WashingtonWeeklyTimes.com
  • Home
  • US News
    Ruby Rose alleges Katy Perry sexually assaulted her nearly 20 years ago

    Ruby Rose alleges Katy Perry sexually assaulted her nearly 20 years ago

    Microsoft says hackers are using AI to launch cyberattacks faster

    Microsoft says hackers are using AI to launch cyberattacks faster

    Detransitioner Prisha Mosley appeals dismissed NC malpractice case

    Detransitioner Prisha Mosley appeals dismissed NC malpractice case

    Trump blasts NATO says ‘they weren’t there for us’ as Iran tensions soar

    Trump blasts NATO says ‘they weren’t there for us’ as Iran tensions soar

    Rep. Vindman says Swalwell should resign over assault allegations

    Rep. Vindman says Swalwell should resign over assault allegations

  • Politics
    Trump Turning Himself Into Jesus Revealed The Depths Of His Insanity

    Trump Turning Himself Into Jesus Revealed The Depths Of His Insanity

    Trump Says Gas Prices Might Be Even Higher By The Midterm Election

    Trump Says Gas Prices Might Be Even Higher By The Midterm Election

    Trump And MAGA See Their Future As Viktor Orbán Gets Wiped Out In Hungarian Election

    Trump And MAGA See Their Future As Viktor Orbán Gets Wiped Out In Hungarian Election

    Eric Swalwell Needs To Go Right Now

    Eric Swalwell Needs To Go Right Now

  • Business
    AI agents are acting like employees, but company structures still treat them like software

    AI agents are acting like employees, but company structures still treat them like software

    Eric Swalwell suspends campaign for California governor, rocking wide-open contest

    Eric Swalwell suspends campaign for California governor, rocking wide-open contest

    A major U.S. gasoline production hub is in such a severe drought that its refineries may be hobbled

    A major U.S. gasoline production hub is in such a severe drought that its refineries may be hobbled

    Stock futures sink, oil spikes as Navy looks to block Iran’s exports and break its grip on Hormuz

    Stock futures sink, oil spikes as Navy looks to block Iran’s exports and break its grip on Hormuz

  • Science
    Marine Animals in the Strait of Hormuz Don’t Get a Ceasefire

    Marine Animals in the Strait of Hormuz Don’t Get a Ceasefire

    New Method Dials Up Superconductivity

    New Method Dials Up Superconductivity

    How DNA forensics is transforming studies of ancient manuscripts

    How DNA forensics is transforming studies of ancient manuscripts

    Hidden fossils reveal secrets of oceans before major mass extinction

    Hidden fossils reveal secrets of oceans before major mass extinction

  • Technology
    Microsoft is officially killing its Outlook Lite app next month

    Microsoft is officially killing its Outlook Lite app next month

    You Should Be More Freaked Out by Shingles

    You Should Be More Freaked Out by Shingles

    The largest orbital compute cluster is open for business

    The largest orbital compute cluster is open for business

    ‘The Audacity’ Is the Broligarchy Takedown You Were Waiting For

    ‘The Audacity’ Is the Broligarchy Takedown You Were Waiting For

  • Lifestyle
    11 Simple Dinners for Busy Nights

    11 Simple Dinners for Busy Nights

    The Best Antiperspirants You Can Buy In 2026

    A Complete Guide To Spring-Summer Hat Styles

    How to Feel Calm as Life Speeds Up

    How to Feel Calm as Life Speeds Up

  • Music
    What You Didn’t See on the Livestream

    What You Didn’t See on the Livestream

    Kelela, Kurt Vile, Olof Dreijer, and More: This Week’s Pitchfork Selects Playlist

    Kelela, Kurt Vile, Olof Dreijer, and More: This Week’s Pitchfork Selects Playlist

    Britney Spears Checks Herself Into a Treatment Facility, Rep Confirms

    Britney Spears Checks Herself Into a Treatment Facility, Rep Confirms

    David Byrne brings out plenty of Talking Heads classics at theatrical Coachella 2026 set

    David Byrne brings out plenty of Talking Heads classics at theatrical Coachella 2026 set

  • Television
    Fanatic Feed: The Rookie & Will Trent Get Renewal Decisions, Little House on the Prairie Trailer, and More!

    Fanatic Feed: The Rookie & Will Trent Get Renewal Decisions, Little House on the Prairie Trailer, and More!

