Margot Robbie busts her corset in Wuthering Heights, the Devil Wears Prada sequel goes fashionably to war, and Christopher Nolan brings us a Greek epic. Plus much more in our pick of the best films co ...
2025 was another stellar year for film, offering a mix of returning franchise hits, exciting new writing and Oscar buzz, ...
Peaky Blinders has become one of the biggest TV shows of the 21st century, as well as a general cultural phenomenon, thanks ...
Emily Brontë is best known for authoring the novel ‘Wuthering Heights.’ She was the sister of Charlotte and Anne Brontë. Read ...
When Emily Dickinson wrote the poem “Hope is that thing like feathers” in 1861, she couldn’t have imagined a world like we ...
Wuthering Heights but make it Brat. This sentence would have made no sense even 18 months ago, yet here we are, in the year 2025, watching a trailer for an Emerald Fennell adaptation with an original ...
The village of Haworth goes back centuries and is well known for being the birthplace of authors Charlotte, Emily and Anne Bronte - here is its history. Did you know with a Digital subscription to ...
The first thing that crossed my mind when I watched the official teaser of Emerald Fennell’s new Wuthering Heights film, which dropped last month, was this: what would Emily Brontë, the most secretive ...
I’m Ann Fisher-Wirth, the Poet Laureate for Mississippi 2025-2029, and I want to tell you about my new podcast series called “The Favorite Poem Project,” available through the Mississippi Arts ...
Spirits are still high for “Wuthering Heights,” a tempestuous, classic gothic love story published in 1847 by English author Emily Brontë. Its legacy is still honored through its namesake song written ...
Like many readers, I first discovered Emily Brontë’s “Wuthering Heights” as a teenager. I was mesmerized by the wild moorland landscape she described and the equally wild characters that inhabited it.
One of America's great poets has written a memoir that's haunting, engrossing and often a hoot. Let's ask Edward Hirsch to read one of his bits from "My Childhood In Pieces." EDWARD HIRSCH: (Reading) ...