With its title appropriately lifted from an Emily Brontë poem, this captivating coming-of-age novel opens with six-year-old Emily joining her sisters at a girls’ school in 1824, where the unsanitary conditions lead to the rampant spread of tuberculosis and the Brontës’ subsequent return home to Haworth.
Raised by their widowed father and his sister-in-law, and educated both at home and in boarding schools, encouraged to draw, write stories and stomp about the moors in the company of several cherished family dogs, the surviving Brontë children — Charlotte, Branwell, Emily and Anne — share lives enriched and inspired by the natural world.
Powell’s sumptuous, careful prose vividly recreates Victorian Yorkshire and richly conveys Emily’s vibrant inner life that sets her imagination aflame as she writes “Wuthering Heights,” its wildness in her heart.
An immersive, moving, literary page-turner.