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Topic: Emily Bronte

Related:
  Emily    Bronte  
  Emily Dickinson    Emily Carr  
  Charlotte Bronte    Emily Post  
  Poem by Emily Dickinson    Emily's List  
  Emily Rose    Emily Murphy  
  Emily Watson    Poetry Archives Emily Dickinson  

 
 
 Vital Stats
The Brain has inferred the following facts from reading text collected on the topic:
Most admires:Shimon Peres,  T S Eliot
Favorite possession(s):Apartment
Favorite author(s):Jane Austen,  Mary W. Shelley,  George Eliot
Favorite era(s):1960s
Favorite TV show(s):Sex and the City
Favorite actor(s):Bette Davis
Favorite book(s):"Jane Eyre" by Charlotte Bronte
Interest(s):Real estate
Favorite royal(s):Queen Victoria
Favorite movie(s):Roman Holiday,  Vertigo,  West Side Story
Listens to:Cliff Richard,  Billy Gilman,  Fiona Apple
Favorite destination(s):New York
Favorite sportsperson(s):Michael Jordan
 
 
 Expert Talk
The Brain has selected interesting relevant sentences from the web. It automatically assigned them to some of our fictitious experts based on their personalities.


Miguel Cortez,
Small Business Owner

Emily Bronte, Wuthering Heights, 1847, "The quicker the thible ran round.
Ben Werner,
Student Newspaper Editor

Wednesday, May 16 Wuthering Heights, by Emily Bronte Leon Ginsky, who has been facilitating book discussion groups since 1974, will provide background information and guide the discussions.
Emily Bronte, writing Wuthering Heights with complete disregard for the demands of the reading public, was somehow able to attract its attention and interest to her portrait of brutality and harshness.
Athena Mondale,
Spiritual Consultant

While this novel Wuthering Heights, exhibits creativity of the author, Emily Bronte, overall it exhibits moral degradation and is lacking of good Christian values.
Using Emily Bronte's Wuthering Heights and Flann O'Brien's At Swim-Two-Birds as case-studies, the unit goes on to discuss such issues in novel-reading as narration and authority, and realism and fictiveness.
Wuthering Heights, based on Emily Bronte's novel.
Phuong Nguyen,
Exotic Dancer

Emily Bronte was a fiery tempestuous person who had no illusions the way her sisters, Charlotte and Ann did.
Wuthering Heights is the name a fictional house in Emily Bronte’s novel.
Emily Bronte sent out her novel, Wuthering Heights, numerous times.
Anita Ganesh,
Poet

This use of setting is clearly demonstrated in Emily Brontes novel Wuthering Heights, a story of love and hate between two families, which is emphasised by the houses in which these families live.
Jack Crawford,
WWII Veteran

Emily Bronte's classic "Wuthering Heights, widely believed to be inspired by the Haworth author's time spent as a governess in the Halifax area, could soon be in the West End.
Chrissie Tanner,
Homemaker and Mom

There is a Bronte Society plaque on what is left of the building at Top Withins, the plaque states that Emily would have known of this house but it bore little resemblance to the Wuthering Heights of the novel.
 
 
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