Sunday, July 05, 2009

Heathcliff is not going to the Emmys

Let's start with unexpected news, it seems that the PBS has not submitted Wuthering Heights 2009 to the Emmy Awards. From The Envelope (Los Angeles Times):
Very odd: Several notable TV miniseries didn't bother to enter the Emmy derby: BBC America's "Burn Up" and PBS productions "Oliver Twist" and "Wuthering Heights. (Tom O'Neil)
Simon Schama selects Wide Sargasso Sea for the best summer readings in The Guardian:
Rhys's vivid re-imagining of the early life of the first Mrs Rochester in Jane Eyre follows the Creole heiress from her youth in lush but oppressive 1830s Jamaica through her transformation into English literature's most famous "madwoman in the attic".
The so-called greatest year of American film, 1939, is the subject of this article in The Cleveland Plain Dealer:
"Wuthering Heights." Oh the tortured agony of it all! The mother of all chick-flicks in the hands of William Wyler (from Emily Bronte's novel), with Laurence Olivier as Heathcliff and Merle Oberon as Cathy. (Clint O'Connor)
The Independent discusses the recent premiere of the Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince film and compares it with the Twilight saga:
Yet teenage snogging is not at the heart of Harry Potter, as it is with Twilight. It is not a rom com, it is a narrative epic – all the greatest stories ever told wrapped into one. The Twilight books are said to nod to Pride and Prejudice, Romeo and Juliet and Wuthering Heights. Harry Potter has everything thrown in from Dante to Beowulf to Dickens. Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince reminds me most of the Old Testament. Dumbledore as played by Michael Gambon is not the kindly old man we remember from Richard Harris's performance. He has turned into God. (Sarah Sands)
Michaela Zamloot compares John Irving's The Cider House Rules with Jane Eyre in the SF Young Adult Literature Examiner:
This classic from the “American Dickens” follows on the journey of a boy trying to find his place in the world, a coming-of-age novel travels from innocence to experience in a way that only the American dreamer can. Following in the footsteps of great British works such as Jane Eyre, Irving’s heart-wrenching story is a powerful portrait of life and love.
UTV News talks about Englishness:
Englishness, I concluded as I prepared to leave Bradford, is not really about a thing - the countryside, the city, the pub or the cricket ground - and it is not about Shakespeare or the Brontë sisters. Being English is about behaving and feeling and responding in ways that are quintessentially English.
Fish with Brontë names in the Chicago Pets Examiner, Wuthering Heights included in a summer reading list in The State (South Carolina), The Wire links again Wide Sargasso Sea with the finally stopped, unauthorized sequel of The Catcher in the Rye.

Exile on Ninth Street talks about Wide Sargasso Sea, Punctum has discovered some recent Brontë fiction (The Secret Diaries of Charlotte Brontë and The Taste of Sorrow) and not so recent (the infamous The Crimes of Charlotte Brontë) through this blog, Reviews (briefly) and Kay's Bookshelf (not so briefly and much more enthusiastic) post about Jane Eyre, Echostains Blog has read S.R. Whitehead's The Brontës' Haworth. Inspired Lunacy looks (with mixed feelings) at Wuthering Heights. Finally, the Brontë Sisters has devoted a post to the Pillar Portrait.

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Romanian and Danish translations

New Brontë translations around:

The Professor in Romanian:
Profesorul
Charlotte Brontë
ISBN: 973-724-175-7
2009
Editura All
Collection: Literatura Universala - Serei Noua

Profesorul este prima opera narativa scrisa de Charlotte Bronte, una dintre cele mai mari romanciere ale secolului al XIX-lea. A fost elaborata in 1845, inainte de capodopera Jane Eyre, fiind valoroasa astazi mai ales pentru meritele de cronica ale societatii victoriene.Povestea pe care o infatiseaza cititorilor este fructul experientei proprii, la Bruxelles, unde a studiat limba franceza, in 1842.
Wuthering Heights in Danish:
Stormfulde højder
Translation: Camilla Jørgensen
ISBN: 9788763810562
Rosinante 2009

"Stormfulde højder" er det eneste, Emily Brontë nåede at skrive, før hun døde som 30-årig. Til gengæld er det en af 1800-tallets vigtigste og dristigste kærlighedsromaner. Bogen udgav hun under pseudonymet Ellis Bell. Emily Brontë var den ene af de berømte tre Brontë søstre: Ud over hende selv og Charlotte, var der også Anne. De debuterede som digtere, men opgav hurtigt poesien til fordel for prosaen. Storesøsteren Charlotte Brontë fik øjeblikkelig succes med sin guvernanteroman "Jane Eyre" (1847) . Stormfulde højder er en stort anlagt skæbnefortælling om kærlighed, der forsøges, fortrydes og forsøges igen, om had og genhad. Den er dristig i kærlighedshistorien, hæmingsløs i sin lidenskabelige voldsomhed, overbærende overfor hysteri og luner og en nærmest sindssyg ulykkelighed. Det er følelser for fuld udløsning og optimal orkestrering. Kys og omfavnelser er næppe udført bedre eller med større timing. "Stormfulde højder" er både ekstatisk og humoristisk - og med en skarp social indignation. (Google translation)
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Saturday, July 04, 2009

G.I. Jane Eyre and her stash of pornography

The latest novel by Alice Hoffman (an inveterate Brontëite), The Story Sisters, is reviewed in The Philadelphia Enquirer:
Shades of the Brontes: Three sisters have created an imaginary world of fairies and demons, queens and minions. (...)
When Charlotte Bronte and her siblings were children, they invented the worlds of Angria and Gondal. Their mother and two oldest sisters were dead; they lived in a cold, remote area of northern England, and they already knew far too much of alcoholism, illness, and death in their immediate family.
Hoffman's Story sisters endure their parents' divorce, but they also live in a comfortable house in a well-off neighborhood on Long Island. Their grandparents have homes in Manhattan and Paris, which they visit regularly. (Susan Balée)
The Guardian carries an article by Jenny Uglow about Edward Lear's Lake District sketches now on exhibition (Edward Lear, the landscape artist) at the Wordsworth Museum & Art Gallery (Dove Cottage, Grasmere). The author being Jenny Uglow it is not surprising that a reference to Charlotte Brontë and Elizabeth Gaskell appear:
The sketches show a landscape at once familiar and strange to the modern eye. The first, for example, is the postcard view from the landing stage at Lowwood, on the eastern shore of Windermere south of Ambleside, looking across the lake and up the distant valleys to the Langdale Pikes, the peaks just emerging from the drifting clouds. In his sketch tourists gather, pointing westwards, as they would always do - it was here that Charlotte Brontë and Elizabeth Gaskell would meet, and talk, and drift on the lake - and it looks much the same today, although crowded with yachts and boats.
The Times has an article about Britain's sea resorts and curiously the Brontës appear not in connection with Scarborough (as usual) but with Filey:
Filey, where Delius and Charlotte Bronte spent holidays, still has a pleasantly Edwardian feel, reflected in its annual festival, which ends tomorrow with a Last Night of the Proms. (Stephen McClarence)
The Daily Finance is one of the last news sources in pairing Wuthering Heights and the Twilight saga:
The four-book Twilight series became a worldwide publishing phenomenon, selling 53 million copies and occupying the top four spots on USA Today's Top 100 Titles of 2008 list, evoking comparisons to J.K. Rowling's Harry Potter series. Readers in France snapped up copies of Emily Brontë's classic Wuthering Heights because Twilight heroine Bella discusses the 19th-century classic in Eclipse, the third Twilight book. (Jonathan Berr)
The Wrap publishes an extraordinary exclusive:
You’ve heard of “Pride and Prejudice and Zombies” and “Pride and Predator”? Well, we can exclusively report on the latest mash-up of a public-domain masterpiece and genre staple … “G.I. Jane Eyre”! Amazingly, Demi Moore has taken time out from her busy Twittering schedule to reprise the “Suck my dick!” role she did for Ridley Scott … while wearing leftover costumes from “The Scarlet Letter." Here’s an early look. Subtle! (Michael Adams)
And The Guardian, talking about Elizabeth David's colourful annotations in her cookbooks, makes a really effective comparison:
These scribbles were personal, written purely as aides-mémoire or occasionally as expressions of joy or outrage. Still unpublished, they were written with no view to posterity yet they reflect her erudition, her humour and her legendary waspishness. But to a David agnostic such as me they are also little short of an epiphany. Trawling through her notes is like reading an undiscovered stash of pornography by Charlotte Bronte or a long-buried draft of early chick-lit from Ernest Hemingway. (Tim Hayward)
The RepublicanAmerican talks about Charles Ludlam's 1984 play The Mystery of Irma Vep full of Brontë (and many other) references:
Expect plenty of melodrama and cross dressing in Yale's wildly comic production. Austin Durant, a tall and large-framed actor steps into the roles of Lady Enid Hillcrest, who is supposed to be frail and delicate. He also plays Nicodemus, the one-legged caretaker; Alcazar, and Pev Amri. Max Gordon Moore plays Lord Edgar, the intruder, and housekeeper Jane, who is a send-up of Bronte's Jane Eyre. (Joanne Greco-Rochman)
The Daily Express talks about bibliotherapy:
The Reader Organisation in Merseyside, a charity set up in 1997 by former university lecturer Jane Davis, runs more than 80 weekly outreach projects across the region in schools, GP surgeries, hospitals and day centres, as well as libraries.
It was while teaching English Literature to adult education classes that Jane, 53, began to camaraderie and support systems” within the group. When one woman, a doctor with a terminal illness who’d never had much time to read, said it had made her last fi ve years bearable Jane knew she was on to something. It gave her the idea that reading for therapy would also benefit people who weren’t academic.
In 2001 with a £500 grant from Liverpool University she started running Get Into Reading groups. Within five weeks she had 14 participants with dinner ladies, manual workers, young single mums and unemployed and retired people queueing up to join her groups.
"We started with a short story and by the end of the course people were volunteering to read out loud. A builder who’d come to us because he was feeling down after being laid off asked if we could read Shakespeare’s Othello. We then went on to spend five months on Wuthering Heights by Emily Bronte, which everyone really enjoyed.” (Tina Walsh)
Le Figaro reviews the French translation of Sam Savage's Firmin and mentions Jane Eyre tasting of lettuce:
Dévoreur intempestif dans un premier temps - il ingurgite du Faulkner et du Flaubert sans faire la différence -, ce Ratatouille version érudit se forge peu à peu un goût sûr jusqu'à devenir un fin gourmet de la littérature (à ses yeux, Jane Eyre a une saveur de laitue...). (Isabelle Courty) (Google translation)
Scéna (Czech Republic) recommends Jane Eyre 1944 which airs tomorrow in ČT2:
Filmové návraty: Jana Eyrová (Vysílání: 05.07., 16.55 hod., ČT2)
Viktoriánský román Charlotte Bronteové Jana Eyrová (1847) patří k oblíbeným knížkám mnoha generací paní a dívek a také k nejčastěji adaptovaným literárním látkám. Existuje nejméně dvacet filmových a televizních přepisů. V našich kinech se v roce 1973 objevil britský film Jana Eyrová (1970) se Susannah Yorkovou a Georgem C. Scottem, ale mnohem populárnější v té době byla čtyřdílná inscenace Československé televize (1972), v níž hlavní role ztělesnili Marta Vančurová a Jan Kačer. Asi poslední verzí, která se u nás hrála (byť jen na videu), je Zeffirelliho adaptace z roku 1995 s Charlotte Gainsbourgovou a Williamem Hurtem. Jedna z nejznámějších (a také nejlepších) verzí vznikla v Hollywoodu v roce 1944, tedy v době jeho největší slávy. Pro studio 20th Century Fox byl snímek jedním ze stěžejních titulů roku s tehdy poměrně vysokým rozpočtem 1,7 mil. dolarů. Režií byl pověřen anglický tvůrce Robert Stevenson, který se do Hollywoodu dostal díky producentu Davidu O. Selznickovi a který se později prosadil jako režisér populárních disneyovských snímků (např. Roztržitý profesor a zejména Mary Poppins). Scénář filmu vycházel z rozhlasové adaptace Orsona Wellese, proto je pod ním kromě známého spisovatele Aldouse Huxleye podepsán také divadelní producent John Houseman, který s Wellesem úzce spolupracoval. Orson Welles měl na konečnou podobu díla větší vliv než jako pouhý hlavní představitel, ale nabízený kredit producenta údajně odmítl. Jeho partnerkou ve filmu byla Joan Fontaineová, jež se na začátku 40. let ocitla na vrcholku popularity díky úlohám ohrožených novomanželek ve dvou Hitchcockových snímcích, v Mrtvé a živé podle románu Daphne du Maurier a v obdobném psychologickém dramatu Podezření, za něž dostala Oscara. Za zmínku ještě stojí hudební doprovod pozdějšího Hitchcockova spolupracovníka Bernarda Herrmanna a herecká účast malé Elizabeth Taylorové v úloze Janiny kamarádky v sirotčinci. (Google translation)
La Jornada Aguascalientes (México) begins an article about Michael Jackson's death referencing Wuthering Heights (!):
No me refiero a la hermosa novela clásica pero sí a la escena que me sugiere el título de este libro. Me provoca imaginar el sentimiento que invade al que con esfuerzo llega a donde pocos, a la cima que por los nimbos quizás no deje ver hacia abajo, al terreno de los mortales, de la gente común que aún alienta los prejuicios victorianos, como en la época de la autora, Emily Brontë. (Marco García Robles) (Google translation)
ЯРНОВОСТИ publishes a survey about preferences in reading made in the Yaroslavl Oblast (Russia). Even there, Jane Eyre is chosen as one of the favourite books of 3,5 % of the participants.

Things I googled for but didn't find questions Jane Eyre's feminism, Literary Transgressions reviews (not enthusiastically) Agnes Grey and The Grim Reader is also not very interested in Villette.