    Premiere Date, Cast, More Details About Netflix Series

    Premiere Date, Cast, More Details About Netflix Series

    Euphoria Season 3 Premiere Recap

    Euphoria Season 3 Premiere Recap

    Watson Season 2 Episode 17 Wasted Time With More Hallucinations Before a Predictably Tragic Reveal

    Watson Season 2 Episode 17 Wasted Time With More Hallucinations Before a Predictably Tragic Reveal

  • Film
    The Wizard of the Kremlin review – ludicrous and…

    The Wizard of the Kremlin review – ludicrous and…

    Timothée Chalamet’s Opera-Ballet Comments Defended By Luca Guadagnino

    Timothée Chalamet’s Opera-Ballet Comments Defended By Luca Guadagnino

    Crunchyroll’s 2026 Awards Lineup Makes It Clear The Streaming Giant Isn’t Ready To Accept Anime’s Future

    Crunchyroll’s 2026 Awards Lineup Makes It Clear The Streaming Giant Isn’t Ready To Accept Anime’s Future

    You, Me & Tuscany review – mamma mia…

    You, Me & Tuscany review – mamma mia…

  • Literature
    Book Riot’s Deals of the Day for April 13, 2026

    Book Riot’s Deals of the Day for April 13, 2026

    Literary Hub » Lit Hub Daily: April 13, 2026

    Literary Hub » Lit Hub Daily: April 13, 2026

    9 Little Odysseys That Don’t Go Very Far, and That’s the Whole Point

    9 Little Odysseys That Don’t Go Very Far, and That’s the Whole Point

    Book Riot’s Deals of the Day for April 12, 2026

    Book Riot’s Deals of the Day for April 12, 2026

    Literary Hub » One great poem to read today: Mark Doty’s “Visitation”

    Literary Hub » One great poem to read today: Mark Doty’s “Visitation”

    Electric Literature Belongs to All of Us

    Electric Literature Belongs to All of Us

    Book Riot’s Deals of the Day for April 11, 2026

    Book Riot’s Deals of the Day for April 11, 2026

    April 6 – 10, 2026

    April 6 – 10, 2026

    A Satire That Captures the Absurdity of Being a Writer in Hollywood

    A Satire That Captures the Absurdity of Being a Writer in Hollywood

  • Contact
    • About
  • Home
  • US News
    Ruby Rose alleges Katy Perry sexually assaulted her nearly 20 years ago

    Ruby Rose alleges Katy Perry sexually assaulted her nearly 20 years ago

    Microsoft says hackers are using AI to launch cyberattacks faster

    Microsoft says hackers are using AI to launch cyberattacks faster

    Detransitioner Prisha Mosley appeals dismissed NC malpractice case

    Detransitioner Prisha Mosley appeals dismissed NC malpractice case

    Trump blasts NATO says ‘they weren’t there for us’ as Iran tensions soar

    Trump blasts NATO says ‘they weren’t there for us’ as Iran tensions soar

    Rep. Vindman says Swalwell should resign over assault allegations

    Rep. Vindman says Swalwell should resign over assault allegations

  • Politics
    Trump Turning Himself Into Jesus Revealed The Depths Of His Insanity

    Trump Turning Himself Into Jesus Revealed The Depths Of His Insanity

    Trump Says Gas Prices Might Be Even Higher By The Midterm Election

    Trump Says Gas Prices Might Be Even Higher By The Midterm Election

    Trump And MAGA See Their Future As Viktor Orbán Gets Wiped Out In Hungarian Election

    Trump And MAGA See Their Future As Viktor Orbán Gets Wiped Out In Hungarian Election

    Eric Swalwell Needs To Go Right Now

    Eric Swalwell Needs To Go Right Now

  • Business
    AI agents are acting like employees, but company structures still treat them like software

    AI agents are acting like employees, but company structures still treat them like software

    Eric Swalwell suspends campaign for California governor, rocking wide-open contest

    Eric Swalwell suspends campaign for California governor, rocking wide-open contest

    A major U.S. gasoline production hub is in such a severe drought that its refineries may be hobbled

    A major U.S. gasoline production hub is in such a severe drought that its refineries may be hobbled

    Stock futures sink, oil spikes as Navy looks to block Iran’s exports and break its grip on Hormuz

    Stock futures sink, oil spikes as Navy looks to block Iran’s exports and break its grip on Hormuz

