I'm pretty sure that no one put this topic up already, which I found a bit weird.
So I'm about three quarters of the way through this and it's really good. Totally believable, very tragic, very romantic.
However I have to admit that the only character I really like, as in, would like to bump into on the street, is Nelly herself. The rest are all really self-centred and nasty. Except for Cathy and Heathcliff who are centred around each other of course.
Any thoughts? No spoilers please, not finished yet!
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I really did like Wuthering Heights. I found Joseph's accent incredibly annoying, however. It was very dark and tragic, but it definitely made you feel something. I actually preferred Jane Eyre (one of my all time favorite classics, so hard to beat) over Wuthering Heights, but it was still a good read.
I've never read Wuthering Heights, but I have read several of Emile Bronte's poems. I loved her poetry, so I am sure her book is good too!
I love this book! I think Heathcliff is one of the best villains in literature, and Catherine is just so awful! The story is kinda like watching a string of mistakes all weave togeather to form a revolting, but enjoyable pattern. This book is well worth the read!
I will probably love this book when I get around to reading it. I'm a sucker for a detailed plot and any type of love story.
Dood, how did I only just now find this? O.o
Anyway, Wuthering Heights is pretty much one of my all time favorite books ever. One of the few that dad bought for me, and it hasn't left my side since.
I haven't seen the movie though...
<3
~Bella Bambina~
TL...where is the romance in your soul?!
Great book. Great movie. Period.
Absolutely captivating.
I am constantly reading it. Haven't put it down since I bought it, which was quite some time ago.
*gasp* This is one of my most favorite books! EVER!
It's so refreshing from typical romance. Two horribly wicked people destroying everyone around them for love. Amazing!
I loved wuthering heights. i love most of the old classics like that, and i think the brontes are definatly some of the most talented authors ever.

Elimear - I've read Jane Eyre. I think i liked that one even more than Wuthering Heights. Some of the places in it, like the school at the beginning, were based on her own experience and the school her and her sisters were sent to and the whole thing from start to finished was amazing.
if you liked Wuthering Heights you should definatly read Jane Eyre as well. they aren't easy reading or anything but definatly worth the effort.
Wuthering Heights stank. Stinks. Stunk.
It was completely unbelievable, all about people destroying themselves for love. Catherine decides that she won't marry Heathcliff, but she has to destroy herself, Heathcliff and everyone around her to make up for her frustrated passion.
Urgh. Bleagh. Gag.
Omg! That was Bella's favorite book in the Twilight series. I should read it, yeah, I should. I'm going to go and check it out today!
-Ailam
Wuthering Heights is amazing. Heathcliff is the best anti hero of all time, and Kathy is so selfish it is unbelievable. This one kept me reading into the wee hours of the night, quite a page turner.
I read the book recently, perhaps some three weeks ago - I’m currently in the Classic mode. It was a bit ‘heavy’ to read, but I found “Wuthering Heights” very deserving of its fame, really, and it’s somewhere near the very top in my mental ‘best books’ list.
It’s tragic, and disturbing. It managed to sketch itself into my mind, and I kept thinking about the book days after finishing it. Creepy, a tad bit, but oh, well. That itself is living proof that Bronte is a genius. The characters were so real, so alive… I was torn at the thought of taking sides, I couldn’t hate anyone without pitying… I wanted very much to cry at some points. Also, it was actually a bit of a jolt when I realized that the book is ending, when everything was drawn to a close. It felt so unbelievable, yet realistic..
“Wuthering Heights” is, again, pure genius.
I finished this book yesterday.
It's not one of my favourite classics; I prefer Rebecca. Having said that it is much better than Jane Eyre, which I detested.
I found that most of the book was a bit....nothing. Some chapters had me hooked but after about chapter 15 I started to find it a bit monotonous. The ending was good, I did feel some sadness for the characters. It's definitely not a romantic book, much more revenge. I was just disappointed in the fact that the main character died in like chapter 10.
I would recommend it but I wouldn't read it again.
Alainna
xxx
This is definately one of my favorite books. It was surprisingly good. I figured I would have been bored after the first little bit, but I enjoyed it. I can't say I really liked Joseph's accent though. It was funny, but extremely hard to understand in some parts.
Well I finished it.
It's only half a romance, really. The rest is about revenge etc. I really enjoyed it, although of course, everyone's entitled to their opinion. But I think it better than Austen, -I don't know, perhaps you can't really compare the two, but just in the classical section now, I have a feeling I'd pick up Jane Eyre instead of Sense and Sensibility... although I intend to read everything by all the Brontes and Jane Austen in any case... But back on topic, I really liked this...
BTW, scriboergosum=I write, therefore I am? Am I right?
I LOVE this book and it's one of my favorites ever, even though I'm usually into fantasy not romance. I read somewhere that Emily Bronte took only ten weeks to write it, too. IMPRESSIVE.

Isn't Heathcliff great?
Ahhhh!!!!
Couldn't stand Wuthering Heights. I really had to struggle to get to the end back when I read it.
I found it irritating, involving far too much whinging on Kathy's part. It was on our KS4 list of suggested books, which was why I read it, but I think it's overated. It's one of the very few books I can say I totally didn't enjoy.
Joseph's accent cracks me up when ever I read it.
I've got 10 chapters to go, I'm reading a chapter a night. I would just finish it, but I got Company of Liars a few days ago, and it's just far too luscious to resist.
Go Wuthering Heights! Woop, woop!
I'm doing that legend of a book for my English coursework, It's amazing! The entire thing is brilliantly plotted out and well written...and what about Joseph's accent?!
Has anyone read Jane Eyre?
This book is the anti-romance if there ever was one
But all the parallels are interesting to take a look at!
Wuthering Heights FTW.
It's a story of love, of passion, of hatred, and of revenge.
Withering Heights? Okay then.
It's about... hmm... how to describe it...
Pretty much, there's this guy called Lockwood who moves into a house called Thrushcross Grange. One night he has to stay at the neighbour's house, Wuthering Heights because of a snowstorm. The neighbour is a man called Heathcliff, who's really a nasty person. While there, Lockwood thinks he sees a ghost outside the window and runs away, leaving Heathcliff at the window begging his dear Cathy to come back inside.
Back at home, Lockwood asks his housekeeper, Nelly Dean about it, and most of the book so far is Nelly's story, how Heathcliff was found by Catherine's father and taken in, how Catherine and Heathcliff fell in love -sort of- how she betrayed him, what he did in retaliation, how she died...
It's really hard to describe without giving anything away. It's a story within a story, Lockwood doesn't do much except lie in bed, but that seems the best way to tell what it's about...
Is that Wuthering Heights or Withering Heights? What's it about? I think I know of it.