Abide With Me by Sabin Willett ๐ถ️
A juvenile delinquent leaves on a five-year tour of Afghanistan, and returns home a broken hero hoping to reunite with the heiress he had an intense ten-week tumultuous adolescent affair with--only to discover she is engaged to a wealthy attorney, and her father's finances are in ruins after his suicide. Determined to win back Emma and restore her family home, The Heights, Roy sets out to make something of himself and earn Emma's love and the town's respect. Set in small-town Hoosier's Bridge, Vermont, the setting plays into the narrative. As in other reframings of Wuthering Heights, all obsessive love ends tragically.
When Katarina Shaw sees Sheila Lin win an Olympic gold medal in ice dancing with her partner, she immediately asks her father for skating lessons and begins training. When she befriends a local foster boy who has learned to skate through a hockey program for underprivileged youth, it doesn't take much convincing to get Heath to begin learning routines with her. Their undeniable chemistry, skill, and talent earn them a spot in Sheila Lin's ice skating academy, alongside her twin children, who are ice dance partners and being groomed for an Olympic bid as well. The narrative oscillates between Kat's point of view and interviews from a variety of sources, for a documentary about what went wrong between Kat and Heath that ended their partnership. Former competitors, coaches, journalists, siblings, friends, and more chime in as the dramatic story moves back and forth in time, covering nearly two decades of competition, training, injury, scandal, and setbacks against an obsessive and possessive relationship modeled after Katherine Earnshaw and Heathcliff's in Wuthering Heights.
Here On Earth by Alice Hoffman ๐ถ️๐ถ️
March Murray and her teenage daughter Gwen travel to their Massachusetts roots for the funeral of the family's housekeeper who raised March; the return reignites March's passion for bad boy Hollis, the orphan her father took in--the one she spurned to marry a rich neighbor, whom she has left behind in California. March abandons all sanity and obligation in pursuit of obsessive love for a bitter man who can neither forgive nor forget her--but does he love her? Through a contemporary lens, Hoffman explores the themes of Wuthering Heights (obsession, violence, abusive relationships) alongside motherhood and middle age, passion and security, chance and destiny with her distinctive character development, almost-supernatural elements, and atmospheric, allegorical writing. New England weather, no less predictable than that of the Scottish moors, plays its own role in a narrative that moves back and forth in time.
When recently widowed professor of Victorian literature loses it at an underperforming student who happens to be the son of the dean, her supervisors suggest a sabbatical; she takes her six-year-son (Heathcliff!) off to London for an extended stay at her friend’s house, happily escaping after an almost-kiss with her husband's best friend, attorney Henry, who is helping her untangle some mysterious details of a trust for Heathie. While in London, she meets with her agent to negotiate a second book (and film!) based on her successful young adult novel, a romance hailed as the next Twilight that’s a magical take on Wuthering Heights. She bumps into another writer who writes popular thrillers, and allows him to pursue her, simultaneously charmed and repulsed by his behavior, and his attraction to her affectations of her grief. Lizzie finds herself befriended by Bella, who plays Cathy in the movie adaptation of Lizzie’s book, who is involved in a love triangles in both the film and IRL. This is wonderfully gothic, well-crafted tale of love and grief and longing that pays homeage to Wuthering Heights, complete with a love triangle, obsession, desperate longing, and hiking on the moors.
Nelly Dean: A Return to Wuthering Heights by Alison A. Case ๐ถ️
In this reimagining of Wuthering Heights through the eyes of the Catherine's loyal young servant, Nelly Dean is raised alongside her employer's children Catherine and Hindley practically as a member of the family until Heathcliff is added to the mix. Her love affair with Hindley's son Hareton results in an illegitimate heir, reduced to a life as an illiterate, uneducated laborer by a vengeful Heathcliff. The slow pace is rife with passion, violence, betrayal, revenge, and especially suffering as Nelly endures the thoughtless cruelty of the gentry she serves.