  • Science
    Marine Animals in the Strait of Hormuz Don’t Get a Ceasefire

    Marine Animals in the Strait of Hormuz Don’t Get a Ceasefire

    New Method Dials Up Superconductivity

    New Method Dials Up Superconductivity

    How DNA forensics is transforming studies of ancient manuscripts

    How DNA forensics is transforming studies of ancient manuscripts

    Hidden fossils reveal secrets of oceans before major mass extinction

    Hidden fossils reveal secrets of oceans before major mass extinction

  • Technology
    Microsoft is officially killing its Outlook Lite app next month

    Microsoft is officially killing its Outlook Lite app next month

    You Should Be More Freaked Out by Shingles

    You Should Be More Freaked Out by Shingles

    The largest orbital compute cluster is open for business

    The largest orbital compute cluster is open for business

    ‘The Audacity’ Is the Broligarchy Takedown You Were Waiting For

    ‘The Audacity’ Is the Broligarchy Takedown You Were Waiting For

  • Lifestyle
    11 Simple Dinners for Busy Nights

    11 Simple Dinners for Busy Nights

    The Best Antiperspirants You Can Buy In 2026

    A Complete Guide To Spring-Summer Hat Styles

    How to Feel Calm as Life Speeds Up

    How to Feel Calm as Life Speeds Up

  • Music
    What You Didn’t See on the Livestream

    What You Didn’t See on the Livestream

    Kelela, Kurt Vile, Olof Dreijer, and More: This Week’s Pitchfork Selects Playlist

    Kelela, Kurt Vile, Olof Dreijer, and More: This Week’s Pitchfork Selects Playlist

    Britney Spears Checks Herself Into a Treatment Facility, Rep Confirms

    Britney Spears Checks Herself Into a Treatment Facility, Rep Confirms

    David Byrne brings out plenty of Talking Heads classics at theatrical Coachella 2026 set

    David Byrne brings out plenty of Talking Heads classics at theatrical Coachella 2026 set

  • Television
    Fanatic Feed: The Rookie & Will Trent Get Renewal Decisions, Little House on the Prairie Trailer, and More!

    Fanatic Feed: The Rookie & Will Trent Get Renewal Decisions, Little House on the Prairie Trailer, and More!

    Premiere Date, Cast, More Details About Netflix Series

    Premiere Date, Cast, More Details About Netflix Series

    Euphoria Season 3 Premiere Recap

    Euphoria Season 3 Premiere Recap

    Watson Season 2 Episode 17 Wasted Time With More Hallucinations Before a Predictably Tragic Reveal

    Watson Season 2 Episode 17 Wasted Time With More Hallucinations Before a Predictably Tragic Reveal

  • Film
    The Wizard of the Kremlin review – ludicrous and…

    The Wizard of the Kremlin review – ludicrous and…

    Timothée Chalamet’s Opera-Ballet Comments Defended By Luca Guadagnino

    Timothée Chalamet’s Opera-Ballet Comments Defended By Luca Guadagnino

    Crunchyroll’s 2026 Awards Lineup Makes It Clear The Streaming Giant Isn’t Ready To Accept Anime’s Future

    Crunchyroll’s 2026 Awards Lineup Makes It Clear The Streaming Giant Isn’t Ready To Accept Anime’s Future

    You, Me & Tuscany review – mamma mia…

    You, Me & Tuscany review – mamma mia…

  • Literature
    Book Riot’s Deals of the Day for April 13, 2026

    Book Riot’s Deals of the Day for April 13, 2026

    Literary Hub » Lit Hub Daily: April 13, 2026

    Literary Hub » Lit Hub Daily: April 13, 2026

    9 Little Odysseys That Don’t Go Very Far, and That’s the Whole Point

    9 Little Odysseys That Don’t Go Very Far, and That’s the Whole Point

    Book Riot’s Deals of the Day for April 12, 2026

    Book Riot’s Deals of the Day for April 12, 2026

    Literary Hub » One great poem to read today: Mark Doty’s “Visitation”

    Literary Hub » One great poem to read today: Mark Doty’s “Visitation”

