Wuthering Heights

by Emily Brontë

$4.99$1.00

Digital version available in epub and pdf. Choose format at download.

Wuthering Heights by Emily Brontë is a dark, passionate novel set on the wild Yorkshire moors, where the landscape mirrors the emotional violence at the heart of the story. Framed through layered narration, the novel is chiefly recounted by the outsider Mr. Lockwood and the housekeeper Nelly Dean, who reveal the tragic history of two neighboring households: Wuthering Heights and Thrushcross Grange.

At the center is Heathcliff, a brooding orphan taken in by the Earnshaw family, and Catherine Earnshaw, his fierce and willful companion. Their bond is intense, elemental, and destructive—more a force of nature than a conventional romance. When Catherine chooses to marry the refined Edgar Linton for social advancement, Heathcliff is devastated. His suffering curdles into a relentless desire for revenge, not only against those who wronged him but against the next generation as well.

The novel explores love in its most obsessive and corrosive forms, along with themes of class conflict, cruelty, inheritance, and the cyclical nature of suffering. Ghosts—both literal and emotional—haunt the story, blurring the line between the living and the dead and emphasizing how the past refuses to remain buried.

Unconventional in structure and tone, Wuthering Heights defies the romantic norms of its time. Its characters are often morally ambiguous, even brutal, yet deeply human. The result is a haunting, unforgettable work that portrays love not as comforting or redemptive, but as raw, consuming, and capable of both transcendence and ruin.

Quote from the book —

“I have to remind myself to breathe -- almost to remind my heart to beat!”

             ― Emily Brontë, Wuthering Heights

Also available in Paperback. Experience the timeless tale of passion and revenge with this beautifully printed edition of Wuthering Heights. Perfect for lovers of classic literature and new readers alike.

Go to Print Edition

Emily Brontë (1818–1848) was an English novelist and poet best known for her only novel, Wuthering Heights. Born in Thornton, Yorkshire, and raised in the isolated village of Haworth, she was the fifth of six children in the remarkable Brontë family. Deeply reserved and imaginative, Emily created vivid fantasy worlds with her siblings and later published poetry under the pseudonym Ellis Bell. Wuthering Heights (1847) shocked Victorian readers with its dark passion and unconventional structure but is now considered a masterpiece of English literature. Emily died of tuberculosis at age thirty, leaving a lasting literary legacy.