Emily Bronte’s Tale of all-consuming love is an omnipotent force to be reckoned with. It’s an intoxicating read—<i>Marie Claire</i><br /><br />A beautiful gift, and perfect gems for bookworms.—<i>So Darling</i><br /><br />A dark and passionate tale of tortured but enduring love... Mesmerising—<i>Guardian</i><br /><br />This brilliantly atmospheric Yorkshire saga has only one drawback - Emily never wrote another novel. For me, it is both fantastic but also true to life because the protagonists have such believably fierce emotions—Kate Mosse<br /><br />When I was 16 I read <i>Wuthering Heights</i> for the first time, and I read it as a kind of oracle; that life is worth nothing if it is not worth everything. Disaster does not matter, intensity does. You can dilute <i>Wuthering Heights</i>, as Mills & Boon and musicals have done. But if you are honest, you cannot escape its central stark premise; all or nothing. The all is not Heathcliff - that is the sentimental version. The all is what Heathcliff represents, which is life itself—Jeanette Winterson