Vous voulez voir cette page en franēais ? Cliquez ici.


or
Sign in to turn on 1-Click ordering.
More Buying Choices
Have one to sell? Sell yours here
Changing Heaven
 
 

Changing Heaven [Paperback]

Jane Urquhart
4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
List Price: CDN$ 21.00
Price: CDN$ 14.99 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over CDN$ 25. Details
You Save: CDN$ 6.01 (29%)
o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o
Usually ships within 10 to 13 days.
Ships from and sold by Amazon.ca. Gift-wrap available.

Formats

Amazon Price New from Used from
Hardcover --  
Paperback CDN $14.99  
Mass Market Paperback --  

Product Details


Product Description

From Amazon

Devotees of Emily Brontë will love Changing Heaven, Jane Urquhart's magical novel about the pitfalls of obsessive love, single-minded passion, and tumultuous weather. The book alternates between two narratives, one focusing on Arianna Ether, a turn-of-the-century balloonist/parachutist who perishes in a failed stunt on the English moors and comes to haunt the region with the ghost of Emily Brontë. The second storyline focuses on lonely Ann, an obsessed modern-day Brontë scholar writing a book about the use of weather in Wuthering Heights. When she meets Arthur, who is equally obsessed with the Italian artist Tintoretto, the two become entwined in a destructive love affair, à la Catherine and Heathcliff, dragging them both to despair.

Not surprisingly, weather plays a major role in the novel, mirroring the intensity of the characters' emotions: "She would lie beneath the wheels of a thousand freight trains for twenty minutes of this pleasure, this troubled storm of blindness and forgetting. His mouth, silent now, draws her toward him, his body cracks her open and certainly there is lightning and thunder, the tempest she has always wanted, the hurricane: its power, its devastation." Urquhart's imaginative plot is captivating, and her lyrical prose persuasively conjures up the wild weather of the moors and of the heart, leaving the reader invigorated by the experience. --Leah Eichler  

From Publishers Weekly

Urquhart's second novel (after The Whirlpool ) is a piercingly beautiful tale of obsession, adultery, murder, ghosts and the afterlife, told in sensuous prose. Ann Frear, an Emily Bronte scholar at a Toronto university, has an affair with married art historian Arthur Woodruff, who is obsessed with Tintoretto. When she discovers he's not interested in commitment, Ann flees to England and rents a cottage on the moors, where she imagines Heathcliff and Catherine roaming as in Bronte's Wuthering Heights . An English farmer rescues her from brokenhearted despair, and a final rendezvous with Arthur in Venice seals their doomed romance. This conventional plot is entwined with an otherworldly narrative about Arianna Ether (nee Polly Smith), a parachutist who is in love with treacherous fellow hot-air balloonist Jeremy Unger. When Arianna dies in a crash in 1900, she goes to heaven and meets the ghost of Emily Bronte, an opinionated chatterbox; their decades of spectral conversations eventually move into the present and intersect with Ann's tortured romance. Urquhart has fashioned an intoxicating fiction in which wind, light and weather are palpable presences, mirroring the characters' psychic energies and the moods of Mother Earth.
Copyright 1993 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Inside This Book (Learn More)
Browse Sample Pages
Front Cover | Copyright | Excerpt
Search inside this book:

Tag this product

 (What's this?)
Think of a tag as a keyword or label you consider is strongly related to this product.
Tags will help all customers organize and find favorite items.
Your tags: Add your first tag
 

What Other Items Do Customers Buy After Viewing This Item?


 

Customer Reviews

2 Reviews
5 star:
 (1)
4 star:
 (1)
3 star:    (0)
2 star:    (0)
1 star:    (0)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
4.5 out of 5 stars (2 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
Share your thoughts with other customers:
Most helpful customer reviews

4 of 4 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars A haunting novel of temporal convergence..., Oct 28 2003
By 
Steven Cain (Temporal Quantum Pocket) - See all my reviews
THIS is the true sequel to Wuthering Heights. Not that Jane Urquhart intended it to be, but it so outstrips Return To Wuthering Heights by Anna L'Estrange that it cannot help but unwittingly assume that mantle.