Solsbury Hill by Susan A. Wyler ๐ถ️
When a surprise call brings twenty-something up-and-coming fashion designer from New York to the Yorkshire Moors, Eleanor discovers she is to inherit Trent Hall, the family estate, where Bronte composed some of her singular novel. Having left behind her childhood sweetheart turned cheating fiancรฉ, Eleanor encounters her dying aunt's ward, the enigmatic Meadowscarp McLeod, as well as the pervasive ghostly presence of Brontรซ herself. Following a long history of women in her family making mistakes in their romances, Eleanor finds herself caught between her love for Miles and for Meadowscarp amid the howling winds off the moors. This atmospheric and inventive romance makes a case that Wuthering Heights’s central theme of finding (and losing) a great love amid the moors was based on actual events, as proven by letters Eleanor discovers with the aid of Bronte's ghost.
As the abandoned son of a lascar—a sailor from India—Heathcliff has spent most of his young life maligned as an "outsider." Now he's been flung into an alien life in the Yorkshire moors, where he clings to his birth father's language even though it makes the children of the house call him an animal, and the maids claim he speaks gibberish. Catherine is the younger child of the estate's owner, a daughter with light skin and brown curls and a mother that nobody talks about. Her father is grooming her for a place in proper society, and that's all that matters. Catherine knows she must mold herself into someone pretty and good and marriageable, even though it might destroy her spirit. As they occasionally flee into the moors to escape judgment and share the half-remembered language of their unknown kin, Catherine and Heathcliff come to find solace in each other. Deep down in their souls, they can feel they are the same. But when Catherine's father dies and the household's treatment of Heathcliff only grows more cruel, their relationship becomes strained and threatens to unravel. For how can they ever be together, when loving each other—and indeed, loving themselves—is as good as throwing themselves into poverty and death? This fresh take on an old classic subverts the default whiteness of the original text.
The Time Traveler's Wife by Audrey Niffennegger ๐ถ️๐ถ️
Time traveling is a genetic disorder like epilepsy in this story modelled after The Odyssey, with Henry always slipping out of time, and his beloved wife Claire, an artist, left behind like Penelope, longing and waiting for his return. She has known him most of her life, as he was drawn back through time to her in his 40s; when they meet in their 20s, he is a familiar sight to her, but to him, they have only just met. The narrative focuses on their tumultuous star-crossed relationship; her art, which is sculptural and involves mostly birds, crafted from handmade paper; his work as a librarian at a world-class institution; their desire to conceive a child; and their search for a cure to Henry's inconvenient disorder. Tons of literary allusions, the Chicago locale, and their punk rock aesthetic create a multi-sensory, rich backdrop to a story that to some will resonate as star-crossed fated mates--and to others, a warning tale of grooming and privilege.
The narrative of this science fiction book moves back and forth between the tragic disaster of the ship Erebus, stranded at the Northwest Passage for several years, and present day Britain, where a time travel device allows specific people with potential to be rescued from certain death and brought forward in time to play a role in the fight against climate change. An agent assigned to a traveler inconveniently falls for her charge, and their relationship is an intense slow burn that incorporates both passion and destruction. The characters are complex, the writing excellent, the plotting clever, the narrative compelling. There is a bit of a disconnect with typical time travel stories, where the basic premise includes rules like "the future is already set" and "going back into the past cannot change or derail things," and "you can’t meet your future or past self." If you are willing to suspend your disbelief, you’ll be rewarded with a tale that will have you googling the Northwest passage and crushing on Commander Graham Gore as unapologetically as the author and the narrator.
Outlander by Diana Gabaldon ๐ถ️๐ถ️๐ถ️
Can you wholly love two separate people with your one heart? Claire, a war nurse on holiday with her officer husband Frank, seeks to rekindle their marriage, spent mostly apart during WWII. She gamely trots off to look for flowers to press in the Scottish highlands while he's on a family history search. On a pagan feast day, she slips through a pair of standing stones and finds herself 200 years in the past, deeply in danger and in the middle of a skirmish between the locals and the British army. Only marriage to a Scotsman--Jamie, a laird with a price on his head--will keep her from being apprehended by the British, and she finds herself developing feelings for her new husband, while still longing for her first one. The adventure is as heart-pounding as the passion; violence, love, betrayal and passion are recurring themes, and both locations and secondary characters are richly drawn. Claire is a feisty, twentieth-century feminist whose mouth gets her into trouble on more than one occasion, and the historical and cultural details are thoroughly researched.
Note: The chili peppers denote the steaminess, or spice level, of the book's romantic/intimate elements; visit https://www.romance.io/steamrating for the key.





































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