'How do you tell an awful truth to someone you care for and wish to protect?' Alice Hoffman explores this question in a tale of passion and adultery in which Wuthering Heights is translated to modern New England. Lovers of Bronte will appreciate the similarities in vivid landscape descriptions, the initmate relationships between the lead characters - and it is no accident that their names begin with H!
Hollis/Heathcliffe is the orphan boy, who becomes embittered through the loss of his childhood love, March until she returns a married woman with a teenage daughter, Gwen. He determines to reclaim her, threatening the fabric of not only March's family, but the whole community, who are forced to examine their consciences concerning the boundaries of small town gossip and taking action over unneighbourly suspicions of abuse.
Whilst initially I feared this was a well worn tale, I was quickly gripped could empathise with the characters and ploughed rapidly though the pages desperate to know the outcome. 'Here on Earth' is an old fashioned story, but with none of the Victorian prudery. The sexual tension aches from its pages and drips from its descriptions. Hoffman's observation of men and women (and adolescents!) in love is impressively keen. As a choice for Oprah's Book Club this was far from disappointing!