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Wuthering Classics Illustrated

Classic Comic Store Ltd is reprinting several Classics Illustrated comics. On this month Wuthering Heights is scheduled to appear. These are the details of the original comic:
Wuthering Heights
  • Paperback: 48 pages
  • Publisher: Classic Comic Store Ltd; 1 UK edition (1 Jul 2009)
  • ISBN-10: 1906814236
  • ISBN-13: 978-1906814236
Classic Illustrated No 59
Originally Published in 1949.

Art work: Henry C. Kiefer
All artwork re-coloured and covers digitally enhanced.
The cover of the present reprinting seems to be the Painted Cover of the original second printing. The artist was Geoffrey Biggs. Next September Jane Eyre is scheduled to be released.

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Friday, July 03, 2009

A rags-to-riches tale

Sharon Tanenbaum recommends the recently published The Secret Diaries of Charlotte Brontë by Syrie James in RealSimple:
In the foreword to this historical novel, author Syrie James (The Lost Memoirs of Jane Austen) asks you to imagine that the private diaries of Jane Eyre scribe Charlotte Brontë are at your fingertips. Using Brontë’s biographies and 24 years of her actual correspondence with close friend Ellen Nussey as a basis, James has created a faux-diary about the rags-to-riches tale and romance of the celebrated writer.
The Telegraph has an article about writers who succeeded after dying. One of them, Emily Brontë:
After all, one book is sometimes enough to earn literary immortality: consider To Kill a Mocking Bird, Wuthering Heights, Black Beauty. Furthermore, plenty of writers have enjoyed fame beyond the grave that they only dreamt of (or occasionally disdained) in their lifetimes. (Nicolette Jones)
More Sargasso references in the Salinger affaire. Now in the Times:
Even so, is Salinger being po-faced? Or does he have a fair claim for copyright infringement? 60 Years certainly isn’t the first novel to exploit another author’s characters. Jean Rhys’s Wide Sargasso Sea owed a debt to Jane Eyre. Flashman was spun out of Tom Brown’s Schooldays. There have been James Bond sequels, though they have been written under the stewardship of Fleming’s estate.
The Daily Post (New York counties) includes an article by a local student now in Oxford, England:
Europe has a unique siren's call for me.
I love everything about it. I fell head-over-heels for France with the help of my high school French teacher. And England? Well, this is a country that has produced some of my favorite things, such as Pink Floyd, Jane Eyre, and cute guys with British accents -- not to mention Hugh Grant and Hugh Laurie, the two English loves of my life.(Kristy Kibler)
Lots of reviews on the blogosphere: Cover to Cover briefly reviews Wide Sargasso Sea; Books, Time, Silence reviews Wuthering Heights; CineBooks does the same with The Professor in Romanian; The first draft of anything is shit... reviews Agnes Grey, Female Mysoginist has a post about Wuthering Heights (and Jane Eyre) with some bizarre arguments.

Finally, an alert for tomorrow June 4 from the Calderdale Council:
Saturday 4th July
Bronte Moors Charity Challenge Walk
7 mile short walk or 20 mile circular walk from Haworth via Top Withins,Walshaw and Gorple reservoirs and Hardcastle Crags in aid of the Stroke Association.

Entry form and information from Haworth & Worth Valley Rotary Club - Tel. 01535 604339 / 646232.

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Death and read lists

Two new books with Brontë-related content:
Death in the Classroom
Writing About Love and Loss
by Jeffrey Berman
State University of New York Press, 2009

Shows how death education can be brought from the healing professions to the literature classroom.
In Death in the Classroom, Jeffrey Berman writes about Love and Loss, the course that he designed and taught two years after his wife’s death, in which he explored with his students the literature of bereavement. Berman, building on his previous courses that emphasized self-disclosing writing, shows how his students wrote about their own experiences with love and loss, how their writing affected classmates and teacher alike, and how writing about death can lead to educational and psychological breakthroughs. In an age in which eighty percent of Americans die not in their homes but in institutions, and in which, consequently, the living are separated from the dying, Death in the Classroom reveals how reading, writing, and speaking about death can play a vital role in a student’s education.
“Death in the Classroom deals with an extremely important topic—our attitudes toward death and grieving and the possibility of helping students, through reading, writing, and classroom discussion, to reflect on death and grieving in their own and others’ lives. I like the book’s clarity and the vigor of its argument for death education in the university classroom. This is a book for teachers, especially teachers of literature and life writing who are committed to teaching literature from an ethical and experiential perspective, and it will also appeal to those interested in death education and attitudes toward death and dying, particularly in North America.” — Hilary Clark, editor of Depression and Narrative: Telling the Dark.
Contains the chapter
6. Cathy’s Letter to Her Deceased Mother in Wuthering Heights
A review can be read on metapsychology.
Read on-- women's fiction : reading lists for every taste
Rebecca Vnuk
Santa Barbara, Calif. : Libraries Unlimited/ABC-CLIO, ©2009.

ISBN13: 9781591586425
ISBN10: 1591586429
Libraries Unlimited
Publication Date: 06/30/2009
Series: Author Research Series
Paperback | 200 pages

Created to offer a different perspective on women's fiction, and reach a broader reading audience (including fans), this book offers new reading paths for women's fiction lovers. It categorizes and lists hundreds of popular women's fiction titles, but the scope is more current and more selective, the tone is lighter and more informal, annotations are shorter and livelier. Most importantly, the organization and approach are based on various appeal factors of the genre, rather than the formal genres and subgenres that other guides adhere to. Use these lists to advise readers, to create thematic reading lists for library web sites, flyers, and newsletters; and as checklists or reading plans by those who enjoy women's fiction. Buy two copies-one for the reference and readers' advisory desk, and one to circulate!


Includes references to Jane Eyre as this review in ricklibrarian certifies.

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Thursday, July 02, 2009

Rochester happy wearing petticoats and Heathcliff dressed by Calvin Klein

The School Library Journal reviews - as a matter of fact summarises rather than reviews - Brian James's The Heights:

Gr 9 Up–This bleak tale of star-crossed love will have little appeal for teens. Angry, orphaned Henry has been raised as a brother to sweet daydreamer Catherine, though their feelings for each other run much deeper than that of siblings. After her father dies at the beginning of the novel, her domineering brother, Hindley, drives the two apart. Catherine finds solace with Edgar, the preppy son of a wealthy neighbor, while Henry becomes caught up in violence at his new public high school. After another tragedy further widens the gap between Henry and Catherine, she resolves to make a clean break with him, but then yet another tragedy occurs. James is known for his unflinching novels about teens battling issues such as child abuse and depression. In The Heights, he cleverly alternates between Henry’s and Catherine’s points of view of the same incidents to show how their feelings for each other change over the course of the book. However, the angst is over-the-top even for a YA novel, and the attempts at profundity fall flat. Send readers to Wuthering Heights instead.–(Leah J. Sparks, formerly at Bowie Public Library, MD)

The Toronto Star makes a list of the top 5 Sophomore Book Flops and Shirley appears on it:
Jane Eyre has entered the canon as one of the foremost examples of Romantic fiction in the English language; Shirley has not. This 1849 attempt at novelistic political commentary was not reprinted in her lifetime. (Bert Archer)
Well, not exactly, although Shirley was not the big success that Jane Eyre was, a second edition was published in 1852 (dated 1853), in Charlotte Brontë's lifetime. Not the first time that Shirley has this doubtful honour.

Antonia Quark on The New Statesman reviews a BBC Radio 4 programme:
The Grandfather of Self Help, 2 July, 11.30am, Radio 4) told the story of the journalist Samuel Smiles, whose book Self Help was published on the same day as The Origin of Species in 1859, and went on to sell more copies than the Bible that century.
And applies the self-help techniques of the book He's Just Not That Into You: The No-Excuses Truth to Understanding Guys (Hardcover) by Greg Behrendt and Liz Tuccillo to Jane Eyre with hilarious results:
All self-help books are useless, of course. I mean, take, for instance, He’s Just Not That Into You, the American mega-seller that promotes hardline tactics for women in dead-end relationships, and apply its advice to some of the great romances of literature: “Dear HJNTIY, I am in love with my boss. He dressed as a gypsy to fool me into revealing my feelings but still fails to make a move. Please help.”
“Dear Jane, if a guy is happy to hang out with you wearing earrings and a petticoat then he’s definitely not that into you. Wake the fuck up.”
USA Today interviews Jack Murnighan, author of Beowulf on the Beach: What to Love and What to Skip in Literature's 50 Greatest Hits who makes the following (gender-oriented) recommendation:
Q:What would you recommend for people who think classics are too stuffy?
A: If you're a guy, read Beowulf. I call my book Beowulf on the Beach because I did catch myself reading Beowulf in a foldable chair in the Hamptons and really enjoying it. It's really short. It's only 70 pages and has a ton of action. So in some ways, it's a perfect beach read. It has a lot of violence and battle scenes, so typically men are going to like it more, although not exclusively.
Q: What else?
A: Wuthering Heights is a great book for women to go back to and read again. It's compelling, romantic, creepy, gripping and well-written. And if you know it was written by a woman who more or less was never allowed out of her house, you wonder, how did she came up with these crazy characters? How did she come up with all this drama and all this intensity? And you realize, wow, she must have been smoldering inside. (Carol Memmott)
Of course we like it when someone recommends Wuthering Heights but the great-book-for-women thing does get tiring.

Stephanie Harper on the Denver Entertainment Examiner publishes a list of summer reads for the lover of literature, including Jean Rhys's Wide Sargasso Sea:
4. Wide Sargasso Sea by Jean Rhys- This incredible novel, based on the infamous Bertha in Bronte’s Jane Eyre (Rochester’s supposedly crazy first wife), is not only set in the beautiful and tropic 1840’s Jamaica, but the sensuality of Antoinette Cosway, and the world she is a part of, makes this a perfect summer read. The plot brings to light several feminist issues with the inclusion of the signature Rhys woman in Antoinette, but also serves as a lovely and powerful critique of British colonialism, and capitalism in general. It is tragic, but engaging, and sure to be a fast read.
Gamasutra interviews Dan Pinchbeck, writer and producer of the single-player mod for Valve Corporation's Half-Life 2: Dear Esther. The interviewer finds echoes of Wuthering Heights in this adaptation:
Comparisons between such works as Wuthering Heights and The Turn of the Screw are obvious, and not at all unjustified. How do you think Dear Esther can only work as a game, rather than a short story or novella?
Wow. Thanks again. I didn’t really imagine it would ever get much attention at all, to be honest, so the way it’s been picked up and talked about is still a massive surprise to me. (Phill Cameron)
Keighley News reports the recent charity walk at Haworth in aid of the Cystic Fibrosis Trust lead by the actress Jenny Agutter (The Railway Children). The Bennington Banner advises GOP's politicians tactics to reconcile with their voters:
The GOP understands that many of its pillars have worked tirelessly in the grueling arena of state and national politics to attain the high plateaus of accomplishment that they now enjoy. The bestowment of political celebrity upon some men oftentimes can lead to a delusional state wherein they recast themselves as great characters from romantic literature; Heathcliff, if you will, as dressed by Calvin Klein. (Alden Graves)
5-Squared posts about Agnes Grey, Medb's Montage has a brief (and not very positive) review of Jane Eyre. The Graphic Novel and Study Abroad: English Adventure!! posts about an epic trip to Top Withens.

Finally, the Brussels Brontë Blog talks about a recent meeting and the Brontë Sisters has added several additional posts.

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Talks and Opera

Two Brontë (and very different) alerts for today, July 2 and tomorrow July 3:

1. Brontë Society member Isobel Stirk will talk about the Brontës at the meeting of the Goldsborough WI:
Don’t forget our next meeting on July 2 will be at the Cricket Pavilion, when we welcome Isobel Stirk talking on The Bronte Society. Bring along a book for the summer BookSwap.(Knaresborought Post)
2. And fragments of Carlisle Floyd's Wuthering Heights opera will be played next Friday, July 3 (8 pm) at the University of Manitoba, Canada:
Love, war and loss define many operas of yore, but the University of Manitoba, which offers North America’s only contemporary opera program, is premiering an opera written by a grad, sung in Ukrainian, and focusing on Chernobyl’s nuclear fallout. (...)
Young singers and pianists from across Canada will present scenes from Carlisle Floyd’s Wuthering Heights and KurtWeill’s Rise and Fall of Mahagonny, as well as from the two debuting commissioned works by Winnipeg composers. Tickets are available at the door for $10 (adults) and $5 (students).
“Graduates from this program go on to do great things at various opera companies so this concert allows Winnipeggers to get the first glimpse of tomorrow’s headliners. And these shows have so much excitement and use the modern sound palate to really stretch our ears with rich layers and extreme emotions,” says Mel Braun, coordinator of the Contemporary Opera Lab.
For more information contact Mel Braun, associate professor, Marcel A. Desautels Faculty of Music, 204-474-8774 or 204-774-4590.
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Wednesday, July 01, 2009

The Brontë Parsonage 'to be transformed over the next two years'

The Telegraph and Argus talks to Brontë Parsonage Museum director about the recent grant awarded to the museum:
The shrine to the Bronte sisters at Haworth is to be transformed over the next two years.
The interior refurbishment of the Bronte Parsonage Museum, which will aim to show how the family fitted into the broader Haworth community, comes thanks to a £50,000 grant from the Heritage Lottery fund.
To celebrate the windfall, Haworth residents will get free admission to the museum, on Saturday, August 15.
And in line with the aim of keeping local people involved, there will be a programme of community activity.
A major feature of the refurbished historic interior will be a greater focus on Haworth’s history and the social-historical context in which the Brontes lived in the early to mid 19th century.
The family arrived in Haworth from Thornton, Bradford, in 1820.
Museum director Andrew McCarthy said: “We will be renewing the interpretation aspects and giving visitors of all ages information about the house and the family.
“The project will also seek to create a greater focus in the museum on Haworth’s history and the social- historical context in which the Brontes lived.
“As part of this initiative there will be a programme of community activity to involve local people in the project.”
The lottery grant will fund stage one of the project involving the introduction of the new interpretation, object cases and displays.
The museum recently completed a refurbishment to its permanent exhibition space, the first major development at the museum in more than 20 years.
Mr McCarthy said the new exhibition space had proved a big hit with visitors.
Fiona Spiers, head of the Heritage Lottery Fund in Yorkshire and the Humber, said: “This fantastic project will really bring the museum’s collections to life for everyone to explore.
“The Brontes are the heart of Haworth but they were part of a broader community when they lived and wrote here and the museum has an important role in reflecting that and in forging links with the 21st century Haworth community.
“This project will hopefully allow us to work in partnership with that community to reinterpret the Brontes and the Parsonage for the next generation.” (Clive White)
The Yorkshire Post echoes the news as well.