Whereas L'Estrange's sequel is a fairly linear novel, which continues the saga through the lives of Heathcliffe and Catherine's descendants, Hareton and young Cathy, Urquhart gets inside Bronte's head and brings us the spirit of her creation, rather than the mere mechanics.

Urquhart's stunning grasp of Emily Bronte's psyche is echoed in Camille Paglia's own cracking assessment of Bronte and her work in the magnificent Sexual Personae. Here, in Paglia's analysis of Bronte's self-referential high romantic prose poem, she writes of how the Byronic Heathcliffe is both Bronte's own projected animus (put simplistically, her Jungian Inner Male component) and in the context of the story, Cathy's as well.

This metathesis, or literary transsexualization comes across in Urquhart's own brilliant re-weaving of the Brontean strands. Yet, such is the subtlety of Jane's unfoldment, that the female characters, including Emily Bronte (in spirit form, as is Arianna Ether) seem almost peripheral to the calculatedly one-dimensional, self-indulgent male characters. Such of course, is the history of patriarchy, in which women have traditionally been the Second Sex.

The only exception to the male group thus defined is the character Hartley, who, by comparison is an almost Shamanic figure - a man in balance, who has surrendered to the wisdom of the eternal Feminine.

I believe that Jane Urquhart has captured the elemental genius of Bronte's original work, with its relatively anarchic temporal shifting and box structure, in particular Bronte's deliberate use of the singular form of 'heaven' (in a related poem), rather than 'the heavens', which would be a more common choice when writing about the weather, the sky etc. The changing heaven is the changing Heaven, and the use of weather as a metaphor in Wuthering Heights, and therefore Changing Heaven, reminds you of the tornado in The Wizard of Oz, which again represented a vortex, connecting the worlds at the opposite ends of the labyrinth. Yin and Yang, Life and Death, Masculine and Feminine etc.

Yet, as Dorothy discovered, when you have truly found yourself, Oz is Kansas. She never left, she merely transformed. Similarly, the temporal convergence that finally connects the female divine Trinity in Jane's epic work is a simliar point of transcendence, and resolution.

I was so impressed by Changing Heaven that I even mentioned it at a pivotal point in my own impending modern gothic novel 'One Star Awake', and in my first work of non-fiction, Sirius Moonlight - concerning the suppression of the Feminine in patriarchal culture - such is the influence that Urquhart's mistresspiece has had on me - likewise, with Camille Paglia.

Even the inspired act of latching onto the Bronte poem's phrase 'changing heaven' and relating it to the absolute core of Wuthering Heights, is a measure of Jane Urquhart's own genius.

I simply cannot recommend this wonderful book highly enough.

Help other customers find the most helpful reviews 
Was this review helpful to you? Yes No


3 of 4 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars Intelligent, May 23 2000
This review is from: Changing Heaven (Paperback)
This book was brought to my attention by my editor who (like Urquhard, I think) hails from Canada. What a treat I had reading it. There were strong, feminist themes throughout the book that reminded me a little of Urquhard's collegue, Margaret Atwood (argh! I told myself I wasn't going to make this comparison...), but the work in Changing Heaven is much gentler than what I would expect to see from Atwood (whom I also enjoy).

And then there are Urquhard's landscapes. Normally, I'm an inveterate skimmer of descriptive prose, but not here. Her descriptions were just too good to miss.

Last but not least, Emily Bronte shows up toward the end of the book. How massively cool can a book get?

Help other customers find the most helpful reviews 
Was this review helpful to you? Yes No

Share your thoughts with other customers: Create your own review
Most Helpful Customer Reviews on Amazon.com (beta)
Amazon.com: 4.0 out of 5 stars (7 customer reviews)

11 of 11 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars beautifully written, Mar 25 2000
By Sasha - Published on Amazon.com
Jane Urquhart has created yet another masterpiece. this is the third Urquhart novel i've read, and this brillinat author never ceases to captivate my imagination with her beautiful, poetic prose. this is the story of several seemingly unrelated characters who grow and develop before the reader, and as you get deeper into the story, their lives are inevitably intertwined in peculiar and fascinating ways. the main characters are a turn-of-the-century baloonist; the young Emily Bronte; a woman in the midst of a troubled love-affair; and the man that connects the pieces in this intriguing puzzle. the main themes in this exquisitely written novel are the loves and passions that bring the characters to a common ground. they are all fascinating and eccentric, and reading about their lives and losses has definitely added to my knowledge and perspective of human nature. a must read for those fascinated by human nature and its aftermaths.