    Electric Literature Belongs to All of Us

    Electric Literature Belongs to All of Us

    Book Riot’s Deals of the Day for April 11, 2026

    Book Riot’s Deals of the Day for April 11, 2026

    April 6 – 10, 2026

    April 6 – 10, 2026

    A Satire That Captures the Absurdity of Being a Writer in Hollywood

    A Satire That Captures the Absurdity of Being a Writer in Hollywood

  • Contact
    • About
No Result
View All Result
WashingtonWeeklyTimes.com
No Result
View All Result
Home Literature

“Wuthering Heights” Was Never a Love Story

by
March 4, 2026
in Literature
“Wuthering Heights” Was Never a Love Story



“This is a strange book,” begins a January 8, 1848 review of Emily Brontë’s Wuthering Heights. “It is not without evidences of considerable power: but, as a whole, it is wild, confused, disjointed, and improbable . . . ” Another review, published a week later, drew similar conclusions: “Wuthering Heights is a strange sort of book—baffling all regular criticism; yet, it is impossible to begin and not finish it . . . we must leave it to our readers to decide what sort of book it is.”

That may be the million-dollar question. What sort of a book is Wuthering Heights? Like many, I first came across the novel in my teens; unlike many, I couldn’t get through it. If I was too impatient to make sense of Joseph’s Yorkshire accent, I was also too unformed as a reader to probe the work’s complex narrative structure. I was fourteen and had no inkling of puppy love, much less passion. And because I didn’t know passion, I couldn’t understand Heathcliff.

A friend once described me as a late bloomer’s late bloomer. In that long period of my life, spanning a little over three decades, in which I had never been in a relationship, I lived mostly in my own head. Fantasy seemed, at times, preferable to reality, not because I ever believed that what I imagined was real, but because, in being able to control every element of every story down to the most minute detail, I could play God. My mind’s eye gave birth to multiple new selves, all beautiful, rich, coveted, and bearing not the slightest resemblance to reality. That a fantasy frequently ended in tragedy (my make-believe death, usually from tuberculosis or being fatally shot by an arrow) rendered it no less delicious, for the following evening I would resurrect myself and a new story with a new lover would commence.

Perhaps this is why watching Emerald Fennell’s adaptation of Wuthering Heights felt so familiar. The landscape that Catherine and Heathcliff run through as children is a landscape that possesses an uncanny resemblance to the fantastical panoramas of my own lonely adolescence. And because fantasy owes very little, if anything, to history, this is a world governed solely by whim and the law of individual desire. Dresses can be anachronistic so long as they are beautiful. Feasts are laid out less for human consumption than for the delight of the eye. Few would be able to guess that Thrushcross Grange, which resembles in its exterior an iced sugar cookie, should contain a labyrinth of rooms with no unifying style beyond the ostentatious spectacle of wealth. There is a room for ribbons that is turned, for Mrs. Catherine Linton’s pleasure, into a room for the display of opulent gowns. Most memorably, there is a room the color and texture of flesh that lends new meaning to what it is to inhabit one’s own skin.

Because fantasy owes very little, if anything, to history, this is a world governed solely by whim and the law of individual desire.

As several reviews have pointed out, Fennell’s adaptation of Brontë’s magnum opus significantly departs from its source material; to document these disparities when the differences are both numerous and flagrant seems a meaningless exercise. What’s more, I don’t see much wrong with the degree of departure, whether minimal or extreme. There are no set rules for how to treat the source material, and different mediums require different modes of expression. Suzy Davies, the movie’s production designer, puts it well: “This film was never about documenting the 1800s in a literal or academic way. Instead, it was about capturing the essence of a teenage fever dream—the sensation of first encountering the book.”

I can’t help but feel disappointed both at critics who have extolled Fennell’s “Wuthering Heights” and those who have panned it. Reviews have run the gamut, from “sexy, dramatic, melodramatic, occasionally comic and often swoonily romantic” to simply “a dud.” Much of the problem seems to stem from the preconception that Brontë’s novel is a love story. In all the times I have failed or succeeded in reading the book, I have never been fully convinced that Wuthering Heights is a romance, or more accurately, that its most foundational element is the love affair between Catherine Earnshaw and Heathcliff. We tend to look for what we want to see on the page, not what is actually there. In reading Wuthering Heights, it’s easy to discern how a combination of atmosphere and titillating storytelling can render the mind susceptible to extracting specific moments and specific lines at the expense of others. Who, after all, can finish Brontë’s work without remembering Catherine’s cry, “I am Heathcliff!”

