Wuthering Heights
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6W Emily Brontë. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1927. Limited Edition (no. 557 of 2000).
Notes
Emily Brontë’s Wuthering Heights is a fierce, elemental masterpiece of Gothic romance and psychological tragedy that subverted the polite conventions of Victorian literature. The multi-layered narrative, framed through the recollections of a housekeeper named Nelly Dean, tracks the consuming, untamed bond between Catherine Earnshaw and the enigmatic foundling Heathcliff on the windswept Yorkshire moors. When Catherine chooses to marry the wealthy, refined Edgar Linton to elevate her social status, a devastated Heathcliff disappears, only to return years later as a wealthy, vindictive man obsessed with systematically destroying both families. Far from a conventional love story, the novel uses its bleak, storm-battered setting to expose the destructive limits of passion and revenge, exploring profound themes of class discrimination, structural violence, and a transcendent connection that refuses to be broken even by death.
The author, Emily Brontë (1818–1848), lived an intensely private, reclusive life that stood in stark contrast to the untamed emotional violence of her only novel. Raised in an isolated parsonage in Haworth, Yorkshire, she was a voracious reader deeply influenced by the emotional intensity and wild natural devotion of the Romantic movement. To protect her work from institutional prejudices against female intellectuals, she adopted the masculine pseudonym "Ellis Bell" to publish the book in 1847 alongside her sister Charlotte's Jane Eyre. Contemporary critics were profoundly shocked by the novel's lack of a clear moral resolution and its raw, unpolished depiction of human cruelty, with many branding it as unchristian and savage. Tragically, Emily died of tuberculosis at the age of thirty, just a year after the book's publication, completely unaware that her widely condemned domestic tragedy would eventually be vindicated as one of the greatest linguistic achievements in the English language.
This 1927 limited edition published by Alfred A. Knopf in New York represents a significant milestone in the book's global canon, commemorating the 80th anniversary of its initial release. Strictly limited to a print run of exactly 2,000 numbered copies. This release includes an insightful introduction by British writer Valentine Dobrée, which helped cement the novel’s transition from a scandalous Victorian curiosity into a permanent pillar of world literature.
Description
Rust embossed cloth boards intricately stamped with an ornate gilt-pictorial background design across the front board and spine panel. Gilt top-edge. Sunfading to spine. Inscription on front blank page. Very good condition.
Wuthering Heights





