an anthology of 16 short stories inspired by Wuthering Heights, with a forward by Kate Mosse, who curated the collection.
I enjoyed the anthology, and thought it was strong overall, even tho some of the stories didn't appeal/engage as much as others.
1. Terminus - Louise Doughty.
🌟 🌟 🌟 🌟
palpably tense. very much the feeling of the tension within Wuthering Heights. the sea feels bit like the open expanse of the moors to me 🌊💙
Anya and the young guy too. a second generation?
2. Anima - Grace McCleen.
🌟 🌟 🌟 🌟 🌟
a fox! a girl/young woman's love for, and inability to save, a fox 🧡🦊🤎
"a few minutes later, I heard the hunt"
"and I began to see that my worst fears were not dark enough"
the idea that the fox led the men and dogs, rather than it being determined their pursuit ♥
(the hunt fitting well with the time period and class stuff of Wuthering Heights).
absolutely gorgeous story. and well structured too - the reprieve, seeming escape, but just the second round...
3. A Bird Half Eaten - Nikesh Shukla.
🌟 🌟 🌟 🌟
boxing, fighting... can feel the aspect of young Heathcliff in it/in the main character.
I really liked the build of intensity in the dynamic between the narrator and the guy at the club - the initial encounter to the later fight - it felt intimate, powerful, transformational... ♥
4. Thicker Than Blood - Erin Kelly.
🌟 🌟 🌟
bit too close to the original to feel original. kinda just the relationships reset in more contemporary times (2017 is mentioned). Heath, Cat, Ed and Izzy.
tho a slightly interesting culmination.
but fairly immediately forgotten....
5. One Letter Difference - Joanna Cannon.
🌟 🌟 🌟 🌟
Elis and Leo (the Heathcliff character I think).
a family holiday, a walk on the moors...
the space the moor gives for words, taking about stuff ♥
a nice story about bereavement, and the beauty of the moors 🙂
6. The Howling Girl - Laurie Penny
🌟 🌟
this one didn't engage me as much as others. the reader? the writing? the content?
the dialogue felt abit clunky.... and some phrases seemed there more to kinda showcase them as clever turns of phase ?!? 🙃
life and death, again. a ghost. annoying character(s).
7. Five Sites, Five Stages - Lisa McInerney.
🌟 🌟 🌟 🌟 .5
Heidi and Cass. the mocking banter between/shared by the two.
Cass's brother, and Cass in hospital.
Heidi as Heathcliff in this one, her mix of violence and care, disliked by Cass's brother. class, mental health. the nature of love ♥
the 5 sites and the 5 stages - in a relationship? of grief? of the cross? (how many are there of those?).
the end was abit abrupt, tho also appropriate 🙂
8. Kit -Juno Dawson.
🌟 🌟 🌟 .5
I enjoyed the writing, and the reader 😃 not an especially new story, but nicely executed, I think 🙂
9. My Eye is a Button on your Dress - Hanan Al-Shaykh. (translation from Arabic by Catherine Cobham).
🌟 🌟 🌟 🌟 .5
a passionate affair, narrated by the woman, Amal. Yusuf, her lover, the Heathcliff figure. "I pursued him like a dog follows his master". their relationship set against the politics of the 'Arab Spring', around Tahrir Square, and his marriage.
meeting after a 5 year separation, back in Cairo, Amal travelling from London where she now lives and works. she finds him much changed by illness (since 2 years). and that she's been invited, not by him, but by his wife imitating him by letter and email, to be his nurse. in her room, the copy of Wuthering Heights she gifted him some years ago.
holds some of the wicked twistedness of the original 😁
10. The Cord - Alison Case.
🌟 🌟 🌟 .5
Heathcliff on the moors. atmospheric. the tension and pain of the cord that tethers him to Cathy and Wuthering Heights. he tries to break the cord, to assert his independence, "I am Heathcliff" 🙂
11. Heathcliffs I Have Known - Louisa Young.
🌟 🌟 🌟 🌟 🌟
assault, assault... but it's OK cos he loves you. codependency.
I enjoyed this story, the voice and account of relationships/men (Heathcliffs) she's dated 🙂
"...she is yours, made of the same stuf., she is you" (referencing a daughter in this instance).
really nicely constructed and reworked 😊
12. Amulet and Feathers - Leila Aboulela.
🌟 🌟 🌟 .5
Maryam... wanting to avenge her father's death.
interestingly applied.
I liked the world in which it was set - physically and culturally, magically too 🦚🙂
"I wanted to see the face of evil, and I saw a beautiful girl".
13. How Things Disappear - Anna James.
🌟 🌟 🌟 🌟
an unusual child, then young woman, whose body comes and goes abit, starts to disappear in places. I thought this was really beautifully written - some of the language and the images painted, and the complexity of meanings ♥
14. The Wildflowers - Dorothy Koomson.
🌟 🌟 🌟 🌟 🌟
initially feels like a kind of reversal, the relationship between Zilla and Fabian - Fabian a rich white boy, and Zilla a young brown woman. Fabian's mothers disapproval. Fabian's grandfather's enigmatic "I am Heathcliff".
oo, a great twist! 😃😁
15. Heathcliff is not my name - Michael Stewart.
🌟 🌟 🌟
nicely descriptive of the landscape and moors. nice language too, including some Yorkshire dialect 🙂
I didn't like how gendered alot of the cursing and swearing was 😕 and/or might just have been the delivery 🤔
seemed a simple retelling of part of the original. tho I think a good retelling of it from Heathcliff's perspective 🙂
16. Only Joseph - Sophie Hannah.
🌟 🌟 .5
an unsolved murder at a school. a boy at school whose interest in a girl at the school creates discomfort. a parent visiting another school with the thought of maybe transferring their child. a Wuthering Heights based musical is referenced 😉
I didn't much like this one either 😕 I found the parent's voice/opinions annoying. the language/writing felt boring, and the narration possibly exacerbated my response 🤔🙃
shame to end on a couple of less strong/enjoyable stories 😕 (tho aware this could be subjective, and others might have enjoyed these last two more).
🌟 🌟 🌟 🌟
accessed as a RNIB audiobook, read by Dami Olukoya, Lucy Brownhill, Lara Sawalha, Freddie Gaminara, Karen Cogan, Hanan al-Shaykh, Joanna Cannon.