All posts by Ti

Hi, I'm Ti! I blog about books and life over at http://bookchatter.net

Wuthering Heights Wednesday: April 21, 2010 – Week 3

Welcome to Wuthering Heights Wednesday! Softdrink is hosting a read-along of this classic novel, and we’re reading (and posting about) 3 chapters a week.

Chapters 7 through 9

My Synopsis:

Let me tell you, Wuthering Heights is a happening place.

After five weeks with the Lintons, Cathy returns home on Christmas Eve. In her absence, Heathcliff has been shunned by the rest of the family and in turn, is quite disheveled in appearance. So much so that Cathy does not recognize him at first and actually has the audacity to laugh in his face.

Mr. Earnshaw invites the Lintons over for Christmas dinner. Everyone is in great spirits over the promise of guests except for Heathcliff. Mrs. Dean, forever looking after him, convinces him to clean-up a bit. He cleans up so well that Earnshaw orders him to be confined to his room. After receiving her guests, Cathy leaves the table to go visit Heathcliff in confinement. Mrs. Dean allows the two of them to visit with each other in the kitchen. It is there that Heathcliff vows to get revenge upon Hindley.

Flash forward to the summer of 1778.

Frances, Hindley’s wife gives birth to a baby boy named Hareton. She dies from consumption so Mrs. Dean ends up nursing Hareton and raising him as her own. Hindley becomes more of a tyrant, Cathy’s demeanor increases in haughtiness and Heathcliff becomes “possessed and diabolical”. In the mean time, Edgar Linton starts to hang around Cathy quite a bit more.

One day, Heathcliff decides to spend some time with Cathy only to find out that she has invited Edgar over for a visit. This is an interesting visit because during the visit Cathy acts appallingly bad and slaps Mrs. Dean. Edgar ends up leaving after seeing Cathy in such a disagreeable state and Cathy pretty much tells him that if he leaves, that will be the end of them. Edgar does leave the house but ends up returning to Cathy (to Mrs. Dean’s surprise) and proposes to her.

After the proposal, Cathy asks Mrs. Dean what she should do. Should she accept the proposal, or decline it? Mrs. Dean asks her to explain her love for Edgar and Cathy has great difficulty doing so. She admits to Mrs. Dean that she has accepted the marriage proposal but secretly loves Heathcliff, but that their love could never work. They would be beggars! She would have nothing to show for it. Heathcliff hears this part of it and leaves the grounds.

Cathy, in a terrified fit goes looking for the missing Heathcliff and comes down with a terrible fever. After spending sometime in bed at home, she is invited to stay with the Lintons for a bit, which ends up being a very bad idea as her fever spreads to Mr. and Mrs. Linton and the end result is not good. When she has fully recovered, Cathy marries Edgar, moves to Thrushcross Grange and Edgar manages to persuade Mrs. Dean to move in with them.

So the newlyweds are now living at Thrushcross Grange and Heathcliff is still nowhere to be found.

My Thoughts:

That Cathy is a real pill. She started off rather sweet but has turned into quite a piece of work. When she slapped Mrs. Dean, all her childlike qualities came out, but none of the good ones. Just the bratty, nasty bits that you see when a child does not get her way. I’m not sure what to make of Heathcliff. I want him to stand-up for himself but he hasn’t really done so as of yet. He seems a bit above all the nonsense though, but we’ll have to see how that all pans out once he enters back into the picture.

It’s very hard to pace myself with my reading. I tend to want to keep going on and on which is great, but I don’t want to get too far ahead of the group so I am trying to stick to the three chapters a week. If you are intrigued by any of this, it’s not too late to join in. You’ll be able to catch-up quickly.

Reading along:

Fancy That! Genres Through the Ages

This is my first, official Fancy That! post.

Anyway, I was thinking about the types of books that I used to read when I was younger. When I was in junior high/high school, I read a lot of thrillers. Stephen King was, well…KING. I stayed up all night reading his books. When I ran out of King books, I turned to Dean Koontz. Someone asked me to read Watchers and I loved it. I think I went out and got all of his books after reading that one.

Sometime after that, I turned to historical romance. Yes! Me! Real bodice rippers too. I loved Johanna Lindsey. A friend of mine was a bit older than me and one summer she found herself hooked on them. She’d give me her copies but I also got quite a few of them from the library. I didn’t need sex education in school because these books told me all I needed to know and tossed in some historical stuff as well. Can teens check these types of books out from the library now? They have ratings for movies but not for books. Just wondering. I mean, would a librarian stop a young girl from checking out a book that might be too mature for her?

In college, I was exposed to a lot of different genres. Much of it was required reading but I didn’t care. I loved all of it. At that time, I fell in love with the classics but the genre that I really favored, was dystopian fiction and to this day, this is the genre that I really covet yet I have the hardest time admitting. Why do I have a hard time admitting it? Well, because for many, dystopian = fail. Meaning, that society has crumbled or fallen in upon itself and lots of people see that as depressing. I don’t see it that way at all though.

For me, I love to pick it apart. To see where society failed or better yet, to try to predict when it will fail. Orwell’s 1984 still resonates with readers today because the concept of Big Brother is more relevant now than it was when the book was first written (1949). BUT, when I read it back in college I could see all of that happening. It didn’t seem so far off to me and that’s how it is when I read dystopian fiction today. Volcanoes erupting, pandemics making themselves known, earthquakes…so many earthquakes. I’ve read all this in books, but have you taken a look around lately?

So my question to you is this, do you still love the genres of your youth? I can’t say that I love thrillers anymore even though I do read them every now and then and historical romance hasn’t had my attention since I put it down in the mid-eighties. I guess you could say that I outgrew those genres. What about you? Is there a genre that you used to love that you cannot read now?