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My apologies for the incursion into Wimbledon rants over the last few days, but do find that Wimbers tends to take over my life when it is on.   However,  this is meant to be a book blog so here we go.

The interest in Jane Austen never seems to wane and books proliferate each year with sign of diminishing in any way whatever.  One does wonder if authors will ever exhaust what can be said or discovered about her, but while they continue to write I am a happy bunny and not complaining.  The full title of this book is What Matters in Jane Austen – Twenty Crucial Puzzles solved.  Now I am not sure that the word crucial is applicable here – none of the chapters deal with a matter that would worry us too unduly or cause us sleepless nights, but they were hugely interesting and entertaining and here is a sample of a couple:

  • How much does Age matter?  "She was fully satisfied of being still quite as handsome as ever, but she felt her approach to the years of danger" This is, of course, Elizabeth Eliot in Persuasion who is in her late twenties and by contemporary standards, getting on a bit.   The author opens this chapter by pointing out how much TV and cinema adaptations of the novels have fixed character's ages in our minds.  Mrs Bennett cannot be much more than 40 and that it is likely she married early.   Mr Collins is viewed by many readers as being middle-aged, but he is a 'tall, heavy-looking young man of five and twenty' though played by David Bamber in THE TV series, who is in his mid forties. In Sense and Sensibility Elinor Dashwood is played by Emma Thompson, then aged 36 but Elinor is nineteen.  We must also remember that Marianne, when marrying Colonel Brandon, can only been about 17 and he is 35, but the point being made is that Marianne has been aged, metaphorically speaking, by her heartbreak and experience.  
  • What do Characters call each other?  "in the whole of the sentence, in his manner of pronouncing it and his addressing her sister by her Christian name…….marked a perfect agreement between them"   Sense and Sensibility again.  Calling each other by Christian names intimates a close relationship.  Emma  cannot imagine calling Mr Knightley George, though she eventually must, Mrs Weston in the same novel always addresses her husband as Mr Weston and we never know the christian names of Mr Allen, Mr Palmer, Mr Bennett or Dr Grant or Admiral Croft.  Mrs Elton, a vulgar upstart addresses her husband as Mr E which I think is a ploy by the author to show us just how ghastly she is. The use of a person's Christian name is a rare privilege and can carry weight and a woman who lets her man use her name has given him a great privilege.

As I said, I don't think any of these 'puzzles' are in any way crucial, but they do make for fascinating and delightfully interesting reading.  Others chapters are How Much Money is Enough?; Why is it Risky to go to the Seaside? (loved this one) Is there any sex in Jane Austen (Andrew Davies has shown us Jmthat, yes there is); What Games do Characters Play and How Experimental a Novelist is Jane Austen?

I do like these kind of books and though I have been fairly light hearted in my review and comments above, I have to say that the questions addressed here do tend to make you think more about the books – certain things brought to my attention by John Mullan had never crossed my mind, and the chapters on  the niceties of social interaction, the gauging of status and position by money help to round out views already formed by one's reading.

I loved reading What Matters in Jane Austen by Claire Harman a year or so ago and reviewed here. Another seemingly light hearted and easy to read book but sharp commentary and insights are contained in both these titles.  Just beause they are 'popular' Austen writing, rather than academic, does not make them any less valuable and this book is staying firmly on my Austen book shelf alongside all her novels (of which I have several editions), her letters, at least two biographies and other tomes.   I never ever tire of reading Jane Austen or reading about her, the more I do, the more I become totally enchanted all over again by her incisive with and pointed pen.  I love her astringency and style and only wish she had been with us a little longer and had given us more titles to read. But in Pride and Prejudice, Persuasion, Mansfield Park, Sense and Sensibility, Northanger Abbey and Emma, we have the perfect collection which will never be superseded.  I know there are people out there who cannot take to Jane and who dislike her and I have to constantly remind myself that she herself said that 'half the world cannot understand the pleasures of the other'

A super book published by these lovely peeps at Bloomsbury.  An essential read for lovers of all things Jane.

 

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8 responses to “What Matters in Jane Austen – John Mullan”

  1. Elaine Avatar

    That is exactly why I liked it too

  2. Nicola Avatar

    I’ve just read this book and I loved it, too. I agree that the puzzles were not ‘crucial’ but I like the way the book struck a balance between academia and readability.

  3. Elaine Avatar

    A sheer delight this book – made its points beautifully without straying into academia too much

  4. Elaine Avatar

    Have realised there are comments I have not responded to my apologies.
    Yes Lydia had ruined the entire family but MRs |Bennett did not seem to worry about this at all, she was boasting about one married daughter with nary a thought for the others. In the end of course, Darcy lifted them all out of the mud but what would have happened if he had not loved Lizzie?

  5. Susan Avatar

    What a lovely review. I’ve added this to my booklist immediately. I love Jane Austen, reading about her work as well as her novels over and over. Thank you so much for reviewing it. I agree too, in her five books, they are an excellent collection of novels, delightful reading.

  6. Susan D Avatar
    Susan D

    I don’t know if he covers this or not, but one thing that blew me away in JA is how, when Lydia eloped with Wickham, the entire family was utterly utterly ruined. True, anyone who’s read anything taking place in the Country of the Past knows of course it was Not Done, and she’d ruined her own chances forever, but the absolute depths of degradation she brought on her sisters’ heads as a result of this action is difficult to really get one’s mind around.
    I believe it, however, because it is represented as such.
    Perhaps it’s just my ongoing reaction to the never-ending (even in 2012) persistence of The Double Standard.

  7. Elaine Avatar

    I thoroughly enjoyed this book. As I said not as academic as others, but more user-friendly and with some fascinating insights I had never thought of.

  8. Claire (The Captive Reader) Avatar

    This sounds so fun! I have a slight addiction to books about Austen, particularly ones that are primarily interested in examining the books rather than the woman. I can’t wait to read the chapters on money and the seaside!

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