THE UNTOLD story of Heathcliff’s time away from Wuthering Heights could hit the small screen.
Author Michael Stewart has just launched a novel imagining what happened after Heathcliff fled his moorland home and his obsession with adoptive sister Cathy.
The book, Ill Will, unveiled last month at Huddersfield Literature Festival, has already earned interest from top TV production company Kudos.
Kudos, responsible for major TV series like Spooks, Granchester, The Tunnel and current BBC blockbuster Troy, has taken an option on Ill Will.
Michael, from Bradford, is a prize-winning author who has already written the novel King Crow , a poetry collection Couples, a second novel Café Assassin and a short fiction collection Mr Jolly.
For his latest he set out to complement the “violently passionate” 1847 novel Wuthering Heights, written by Emily Brontë, who is this year celebrating her 200th birthday.
An abused young Heathcliff fled Wuthering Heights and after three years he returned to moorland Yorkshire as a wealthy, saturnine gentleman bent on revenge for his humiliations. What brought about the transformation?
Emily Brontë left the episode as a blank canvas, but the missing years have been explored by Michael, the Head of Creative Writing at the University of Huddersfield.
Michael said: “My publishers have brought out a special edition of Wuthering Heights, for which I have written a foreword. You could, if you wanted, read Emily Brontë’s novel up the point where Heathcliff runs off, read Ill Will, and then go back to Wuthering Heights!”
Mike’s account of Heathcliff’s missing period sees one of the greatest anti-heroes in world literature roam a North of England that in the 1780s – the period in which Wuthering Heights is set – was on the cusp of industrialisation.
In Ill Will, Michael Stewart has Heathcliff form an alliance with Emily, a worldly-wise highwayman’s daughter, and they hatch money-making scams based on her claim to be able to communicate with the dead.
But although the new novel is a work of imaginative fiction, inspired by Emily Brontë, it required Michael Stewart to conduct detailed research into the social history of the late 18th century.
He said: “The late 1780s are fascinating, with industrialisation, the slave trade, the enclosures acts, highwaymen, press gangs and the construction of canals.”
“It was a very interesting turning point in our culture, and I wanted to take Heathcliff first into the agricultural industries of the period and then to Manchester, where we see the Industrial Revolution – the beauty and the cruelty of it. Then he goes to Liverpool to trace who he is, and slavery is part of that story.”
One phase of Dr Stewart’s research was highly physical. He recreated the walk from the Haworth moors to Liverpool that was made by Mr Earnshaw when he brought the boy Heathcliff back to Wuthering Heights.
Michael said: “It took me three days to get there. He got there and back in three days. He must have walked continuously without sleeping or stopping to eat!”
Michael Stewart’s fascination for Heathcliff and his period away from Wuthering Heights was triggered in the 1990s by an essay titled Was Heathcliff a murderer? by leading literary critic John Sutherland.
The seeds of an idea that led to Ill Will were sown, and eventually a period of sabbatical leave from the University of Huddersfield enabled Michael to conduct his research, including the trek to Liverpool.
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