The Brontë Parsonage Blog publishes a a plea for help:
Jon Lindseth writes:
I am compiling a census of two Bruxelles 1849 adaptation editions of Jane Eyre in French language. If any one knows of any copy other than those listed below, please let me know.
1. The first is: Jane Eyre. Bruxelles: Alp. Lebegue, imprimeur-editor. 1849. Translated by “O.N.” (Old-Nick; i.e. P. E. Durand-Forgues.) 2 v in 1. This is an adaptation of pp143;104. It is discussed by Emile Langlois in Brontë Society Transactions Part 81, No.1 of Volume 16, 1971. It is shown in one copy on COPAC, that at Cambridge and in three copies on OCLC, at Cambridge, Princeton and Leiden University.
2. The second is: Jane Eyre. Bruxelles: Meline, Cans et Compagnie. 1849. No translator listed but now known to be the same Durand-Forgues as in book (1) above. 2 v. Pp [iv] + 269; [iv] + 284. In 27 chapters. Not discussed by Langlois or listed in any Brontë bibliography. No copy in COPAC or OCLC. I have a copy which so far is the only one located.
Neither book shows in American Book Prices Current (ABPC online) for recorded auctions since 1978, or on Artfact or Jahrbuch der Auktionspreise.
The Bodleian has not posted their pre-1920 books on COPAC but a check of their catalogue shows they have no Jane Eyre editions, Bruxelles, 1849. The British Library has neither edition. Bibliotheque royale de Belgique and the Belgian Union Catalogue have neither. Bibliotheque nationale de France and the French Union Catalogue locate neither edition. Koninklijke Bibliotheek, the national library of the Netherlands, confirms they have neither edition; their search of the Dutch Union Catalog confirms that only Leiden University holds the Alp. Lebegue adaptation edition and the Meline edition is not found.
My speculation is that other copies will turn up in personal Brontë or Victorian woman writer collections or library shelves of people who have inherited books and don’t know the significance of what they have.
If you know of other copies of either edition, please contact me at jalindseth@aol.com
If anyone can help, please do write to him.

On a very different note, The Boston Globe defines Red Sox owner John Henry's wooing emails to his now-wife as
Shakespearean - in some cases, right out of a Bronte novel, or maybe "Twilight." (Meredith Goldstein)
And highly varied too, we would add, as Shakespeare has nothing to do with the Brontës or Twilight.

A couple of Blogs discuss Jane Eyre: The Book Lady's Blog is not completely convinced by Jane Eyre after reading it, while The Library Files is halfway through the novel and enjoying it. YouTube user matcoop shares a video of Haworth at Christmas.

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Win a copy of White's Books edition of Wuthering Heights!

White's Books have generously offered to give away a copy of its new and luxurious edition of Wuthering Heights.

To enter the competition, you only have to answer the following question:

With what other novel was first published Wuthering Heights?

The answer must be sent to our e-mail address: bronteblog (AT) gmail (DOT) com (read that aloud if that doesn't look like an e-mail address to you). Answers will be accepted until July 12 (12 am CET). Winners will be notified by e-mail on the ensuing days. We will accept ONE ANSWER ONLY per participant.

Good luck!

Edit: NOTE: answers in comments will be automatically deleted and won't be entered into the competition. Answers should be sent by email as explained above.


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Wuthering Heights returns to Estonia

The Estonian production of Wuthering Heights (adapted by John Davison in 1972 and translated to Estonian by Kersti Unt) which was premiered last year in Tartu:
Vihurimäe (Wuthering Heights)
Vanemuine Theatre
Park of the Alatskivi Castle

July 1, 2, 9, 10, 11, 12, 15, 16, 17 and 18
20.00 hrs

One of the unique masterpieces among the 19th century English literary classics – Wuthering Heights – will be staged in Estonia for the first time. This is a passionate and fateful love story between the demonic Heathcliff and beautiful Catherine Earnshaw which influences the destiny of two squire families over many generations.

Director: Roman Baskin
Stage Designer: Ann Lumiste
Light Designer: Martin Meelandi
In roles: Helena Merzin-Tamm, Marko Matvere, Riho Kütsar, Ott Sepp, Külliki Saldre, Helen Rekkor, Margus Jaanovits, Raivo Adlas
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Tuesday, June 30, 2009

Who Doesn't Like Pathetic Fallacies?

Skyscanner talks about books where exotic, and sometimes not so exotic locations, are key to the mood of the novel:
Wuthering Heights, Emily Brontë, Northern England

The Yorkshire Moors are the setting for this classic novel. If you like pathetic fallacy, and quite frankly, who doesn’t, then this is the book for you. The anti-hero, Heathcliff, rants and raves whilst storms abound, as he lives a life tormented by his thwarted love for Catherine Linton.
The novel explores the destructive forces which their unresolved passion unleashes on them and others caught up in the drama. Part romance, mostly gothic fiction, the setting matches perfectly the isolation of many characters and the harshness of the landscape is an ideal backdrop for Heathcliff’s elemental nature to show its true colours.
Brief news: a graduate student remembering that her "class had great discussions about Wuthering Heights" in Livingston Daily, the Guardian (Nigeria) uses a bizarre Wuthering Heights metaphor:
If Yenagoa looked secure and tempting like a young girl in the summer of pubescence, the wuthering heights of life in the Delta is in the uncertainty of hope. So much potential hobbled by the failure of Nigerian politics. (Reuben Abati)
Cate Masters interviews author and Brontëite, Sandy Lender:
Who are some of your favorite authors and books? What are you reading now?
Sandy Lender: I love Charlotte Bronte (and her sisters). My favorite book of all time is JANE EYRE, and if you look closely, you’ll see influences in CHOICES MEANT FOR GODS. Right now I’m reading a book called CHARLOTTE IN LOVE by Brian Wilks. It’s driving me mad because, bless his heart, Mr. Wilks keeps saying the same things over and over and over…and they’re mostly things that Bronte scholars already know. So I keep putting the book down to read other books. That sounds very harsh of me. I should also say that he has done his research well. The things that he repeats are accurate and well-placed to make his arguments in the text.
Only Sometimes Clever, Community of Readers Book Reviews, The Read Queen and June Women have read (or reread) Jane Eyre, The weird world of Dani posts about Jane Eyre 2006 (in Dutch), 5 Minutes for Books reviews Jillian Dare, Savidge Reads posts a review of Justine Picardie's Daphne and Dalal Al Shareif posts an article by Sundus E. Al. Nabhani: Essential Differences Among Brontë Sisters’ Works.

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The Secret Diaries of Charlotte Brontë - a review

Our thanks to Avon A for sending us a review copy of this book:
The Secret Diaries of Charlotte Brontë
By Syrie James

ISBN: 9780061648373
ISBN10: 006164837X
Imprint: Avon A
On Sale: 6/30/2009
Format: Trade PB


ISBN: 9780061891786 (ebook)
ISBN: 9780061720192 (large print)

If deals and publication dates are to be believed, it looks like The Secret Diaries of Charlotte Brontë is - after the slow recent trickle of Emily's Journal, The Secret Adventures of Charlotte Brontë and, a few weeks ago, The Taste of Sorrow - among the first of the many fictional takes that we are to read on the Brontës and their writing. Fiction on Jane Austen seems to have led onto fiction on the Brontës, and Syrie James has first-hand experience of that, her début novel having been The Lost Memoirs of Jane Austen.

What first draws attention to her second novel is its beautiful, original sort of cover, which includes a little drawing by Charlotte Brontë herself. Besides, it also includes resources for what we believe to be the target audience of the book: readers with a remote and superficial interest in nineteenth-century literature in general and members of book clubs with said interests in particular. Thus, the book includes a Q & A with the author, fragments from Charlotte's letters, selected poetry by the Brontë family (including Patrick Brontë's hilarious poem for Arthur Bell Nicholls against the washerwomen of Haworth's practices), the Brontë family bibliography and a guide for book clubs. Add to that Syrie James's extensive research, which shows all throughout the book - sometimes, perhaps, a little too much if we may say so - and you have a very complete book indeed.

Syrie James, in her foreword, asks the reader to:
Dear Reader,

Imagine, if you will, that a great discovery has been made, which has sparked enormous excitement in the literary world: a series of journals, which have lain buried and forgotten for more than a century in the cellar of a remote farmhouse in the British Isles, have been officially authenticated as the private diaries of Charlotte Brontë. [...]
The story you are about to read is true.
(Incidentally, though, we are never told how the diaries got to that 'remote farmhouse' in the first place). Also, Syrie James states in the Q& A that,
The novel is based almost entirely on fact. All the details of Charlotte's family life, her experiences at school, her friendship with Ellen, her feelings for Monsieur Heger, the evolution of her writing career, and her relationship with her publisher, George Smith, are all true and based on information from her letters and biographies. [...]
I was obliged to conjecture some of the events during the earlier years of Charlotte and Mr. Nicholls's acquaintance, to flesh out their love story--but based on what we do know, I feel that this telling is very close to the truth.
As Syrie James must have known too, Karen Joy Fowler began her novel The Jane Austen Book Club stating that, 'each of us has a private Austen', to which we add that each of us has private Brontës as well. This results in reading facts and personalities differently. To us, for instance, Emily Brontë was a highly private person, both in her personal and public life. To Syrie James, Emily - at least at the beginning of the book - is quite the gossipy, open girl who chats with a made-up acquaintance from Haworth and laughs quite a lot(1).

Fictional accounts get the two sides of the coin. On the positive side, we get the 'fleshed out' version, which paradoxically helps - through at least partially made-up events - to draw out a more real, three-dimensional person. Syrie James excels at her depiction of life at Roe Head School, for instance. She visited the place while researching this novel and she not only got - we suppose - the locations right but she also seems to have taken with her the whole atmosphere of the place. The boarding school life, the misfit that Charlotte must have been when she first got there and the actual train of events are all clearly, magically evoked. On the negative said, and connected to what we were saying before, the differing image the author and the reader might have if the reader is well-acquainted with the characters might clash sometimes. This reader found too much sugar in Branwell's death scene or in Charlotte and Arthur Bell Nicholls's married bliss.

Fiction also allows the author to be selective when it comes to the facts that his/her novel is being based on, which might be seen by the knowledgeable reader as quite a tricky, deceitful resource but might work to advantage on a more casual reader. Unreliable narrator though she must be, Charlotte states that she has never felt anything but friendship for her young editor George Smith when actually her infatuation with him is quite firmly supported by letters and accounts and is certainly more proved than Anne's love for her father's charming curate William Weightman and which Syrie James takes at face value. Charlotte's statement makes it easier for Syrie James to create Charlotte and Arthur's love story without having to deal with that. Later on, the couple's married bliss is - with one made-up exception - depicted as whole and uninterrupted. Ellen Nussey's jealousy and troubled relationship with her friend's husband is only touched upon prior to the wedding. Afterwards all three seem to live 'happily ever after'. Neither is it mentioned Arthur's position as censor of Charlotte's letters to Ellen Nussey and - fiction or not - we find the following conversation to be wholly out of character with him:
'Haven't you been writing something anyway, in the months since we've been married? A diary, I think it is?'
[...] 'Yes, I have. I did not think you knew. Do you object?'
'Why would I object? Charlotte: you are a writer. I knew that long before I asked you to marry me. It's what you love, and a part of who you are. I'll love you whether you write or not. If you've had your fill of it, then stop. If you enjoy keeping a diary, then keep it. . .'
The man who said that Charlotte's letters to Ellen Nussey were 'dangerous as lucifer matches' would have indeed objected to Charlotte keeping a diary. And we actually have a soft spot for Arthur, but - while we are at it - we find his fictional counterpart to be quite the Hollywood gentleman as opposed to the strict - loving yes, but strict - man of his time that he was(2).

Charlotte begins keeping this, then, not-so-secret diary shortly after receiving Arthur's proposal of marriage. She then tells the story of her life, which is inseparable from her family's, through flashbacks inserted in-between the chain of events that led to said proposal - and beyond - ever since Arthur Bell Nicholls arrived in Haworth in 1845. This non-linear structure works surprisingly well, as Syrie James aptly places each flashback at the precise relevant moment. It's not at all confusing or chaotic and it does keep the knowledgeable reader alert and glued to the story which he/she obviously knows all too well. That, too, would be one of the great things of fictional accounts: much as we may love the story, much as accounts may overlap in certain points, each one is radically different from the rest. We wonder, though, whether Syrie James kept Jane Austen present - and the sisters discuss her works too - on purpose, as Charlotte and Arthur's love story is highly reminiscent of Pride and Prejudice.

The style in which the novel is written imitates Charlotte Brontë's style of writing, which works irregularly. Syrie James has included direct and extensive quotes and occurrences from all sorts of sources (novels, letters, prefaces, etc.). This effort to keep Charlotte Brontë and her family and friends speaking for themselves is truly praiseworthy, even though sometimes the insertion is quite obvious as it clashes somewhat with the rest (sometimes it is also subtle enough). Charlotte's addresses to the 'diary' as substitute of her famous 'reader' sound a bit forced, though. But our main problem with the style actually comes with the editing, which is contradictory. A British spelling has been adopted ('favour', 'endeavour') and typically British words such as 'daft' are used throughout. However, Americanisms also filter in which give the whole book an uncertain, undefined status in that sense: Patrick Brontë 'hires' a curate - the word 'hire' in this context is extensively used in a way a British person would not use -, people walk 'out the door' (a Britton would say 'out of the door') and, despite the British spelling, Mr and Mrs are abbreviated as 'Mr.' and 'Mrs.', which is the American way. Also, 'loan it to you' and 'loan me a copy' are considered ungrammatical in the UK and would not have been used by Charlotte Brontë or Arthur Bell Nicholls. The surname Heger is consistently spelled 'Héger' which , although used in some sources, is not correct(3). And the few sentences in French are precarious at best(4).

