blog tour, books, reviews

Blog Tour: Catherine – Essie Fox

With a nature as wild as the moors she loves to roam, Catherine Earnshaw grows up alongside Heathcliff, a foundling her father rescued from the streets of Liverpool. Their fierce, untamed bond deepens as they grow – until Mr Earnshaw’s death leaves Hindley, Catherine’s brutal brother, in control and Heathcliff reduced to servitude.

Desperate to protect him, Catherine turns to Edgar Linton, the handsome heir to Thrushcross Grange. She believes his wealth might free Heathcliff from cruelty – but her choice is fatally misunderstood, and their lives spiral into a storm of passion, jealousy and revenge. Now, eighteen years later, Catherine rises from her grave to tell her story – and to seek redemption.

Essie Fox’s Catherine reimagines Wuthering Heights with beauty and intensity – a haunting, atmospheric retelling that brings new life to a timeless classic and lays bare the dark heart of an immortal love

Essie Fox is the Sunday Times bestselling author of seven historical novels, including The Somnambulist, shortlisted for the National Book Awards, and The Fascination, an instant Sunday Times bestseller. Her work has twice been selected as The Times Historical Book of the Month, most recently for her gothic mystery Dangerous. She appears regularly at literary festivals and cultural institutions and is the host of the podcast Talking the Gothic. She lives in Windsor.

My thoughts: Essie Fox’s reinagining of Emily Bronte’s Wuthering Heights narrated by the ghost of Catherine Earnshaw-Linton after her death in childbirth, offers a different perspective than that of the narrators of the original novel – housekeeper Nelly Dean and Lockwood, who doesn’t feature in this version, set as it is before his arrival.

Catherine feels deep affection for Heathcliffe but doesn’t excuse his horrible behaviour, the cruel and vicious revenge he spends his adult life inflicting on the next generation. 

Fox’s version makes it clear that Heathcliffe and Cathy have the same father, who tries to prevent their relationship getting too complicated, shall we say. Although the next generation, who are all cousins, no one seems so worried about.

While I have complicated feelings about Emily Bronte’s novel (I had to study it, write essays and sit an exam about it, tends to make it far from beloved), and get really fed up with people who think an incestuous relationship between two truly awful, spoilt and narcissistic people is romantic, I actually really liked this reimagining.

Essie Fox has a keen understanding of the Gothic and gives Cathy her voice back, she’s a passive character in WH, what with being dead, but here, she’s the all-seeing godlike narrator, who wishes she could intervene and change the situation for her family, messy and complicated as it all becomes.

*I was kindly gifted a copy of this book in exchange for taking part in this blog tour, but all opinions remain my own.

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