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Friday, August 18, 2017

Friday, August 18, 2017 12:01 pm by M. in    No comments
Belatedly, we report the death of the Harold Orel (1926-2017) (and here), distinguished professor emeritus of English at the University of Kansas and author of several scholar works on Thomas Hardy, Rudyard Kipling, William Wordsworth, Gilbert and Sullivan, Rebecca West and the Brontës. He edited one of those books that any Brontë library should have: The Brontës. Interviews and Recollections in 1997.
A great deal of what we know about the Brontes has come not from the Brontes themselves but from local tradition, inhabitants of the places associated with them, friends and acquaintances, journalists, other novelists, publishers, and even the most casual of visitors to the Haworth Parsonage. Because this extraordinary family left behind such sketchy documentation, the testimonies in Harold Orel s admirable anthology will go far toward satisfying readers interested in the question of how a family living in so small and remote a community were able to produce some of the most heartfelt, original, and striking literature of the nineteenth century. The Brontes: Interviews and Recollections includes forty selections from books and periodicals many of them never reprinted before in their entirety which cast light upon the personalities and activities of the Reverend Patrick Bronte; his son, Branwell; and his three daughters, Charlotte, Emily, and Anne. Arranged chronologically, the volume begins with T. Wemyss Reid s recollections of the little family of the Brontes and ends with C. Holmes Cautley s interviews with old Haworth folk who knew the Brontes. Among the many contributors are William Makepeace Thackeray, Harriet Martineau, Elizabeth Gaskell, and the Brontes themselves.This lively gathering will both correct and put into perspective some of the many romanticized anecdotes and regrettably distorted biographies of the members of this famous family. It will enhance our appreciation of their imaginative and widely read novels, which collectively may have no peer in the annals of English literature. 

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