4 of 5 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars ABSOLUTELY WORTH READING-A MUST!, Aug 20 1997
By A Customer - Published on Amazon.com
for any classic literature fan who loves Emily Bronte, this book is excellent. The way the ghost of Emily refers to Heathcliffe as "Mr. capital H" is hysterical. This Canadian author is a rare find and I love the way she writes. Maybe one hundred years from now we'll be reading her novels in high school English classes also

1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Weather, Oct 2 2010
By Roger Brunyate "reader/writer/musician" - Published on Amazon.com
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
A brilliant riff on Emily Brontė's WUTHERING HEIGHTS, this highly original novel is as bracing and wild as the weather itself, impossible to pin down, virtually plotless, yet sweeping all before it. Just as one speaks of a novel of ideas, this is a novel of emotions -- emotions in their purest form, taking possession like a natural force, and largely divorced from the normal ties of cause and effect. This is not a book for those who demand realism and logic rather than a novel organized by poetic association and contrast. But for those who approach it as the unique vision of a poet who just happens to be writing in prose -- wondrous prose -- it is something very special indeed.

I have now read all but two of Jane Urquhart's novels, and know nothing quite like this one from 1990, which barely seems to touch the ground. True, SANCTUARY LINE, her latest, has also the structure of poetry, revisiting scraps of memory, probing and elucidating, but its basic story is down to earth; indeed that is its essence. The other three that I have read -- AWAY (1993), THE STONE CARVERS (2001), and A MAP OF GLASS (2005) -- tell their stories in a more-or-less linear way, although all show Urquhart's characteristic delight in juxtaposing different periods, and AWAY and MAP especially have traces of the otherworldly elements that are so strong here. All of her later novels are set largely in her native Ontario; although Toronto makes an appearance here (as does Venice), the primary setting is the wild Yorkshire moorland near Haworth, where the Brontė sisters grew up. And even here, her concern is less the heather and crags so much as the clouds scudding over them, driven by a restless wind.

The novel brings together three women from different centuries. One is Emily Brontė herself, who appears as a rather personable ghost. The second is a turn-of-the-century balloonist, Arianna Ether, who performed for her manager and lover Jeremy Jacobs, the "Sindbad of the Skies." The third is a Canadian, Ann Frear, who has developed her childhood passion for WUTHERING HEIGHTS into an academic career in English. Shattered by an affair with a colleague named Arthur, an art historian who is also living out a passion for the darker works of Tintoretto, she takes a sabbatical in Yorkshire to write a book on Brontė's weather. But these are just the axes around which the elemental opposites of the novel revolve: passion and peace, wildness and domesticity, heath and hearth.

For most of the novel, the more dramatic elements predominate: the wild wind, the barren landscape, Tintoretto's dark visions lit by flashes of lightning, the unbroken whiteness of the arctic wastes. But, despite what I said about the relative absence of plot, we do begin to care a lot for Ann as a person, and feel for her as she finds a different kind of love from an unexpected source. We know she will never be free of her wild side, but now the question of balance becomes important. Nothing in this novel is as impressive as the way in which Urquhart moves towards that resolution at the end, and the evocative simplicity of her final sentence is heart-stopping.
 Go to Amazon.com to see all 7 reviews  4.0 out of 5 stars 
 
 
Only search this product's reviews



Listmania!

Create a Listmania! list

Look for similar items by category


Look for similar items by subject









i.e., each book must be in subject 1 AND subject 2 AND ...

Feedback


Amazon.ca Privacy Statement Amazon.ca Shipping Information Amazon.ca Returns & Exchanges