As a whole, The Secret Diaries of Charlotte Brontë by Syrie James is completely readable and extremely respectful to its subjects. It reads as a modern-day Devotion, where everything is sweeter and more charming than it supposedly was, but it serves to tell the Brontë story to readers who might not otherwise have thought it initially interesting or intriguing. They will be glued to its pages from start to finish and, no doubt, will want to read more by and about the Brontës. And for that, especially, we thank Syrie James.

Notes:

(1) Charlotte Brontë to William Smith Williams, 22 November 1848:
Ellis "the man of uncommon talents but dogged, brutal and morose", sat leaning back in his easy chair drawing his impeded breath as he best could, and looking, alas! piteously pale and wasted--it is not his wont to laugh--but he smiled half-amused and half in corn as he listened. (Our bold)
(2) Another anachronistic reappraisal seems to be that of Tabby when she is said to feed 'our eager attention with tales of love and adventure taken from old fairy tales and ballads--or, as I later discovered, from the pages of her favourite novels, such as Pamela'. We are grateful for the effort to have Tabby be more than just a servant, but in all probability and fairness Tabby couldn't read, didn't have a 'favourite novel' and had never even heard of Pamela.

(3) Speaking of Heger, he is unwittingly helping The Secret Diaries of Charlotte Brontë to be marketed.
For years, Charlotte harbored a secret love for her Belgian professor, Monsieur Hegér [sic]—a married man. Monsieur Hegér is the basis for all the heroes in Charlotte’s books, including Mr. Rochester in her most famous novel, Jane Eyre.
This marketing is a bit misleading as inside the book itself, Charlotte admits that Rochester owes a lot to the Duke of Zamorna as well (we would hazard that he owes more to Zamorna than to Heger, but that is just us). We might as well say here, that one conversation taken from Jane Eyre and made to take place between Heger and Charlotte didn't work for us.

(4) M. Heger saying 'ainsi je vois' for 'so I see' is simply wrong, to quote just one example.


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Monday, June 29, 2009

Brontë Parsonage Receives a Grant from the Heritage Lottery Fund

Good news from the Parsonage:
BRONTË PARSONAGE MUSEUM RECEIVES £50,000 FROM HERITAGE LOTTERY FUND TO SUPPORT NEW DEVELOPMENT

The Brontë Parsonage Museum has been awarded a grant of £50,000 from the Heritage Lottery Fund to support a programme of exciting new developments.

The museum has ambitious plans to completely refurbish the historic interiors of the Parsonage over the next two years. This will involve researching and introducing a new decorative scheme to the Parsonage rooms, the renewal of interpretation giving visitors of all ages information about the house and the family, and installing new object cases and displays. The project will also seek to create a greater focus in the museum on Haworth’s history and the social-historical context in which the Brontës lived. As part of this initiative there will be a programme of community activity to involve local people in the project. The Heritage Lottery Fund grant will fund stage 1 of the project which will involve the introduction of new interpretation, object cases and displays and the community programme of events which will begin with a local residents’ free admission day on 15 August.

The museum, which was home to the famous Brontë family for over forty years, and is where Charlotte, Emily and Anne’s great novels were written, recently completed a major refurbishment to its permanent exhibition space located in an extension to the original Brontë house. The refurbishment was the first major development at the museum in over twenty years and the new exhibition space, Genius: The Brontë Story, which includes the treasures of the museum’s collection as well as fun interactive displays for children, has proved a big hit with visitors. This latest project will see further improvements to the museum.

Fiona Spiers, Head of HLF, Yorkshire and the Humber Region, said:
This fantastic project will really bring the museum’s collections to life for everyone to explore. HLF is dedicated to supporting projects that open up our heritage for locals and visitors to learn about and enjoy.
We are delighted that the Heritage Lottery Fund is supporting us with this work. The Brontës are the heart of Haworth but they were part of a broader community when they lived and wrote here and the museum has an important role in reflecting that and in forging links with the twenty-first century Haworth community. This project will hopefully allow us to work in partnership with that community to reinterpret the Brontës and the Parsonage for the next generation.

Andrew McCarthy, Director, Brontë Parsonage Museum
Also on the Brontë Parsonage Blog and Yorkshire Post.

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Jane Eyre’s Heathcliff [sic!]

Before we move on to our daily newsround, we would like to publish a brief reminder that Charlotte Brontë - looking like a 'snowdrop' - married Arthur Bell Nicholls on a day like today in 1854, that is 155 years ago.

The Times reviews Flirting With Finance: The Modern Woman’s Guide To Financial Freedom, 'written by Anneli Knight, a freelance journalist, and Virginia Graham, a qualified financial planner and former model'. The reviewer spots one big mistake:
But these analogies gradually become stretched and overly literal, with biotech shares being compared to the guy who “wears a lab coat and protective eyewear during business hours”, telecoms shares to men who are “always on the phone, the internet” and the enterprise collapses entirely when the authors compare art and other collectable investments to “ahh, the dreamy, mysterious artist. The dark horse. Jane Eyre’s Heathcliff.” There’s a book called Jane Eyre written by Charlotte Brontë. There’s also a book called Wuthering Heights written by Emily Brontë. The latter, when I last read it, featured a character called Heathcliff. But, if memory serves, Jane Eyre and Heathcliff have never featured in the same major literary work. [...]
But the Heathcliff/Jane Eyre clanger is a symptom of a bigger intellectual problem with Flirting with Finance: ultimately, romance and investment are completely dissimilar. And to compare them (to make another comparison) is like drawing an analogy between Michael Jackson’s discography and the output of a Midlands sponge factory. (Sathnam Sanghera)
Fortunately, other people are capable of remembering who's in which book. The Mormon Times carries an article on Sister Ann M. Dibb:
One of her favorite examples of virtue is the character Jane Eyre, when she refuses to marry Mr. Rochester after she finds out his first wife is still alive. "It is because she is a virtuous woman" that she stays true to the laws of God, Sister Dibb said. (Christine Rappleye)
And it is one of our favourite examples of Jane Eyre's versatility and how it will be considered religious, not religious, Christian, unChristian, etc.

The Herald-Mail talks to Katie Wennick, a teenager who has 'won a $30,000 scholarship from romance writer Nora Roberts’ foundation'.
As a reader, Wennick said she likes many types of books, including classics such as “Jane Eyre” and “Oliver Twist.” (Andrew Schotz)
We wonder if due to that Nora Roberts will treat her to a night at her inn's Jane Eyre room.

On the blogosphere Tales of a Liberty Belle and Linda Loves Books! both write about Jane Eyre. Dovegreyreader interviews Lilian Pizzichini, Jean Rhys's biographer.

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Shirts, Books for dolls, Cards and Amulets

Lots of Charlotte Brontë-related thingies on the etsy shops:

Hand Stenciled Shirts:
KMStitchery:
This is not silk screened. I hand cut this stencil with an xacto knife.
This is apart of a feminism series of stencils I'm doing on influential women. I want to make this clothing to empower women. So, Represent! With these powerful ladies!
This is a RECYCLED shirt. Brand New Condition. Overstock purchased from thrift store. 55% Cotton 45% Modal. Short sleeves with folded style. Deep scoop neck on the front and small scoop in the back, thin material.
Miniature book for dollhouse:
marottesud:
Cute book « Jane Eyre » by Charlotte Brontë – Illustrations by Edmond Dulac
1,20cm x 1,70cm
The book contains 26 printed pages with 12 coloured illustrations.
This book is handmade.
It is a tiny book for dollhouse, roomboxe or collector. Not suitable for children.
I don't sell the lectern. You only buy the book.
Cards and drawings with Charlotte Brontë quotes:
yardia:
“Look twice before you leap.” –Charlotte Brontë
This is an original drawing of a Victorian handkerchief, accompanied by a hand-lettered quotation from Charlotte Brontë's novel, "Shirley". This illustration is hand drawn by me in violet-brown ink on watercolor paper.

"Try to keep looking upward."
--Charlotte Bronte, from an 1849 letter
This is a Gocco printed card taken from one of my original drawings of nineteenth-century dresses. The drawing is inspired by a silk taffeta ballgown from 1870. (or in a moleskine-like journal)
and... erm... Charlotte Brontë as an amulet:
SimpletoEnchant:
Charlotte Bronte evil eye charm ring
In addition to protecting you from all the routine evil eye problems, this Charlotte Bronte charm will protect you from evil against your book, short story, poem, article or English test. Charms is half an inch on diameter, on an adjustable ring.

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Sunday, June 28, 2009

An irascible demi-celebrity

The Boston Globe talks about modern-day high-school summer readings. It seems that the Brontës are not fashionable anymore:
Not so long ago, high schoolers had to lug heavy beach bags brimming with tomes by Bronte, Steinbeck, and Tolstoy. These days, they’re more likely to carry sprightly fare by contemporary authors like Dan Brown, Mitch Albom, and Bill Bryson.
With apologies to Kafka, the summer reading list is undergoing a metamorphosis.
While area schools constantly tweak their lists and debate what deserves a spot, a consensus is growing that students should be enticed to read, even if that leads them to books that haven’t yet stood the test of time.
So instead of reading about Heathcliff’s romantic misfortune at Wuthering Heights circa 1800, students can laugh over Bryson’s present-day attempt to conquer the Appalachian Trail, while riffing on his hiking buddy’s more annoying habits. (Lisa Kocian)
A Brontë reference in the Washington Times review of Richard Flanagan's Wanting:
Given her faith in continuous improvement, it is perhaps not surprising that she hit on the idea of adopting an aboriginal child and educating it like an English child to prove that aborigines can be brought into the modern world. She chooses Mathinna, who charms almost everyone with her spritely spontaneity. But while spriteliness appeals, it is not what is required, so Lady Jane subjects Mathinna to the kind of Victorian education shown in Charlotte Bronte's "Jane Eyre." (Claire Hopley)
Bloomberg interviews writer (and Brontëite) Alice Hoffman:
Zinta Lundborg: What’s your reaction to being described as a “magical” writer?
Hoffman: I like to write about real people in mythic ways because I see them that way. The tradition of literature is magic, whether it’s fairy tales or Kafka, Shakespeare or the Brontes, and the whole idea of realism is a new and not-so- interesting idea.
Los Angeles Times reviews Jean Rhys's biography The Blue Hour by Lilian Pizzichini:
Rhys was thought to be dead, but she was living, precariously, the town drunk in constant squabbles with her neighbors and with her third husband, Max. The news that she was alive reached the ears of a sympathetic publisher who in 1958 signed her to finish the novel she was working on. When her masterpiece, "Wide Sargasso Sea," was published in 1966, and her four previous novels returned to print, she was hailed as the great lost writer of prewar England -- indeed, one of the finest and most original writers of the century. (...)
Pizzichini seems bored by Rhys' post-"Wide Sargasso Sea" life as an irascible demi-celebrity (nightclub impresario George Melly compared her to a septuagenarian Johnny Rotten in a pink wig). But her book -- more a "portrait" of Rhys than a full-blown biography -- largely achieves its aim: to "present the fact of Rhys's life in such a way that the reader is left with an impression of what it was like to have lived such a life." (Eric Banks)
The Sunday Observer (Sri Lanka) talks with the actress Anarkali Akarsha who mentions her role as Jane Eyre in the local TV production Kula Kumariya (2007):
The actress with a charming personality chose ‘Iti Pahan’ by Somaratna Dissanayaka, ‘Arunoda Kalapaya’ by Senesh Bandara Dissanayake and Bermin Fernando’s ‘Kulakumari’ (playing her favourite Jane Eyre) as tele-dramas which made an impact among her fans. (Jatila Karawita)
Stacy's Bookblog posts about Jane Eyre 2006, The World According to Sam and Searching My Soul (in Greek) talk about Charlotte Brontë's novel.

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Exhibitions, Translations and Readings

1. In Germany:

Annelies Štrba's exhibition My Life Dreams (more information on previous posts) can now be visited at the Burg Wissem Museum in Troisdorf, Germany:
26.06.2009 – 06.09.2009
Museum Burg Wissem
My Life Dreams:
Annelies Štrba

Die englischen Schwestern Anne, Emily und Charlotte Brontë gehören zu den bedeutendsten Schriftstellerinnen des 19. Jahrhunderts.
Sie wuchsen in einem Pfarrhaus im Heidemoor von Yorkshire auf und schufen schon als Kinder fantasievolle Geschichten, Gedichte und Zeichnungen. Eine Auswahl ihrer kleinformatigen Bücher und Zeichnungen aus der Sammlung des Brontë Parsonage Museum in Haworth gewähren einen intimen Einblick in die von ihnen erfundenen fiktiven Welten.
Die Schweizer Künstlerin Annelies Štrba hat sich von Leben und Werk der Schwestern und insbesondere von Emily Brontës berühmten Roman »Wuthering Heighs« inspirieren lassen. Mit ihren romantisch anmutenden Arbeiten beschwörtsie eine magische, märchenhafte Welt, die von ätherischen Frauen- und Mädchenfiguren in traumartigen Landschaften bevölkert wird. Ihre Arbeiten faszinieren durch einen sehr eigenwilligen und assoziativen Blick auf das Werk der Brontës. (Cut and paste to Google translation)
2. In Italy:
The second installment of the collection I Romanzi di Sempre with Il Giornale is Wuthering Heights:
Cime Tempestose di Emily Brontë

Introduzione di Mario Lunetta.
Traduzione di Mariagrazia Oddera Bianchi.

È questa un'opera del tutto isolata nella tradizione narrativa inglese. In essa l'aspro realismo del quotidiano vive di misteriose e inquietanti tensioni onirico-simboliche e di cupe fiammate emotive, all'interno di una struttura narrativa di grande saldezza ed efficacia. Vi domina la figura di Heathcliff il quale, animato da una passione distruttiva, svolge nel libro la funzione "fatale" del vendicatore spietato, vero "replicante" di tante devastanti figure del gothic novel britannico; ma il suo tirannico porsi come l'inflessibile dark hero nasce da una disperata infelicità di fondo e lo porta infine a vivificare la propria morte con quella della donna amata, in una sorta di aspirazione erotico-panteistica che conferisce alla sua figura dimensioni assolutamente inedite.

