatos donde los personajes femeninos eran inteligentes, complicados y rebeldes. Emily solo publicó Cumbres borrascosas, pero sus hermanas continuaron su carrera de escritura. La más conocida de Charlotte es Jane Eyre. Anne fue una de las más olvidadas, pero cuenta con obras tan interesantes como La inquilina de Wildfell Hall.
En esta novela, cuenta la misteriosa llegada de Helen Graham y su hijo a la vieja mansión Wildfell Hall. El pueblo no sabe que esta mujer realmente huye de un pasado muy turbulento. Algo que va descubriendo mientras lee su diario el narrador de la historia, Gilbert Markham, que está enamorado de ella en secreto. En el relato se cuelan opiniones y actitudes de mujeres muy avanzadas para su tiempo que lo hacen aún más atractivo. (Lidia Lozano) (Translation)
The Edinburgh Evening News publishes  photos of Meadows Festival 2026, "including hundreds of people dressed as Kate Bush dancing together in the popular Most Wuthering Heights Day Ever event." BBC talks about a grant received by the Haworth Village Hall:
A community hall in a historic West Yorkshire village has been awarded a £74,800 grant to fix facilities which had fallen into "significant disrepair".
The Local Regeneration Fund approved the money to refurbish Haworth Village Hall's toilets, which have been described as unsafe.
A Bradford Council spokesperson said the works, in the village synonymous with the Brontës, were "vital to ensure the building meets safety standards and provides accessible amenities to meet the needs of the growing community". (Chris Young)
   

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