This all boils down to a certain amount of delusion around love: its addictive nature, its inextinguishable flame. That is, the belief that love is not love if it isn’t immortal, if it fails to live beyond the grave. Love is not love if one is not willing to kill for it, to give up one’s life for it, to exercise violence and exact vengeance on its behalf and under its banner. Love is not love if you do not place someone’s well-being totally above your own, if you do not sacrifice yourself to it, if formerly two separate selves do not merge wholly and completely into one. This thinking may be why we remember Wuthering Heights more for Heathcliff’s extreme—and insane—devotion to Catherine’s memory than as a story about generational abuse, otherness, and redemption. It is also why, regrettably, we remember Wuthering Heights less as an exemplar of vicarious, vivid, and vivacious storytelling than for the love story that was never really the crux of what is, from first page to last, a passion project: a passion not for romance but for, above all, the act of creativity and the pure, unadulterated joy of playing God in ink.

This is how the novel has always struck me: as a gratuitous exercise in artistry and play, in the kind of explosive energy that will unfold on the page when, for better or worse, the imagination is loosed like a dog that has been liberated from its leash in a park. How else to explain the layers of narrative that remind me, at times, of a mille-feuille? Revisiting the work in my early thirties, I noticed as I didn’t before the delightful recklessness, the heedlessness and risk-taking of Brontë’s prose. I laughed at Lockwood’s ineptitude and buffoonery, his pomposity, his romantic nature that allows him to be so easily beguiled by a pretty face and to fancy himself in love. In the first pages alone, a comic scene unfolds that sends the whole household into uproar. If there is passion, then it is passion made vivid to the point of fluorescence with melodrama.

Wuthering Heights is, in a nutshell, a noisy affair, raucous with Joseph’s ear-splitting outbursts, with Nellie Dean’s sanctimonious need to be right, with Linton Heathcliff’s whining, with violence and kidnapping and elopement and death and ghosts. In its ingenuity, its surrender to the spirit of its diverse and strange cast of characters, Wuthering Heights is more instinct than strategy, more id than superego, more the splatter of ink that leaks from a broken nib than a smooth and unbroken line. Thomas Wolfe is reputed to have said, “Writing is easy. Just put a sheet of paper in the typewriter and start bleeding.” I feel something different at work with Brontë. Even when I disliked the book, I always sensed how fun and, more vitally, how free it was. So often do we harp on the struggle of writing that we forget that pleasure can and frequently does accompany the uphill battle to put words on the page.

Fennell’s film is a testament to the contagiousness of that energy and pleasure. For all its adult themes, it’s a fantasy of the kind that precedes actual experience of the realities of the world; its stunning aesthetics betray, at its heart, a cluelessness. The hodgepodge of erotic imagery scattered throughout scenes recollects the giggles that would inevitably spread like wildfire in a classroom whenever someone happened to mention boobs or dared to say the word “dick” or “fuck” aloud. Tellingly, even symbolically, there is no nudity in Fennell’s movie: no breasts or buttocks or penises. But there are plenty of pig’s feet; there is the underside of a snail leaving a trail of slime across a glass pane. There’s the slap of wet dough and the meticulously handcrafted book Isabella Linton presents Catherine, which highlights more than one erotic feature in its pages: a pop-up of a phallus-shaped mushroom, a flower that resembles vaginal lips. Sex is clean, and its participants are, most of the time, even formally dressed for the occasion.

In one revealing scene, Catherine screams at her good-for-nothing father, as she stamps across the courtyard of Wuthering Heights, “We’re all ill! We’re all ill because of you!” This line hits at what Fennell’s “Wuthering Heights” is about. None of the characters know what they’re doing or how to go about getting what they want. Everyone is suffering under some form of delusion. Except for, surprisingly, Zillah, who has left the service of Wuthering Heights, married, and become a mother of a little boy, no one really grows up or moves on. With guardians like Mr. Earnshaw and Edgar Linton, maybe they don’t know how.

So often do we harp on the struggle of writing that we forget that pleasure can and frequently does accompany the uphill battle to put words on the page.