In edicola il 25/06/2009
Al costo di 6,80 € (Cut and paste to Google translation)
EDIT:
3. In Slovakia.
A radio programme in the Slovak Republic will read fragments of Jane Eyre. The reader is Mária Schlosserová. These are the details:

Charlotte Bronteová: Jana Eyrová
Marián Grebáč, Rádio Devín
[30. 06. 2009, 15:15]

Charlotte Bronteová, anglická spisovateľka, najznámejšia z troch sestier spisovateliek. Jej tvorbu výrazne poznamenalo domáce napätie a rodinné tragédie. Ich matka skonala na rakovinu, päť dcér a jedného syna zverila do opatery svojej sestre. Charlotte spolu s troma zo štyroch sestier poslali do internátnej školy. Dve staršie sestry - Mária a Elisabeth - opustili školu skôr a onedlho na to zomreli na tuberkulózu. Charlotte Bronteová sa preslávila románom Jana Eyrová. Prvé vydanie bolo ihneď rozpredané. Ľudia boli nadšení ohnivosťou mladej vychovávateľky a genialitou neznámej spisovateľky. Román je na vtedajšie pomery veľmi pokrokový, pretože nekopíruje len zásady romantizmu, ale miešajú sa v ňom aj nové, realistické prvky a motívy. V Jane, v zdanlivo útlej a nežnej bytôstke, stelesnila Bronteová všetky smelé sny o osamostatnení ženy v anglickej viktoriánskej spoločnosti. Eyrová očarúva čitateľov na celom svete mravnou čistotou a silou. Je to žena bez predsudkov, ktorá vie svoje túžby a bolesti podriadiť triezvemu rozumu. Úryvok z románu Charlotte Bronteovej Jana Eyrová číta Mária Schlosserová. (Google translation)
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Saturday, June 27, 2009

The photograph seemed to say 'buy me'

The Independent gives more details about the anonymous buyer of the photograph of Patrick Brontë recently auctioned and who will donate it to the Parsonage:
A portrait of Patrick Brontë, whose daughters Emily, Charlotte and Anne wrote some of the most celebrated novels in the English literary canon, is to be returned to its rightful place in the family's former home after going missing for more than a century.
Four weeks ago, The Independent reported that the rare picture, which had not been seen since being sold by the Museum of Brontë Relics in 1898, was discovered in a cardboard box at a Midlands antique fair, in its original gilt frame.
On Wednesday, it was sold by an auction house in Surrey for £1,476 – more than double its estimated value. The buyer, who called in her bids by phone and saw off competition from a London antique dealer, is from the south of England, and she had read about the portrait in The Independent.
She has decided to donate it to the Brontë Parsonage Museum in Haworth, west Yorkshire, after reading that its directors could not afford to bid themselves. The woman, an office worker in her early 60s, wished to remain anonymous, but in an email to this newspaper she explained her motivations for buying the portrait.
"My husband saw the article in The Independent initially and, knowing my interest in the Brontës, drew it to my attention," she wrote. "Having read the article, which I found very interesting, the photograph seemed to say 'buy me', and I just thought it would be nice to own a piece of Brontë memorabilia – if I could afford it.
"I am a Brontë fan, particularly of Charlotte, but I'm not manic about it. I then checked [the auction house] website and the more I thought about it, the more it seemed wrong for the photograph to be in private hands, it should be back at the Parsonage where it belonged, so I decided that if I were successful, I would donate it to the museum.
"I must say that I was pushed to my financial limit to get the photograph, but the surprise and delight of the lady to whom I spoke at the museum was well worth it."
The woman added that she hoped to return the portrait to the museum in a few weeks. Andrew McCarthy, the museum's director, said he was "absolutely delighted" to hear it would soon be hanging in its rightful place in the Parsonage.
"We do get a lot of support from people in a lot of different ways, but usually it's from members of the Brontë Society who we know care about the family's heritage," he said. "When this kind of thing happens it's particularly gratifying, because it's an act of kindness from someone who just read about this picture and realised they could do something to help us, and she's really made a big difference."
Elizabeth Gaskell, in her 1857 biography of Charlotte Brontë, described the Rev Brontë as a "strange" and"half-mad" man who was "not naturally fond of children". In the portrait he is gazing into the distance with haughty austerity. (Chris Green)
The author Sarah Zettel is a bit confused mentioning Anne Brontë's The Tenant of Wildfell Hall on BSCReview:
In Shaman Drum I found an Anne Bronte novel, a genuine early feminist work that her more famous sister Charlotte had tried to stop from being published.
It is true that Charlotte Brontë stated that she didn't much like Anne's second work, but it's untrue that she tried to stop it from being published. What she actually did is not give it to her own editors, Smith, Elder & Co. for republication after Emily and Anne were dead, in 1850, partly because Thomas Newby still owned the copyright to it. Instead she gave them Agnes Grey to publish in a single volume with Wuthering Heights, neither of whose copyrights - it was decided - belonged to Newby.

We are not very sure that the following advice for getting an A in exams will work, but The Daily Star seems think otherwise:
Give them entertainment. Interpret the assignments they give you in the strangest ways possible. Brighten their lives with analyses of Jane Eyre's prediction of the nuclear arms race; expand their realms of thinking by debating with them the literary manifestations of Shakespeare's desire to exterminate the human race and repopulate the Earth with small rabbits.
Ladies and gentlemen, these kind teachers put up with mindless, poorly worded droning of identical themes for years _ the least you can do is provide them the enjoyment of having a genuine lunatic in one of their classes. (Jessie Matus)
Lijia Zhang's Socialism is Great! is recommend by the New York Times Paperback Row:
This coming-of-age memoir, written in fluent English (Zhang taught herself by reading “Jane Eyre” during political study sessions), traces a life of resistance and personal struggle. (Elsa Dixler)
ReadJunk interviews Bruce Campbell. The actor talks about his character in Burn Notice, Sam Axe:
What is something people don’t know about Sam Axe?
[Sam] reads a lot. He reads fiction, because it takes away from the reality; and that his favorite book is Wuthering Heights. That Sam is a secret romantic. That’s all I can reveal. I’ll have to kill you if I tell you more. (Adam Coozer)
We have a new category: a virtual Brontëite.

Some time ago we reported the appearance of a book (The Little Book of Twitter by Tim Collins) including Twitter summaries of classical novels. Not the only project around about basically the same, the Telegraph reports another upcoming book: Twitterature by Emmett Rensin and Alex Aciman. Wuthering Heights comes to this:
Wild-eyed, bushy-haired fellow on moors causes havoc with local females. If you haven't time to read it, listen to song of same name.
Il Sussidiario (Italy) talks about Stephenie Meyer's New Moon and guess who is referenced:
Un unione tra i due che ha quasi del soprannaturale (non a caso in Eclipse sarà citato Cime tempestose di Emily Brönte, in cui i protagonisti Heathcliff e Catherine sembrano indissolubili, nella vita come dopo la morte). Un “oltre” le loro stesse volontà cui debbono piegarsi. E che non li tradisce mai. Troppo metafisico per quello che in fondo è il racconto del primo vero amore di due ragazzi? (Eva Anelli) (Google translation)
Televizier.nl and TV-Visie publish information about the airing of Jane Eyre 2006 on Nederland 2.

Ionarts reviews Kate Royal's Midsummer Night CD. Onirik reviews the Sparkhouse DVD (in French). A Secret Garden posts about Wuthering Heights, Unmana on Indian Blog World has mixed feelings with Jane Eyre and BlackSheepBooks reviews enthusiastically Agnes Grey.

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The Secret Diaries of Charlotte Brontë

We present today Syrie James's new novel. BrontëBlog will publish a review next week.
The Secret Diaries of Charlotte Brontë
By Syrie James

ISBN: 9780061648373
ISBN10: 006164837X
Imprint: Avon A
On Sale: 6/30/2009
Format: Trade PB

ISBN: 9780061891786 (ebook)
ISBN: 9780061720192 (large print)


Book Description

"I have written about the joys of love. I have, in my secret heart, long dreamt of an intimate connection with a man; every Jane, I believe, deserves her Rochester."

Though poor, plain, and unconnected, Charlotte Bronte possesses a deeply passionate side which she reveals only in her writings—creating Jane Eyre and other novels that stand among literature's most beloved works. Living a secluded life in the wilds of Yorkshire with her sisters Emily and Anne, their drug-addicted brother, and an eccentric father who is going blind, Charlotte Bronte dreams of a real love story as fiery as the ones she creates.

But it is in the pages of her diary where Charlotte exposes her deepest feelings and desires—and the truth about her life, its triumphs and shattering disappointments, her family, the inspiration behind her work, her scandalous secret passion for the man she can never have . . . and her intense, dramatic relationship with the man she comes to love, the enigmatic Arthur Bell Nicholls.

"Who is this man who has dared to ask for my hand? Why is my father so dead set against him? Why are half the residents of Haworth determined to lynch him—or shoot him?"

From Syrie James, the acclaimed, bestselling author of The Lost Memoirs of Jane Austen, comes a powerfully compelling, intensely researched literary feat that blends historical fact and fiction to explore the passionate heart and unquiet soul of Charlotte Bronte. It is Charlotte's story, just as she might have written it herself.
On Syrie James's web much more information can be found: a Q&A with the author, an excerpt and even a Reading Group Study Guide.

Harriet Klausner on the B&N website has published a review:
This is a super historical biography that uses a diary to tell the tale of Charlotte Bronte, author of Jane Eyre. Using a first person perspective brings depth to the great author even that much more, but also detracts from how others see her and events like her sisters and Arthur as they come across through a Charlotte filter. Still this is an excellent biographical fiction that looks profoundly at a great nineteenth century writer as Syrie James does her research to tell the story of Charlotte Bronte as she did with THE LOST MEMOIRS OF JANE AUSTEN.
And Katherine Pierson on Fresh Fiction:
Syrie James writes in a similar style to Charlotte and Emily, and any who have read JANE EYRE or WUTHERING HEIGHTS will recognize the long, flowing sentences of a more old-fashioned construction. The style works well for this story as it mirrors both the time period and Charlotte's writing, and James uses footnotes to explain archaic terminology and to translate French conversation.
The book gets off to a slow start, but the pace picks up once the women publish a book of poetry and focus on their novels. I admit to hoping the author would get to the marriage proposal and romance sooner than she did, but I kept reading knowing it would come. I appreciate fiction for fiction's sake, but knowing that a story portrays an individual -- and not just a made-up character -- gives an extra sense of passion and curiosity to my reading. Fans of historical fiction -- and the Bronte sisters in particular -- will find this an enjoyable read.
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Friday, June 26, 2009

Back in Haworth

The Telegraph & Argus gives further details of the auction of a rare Patrick Brontë photograph (more information on previous posts):
The miniature has been sold by auctioneers Ewbank Clarke Gammon Wellers to a woman in the south of England for £1,476.
Now she wants it to return to the Bronte Parsonage Museum where it will go on permanent loan.
Andrew McCarthy, director of the Bronte Parsonage Museum, confirmed the Bronte Society had made a bid for the item.
He said: “This is great news and a very generous and wonderful offer. She telephoned us straight away and said she wanted it back in Haworth.
“We had people ringing up and making significant donations, which was hugely appreciated.
“They said in the event of us not getting the photograph, the money should go into our collections fund.
“We believe there are some significant Bronte items coming up for sale this year and we are hoping those donations will help us.”
Also in The Telegraph & Argus an article about Bollywood which mentions Deepak Verma and Tamasha recent Wuthering Heights adaptation and another one about the locations of Wuthering Heights 1992:
There have been various movie adaptations of Emily Bronte’s only published novel.
Sam Goldwyn at MGM had a go at it in 1939, and then in 1991, American International Pictures spent a reported $9 million on a remake, written by Irish playwright Anne Devlin, with Timothy Dalton as Heathcliff and Anna Calder-Marshall as Cathy. The film was released through Paramount Pictures.
Director Peter Kominsky rejected Haworth as a location because of the prevalence of TV aerials, pylons and power cables. But scenes were shot at Keighley’s East Riddlesden Hall and Shibden Hall, Halifax, between September and October, 1991.
Casting French actress Juliette Binoche as Cathy seemed unusual, but no more so than Merle Oberon starring opposite Laurence Olivier 52 years before.
Ralph Fiennes, Simon Ward, John Woodvine and Sinead O’Connor as Emily Bronte were among the cast.
Seventy-room Broughton Hall, near Skipton, was the base for crew and cast. It also doubled as Thrushcross Grange, home of Edgar and Isabella Linton. Ralph Fiennes went to art school with the wife of the-then owner, Roger Tempest.
The Guardian asks several writers about their favorite escapades. Marina Lewycka (A Short History of Tractors in Ukrainian, Two Caravans) chooses the Peak District and North Lees Hall:
So I love to go out walking all day. When friends visit, we'll often walk close to Sheffield, down by North Lees Hall, near the gritstone cliff of Stanage Edge. Charlotte Brontë visited the house in the 1840s, and it's supposed to have inspired Mr Rochester's house in Jane Eyre. From there, you go down into the valley at Hathersage, where you can get a great cream tea, then you walk up by a little stream and a mill pond and take an old drover's track up along Stanage Edge to Robin Hood's Cave.
And the Edinburgh Evening News asks some of Edinburgh's best-known names what they loved reading as youngsters and why:
Mary Contini, 48, is an author and co-owner of Valvona and Crolla
"I remember loving Little Women, The Secret Garden, Wuthering Heights, Jane Eyre and all those kinds of books when I was around 14, the age my daughter Olivia is now. They were such good reads – you were immediately pulled into the story. (Mark McLaughlin)
Russ Williams discusses Gothic vs Horror in the LA Writing Careers Examiner and thinks that The Sixth Sense is Brontë material (!):
An essential element of the Gothic is almost always romance. Just as Baldick leaves out the supernatural, which surely "haunts" much within the Gothic territory, he omits romance as well. Nowadays, if you want to write a good Gothic story, especially one that sells, you must have a strong romantic interest to animate your plot. Doomed love is the Gothic romantic theme par excellence, but you can also have it both ways, as does Emily Brontë in Wuthering Heights. Her main story is about a tragic romance, but she manages to insert a subplot romance with a happy ending. Volumes have been written about he relation between the Gothic and Romantic. All you need to know is, to write a successful Gothic story, in the words of the song, "You can't have one without the other."
If Emily and Charlotte Brontë typify the Gothic romantic end of the Gothic spectrum, authors like Edgar Allan Poe and H.P. Lovecraft champion the horror side. (...)
In film, an excellent example of a "purely" Gothic tale is The Sixth Sense. Referred to by Hollywood as a "supernatural thriller," this story is actually Gothic in the best sense of the word. Without retelling the whole story (the film is available on DVD if you haven't seen it), I want to emphasize the Gothic elements. The main character feels trapped by what happened to him in the past and senses a disintegration and isolation in his life, all of which he cannot understand. The theme of the supernatural is established early on by the boy with strange visions. The romantic element predominates, and in fact this entire story turns on the main character's love for his wife. In the end, the tragic reason his life has "fallen apart" stunningly reveals itself. Death has triumphed over love, but there's a final hope that love can be stronger than death. This is authentic Gothic stuff and could have easily been penned by an Emily or Charlotte Brontë of the 1990s. The real writer-director, M. Night Shyamalan went on to establish himself as one of the Gothic masters of Hollywood film.
The Stonington Times has an article about dogs and Keeper crops up:
“Bull’s Eye,” the very loyal and true pet of his very unworthy master Bill Sykes, is a character we’ve all met outside of Dickens. And when we read Emily Brontë’s novels we can easily imagine her roaming the moors, accompanied by the large and aggressive canine “Keeper.” The two of them, wind whipped and still wet, braving the Wuthering Heights, must once have been a familiar sight on those bleak, Yorkshire hills. (Penny Parr)
The Seattle Post reviews Stephen Frears new movie Chéri (adapting Colette) and makes the following remark about Rupert Friend:
And the couple at its center, Michelle Pfeiffer and the very Heathcliff-ish Rupert Friend, don't look so bad either. (Moira McDonald)
ArtDaily remembers the upcoming auction of the painting Wuthering Heights by L.S. Lowry.
Check this previous post for more information.

