literature
Geek literature from the New York Times or the recesses of online. Our favorite stories showcase geeks.
Wuthering Heights Movie Review
Over a century after its release, Emily Bronte’s Wuthering Heights remains a classic of English literature; it has been adapted many times on the big screen, reaching across many cultures and filmmaking styles. The latest attempt goes for a modern approach and style, but it’s a rotten production from top to bottom.
By Robert Cain18 days ago in Geeks
"Jane Austen at Home" by Lucy Worsley (Pt.4)
This review covers chapters 27 through to the end of the book, including the epilogue. *** The 'Great House', where which Jane would receive most of her education in grand houses, may have been part of the inspiration for her later writings like the incomplete Sanditon. But apart from this, we have the wit of Emma coming through. Lucy Worsley teaches us of the trepidations that came with publishing Emma and the expectation that it would be the best selling book yet. There was a lot of back and forths for Jane and her publisher, John Murray. She was starting to prove that, like her main character of Emma Woodhouse, she was capable of holding her own.
By Annie Kapur19 days ago in Geeks
Aurora Floyd by Mary Elizabeth Braddon
Temple Bar Magazine first published Aurora Floyd in serial form between the years 1862 and 1863. After that, it was released as a three-volumed novel and has been considered the most successful work of its writer, Mary Elizabeth Braddon after her sensational Lady Audley's Secret. Melodramatic and filled with domestic intrigue, the story captivated Victorian readers and contributed to those novels which often critique the models of sensibility, preached but not practiced, by the upper class.
By Annie Kapur20 days ago in Geeks
"Jane Austen at Home" by Lucy Worsley (Pt.3)
This review covers chapters 19 through to 26. *** As we continue through the story of Jane, Lucy Worsley gives us something to chew on. We get the story of the first writing of my personal favourite Austen novel, Northanger Abbey - originally entitled Susan. The 'chewing' is to decide exactly when it was being forged. There are known bursts of it in 1798 and 1799, but as the author states, there is certain inspiration from another book that wasn't published until 1801. It is a direct representation that though we may know much about Jane Austen's life from her letters, her everyday mapped out for us, her dislikes and likes seen clearly - we still don't really have the minutae of her writings. It is a bit here and there. Again, maybe this was done on purpose. Jane Austen was clever enough to keep those who didn't need to know in the dark about her actual intentions for the writings and when they were held out.
By Annie Kapur20 days ago in Geeks
Book Review: "Jane Austen at Home" by Lucy Worsley (Pt.2)
This review covers chapters 10 through to 18. *** Chapter 10, entitled 'Novels' covers Jane's written beginnings. We get to see inside the first formations of the novel that would become Sense and Sensibility and how, in installments, she would read it per evening to her family. These were novels written in letters, which were not in fashion and had not been for decades. I'm quite surprised and filled with joy that such an incredible woman existed in a place where more than often, extra-curricular activities outside that of being a wife and mother were not considered very important. However, her father thought them important enough to buy his daughter a writing desk with many drawers. This single act of encouragement was definitely a play to make sure his daughter continued to show her passions - a man clearly ahead of his time and fond of his daughters.
By Annie Kapur20 days ago in Geeks
why I read Banned Books
The first time I picked up a banned book, I felt like I was doing something illegal. My palms were actually sweating. It was just a paperback. No alarm wires. No secret cameras. Just a story someone, somewhere, had decided other people shouldn’t read.
By John Smith21 days ago in Geeks
Book Review: "Cranford" by Elizabeth Gaskell
"I could perceive she was in a tremor at the thought of seeing the place which might have been her home, and round which it is probable that many of her innocent girlish imaginations had clustered" - "Cranford" by Elizabeth Gaskell
By Annie Kapur22 days ago in Geeks
‘Curiouser and Curiouser: The Creepy, Captivating, Magical and Mysterious at Whitby Museum’. Content Warning.
Introduction Whitby Museum curators have chosen a selection of the most macabre and unusual treasures together with local tales of folklore to create this new exhibition. Discover stories rooted in superstition that accompany some of the objects held at the museum. From the Ruswarp Witch to the Gytrash of Goathland join us for this most curious exhibition. Exhibition opens 7th February 2026 and runs until December 2026.
By Mike Singleton 💜 Mikeydred 23 days ago in Geeks
Book Review: "The Defence" by Steve Cavanagh
This book was recommended to me by Twitter and I’m seriously reconsidering taking recommendations from that hellscape. The first novel in a series is supposed to be the one that hooks you in, makes you fall in love with characters and themes and establish real in-depth parts of the backstory to you. This book does none of those things and yet, is so confident about itself that it completely fails to give the reader a coherent story that they can get lost in. I would say the audience of this book is basically people who don’t like to read - why? There’s no atmosphere, there are no in-depth concepts, there is no real story and the characters are hollow as hell. I was quite underwhelmed after reading this, it just felt so forgettable.
By Annie Kapur24 days ago in Geeks
Disney’s Next Era: A Fan-Centered, Creator-Driven Vision for the Company That Once Imagined the Future.
Disney is at a crossroads. Not in the dramatic “end of an era” way people say every few years, but in a quieter, more important way. Disney has more money, more platforms, and more fandom franchises than ever before, and yet something feels off.
By Jenna Deedy24 days ago in Geeks
Book Review: "Modern Man in Search of a Soul" by Carl Jung
What happens when we strip human life of meaning? Well, according to Jung, everything begins to go wrong for us. From the moment we started to have control over nature, we start to descend in meaning and value. Rationalism may have brought us comfort in understanding, but it has also brought us less meaning in our soul. I'm not going to lie, if a book doesn't define what a 'soul' or a 'spirit' is, then I have no interest in the argument. The issue is that Jung takes us on a journey in which we start to understand what the soul is - or at least, what it is meant to consist of. So even though I don't agree with all of it, I understand where he is coming from when he talks about the subject of a 'soul'. Science can provide us with understanding but cannot answer the larger, more existential questions regarding ourselves.
By Annie Kapur25 days ago in Geeks