If Fennell’s “Wuthering Heights” is meant, to quote Davies, to replicate “a teenage fever dream,” it also warns of the dangers of being caught in the stage of hormonally fueled fantasy for too long. There is a difference between the love we imagine and the love we practice, and “compromise,” so integral to real life and to navigating any relationship, is not a word recognized in the world of this film. No one surrenders, except to their own fantasy of what and how things should be. Everyone clings. Edgar Linton deceives himself that his wife is perfect. Isabella allows herself to be treated, literally, like a dog. Nelly guards the only thing that gives meaning to her life: her proximity to those in power. And Catherine and Heathcliff abjectly fail to grow out of an adolescent hedonism; their creed remains, we can do anything we want, so long as we are the ones doing it. Appropriately, the film concludes with flashbacks to Catherine and Heathcliff’s childhood. This move is sentimental, even predictable, a play for easy audience tears. But the bigger lesson may be that if one can’t look forward, one runs the risk of living forever in an idealized past. And lest we forget, the film ends in tragedy.

While watching Fennell’s “Wuthering Heights,” I thought a lot about my debut novel, a retelling of Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice. I wrote it a few years out of college, having just been fired from a dead-end job I despised. I was twenty-five and had never had either a boyfriend or sex. My parents were filing for bankruptcy, and I was about to lose my childhood home. Some, or possibly most, of that pent-up frustration came out in the span of three months in a first draft of a novel that I composed while sweating in an airless basement I would very soon never have the privilege of sitting or typing in again. All of my fears and wishes for the future somehow found their expression in that first book. I had no idea what I was doing.

The end result was a fantasy. My protagonist not only gets her happy ending but also has a lot of fine, robust sex in between. I wondered that I could write about positions, about the sensation of lying naked beside a lover, without having experienced any of what I described. My inspiration came from what I had consumed in books, movies, and porn, from my introversion and isolation, from the buzz of sexual frustration and my despair at repetitive encounters with unrequited love. By and large, critics were much kinder to my first novel than readers were. Many were furious, outraged to the point of being almost comic. What I’d done to Austen was disgraceful, they declared; what right did I have to rewrite, to retell, to revise, to essentially destroy what had already attained the highest echelon of literary perfection. So, the litany of complaints went on and on—and on.

If I could, I’d inform the Janeite mob at my door that my treatment of Mr. Darcy and Lizzy, of Charlotte Lucas and Mr. Collins, of, notably, Mary Bennet, had nothing to do with them. I did not think of them. I didn’t want to think of them, not out of any disrespect, but because all that mattered as I was writing the novel was the absolute, all-consuming urgency I felt in transplanting my vision onto a preexisting world that had become so intimate to me that I had grown bold enough to wish to change the scenery and the weather, to shift the furniture and swap the curtains, and to rearrange characters as if they were my own playthings. You don’t do that out of hatred or scorn. You do that only when a book becomes so alive that you cannot remember who you were before you read it, when your tongue takes on the rhythm of its language and lines, and when the impulse to rummage around inside of its world becomes all but irresistible. In short, it is out of adulation—and out of love.

I sense the same impulse in Fennell’s adaptation. This is surely a personal vision, and because it is so personal, it will be, at times, moving, and, at times, ridiculous. The trailer for the film describes it as, “Inspired by the greatest love story of all time.” I don’t think, however, that this is accurate. Rather, I would say that Fennell’s “Wuthering Heights” is inspired simply by her love for a truly great—and truly strange—novel, that the passion which drove her to undertake such an ambitious project is the same that compelled Brontë to write the book. It’s a bold move, and it takes courage.

There’s a scene in the film where a shivering Catherine complains of the cold. Heathcliff offers to build a fire, but they cannot spare the firewood. After a brief exchange, Heathcliff stands up. He slams his chair against the floor, again, then again, until it breaks. With the remnants of the chair, he builds a fire; he will not see Catherine cold.

In “Nosferatu,” The Monster That Needs Feeding Is Female Desire


In Robert Eggers’ remake, Ellen Hutter isn’t haunted. She’s horny.

Jan 22 – Katherine J. Chen

Books & Culture


This scene doesn’t appear in the book. One could say it is cheesy, the stuff of which so many romances are made. But in its simple and unapologetic expression, it’s refreshing, too. We all wish that someone might break a chair to pieces if it meant we would not be cold. We all wish we could be loved so passionately. And who can say that such a moment or something very like it did not or could not happen in those gaps of the novel in which a reader’s imagination is given space to ferment? I recall one of my favorite lines from the book. In describing Heathcliff and Catherine’s final embrace, Brontë writes, “They were silent—their faces hid against each other, and washed by each other’s tears.” The edges of book and film begin to blur, and I wonder what memories these characters might have recalled, whether their youth came back to them, or whether they reveled, even fleetingly, in a glorious and unrealized future in which things had turned out different.