The blogosphere brings today Karine et ses livres reviewing The Tenant of Wildfell Hall in French, Cup-Bound and Scalding posting a poem devoted to Branwell Brontë and a short piece about Grace Poole. New posts with lots of pictures on the Brontë Sisters: Oakwell Hall, Gawthorpe Hall, the moors, Elizabeth Gaskell and Brookroyd. Posts about Jane Eyre on Emma in Oz and The Maiden's Court.

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Jane Eyre and the Secrets of Thornfield Manor

A very curious Jane Eyre adaptation opens today in Greater London. No less than a version of John Courtney's Jane Eyre or The Secrets of Thornfield Manor (1848), the first theatrical adaptation of Charlotte Brontë's novel.
Jane Eyre and the Secrets of Thornfield Manor
by John Courtney and Catherine McDonald

Through the Window
Theatre Company
The Colour House,
Merton Abbey Mills

Date(s): Fri 26/06/2009 - Sat 27/06/2009
Friday and Saturday Night Only
Time(s): 7:30pm


Overview

Supported by research by eminent Brontë Scholar Dr Patsy Stoneman, Through The Window Theatre were commissioned in 2008 to adapt and perform a new one-act version of Jane Eyre for the Brontë Society, based on John Courtney's 1848 adaptation The Secrets of Thornfield Manor. Now, one year on, we have revised and extended the play and will be premiering the new work in June 2009.

Synopsis

The year is 1848. Legendary playwright John Courtney is finishing his adaptation of Mr. Currer Bell's Jane Eyre...
The actors are preparing in the dusty corridors, the audience are making their way through the foggy London streets...
On stage, Jane Eyre grows from a lonely orphan into a young woman, and finds work as a governess at Thornfield Hall. She meets the dark, mysterious Mr Rochester and explores the even darker secrets of her new home.
Meanwhile in Haworth, Yorkshire, Charlotte Bronte, still disguised by her male pseudonym of Currer Bell, discusses Courtney's adaptation of her beloved novel with her brother Branwell. She is not best pleased by Courtney's ‘improvements' ...
The delicious Betty Bunce and the knavish Joe Joker are Courtney's delightful servant characters. They serve Brocklehurst, Rochester and other characters whilst getting into scrapes, fights, love triangles and, as Courtney says, "all the uproarious escapades of the lower order..." Their fate is now tied in with that of their masters!
From an unlikely friendship, and the frightening events which occur in Thornfield, Jane and Rochester learn to trust one another, and then begin to fall in love...
But Rochester has a secret, which will shatter all...
The Surrey Comet brings some details, like the origins of the project:
Picture: Catherine McDonald and Emily Jukes as Jane Eyre and Mrs Fairfax (Source)
It seems the indignant act of re-writing your favourite book to suit a Hollywood audience - Captain Corelli's Mandolin anyone? - was happening way back in the 19th Century as told in the new play, Jane Eyre and the Secrets of Thornfield Manor, showing at Merton's Colour House Theatre this week.
Charlotte Bronte’s passionate story of Jane and Mr Rochester was written to popular acclaim in 1846, but within three months adaptations and blatant rewritings of the book were being performed on stage.
Last year playwright and actor Catherine McDonald was commissioned by the Bronte Society to develop the first of these adaptations, written by John Courtney, into a one-act play that was performed at their AGM.
McDonald says: “Courtney’s adaptation is a raunchy comical farce. He creates new servant characters called Joe Joker, Betty Bunce and Sally Suds who romp their way through the story focusing away from Jane and Rochester.
“At the time Courtney was like the Shakespeare of his day having written 54 plays, though far removed from Bronte’s book this one was a sell out smash.”
In the one-act play McDonald used the character of John Courtney to narrate his own play.
McDonald has now cleverly expanded this show to weave together the story of Charlotte Bronte’s novel along with her well documented horrified response to the madness that had become of her work on stage.
McDonald says: “This play offers a dissection of what makes a novel work and what makes a play. It provides insight into life on the brink of change and looks at Charlotte Bronte, a woman ahead of her time.
“Bronte hates what has become of her book and more to the point that people love it.
"For those who are a fan of the novel I went back to it for the faithful retelling of the love story that sits alongside the farcical, comedy element of Courtney’s characters.”
McDonald worked with the eminent Bronte scholar Dr Patsy Stoneman, who discovered the lost manuscript for Courtney’s play and wrote the authoritative book, Jane Eyre on Stage 1848-1898, that explores the adaptations of Jane Eyre and explains their popularity.
Stoneman wrote that nineteenth century playwrights had no reverence for a text we regard as canonical and deleted and twisted it to suit their own purposes.
She adds that by focusing on the servants Courtney’s play becomes about class rebellion which is why it is so popular with the audience.
McDonald says: “Courtney’s play was appropriate for the audience of the time who were, what is named, the lower order. Ninety percent of society were illiterate and trawling through the novel would have been boring for them.
“In our play there is a discussion between Charlotte her brother Bramwell who understands the need to appeal to the different audience and acknowledges that people will still get to know and love her story.” (Claire Cain)
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Happy 192nd, Branwell!

Quite what Branwell Brontë would make of being well-known today, 192 years after his birth on a day like today in Thornton - and known as the 'bad boy' of the family too - thanks to his sisters' achievements we can't imagine. But we are pretty sure that having people read his writings and his poems today would be a fabulous birthday present.

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Thursday, June 25, 2009

Ray Bradbury loves Wuthering Heights covers

Nylon Magazine talks about the new covers designed by Ruben Toledo for the Penguin Classics DeLuxe Editions. Wuthering Heights (on the right) is scheduled for next August 25:
Pride and Prejudice is a book that needs no selling—the story of love, life, and first impressions is just as good today as when Jane Austen first wrote it. Same goes for Emily Bronte’s epic Wuthering Heights and Nathaniel Hawthorne’s damning The Scarlet Letter.
But if we were to judge a book by its cover, we’d argue that these classic reads have never looked better, thanks to the creative vision of Ruben Toledo. The artist is behind the three Penguin Classics Deluxe Editions, illustrating the front flaps of each. While his surreal take on the Yorkshire moors or his Technicolor vision of Hester Prynne might not change the actual details of the plot, they certainly add a stylish edge to book club mainstays.
The series gets its official release on August 25, but they’re available now for pre-order. Which means you have enough time to check out his work at the exhibit Toledo/Toledo: A Marriage of Art and FashionIsabel Toledo: Fashion from the Inside out (on view at the Museum at the Fashion Institute of Technology in New York City through September 26) and watch the entire BBC version of Pride and Prejudice beforehand. (Rebecca Willa Davis)
Another article about Salinger's veto to a sequel of The Catcher of the Rye which mentions Wide Sargasso Sea. On Real Clear Politics:
Borrowing is an essential part of the creation of culture. If we eliminated all derivative works, we would lose, among other things, Shakespeare's "Romeo and Juliet" (based on a story by an Italian writer), and Jean Rhys's acclaimed novel "Wide Sargasso Sea," the story of Mr. Rochester's mad wife from Charlotte Bronte's "Jane Eyre." (Cathy Young)
Intelligent Enterprise finds Brontë references in a very improbable source: Opinion Mining and Sentiment Analysis by Bo Pang and Lillian Lee.
It cites 332 references, mostly to technical literature, but it also presents the business case for sentiment analysis and firmly roots discussions in real-world examples, from movie reviews to quotations from literary sources such as novelist Charlotte Brontë. You may find the opening chapters, "The Demand for Information on Opinions and Sentiment" and "Applications," helpful, even if you don't read further into the monograph, which goes deep into the technology. (Seth Grimes)
Chris Power in The Guardian's Book Blog analyses one of the current big mysteries: the algorithms behind book recommendations.
Yesterday morning a friend of mine – let's call her Hannah – emailed to apologise for making me redundant as her favoured source of book recommendations. Beneath that stark notice of termination stood a link: www.bookseer.com. Hackles already up, I clicked through to a screen that asked me the title and author of the last book I'd read.
"The Illustrated Man", I typed, and "Ray Bradbury". In the wink of a modem I was furnished with a list of recommendations from both Amazon and LibraryThing. On the Amazon list, understandably enough, there were a few other Bradbury titles mentioned – Dandelion Wine, The Martian Chronicles – as well as Philip K Dick's Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? Also Watchmen, which I thought was a rather good and not entirely obvious suggestion.
The logic behind LibraryThing's recommendations, however, was less discernible. Would Kim Stanley Robinson's Martian cycle get a mention? How about Vonnegut's Slaughterhouse-Five, which shares Bradbury's interest in commingling the horrific, the fantastic and the imperfectly human? Nope: Wuthering Heights. Quite madly, the rest of the list comprised Jane Austen novels and "saucy" rip-offs of the same.
The Tuscaloosa Liberal Examiner quotes Charlotte Brontë's conventionality-is-not-morality phrase to describe Governor Mark Sanford's sex scandal, The Times Literary Supplement recovers a 1905 article by Virginia Woolf which includes a couple of Brontë references, The Philadelphia Citypaper contains an enigmatic Wuthering Heights reference and the San Francisco Gate recommends Wuthering Heights 1939.

oberlep27 has uploaded to flickr (also on Discombobulated D.C.) a complete set of pictures (on the right) of the recent performances of Jane Eyre. The Musical by the TheatreLab in Washington D.C. One of the violin players in the performances is Joshua Coyne who is the subject of an article on WTOP.com. Student in the States recommends Jane Eyre, Without You I'll Be Miserable At Best, Into the quiet and Only from the heart can you reach the sky mention Wuthering Heights.

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"I feel this is something that shouldn't be in private hands"

The Yorkshire Post reports the results of the recent auction of Patrick Brontë's newly-discovered photograph, which fetched more than double the initial estimate: £1, 476
A RARE photograph of the father of the literary Brontë sisters fetched £1, 476 at auction yesterday and will be given to the museum in Haworth.
The faded sepia image of the Rev Patrick Brontë, Rector of Haworth, was found recently among papers in an old film box.
It has been lost since it was sold for one shilling (5p) in 1898 and was expected to fetch £600.
Yesterday a woman from the south of England, bidding by telephone, beat off competition from a London dealer to snap up the portrait photo for nearly three times more than expected at Surrey auctioneers Ewbank Clarke Gammon Wellers.
The unidentified buyer said afterwards she would present the photo to the Brontë Parsonage Museum in Haworth.
"I feel this is something that shouldn't be in private hands," she said.
The photograph was once on display along with other Brontë mementoes at the Temperance tearooms in Haworth.
Still in its original oval gilt frame, its whereabouts were a mystery until it was discovered at a provincial antiques fair. (...)
An inscription on the reverse of the portrait, presumably the original museum description, reads: "Rev P Brontë; Various relics including an oval photograph framed and glazed, a small china blue and white plate often used by him and a sword stick."
From BrontëBlog we would love to curtsy and bow and salute the anonymous bidder for such a gesture. We are not speaking for the Brontë Society, but thank her profusely for her generosity.

