Woman's World features Stevie Nicks's favourite books including‘Wuthering Heights’ by Emily BrontëWith more than 20 film and TV adaptations of Wuthering Heights, the classic story between Heathcliff and Catherine has been told in a number of ...
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"BrontëBlog" - 5 new articles

  1. Brilliantly written, says Stevie Nicks
  2. Love, Revenge, and Self-Destruction
  3. Nursery Rhymes, Peter Pan and Jane Eyre
  4. The Brontës for (Gay) Boys
  5. A knotty character
  6. More Recent Articles

Brilliantly written, says Stevie Nicks

Woman's World features Stevie Nicks's favourite books including
‘Wuthering Heights’ by Emily Brontë
With more than 20 film and TV adaptations of Wuthering Heights, the classic story between Heathcliff and Catherine has been told in a number of ways—including a song by Nicks. While she was inspired to write “Wild Heart” after watching an adaptation of the story on the big screen, she’s been a fan of the books since her college days. 
“I first read Jane Eyre and Wuthering Heights when I was in college in California in the late 1960s,” Nicks shared. “They are two of my favorite books because they’re just so brilliantly written. The beauty of both these classics is that they were fantastic when I was a teenager and they still appeal to me now as a 63-year-old woman.”
While those classic novels left a lasting impression on Nicks, literature wasn’t her only creative influence. Film also played a major role in shaping her songwriting. In fact, the singer has shared that seeing Wuthering Heights inspired her to write the title track for her 1983 album, Wild Heart.
“I’d written “Wild Heart” early on,” Nicks recalled. “I remember singing it during a Rolling Stone cover shoot for Bella Donna [which came out in 1981] and I wrote it completely and utterly about the movie Wuthering Heights. I wrote it about Heathcliff and Cathy, and the fact that they were one person, that they couldn’t be together and they couldn’t be separate, and about the power and the drama of the closing death bed scene… All those amazing things he says to her.” (Julianne MacNeill)
A reader from Münster's City Library (Germany) recommends Wuthering Heights too.

The British Blacklist interviews Karla Crome, creator of the series Possession.
Tell us about Possession from your perspective …
Tonally, it’s Modern Gothic. A woman travels to a remote location. A foreboding ‘house on the hill‘. She has this vague feeling that something terrible is about to happen (spoiler – it does). It’s the same set-up as Jane Eyre, Dracula, or The Woman in Black, but it centres around the experience of a woman of colour in the present day. (Tamika Mitchell)
   

Love, Revenge, and Self-Destruction

 A new Brontë-related paper:
Alia Rehman, Hira Javed and Iram Ayaz
Liberal Journal of Language & Literature Review, Vol. 4 No. 1 (2026)

The paper discusses a thematic and psychological analysis of the notions of love and revenge in Emily Brontë’s Wuthering Heights, with particular attention to the figure of Heathcliff. It aims to study how intense frustrated love becomes transformed into destructive vengeance and the way such a vicious circle furthers violence, suffering, and ruination throughout generations. Qualitative research methodology is employed in this study because close textual reading and thematic analysis, as its tools, are necessary to trace causes, development, and consequences of revenge within the narrative. Analysis reveals that the vengeful behavior of Heathcliff originates from social alienation, class prejudice, childhood abuse, and emotional betrayal, mainly Catherine Earnshaw’s denigrating her emotional commitment for social status. The research further discusses an intriguing connection between obsessive love and revenge; it indicates how passion, when strangled by social mores, acts as a catalyst for cruelty and moral degeneration. Most importantly, this study suggests that Brontë had denounced revenge as a self-deprecating impulse, and how such a cycle of revenge is retarded in the second generation through mutual comprehension, forgiveness, and nourishing love. By placing revenge as the central thematic force of the novel, this research contributes to a deeper understanding of Wuthering Heights as a psychological and moral exploration of human passion, suffering, and the possibility of redemption.
   

Nursery Rhymes, Peter Pan and Jane Eyre

Sussex Express lists things to do this summer in West Sussex such as this exhibition:
The Newlands House Gallery in Petworth has collated works and personal artefacts to create a mesmerising exhibition, Paula Rego: Visions of English Literature, showing until 6th September. Paula Rego was one of the great printmakers and storytellers of our time and she took inspiration from a range of literary sources such as fairy tales, nursery rhymes, literary classics and folklore. This summer exhibition draws upon three of Paula’s major printmaking works: Nursery Rhymes, Peter Pan and Jane Eyre to illustrate her striking and unexpected portrayal of these well-known stories.                                                                                          Paula Rego: Visions of English Literature, 22nd May – 6th September 
The Yorkshire Post has another article detailing why the plans for a wind farm at the heart of Brontë country are not a good idea. 
   

The Brontës for (Gay) Boys

Gay romance with a Brontë touch. Who ordered that? Well, someone did:
by Kit Iford 
Rainbow Gothic
ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-1919536934
March 2026

Romance for Boys is a 5 book series. Seven queer boys at a northern English university believe classic straight romance has nothing to do with modern queer love, so they form the Romance for Boys book club to pick apart Brontë, Shakespeare, du Maurier, Dickens and Austen, and end up in a dark‑academia, BL‑style tangle of intense first loves, aching unrequited crushes, messy love triangles and dangerous obsessions, slowly realising that the very stories they dismissed are shaping how they hurt each other, choose each other, and fight their way toward messy, hard‑won happy endings.

Kit used to think great love stories were dangerous nonsense, until he found himself caught between two very different boys under the shadow of the Brontës. After a career-ending dance injury, he starts over at a northern university and falls into a world of moors, literature, and unexpected longing.
Marcus is wild, intense, and impossible to ignore, the kind of hillwalker who drags Kit out onto the moors and into feelings he thought he had left behind. Gerald is careful, clever, and steady, offering warmth, safety, and the possibility of a future Kit never expected to want. As Kit and his friends study Jane Eyre and Wuthering Heights, their own lives begin to echo the Brontës’ worlds of desire, restraint, obsession, and self-respect.
Book 1 is a queer campus coming-of-age romance with found family, hurt/comfort, disability and recovery, grumpy/sunshine tension, moorland gothic atmosphere, and lit-nerd drama for readers who love Wuthering Heights, Jane Eyre, and intense slow burns that turn friendship into love.
   

A knotty character

The New York Times has picked '5 New Books We Love This Week' and this includes
This Dark Night by Deborah Lutz
In her lyrical new biography, Lutz shines light on the most enigmatic of the literary, secluded Brontë sisters: Emily. She was described as introverted, odd, guarded to the point of taciturnity, and her “extreme reserve seemed impenetrable,” said her friend Ellen Nussey. “Except to go to church or take a walk on the hills,” wrote her sister Charlotte, “she rarely crossed the threshold of home.” Lutz writes that Emily was indeed a knotty character of “devilish ferocity,” but she was also informed, engaged, even cosmopolitan in her reading and outlook.
You can check on the Official London Theatre YouTube channel for the appearance of Charlie Burn and Ashley Gilmore from the cast of the upcoming London production of Gordon & Caird's Jane Eyre. The Musical at the recent West End Live 2026 in Trafalgar Square. They performed Sweet Liberty and Secret Soul.
For Father's Day yesterday, AnneBrontë.org had a post on Patrick Brontë. 
   

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