No one knows. That is the beauty of fiction.

Take a break from the news

We publish your favorite authors—even the ones you haven’t read yet. Get new fiction, essays, and poetry delivered to your inbox.

YOUR INBOX IS LIT

Enjoy strange, diverting work from The Commuter on Mondays, absorbing fiction from Recommended Reading on Wednesdays, and a roundup of our best work of the week on Fridays. Personalize your subscription preferences here.



Original Source Link

Previous Post

Grandson says O2 Forum Kentish Town wouldn’t let him bring Bob Vylan out on stage

Next Post

BaByliss LoPRO FX Clipper Review: Insider’s Scoop For 2026

Next Post

BaByliss LoPRO FX Clipper Review: Insider’s Scoop For 2026

SNL Creator Lorne Michaels Got His Start Writing For A Hollywood Legend’s Forgotten TV Show

SNL Creator Lorne Michaels Got His Start Writing For A Hollywood Legend's Forgotten TV Show

Christian Bale Weighs in on ‘Bold Choice’ to Make New American Psycho

Christian Bale Weighs in on 'Bold Choice' to Make New American Psycho

PopularPosts

John Hinckley Jr. Concert Cancelled in Brooklyn

John Hinckley Jr. Concert Cancelled in Brooklyn

June 16, 2022
Tired Adults May Learn Language like Children Do

Tired Adults May Learn Language like Children Do

May 31, 2022
Monarch: FOX’s Country Music Drama Casts Shania Twain, Martina McBride, and More!

Monarch: FOX’s Country Music Drama Casts Shania Twain, Martina McBride, and More!

August 17, 2022
Watch Jessie Ware’s heartfelt version of ‘The Way We Were’ for the BAFTAs ‘In Memoriam’ segment

Watch Jessie Ware’s heartfelt version of ‘The Way We Were’ for the BAFTAs ‘In Memoriam’ segment

February 23, 2026
Young Mothers first-look review

Young Mothers first-look review

May 24, 2025
Volkswagen Job Cuts to Help Save Flagship Brand .37 Billion Next Year

Volkswagen Job Cuts to Help Save Flagship Brand $4.37 Billion Next Year

December 20, 2023

Categories

  • Business (7,276)
  • Events (7)
  • Film (7,208)
  • Lifestyle (5,184)
  • Literature (5,324)
  • Music (7,255)
  • Politics (7,166)
  • Science (6,650)
  • Technology (7,204)
  • Television (7,268)
  • Uncategorized (6)
  • US News (7,306)

RecentPosts

Fanatic Feed: The Rookie & Will Trent Get Renewal Decisions, Little House on the Prairie Trailer, and More!

Fanatic Feed: The Rookie & Will Trent Get Renewal Decisions, Little House on the Prairie Trailer, and More!

by
April 13, 2026

ABC is starting the week off with renewals. On Monday...

Book Riot’s Deals of the Day for April 13, 2026

Book Riot’s Deals of the Day for April 13, 2026

by
April 13, 2026

Today’s Featured Book Deals $5.99Bury Our Bones in the Midnight...

What You Didn’t See on the Livestream

What You Didn’t See on the Livestream

by
April 13, 2026

In a swirl of grass, dust, and Bieber fever, Coachella...

AI agents are acting like employees, but company structures still treat them like software

AI agents are acting like employees, but company structures still treat them like software

by
April 13, 2026

The governance frameworks executives built over decades were designed for...

Trump Turning Himself Into Jesus Revealed The Depths Of His Insanity

Trump Turning Himself Into Jesus Revealed The Depths Of His Insanity

by
April 13, 2026

For those who track Trump’s second presidency, his latest post,...

Ruby Rose alleges Katy Perry sexually assaulted her nearly 20 years ago

Ruby Rose alleges Katy Perry sexually assaulted her nearly 20 years ago

by
April 13, 2026

NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles! Ruby Rose...