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Chinese Reviews

Several reviews of the Jane Eyre performances at the National Center for the Performing Arts in Beijing, China, are slowly appearing in the Chinese media. Regrettably we just can quote rough "translations" (via Google translation) of some paragraphs to get the idea:

北京青年报 (Beijing Youth Daily):
Jane Eyre" performed at the Grand Theater. Sure enough, the film "near flawless." Music, sets, costumes, lighting, scheduling, etc. can be "absolutely fine" to describe. Rochester is said to even the hands of the paintings are produced in accordance with the original props, this movie's intentions can be seen, for the better-known Eagle teachers appreciate the creative approach. (...)
In any case, "Jane Eyre" is the best drama this year's entries. Play and give full play to the charm of the original works of literature, on stage with a beautiful picture and nice music. There is no lack of power performance, "made his mark", the lack of additional directors to expand the meaning and significance of embodiment, and to rely on a lot of movies. Although the completion of the reproduction of the original task, but there are many aesthetic elements for the exploitation and processing. (解玺璋)
北京娱乐信报 (Beijing Daily):
Wong's play "Jane Eyre" this week, the National Grand Theater in his heat, the performing arts sector has attracted many a star-studded. Zhang Guoli, Xu Fan, Chen Yi and others have come to watch the play, it is said that Zhang Guoli, read "Jane Eyre" He also would like to have fun on stage.
Xu Fan in told reporters after the show said: "" Jane Eyre "novels and movies I have seen. For now impetuous society drama" Jane Eyre "can give you a spiritual pillar. My mind 'Jane Eyre' is the Yuan Quan's like this. "Chen Yi in the drama after reading" Jane Eyre "said:" Although there have been prior to the film's "Jane Eyre", but it has the charm of the stage drama completely broken through the film. "
Star.Fotoever:
Yuan Quan and Wang Luoyong performing two different styles in "Jane Eyre" take on the story after the collision occurred, but also the feelings of a new audience. Jane Eyre and Mr. Rochester's love is far from plain sailing, Wang Luoyong highly infectious power of the performances, Yuan Quan as Jane Eyre's love is deep, depression. Moran stand up under the light of the Yuan Quan, most audiences love for them I do feel sorry for heartbreak. (彻寒)
EDIT (26/06/09):
The English section of CCTV.com publishes some pictures, a video (where we rea
lize that the production uses profusely John William's music for Jane Eyre 1970) and a brief comment on the production.
A governess goes to work for a moody employer, captures his heart, a dark secret emerges. Charlotte Bronte's 1847 love story "Jane Eyre" comes to life in a new adaptation at Beijing's National Center for the Performing Arts. The production boasts A-list stars including Wang Luoyong, the first Chinese star to sparkle on Broadway. In today's "Spotlight", we hear Wang Luoyong's experience with the refreshing Chinese take on the drama.
The Chinese version of Charlotte Bronte's 1847 novel "Jane Eyre" has swept across China since the complete Chinese version was released in the 1950's. Capable, intelligent, forthright and sometimes tactless, Jane Eyre has been received by Chinese girls as a cultural pioneer of modern womanhood.
It's evident that the story remains pertinent today, in an ingenious theatrical adaptation at the National Center for the Performing Arts.
Actress Yuan Quan is well suited to the lead role as the spirited but plain young woman. And Wang Luoyong, who has broken the westerners' dominance on Broadway, is cast into the enigmatic master of Thornfield Hall, Edward Rochester.(...)
The story of Jane Eyre and Rochester has inspired a variety of films and dramas. Generations of directors and actors have taken relentless attempts in translating the chemistry between Jane and Rochester. The two won't be held back, as they help each other find their true selves.
Wang Luoyong acknowledged that the previous versions have left positive marks on this production.
Wang Luoyong hopes that this Chinese adaptation will serve as a memorable tribute to great literature that stands the test of time. (Zhao Yanchen)
And even more pict
ures on Le Quotidien du Peuple (in French):
L'actrice Yuan Quan est idéale dans le rôle principal de femme à la fois simple et spirituelle. Et Wang Luoyong, qui s'est imposé sur les planches de Broadway réservés jusqu'à présent aux Occidentaux, incarne le mystérieux maître du manoir de Thornfield, Edward Rochester.
Wang pense que le regain de la littérature classique comble le vide émotionnel éprouvé par la plupart des Chinois d'aujourd'hui.
Wang Luoyong, Acteur:
"Je pense que le public chinois est vraiment avide de ce genre d'histoire. Un amour absolu, dépourvu de tout intérêt lié à l'argent, aux bijoux, au côté clinquant des marques...car aujourd'hui, beaucoup de personnes ne pensent qu'à ça. Mais je pense qu'au fond d'eux-mêmes, il existe une infime partie qui réclame ce genre d'amour."
"Inédite, étrange, et captivant, un vrai défi... Au théâtre, on doit comprendre la langue originale. La langage est très important pour un acteur. Car il ne suffit pas de reproduire des sons. Il faut encore lier la pensée à la voix, et les combiner avec des sentiments authentiques. C'est difficile. Il m'arrive souvent de ne pas savoir établir ce genre de connexions..."
L'histoire d'amour entre Jane Eyre et Rochester a inspiré de nombreux cinéastes et dramaturges. Des générations d'acteurs ont tenté inlassablement d'exprimer cette relation subtile entre les deux personnages où chacun aide l'autre à se découvrir.
Wang Luoyong reconnaît tout le mérite des anciennes adaptations et leurs influences sur la pièce de théâtre.
"La musique est tirée de différentes adaptations. Les acteurs chinois ont essayé de se familiariser avec la musique et le rythme. Il a fallut aussi adopter des gestes particuliers. Ce n'est pas exactement un ballet, mais l'acteur doit se tenir droit, vous savez, être en extension, avec de la grâce. Il faut que le public considère notre corps comme un instrument qui se produit devant lui. Les spectateurs prennent conscience des sensations, et trouvent des réponses à leurs sentiments." (Google translation)
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Wednesday, June 24, 2009

To follow on the footsteps of the Brontës

The Literary Walks series of The Times is devoted today to the Brontës. And who better than Juliet Barker to guide us across Haworth and the Brontë moors?
There is no better place to begin a walk in Brontë country than at Haworth Parsonage, the home of the Brontë family for more than 40 years. A purist might wish to struggle up the cobbled Main Street, but I prefer to save my breath for the moors.
The parsonage stands at the top of the hill behind the church, its stolid exterior betraying no hint that it was a powerhouse of extraordinary creativity. It was here that, as young children, Charlotte, Branwell, Emily and Anne conjured up the exotic imaginary worlds of Glasstown, Angria and Gondal, which were to become a consuming passion well into their adult lives and lead to the creation of Jane Eyre, Wuthering Heights and The Tenant of Wildfell Hall.
A visit to the parsonage, now the Brontë Parsonage Museum, is essential to set the scene for our walk. There is such a contrast between the handmade books, no bigger than a credit card, written in script so tiny that they are almost indecipherable and the imaginative power of the stories that they contain. There is a similar and equally symbolic contrast between the cramped parsonage and the wide open spaces of the moors, which were the inspiration and setting for the Brontës’ novels and poetry.
To follow on the footsteps of the Brontës, take the footpath from the parsonage, past the last remnants of the village and the old stone-pits and quarries, which Mrs Gaskell describes in her Life of Charlotte Brontë. You are heading high on the hillside, in the words of Emily’s poem: For the moors, For the moors, where the short grass like velvet beneath us should lie!
The great vista of open moorland broods on the horizon but the lower reaches of the hills are green: a testament to the tenacity of generations of Yorkshire farmers who have carved their fields out of a hostile environment and even today battle against the encroaching bracken and heather of the moor. The land is too poor to support crops, so the fields are small, bounded by drystone walls and provide only pasture for sheep. The scattered farmhouses hunker into the hillsides, as if sheltering from the constant “wuthering” of the wind. In the valley bottoms you occasionally glimpse a tall chimney and a square-built mill, sometimes with a row of cottages, all relics of the industrial revolution that transformed this corner of the West Riding and inspired Charlotte’s novel Shirley.
As early as 1850, Charlotte had observed that “various folks are beginning to come boring to Haworth, on the wise errand of seeing the scenery described in Jane Eyre and Shirley”. Today most visitors come with the landscape of Emily’s Wuthering Heights in mind. They won’t be disappointed, unless their impressions have been drawn from the films, rather than the books.
The real Brontë moors are as harsh and uncompromising as millstone grit. This is a landscape in thrall to the elements. The sinuous hills are riven with steep-sided valleys and, here and there, amid the heath and bracken, a landslip has gouged out a bare hollow or a black mass of rock rears on an exposed ridge. Clinging to the hills are a few scattered trees. There are no hedgerows, only grey drystone walls.
Apart from a few weeks in autumn, when the moors become a sea of purple, heavy with the scent of heather, the landscape is a variety of greens, browns and greys that change with the season and weather. The silence is broken only by the plaintive cry of sheep, the liquid warbling of curlew and the lyrical crescendos of lark-song. The one discordant element is the wind turbines, an affront to the eyes and an insult to the intelligence.
There are well-worn paths to the official tourist sites. All have questionable Brontë associations but that is irrelevant. “In the hill-country silence,” Charlotte wrote after her sisters had died, “their poetry comes by lines and stanzas into my mind”. We can share that experience and begin to understand the genesis of some of the greatest novels in the English language.
In search of Heathcliff’s lair
Out on the moor, following the path to the Brontë Falls, it’s easy to see the source of the power and the inspiration for Emily’s brutal battering-ram of a fable, Wuthering Heights. From the rim of the moor beyond the falls juts the ruined farmhouse of Top Withins, a hard, black angle of walls under a pair of skeletal trees.
Whether Emily modelled her fortress-like novel on Top Withins is open to question. But the isolated farmhouse under the edge of the moor was well known to her and, in its harshly beautiful setting, commanding a vast panorama of moorland, it makes by far the best candidate for Heathcliff’s lair.
Down in the valley, on a bank overlooking Ponden Reservoir, stands Ponden Hall, a Pennine farmhouse, long and low among its shelter trees. This was Emily’s Thrushcross Grange, home of the Linton family so sadistically and remorselessly destroyed by Heathcliff and his lover and foster-sister Catherine. It was also the setting for one of Emily’s lighter scenes, with Cathy and Heathcliff as naughty children, terrifying Edgar and Isabella Linton by making faces at them through the window — a chink of light and laughter in the dark stormy sky of Emily Brontë’s extraordinary imagination. (
Juliet Barker)
Tom Hardy is the subject of an article in today's The Guardian. A paragraph is devoted to his performance as Heathcliff in Wuthering Heights 2009:
Later this year, he'll play Heathcliff in a new adaptation of Wuthering Heights by Peter Bowker, writer of BBC1's recent Occupation. "Tom is the first Heathcliff I've ever seen who you honestly feel could beat the living daylights out of you," Bowker says. "He brings great pain to the role. What Tom instinctively understood was that Heathcliff knows power because he's been abused by those in power. Even at his most bullying, you sense what's driving him." (Gareth McLean)
The Boston Book Examiner makes a list of classic novels inspiring pop culture. Wuthering Heights and Twilight appear:
Wuthering Heights: Emily Bronte's novel is another inspiration for Twilight. Heathcliff, adopted into the Earnshaw family, is terribly mistreated by his adopted brother. However, his love for his adopted sister, Catherine, keeps him sane and alive. Eventually, though, Catherine meets another man, whom she becomes obsessed with, and she is torn between the two men. Catherine, more interested in her chances to advance socially, chooses another man over Heathcliff, so Heathcliff disappears. When he returns, having mysteriously acquired quite a bit of wealth, Heathcliff is determined to have his revenge on everyone who has hurt him. In an incredibly twisted plot of revenge, betrayal, and heartbreak, Heathcliff and Catherine's doomed relationship not only destroys them, but it destroys everyone in their path as well. (Tara Enwistle-Clark)
The Newark Book Examiner exaggerates a bit when it says:
In high school, students fantasize about burning their school books. Of course, since the books are school property, students generally aren't able to fulfill this particular dream. (...)
The cheapest books, and therefore the easiest to burn, are the novels. These little bundles of literature are generally less than ten dollars each and are the bane of many students' existence. Decoding the works of the likes of William Shakespeare and the Bronte sisters, who wrote their works in the vernacular of a different country (not to mention in a different century) was worse torture to some than facing all the algebra problems in the world. (
Zinovia Stone)
The Suffolk Times announces two awards for a local student production of Jane Eyre at the Teeny Awards:
Two cast members from Mattituck High School's "Jane Eyre" were recognized: Megan Ross for outstanding performance in a drama and Moggy Vinciguerra for best supporting actress in a drama. (Ms. Vinciguerra won outstanding performance in a drama last year.) (Bridget Degnan)
Pictures of the two winners can be seen in the article.

Variety reviews the film Nebo, Peklo...Zem (Heaven, Hell... Earth) by Laura Veráková:
A comely ballerina has a passionate but painful affair with a mysterious older physician in contempo melodrama "Heaven, Hell ... Earth," the second feature by Slovak writer-director Laura Sivakova ("Quartetto"). This mostly compelling tale of a young woman coming to grips with her love life, career options and dysfunctional family plays more like "The Red Shoe Diaries" than "The Red Shoes," as the genre-savvy helmer tips her hat to romantic thrillers from "Jane Eyre" to "Fatal Attraction." Commercial fare on home turf, where it is still in theaters, the pic could attract fests and Euro tube sales. (Alissa Simon)
Village Voice reviews the performances of Sarah Michelson's Dover Beach dance piece:
Most provocative is a duet between Greg Zuccolo, who appears halfway through Dover Beach looking like Jane Eyre's Mr. Rochester in deshabille, and 13-year-old Allegra Herman, who has intermittently entered to watch. (Deborah Jowitt)
Amanda Fortini quotes on Salon.com a very heterogeneous group of references for her ideas about love:
As with most Americans, my own ideas about love were formed not only by books -- "Jane Eyre" and "Pride and Prejudice," "Emma" and "Wuthering Heights," yes, as well as the incestuous "Flowers in the Attic" series, "The Thorn Birds," and the Andrew Greeley books with their fornicating priests -- but by soap operas and romantic comedies: the tempestuous on-again-off-again affair of Bo and Hope on "Days of Our Lives," the jaunty repartee of "When Harry Met Sally."
Tales from the Reading Room posts about Justine Picardie's Daphne and Literary Trangressions posts about Jane Eyre, Wuthering Heights and The Tenant of Wildfell Hall.

