Initial reaction: “Umm… ok… wow.”
I requested this book because I love the classics and read this one in high school, wanting to see how “reimagined” it was… One theme that I.J. Miller definitely kept is this:
In both Wuthering Heights and Wuthering Nights, I love the books whilst also wanting to cause major bodily harm to the majority of the main characters. Vain, selfish, hateful, spoiled and spiteful creatures, the lot of them.
What I found interesting is that, though somewhat shocking, I can TOTALLY see this all actually happening. That somehow this is real. Brontë wrote a PG or PG-13 rated book and Miller just uncovered the sordid underbelly and turned it NC-17.
Beware: This book is NOT for the faint of heart. If you felt uncomfortable reading 50 Shades of Gray (which, in my personal opinion, should NEVER be the “authoritative” book or baseline for BDSM novels), then don’t read this book.
I, personally, have read worse… and oddly, out of all the “taboo” things committed in this book (and others), the instance of a woman suckling a man’s breast is what disturbed me the most (I’m not saying who was involved and when but… ) … in this reviewer’s humble opinion, the word “suckling” should only be used in the instance of a child to its mother’s breast… men doing it to women… ok, but use a different word… a woman suckling at the man’s breast, whether or not he is her master, just bothers me. But I digress…
If you’ve read the original book, Wuthering Heights, by Emily Brontë, and are prepared to go dark, you’ll enjoy this book, as I did. If you haven’t read the original, first off, shame on you, and secondly, be prepared to want to slap the characters. But that’s part of what makes these books so compelling. You dislike the characters so much, yet you keep reading to see what happens next and if they will or can redeem themselves.
The tale is one of forbidden love, revenge, selfishness, jealous, vanity, pain and, ultimately, sacrifice – or punishment, depending on how you look at it.
Either way, I was a huge fan and recommend it to those up to the task.
A tip of the hat to I.J. Miller for “reimagining” a book so well.