Heathcliff is coming!
“I believe--I know
that ghosts have wandered the earth. Be with me always--take any form--drive me
mad. Only do not leave me in this abyss, where I cannot find you! Oh, God! It
is unutterable! I cannot live without my life! I cannot live without my soul!
[Lily’s note: his ‘life & soul’ being Cathy!]”
- Heathcliff, Wuthering Heights by
Emily Bronte.
I’ve always loved the Gothic Romance genre. My first
taste and probably most people’s first brush with Gothic Romance was Wuthering Heights, by Emily Bronte. It’s
been around a long time, as it was written in 1847. The old black and white
movie starring Sir Laurence Olivier as Heathcliff was my first taste of the
dark, twisted, beautiful yet sad tale. The black and white version is visually
stunning and has the haunting atmosphere of the book. Whether it’s Heathcliff served up as Olivier
in black & white or as Ralph Fiennes in the 1990’s A & E television
version, it’s an equally compelling in its desolate splendor.
Every November, it seems, there is a new version of
the classic available in movie form. My husband and I first discovered
Heathcliff and Cathy’s sad tale on a cold, stormy night in November. The rain
was horrendous, branches were creaking outside and the wind battered the
windows as we sat huddled together on the sofa watching the old B&W classic
movie. To this day, when the wind is whistling eerily through the bare tree
branches in November, my husband will turn to me with a creepy grin and say
“Heathcliff is coming!”
The old movie version with Olivier is romantic and
sad, while the newer version with Fiennes is a disturbing tale that adheres
more closely to the storyline in the book. For those who are not familiar with
the tale, Wuthering Heights tells the
story of Heathcliff and Cathy. They are both under the power of Cathy’s brother
and they are in love. Heathcliff silently and stoically endures the cruelty of
Cathy’s brother and pines for Cathy as he seeks to be with her. Cathy, on the
other hand, loves Heathcliff but flippantly decides to marry another man, a rich
man who can give her social prestige and luxury. Heathcliff is heartbroken. He
vows to wreak revenge on everyone in the story who wronged him and displays an
alarming penchant for cruelty as he torments even the children of his enemies.
Heathcliff begins as a wounded lover in the story and changes into the
villain--or the monster by the end of the book. Lucky for him, even though he’s
the bad guy who has made everyone suffer, he finally is reunited with Cathy in
the afterlife as they haunt the moors together. The quote above from Heathcliff
is spoken when he’s given news of her death. He’d rather be haunted and driven
mad by her then live without her.
The question: Can Heathcliff be redeemed as a
romance hero by today’s standards?
Answer: Probably not. We’d damn him as the villain
for his innate cruelty and also label him as psychotic, and rightly so. No hero
by today’s standards could get away with hanging his fiancee’s dog from a tree
and survive to remain a hero. It’s just sick, sad and creepy.
Still, the icon of the Gothic Romance Hero survives.
It’s Halloween today, we’re celebrating Dark Things. Dark love, dark kisses,
dark magic, dark embrace . . . you name it and we’ve probably had a gothic
romance novel with the word Dark
emblazoned on the cover. The haunting November winds are upon us and I have to
warn you, Heathcliff is coming.
A sort of kinder, gentler cousin of Heathcliff. My
version of a Gothic Romance Hero is not a bully or a psychopath. In Dark Hero, A Gothic Romance Donovan Beaumont is a scientist, a former
pirate and pure alpha male. He escaped France at the onset of the French
Revolution after being tortured for a crime he didn’t commit. He mistrusts those
about him and wants only to live in peace on his isolated island estate in the
West Indies. As an adult he has physical scars yet his childhood was not dark
and tragic like Heathcliff’s. Donovan was the only son of a wealthy nobleman,
much beloved. This gives him the depth of character to be able to give and receive
love from a worthy heroine; something I think Heathcliff missed out on growing
up. Heathcliff knows only how to manipulate and control, not to give real love.
My Gothic Hero, Donovan, also has a dark side. He
mistrusts people so he uses disguises and false identities to keep people at a
distance. He’s damaged, and may seem a little too close to crazy at times. He’s
a scientist, an anatomist to be exact. He studies disease but in order to do
that he dissects corpses on his isolated island estate that he buys from the
hangman. He doesn’t believe in the supernatural. As a product of the
Enlightenment he’s a stickler for logic and reason. And yet, his home is infested
with ghosts. Others can see them, others have told him, but he just won’t
believe them.