Archives

Editor's Picks

Evanescence Drop Heavy New Song ‘Who Will You Follow’

Evanescence Drop Heavy New Song ‘Who Will You Follow’

April 10, 2026
Watch Justin Bieber Headline Coachella 2026

Watch Justin Bieber Headline Coachella 2026

April 12, 2026
Days of Our LIves Spoilers for the Week of 4-13-26 Suggest That Stephanie’s PTSD Storyline Will Take a Ridiculous Turn

Days of Our LIves Spoilers for the Week of 4-13-26 Suggest That Stephanie’s PTSD Storyline Will Take a Ridiculous Turn

April 11, 2026

Browse By Category

  • Business (7,276)
  • Events (7)
  • Film (7,208)
  • Lifestyle (5,184)
  • Literature (5,324)
  • Music (7,255)
  • Politics (7,166)
  • Science (6,650)
  • Technology (7,204)
  • Television (7,268)
  • Uncategorized (6)
  • US News (7,306)

Useful Links

  • Anti-Spam Policy
  • Copyright Notice
  • DMCA Compliance
  • Earnings Disclaimer
  • Fair Use Disclaimer
  • FTC Compliance
  • Medical Disclaimer
  • Privacy Policy
  • Social Media Disclaimer
  • Terms and Conditions

Copyright © 2022 by Washington Weekly Times. All rights reserved. All articles, images, product names, logos, and brands are property of their respective owners. All company, product and service names used in this website are for identification purposes only. Use of these names, logos, and brands does not imply endorsement unless specified. By using this site, you agree to the Terms of Use and Privacy Policy.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • US News
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Science
  • Technology
  • Lifestyle
  • Music
  • Television
  • Film
  • Literature
  • Contact
    • About

Copyright © 2022 by Washington Weekly Times. All rights reserved. All articles, images, product names, logos, and brands are property of their respective owners. All company, product and service names used in this website are for identification purposes only. Use of these names, logos, and brands does not imply endorsement unless specified. By using this site, you agree to the Terms of Use and Privacy Policy.

We use cookies on our website to give you the most relevant experience by remembering your preferences and repeat visits. By clicking “Accept All”, you consent to the use of ALL the cookies. However, you may visit "Cookie Settings" to provide a controlled consent.
Cookie SettingsAccept All
Manage consent

Privacy Overview

This website uses cookies to improve your experience while you navigate through the website. Out of these, the cookies that are categorized as necessary are stored on your browser as they are essential for the working of basic functionalities of the website. We also use third-party cookies that help us analyze and understand how you use this website. These cookies will be stored in your browser only with your consent. You also have the option to opt-out of these cookies. But opting out of some of these cookies may affect your browsing experience.
Necessary
Always Enabled
Necessary cookies are absolutely essential for the website to function properly. These cookies ensure basic functionalities and security features of the website, anonymously.
CookieDurationDescription
cookielawinfo-checkbox-analytics11 monthsThis cookie is set by GDPR Cookie Consent plugin. The cookie is used to store the user consent for the cookies in the category "Analytics".
cookielawinfo-checkbox-functional11 monthsThe cookie is set by GDPR cookie consent to record the user consent for the cookies in the category "Functional".
cookielawinfo-checkbox-necessary11 monthsThis cookie is set by GDPR Cookie Consent plugin. The cookies is used to store the user consent for the cookies in the category "Necessary".
cookielawinfo-checkbox-others11 monthsThis cookie is set by GDPR Cookie Consent plugin. The cookie is used to store the user consent for the cookies in the category "Other.
cookielawinfo-checkbox-performance11 monthsThis cookie is set by GDPR Cookie Consent plugin. The cookie is used to store the user consent for the cookies in the category "Performance".
viewed_cookie_policy11 monthsThe cookie is set by the GDPR Cookie Consent plugin and is used to store whether or not user has consented to the use of cookies. It does not store any personal data.
Functional
Functional cookies help to perform certain functionalities like sharing the content of the website on social media platforms, collect feedbacks, and other third-party features.
Performance
Performance cookies are used to understand and analyze the key performance indexes of the website which helps in delivering a better user experience for the visitors.
Analytics
Analytical cookies are used to understand how visitors interact with the website. These cookies help provide information on metrics the number of visitors, bounce rate, traffic source, etc.
Advertisement
Advertisement cookies are used to provide visitors with relevant ads and marketing campaigns. These cookies track visitors across websites and collect information to provide customized ads.
Others
Other uncategorized cookies are those that are being analyzed and have not been classified into a category as yet.
SAVE & ACCEPT