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Brontë Academics Discuss Brontës' Love of the Arts

A press release from the Brontë Parsonage Museum:
BRONTË ACADEMICS DISCUSS BRONTËS’ LOVE OF THE ARTS

Brontë scholars from around the world will meet in Haworth on the evening of Friday 3 July, to discuss the Brontës’ relationship with the creative arts. The Brontës’ were passionate about the visual arts – all of the siblings drew or painted – but they were also interested in the arts more widely. This panel of academics, all of who have contributed to a new book of essays The Brontës in the World of the Arts, will discuss the Brontës’ interest in art, as well as music, theatre and performance. Chaired by Patsy Stoneman, the panel will include Christine Alexander, Meg Harris-Williams, Sandra Hagan and Juliette Wells, and is a rare opportunity for the public to hear such respected Brontë experts speaking in the UK. The event takes place as part of the museum’s contemporary arts programme.
‘The Brontës have had a huge impact on contemporary culture. They continue to inspire books, films, theatre and music, from Bollywood musicals through to opera and even pop songs. So it is very interesting to think about the Brontës’ own interest in performance and music, and the examples of this that we find in their writing. We hope that the public will come along to find out a bit more about the Brontës’ drawings and paintings on display at the museum too’. (Jenna Holmes, Arts Officer, Brontë Parsonage Museum)
The event takes place at 7.30pm on Friday 3 July at the West Lane Baptist Centre in Haworth. Tickets are £5 and can be booked in advance from the Brontë Parsonage Museum, contact jenna.holmes@bronte.org.uk / 01535 640188 for more information.
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Blackburn, Delaware and Gettysburg

A couple of alerts for today, June 24:

A student production of Jane Eyre. The Musical in Blackburn, UK:
Westholme’s Summer Production
Blackburn, UK

JANE EYRE THE MUSICAL
Wednesday 24th to Saturday 27th June 09

More information here.
And a talk in Delaware, Ohio:
Delaware County District Library
Book Discussion
At the Main Library on Wednesday, June 24th at 7:30 p.m., we’ll talk about Wuthering Heights by Emily Bronte.
And Wuthering Heights 1939 in Gettysburg, PA:
Wuthering Heights - Classic 1939 film
Wednesday, June 24, 2009 7:30 p.m.
Majestic Theater
Gettysburg, US

Emily Bronte’s timeless and tragic romance brilliantly captured on film by Academy Award-winning director William (Ben-Hur) Wyler and stars Merle Oberon and Laurence Olivier as the doomed lovers Catherine and Heathcliff. Superb, lush atmospheric drama with strong supporting performances by David Niven, Flora Robson and Donald Crisp.
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Tuesday, June 23, 2009

A bad day for Wuthering Heights

The Norfolk Film Examiner has compiled a list of 'films to slit your wrists by'. Number 1 of the list is... Wuthering Heights.
Wuthering Heights #1

The family of Catherine as a child takes in Heathcliff. They grow up together on the estate of Wuthering Heights and know immediately that they are soul mates; an impenetrable love grows over the years and bonds their hearts. They both believe that nothing could ever break their connection. However, although they are both in love with each other, Catherine marries someone else. Heathcliff, heartbroken and bitter runs away from Wuthering Heights, now unkempt, run-down and no longer a happy home and returns a very wealthy man. Heathcliff buys the estate and marries another woman he doesn’t love in the least to spite Catherine for she has devastated his heart and ego.
Healthcliff learns that Catherine is deathly ill and becomes crueler to his wife, angry that she is not Catherine. Catherine calls for Heathcliff on her death-bead and she dies shortly thereafter. Regardless of Heathcliff’s newfound wealth, he has nothing to live for and he dies as well. The end.
This film is beautifully written, performed and impossible to watch without a box of tissue and a hole forming in the gut. On the upside, it is implied that Catherine’s ghost takes Heathcliff and they reunite happily in the afterlife. (Renee Roland)
Judging by the picture that accompanies the article, we believe it refers to the 1939 Hollywood adaptation.

The Leicester Mercury reviews a performance of the band Birdeatsbaby.
"They sounded to me like a group of spurned Sunday school teachers exacting their musical revenge; joyless, devoid of warmth, often shrill - ie, all the annoying aspects of Wuthering Heights without any of the mad sensuality," was the verdict of one writer.
As is usually the case lately, the blog front is livelier than the news front: Jane Eyre is reviewed by Welcome to My World, Jazzster Reviews and My Dear Book. The Back and Visible Things posts about Sparkhouse. And Savidge Reads has just got Jude Morgan's The Taste of Sorrow in the post.

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More Dutch Brontë Blogs

We introduce you today to a new (Brontë) Blog. It comes from the Netherlands (where there seems to be an extraordinary Brontë Web 2.0 activity: Brontës.nl or Brontë Sisters on Hyves.nl.

This particular one is named the Brontë Sisters (kleurrijkbrontesisters) and is defined by her blogmaster, Geri Meftah:
Ik ben dit weblog begonnen omdat ik een fan ben van the Bronte Sisters. Van jongs af aan las ik hun boeken, om te beginnen Jane Eyre. Al gauw probeerde ik uit te zoeken wie de zussen waren. Er is veel informatie, ik probeer met dit weblog de informatie te bundelen. Ik ben uitgegaan
van de biografie van Juliet Barker " The Brontës". (Google translation -> I started this blog because I'm a fan of the Bronte Sisters. From childhood on I read their books, starting Jane Eyre. Soon I tried to find out who were sisters. There is much information, I try with this blog the information together. I assumed the biography of Juliet Barker "The Brontës". )
The blog includes posts both in Dutch and English and contains entries on practically every Brontë subject you can imagine.

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Monday, June 22, 2009

Emily Brontë and txt language

Hardly anything to report today, apart from the fact that Emily Brontë is being used to defend txt language in a way. This is David Crystal's opinion as read in the Yorkshire Post:
"We really ought to be more relaxed about the whole issue. There is a lot of talk about the need to preserve standard written English and that's true. Without the correct use of grammar and spelling, it becomes more difficult to communicate not just with people in our own country, but with English speakers abroad.
"However, 96 per cent of spoken English is already non-standard and throughout history writers like Sir Walter Scott and Emily Brontë have used dialect in their books without too much problem." (Sarah Freeman)
The blogosphere is a bit more lively and international. Histoires de Fil, ici (in French) and Mulheres que pecam (in Portuguese) both write about Jane Eyre. Bokslukarens blogg (in Swedish) posts about the Brontë sisters. And finally The World of Romance briefly reviews Syrie James's The Secret Diaries of Charlotte Brontë, a review of which will also appear on BrontëBlog soon.

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A teen novel and a French essay

What do a YA novel and a French essay about the pleasures of reading have in common? You guessed it: Brontë references:
Back Creek
by Leslie Goetsch
Publisher: Bancroft Press (February 15, 2008)
ISBN-10: 1890862525
ISBN-13: 978-1890862527

It’s the summer of 1975. Eighteen-year-old Grace Barnett knows she should be preparing to leave for college in September. But a strange Memorial Day boating accident on the creek near her Virginia home—she’s the only witness to the apparent suicide—kicks off a series of events that will define her family’s future as well as her emerging view of life. (...)
Grace’s story, like the Romantic novels she’s obsessed with, is layered, full of symbolism, and rife with issues for discussion, making it a near-perfect coming-of-age story for high school students. And thus, like the Jane Austen and Bronte sisters’ classics Grace so admires, Back Creek is ideal for classroom use at any school—public, parochial, or independent.
Two blog reviews clarify the Brontë references:

Books and Movies:
Grace copes by visiting her friend Cal, a 25-year-old Vietnam vet who was discharged for medical reasons but has no visible injury, and by re-reading her favorite gothic novels, Wuthering Heights and Jane Eyre.
Life in the thumb:
How can you not connect with this young girl? She lives inside her two favorite novels, Wuthering Heights and Jane Eyre. They're the one constant in her life that she can depend on, that and Back Creek itself.
Petite nuit
de Marianne Alphant
Publisher : POL (10 January 2008)
ISBN-10: 284682228X
ISBN-13: 978-2846822282

Petite nuit évoque ces images arrêtées où l'on se revoit en train de lire – à genoux sur le tapis d'un salon, allongée dans l'herbe, réfugiée dans une embrasure avec, selon les cas et les époques, L'Auberge de l'Ange-Gardien, La Guerre du feu ou La Légende de saint Julien l'Hospitalier. Scènes comme hors du temps, fondatrices, sans qu'on sache au juste pourquoi cette page, ce moment, cette lumière, cette position, ont ainsi résisté à l'oubli, aussi tenaces et inexplicables que des souvenirs-écrans. (...)
Quitte à mélanger sans fin les figures de cette addiction, Stendhal racontant Waterloo à une petite fille, une séance de tables tournantes chez Victor Hugo, Dostoïevski réclamant des livres à son frère, Freud montrant sa collection d'antiques, une soirée de poésie chez Madame Récamier, Madeleine Blanchet traversant la rivière en portant le champi, Gwynplaine découvrant un bébé dans la neige, Winnicott au chevet d'une patiente, la Comtesse de Ségur dans son château des Nouettes et Monseigneur son fils en pèlerinage chez des extatiques, Viennet reçu à l'Académie, Énée conduit chez les morts par la Sibylle, Charlotte Brontë écoutant le vent souffler sur la lande et les tombes de ses sœurs, et ainsi de suite jusqu'au trisaïeul Alfred Bougeault rédigeant son Précis historique et chronologique de la littérature française. (Google translation)
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Sunday, June 21, 2009

Jane Eyre Fantasies

India Knight's column today in The Sunday Times contains the following paragraph which shows clear parallels with the situation of governesses in Charlotte Brontë's times. Check it out:
If your child’s tutor is so clever, so qualified, so possessed of all the magical transformative powers that parents will themselves to believe in, why are they tutoring some brat for cash? It can’t all be to do with Jane Eyre fantasies or the opportunity to holiday in exotic places while being treated like a member of staff (although actually people never know what to do with tutors. They’re hired help, but reasonably clever hired help. Do they eat with the au pair or eat with the family? Such are the ludicrous quandaries of the well-to-do). No: the truth of the matter is that the well educated are available to teach your children because that is, right now, the only career path available to them. Ironic, innit?
William Boyd publishes an article about parks and literature in The Guardian putting the Brontës into the category of rural writers:
Rural novelists (a baker's dozen in no particular order): Jane Austen, Thomas Hardy, John Cowper Powys, Elizabeth Bowen, John Fowles, DH Lawrence, Walter Scott, Bruce Chatwin, Emily Brontë, Charlotte Brontë, John Buchan, William Trevor, Elizabeth Gaskell.
The Washington Times reviews Sarah Waters's The Little Stranger:
There are hints of the dark anger that pervades Emily Bronte's "Wuthering Heights" in this latter-day gothic masterpiece in which Ms. Waters has dexterously set rigid British class conflicts in a subtly eerie setting. This is no easily defined ghost story, because the evil manifestation is only part of the gradual devastation not only of the memorably named house, but of its occupants who once lived an enviable existence. The author has captured sociological change and woven it into the supernatural. She skillfully portrays the strange and sinister force gathering at Hundreds Hall, where its targets are the remnants of the Ayres family, once privileged and wealthy patrons of the community. (Muriel Dobbin)
The Burnley Express talks about the much-awaited meeting of a couple of penpals from both sides of the pond. We are delighted to read that
Nicola, who works for Burnley Council, ensured 37-year-old Marsha saw some of the region's finest attractions including the Brontë's home at Haworth and Burnley's Singing Ringing Tree.
Bookbytes reviews Wuthering Heights, Le fil d'archal posts about the Brontës (in French and with the inclusion of the G.H. Lewes portrait so often mistaken by an Emily Brontë one). Both The Sound of Butterflies (the blog of the author Rachael King) and The Rainbow Notebook review briefly Wuthering Heights 2009.

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Travel books

Some recent non-English books with Brontë content. A couple of travel books in French and Portuguese:
Demeures de l'esprit III
Renaud Camus

Éditions Fayard
Date de Parution : 10/06/2009
Collection : Littérature Française
ISBN : 9782213637709

Ce volume est le troisième des Demeures de l’esprit, le deuxième (et le dernier) de ceux qui sont consacrés aux Iles britanniques : après le Sud et le Centre de l’Angleterre, plus le Pays de Galles, c’est cette fois le Nord de l’Angleterre,
l’Ecosse et l’Irlande que nous parcourons en compagnie de Renaud Camus, auteur et photographe. Le dramatis personnae n’a rien à envier à celui du livre frère puisqu’il va des sœurs Brontë à Joyce, de Laurence Sterne à Yeats, de Sir Walter Scott à George Bernard Shaw en passant par Synge, Carlyle ou Barrie, le père assez ambigu de Peter Pan. William Wordsworth n’a pas moins de trois maisons aujourd’hui ouvertes au public tandis que Robert Burns, le poète national de l’Ecosse, en a quatre ! (Google translation)
Passaporte
Viagens de 1994-2008
by Maria Filomena Mónica
Colecção: N I
Editora: Alêtheia, 2009
This travel book apparently mentions Brontë country as we read on Vidas Alternativas:
Filomena Mónica estudou em Oxford, gosta da Inglaterra, das suas gentes, leis e cultura, di-lo abertamente, os seus passeios por onde Dickens, Emily Brontë, Thomas Hardy ou Robert Louis Stevenson viveram e escreveram comovem-nos. (Google translation)
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    As the term continued, I was persuaded on many occasions--despite the danger to our fortunes and reputations--to tell stories after hours. In an effort to avoid detection, we gathered in a far corner of the room by the light of a single candle, and spoke in hushed tones. [...] On the one occasion that we were assessed a fine for "talking after hours", my conspirators and I privately admitted that we did not mind being caught. It had been worth it; and it was a thrill to have done something, for once in our lives, that was against the rules.
    ~ The Secret Diaries of Charlotte Brontë, by Syrie James

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  • Nederland 2 (Netherlands) June 29 8:55 PM - Jane Eyre (2006) (Episode 2)
  • Rádio Devín (Slovak Republic) June 30 3:15 PM - Fragments of Jana Eyrová read by Mária Schlosserová
  • MGM (Spain) June 30 9:45 PM - Wuthering Heights (1970)
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