Elizabeth, the heroine in the story, is Donovan’s
opposite. It’s sort of like Heathcliff meets the Ghost Whisperer, they fall in
love and get married. Elizabeth is a child of nature, a descendant of Druids.
She can see and speak with the dead. She’s not happy about it, and would rather
just ignore the gift and try to pretend to be normal like everyone else. She
can’t. Once her grandmother dies, the gift of the seer passes t her. It’s as if
she suddenly has a sign on her that says to ghosts ‘hey, want to speak with the living, talk to me!’ This creates a
serious problem for her as she’s married to Mr. Logic and Reason and those
pesky ghosts just won’t leave her alone.
Elizabeth is afraid to let Donovan know she has this
gift, and with good reason as he might just think she’s crazy and pack her off
to the nearest asylum. They did those things to women back in 1798. Elizabeth
spends a lot of time trying to hide the gift. It would be easy, except there is
one ghost in particular who is trying to harm her. This ghost won’t let her
ignore it and the more she tries, the more violent the ghost becomes. So,
Elizabeth has a problem, a big one. A ghost trying to hurt her, and its getting
harder to hide the bruises from her husband.
It seems as if Donovan is her worst nightmare at
times as Elizabeth struggles to understand him. Like Heathcliff, Donovan can not
only be dark and brooding but also scary, manipulative and controlling. And yet, Donovan is just what Elizabeth’s
Druid Granny ordered. You see, before Elizabeth’s grandmother died she cast a
spell to summon a champion from the mists to protect Elizabeth, a Dark Hero
based on the heroes in the Gothic Novels Elizabeth devoured as an adolescent
girl.
So the question that begs answering is this; was
Granny Sheila senile when she cast the spell or perfectly lucid?
Will Donovan win Elizabeth’s heart or drive her away
from him? Will Elizabeth trust him with her secret? Can she trust him?
There’s an old saying. Be Careful What You Wish For.
I’ve reworked it a little for the tagline of Dark Hero: Guard Your Dreams, Lest They Emerge from the Mists to Embrace You . .
.
Like Heathcliff, Donovan emerges from the mists . .
. embrace him at your own risk!
Happy Halloween, everyone. May all your hauntings
chill you to the bone and your heroes be dark, sultry, passionate but
ultimately redeemable.
No tricks, just a
Halloween treat:
Leave
a comment here and be entered to win a free digital copy of Dark Hero, A Gothic
Romance by Lily Silver. Any digital format is available, so don’t worry, we’ve
got you covered. I’m giving away four e-book copies to lucky readers so leave a
comment to enter and win.
~ * ~
About Lily Silver:
Lily studied history and humanistic studies at
UW Green Bay. She graduated with degrees in both disciplines. She loves reading
romance and researching history. It seemed only natural to move from reading
historical romances to writing them. Lily lives in an old Victorian home with
her husband and three charming cats. The house isn’t haunted, as far as Lily
can tell . . . and yet, those cats seem to have a heavy tread on the stairs of
late . . .
Lily’s books:
Aside from Dark Hero, A Gothic Romance, Lily has two other books in stores at
present; Some Enchanted Waltz, A Time
Travel Romance and The Rock Star Next
Door, A Modern Fairytale. She is currently working on the sequel to Dark Hero, titled Bright Scoundrel, which takes place in Ireland in 1802 in a haunted
castle. She is also working on a Regency Paranormal, The Gypsy’s Curse. Both new
titles will be available in December 2012.
Find Lily Online:
Blogs: http://romancinghistorylove.blogspot.com/
http://strictlygothic.blogspot.com/
Facebook: Lily Silver, Author
Twitter: Lily
Silver @Timeless_Lovers
Website: http://lilysilver.webs.com/
You can email Lily through her website contact page,
she loves to hear from readers.
Thank you for stopping by, Lily. The book sounds fab. :-)
ReplyDeleteI have always been a big Jane Eyre fan, but Wuthering Heights is such an amazing story. I have been to Bronte country a couple of times and visited the house of the sisters, and it's just an amazing place.