Artistic truth in the novels of Charlotte Brontë / Inga-Stina Ewbank
The tenant of Wildfell Hall / W.A. Craik
Charlotte and Emily Brontë / Raymond Williams
A baby god, the creative dynamism of Emily Brontë's poetry / Rosalind Miles
Repression and sublimation of nature in Wuthering Heights / Margaret Homans
The genesis of hunger according to Shirley / Sandra M. Gilbert and Susan Gubar
The face in the mirror, Villette and the conventions of autobiography / Janice Carlisle
Jane Eyre in search of her story / Rosemarie Bodenheimer
Wuthering Heights, repetition and the "uncanny" / J. Hillis Miller
Biography of Charlotte Brontë --
[pt. 1]. Plot summary of Villette --
List of characters in Villette --
Critical views on Villette: --
Harriet Martineau on the originality of the novel --
George Henry Lewes on the moral in the novel --
Catherine M. Sedgwick on the Byronic intensity of the novel --
Margaret Oliphant on the novel's similarities ot Jane Eyre --
Robert B. Heilman on the moon as symbol in the novel --
Kate Millett on Lucy Snowe's peculiar freedom --
Carol T. Christ on narrative styles in the novel --
Brenda R. Silver on the uses of silence and revelation in the novel --
Jerome Beaty on Lucy Snowe and Jane Eyre --
[pt. 2]. Plot summary of Jane Eyre --
List of characters in Jane Eyre --
Critical views on Jane Eyre: Virginia Woolf on Charlotte Brontë as poet --
Richard Chase on the struggle between Jane Eyre and Rochester --
Robert Bernard Martin on the cosmic scope of Brontë's imagination --
Richard Benvenuto on Jane Eyre's moral choices --
Nina Auerbach on Thornfield and Rochester --
Adrienne Rich on Jane Eyre and Bertha Rochester --
Nancy Pell on the novel and history --
Sandra M. Gilbert and Susan Gubar on the opening of the novel --
John Maynard on sexuality in the novel --
Bettina L. Knapp on the imagery of the red room --
[pt. 3]. Plot summary of Wuthering Heights --
List of characters in Wuthering Heights --
Critical views on Wuthering Heights: V.S. Pritchett on unity with nature in the novel --
Denis Donoghue on Thrushcross Grange and Wuthering Heights --
Arnold Krupat on Heathcliff's diction --
Terry Eagleton on economics and politics in the novel --
Patricia Meyer Spacks on the adolescence of Catherine --
Donald D. Stone on the romantic setting of the novel --
Stevie Davies on structure and point of view in the novel --
Robert M. Polhemus on love and death in the novel --
Sheila Smith on supernaturalism and balladry in the novel.