
Wuthering Heights
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Narrado por:
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Patricia Routledge
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De:
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Emily Brontë
The passionate and tragic story of Catherine Earnshaw and Heathcliff is one of the high points of 19th-century Romantic literature. In the relationship of Cathy and Heathcliff, and in the wild, bleak Yorkshire Moors of its setting, Wuthering Heights creates a world of its own, conceived with a disregard for convention and an instinct for poetry and the darkest depths of the human soul in torment.
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What does Patricia Routledge bring to the story that you wouldn’t experience if you just read the book?
No-one absolutely no-one does character voices like Patricia Routledge, her vocal range is like no other i have listened to. She brings the story to life, her voice is so animated and dramatic....she does not read....she performs. If you have hated every attempt hollywood has made to reproduce this great classic on the big screen.....Patricia Routledge's performance is as good as it gets.Patricia Routledge Does Wuthering Heights Justice!
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The Best Performance
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Wonderful narration. Questionable story.
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Magnificent Performance
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The characters in this story move the reader not so much by the strength of their own character but by the tragic way they became who they are, and how wrongs done to them in past generations bleed into the future.
I don't read a lot of fiction but was impressed with what I think are unique aspects of how Emily Brontë tells this story. The use of multiple first-person narrators lends verisimilitude to the description of the events. There are 2 major and maybe 3-4 minor narrators. Oddly, the primary narrator, Nelly Dean, who is an observer adjacent to much of the story, might be the only admirable character in this odd tale.
It's fascinating to me to find that I don't have to love or admire the main characters, nor be sympathetic to their wants and needs, to find the story a good one. I don't believe Brontë tries to get me to identify with any of them. But she still makes me strongly feel ways about the story.
People complain about the reader (Patricia Routledge), but they're really complaining about the way certain characters are written. Joseph speaks with a Yorkshire accent that is written out phonetically in the book. Routledge reproduces this accent, which is undecipherable to the uninitiated. You can get enough words and guess by the way he speaks exactly what he is thinking. And it's no worse (better, perhaps) than sister Charlotte's "Jane Eyre", in which Adele often speaks in her native French — with no translation offered for the reader.
This book is well out of my comfort zone but I'm very happy to have read it. I'll likely read it again.
Gothic Romance — Well-Told and Well-Read
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what is grief if not love persisting?
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superb narration
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Brilliant Writing, Depressing Reading
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Excellent voice actor!!
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Would you consider the audio edition of Wuthering Heights to be better than the print version?
Audio is not better, I still read most books in print, but there is something about listening to classics. It is nice to savor the sound, to not rush, to have the book surround you as you do tasks.What other book might you compare Wuthering Heights to and why?
Well, Jane Eyre, but also the Gaskell books, or all of George Eliot. Nothing is as tumultuous as Wuthering Heights.What aspect of Patricia Routledge’s performance would you have changed?
I love Patricia Rutledge, and for the most part she does a fine job here, but there are a few characters that were so wrong that I wasn't sure I could finish listening to the book. I wish I had gotten one of the other versions because I like "rereading" the classics. I did like her version of Nellie though.Was there a moment in the book that particularly moved you?
It would be the tormented boy, Linton, except this version makes him a nasal whiney mess, so it is hard to feel much sympathy.Any additional comments?
This has earned its reputation and is well worth a listen. But maybe not this narrator.Not the right narrator for big chunks of the book
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