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Monday, May 30

Interview with Margaret C. Sullivan, Author of The Jane Austen Handbook

Inquiring readers, Tony Grant recently interviewed Margaret C. Sullivan, author of the delightful Jane Austen's Handbook: A Sensible Yet Elegant Guide to Her World. I hope you'll enjoy their conversation as much as I did.

A short while ago a chunky package, smallish, but with some solidity about it came to my door delivered by courier. I haven’t ordered anything from Amazon for a while and I certainly don’t do mail order. It was a book!! Margaret’s book ,”The Jane Austen Handbook.” I perused it. I read bits in the minutest detail, some bits twice over. I examined the index, the glossary. I thought up,”what about , education?” and yes there it was. How about, “dancing,”? Oh yes it was there. The index was an education in itself. A great little book. Margaret’s editor had contacted me ages and ages ago. I think Vic had put him on to me. He asked if I would write a review of this new edition and I accepted. Weeks and weeks later it arrived. I had actually forgotten all about it. It was a very very pleasant surprise.

After writing the review I had no idea of Margaret’s reaction to it. I deigned to contact her and ask for an interview

Oh dear me!!!!! Apparently I had managed to charm the words right out of Margaret.
She wrote back to me.
“I loved the review! A few smiles, a few compliments for my word-nerdiness and I'm a lost woman.”

Here is the interview.
All the best,
Tony

Why did you write The Jane Austen Handbook?


Being kind of a bigmouth obsessive Janeite who liked to write and had acquired a largish book collection about Jane Austen, after I had several Austen-related articles and stories and things published in various places, many people said to me, "You should write a book!" But what book to write? It seemed to me that everything about Jane Austen had been done.

Margaret Sullivan at JASNA 2008. Image @Laurie Viera Rigler
Fortunately, an editor at Quirk Books, Melissa Wagner, approached me with a proposal. They had a line of faux-but-not-really handbooks related to various popular culture properties, such as the Batman Handbook, the Spiderman Handbook, etc., and they wanted to do something literary for the next handbook. They asked if I was interested in writing The Jane Austen Handbook. They already had the format, with the "How-to" scenarios with documentation-like procedure lists. I liked the idea and thought the format was fun--it was informative and yet there was an opportunity to really have fun with it, which was right up my alley. It was the book I wanted to write, but didn't know it.

Where did you get all those fascinating facts and information from?

Like I said above, I had acquired a pretty extensive library of Austen-related books, because they interested me and also because I was writing a lot of Austen fan fiction and needed the information. While I was writing the book, I acquired some more books and tortured the local librarians with interlibrary loan requests. Also, I depended on the kindness of friends! My friend Allison Thompson, who is a dance historian, was really helpful with the dance sections and sent me a lot of really interesting information. I also picked up a lot of esoteric information (for instance, how to ride sidesaddle) while researching my fan fiction stories.

What is your writing process when you write a book like this?

Many readers have noted that the book is easy to consume in small bits because there are short scenarios and bits of information. That was how it was written, too; I was working full-time at my day job during the writing process, snatching a few minutes here and there on the train, at lunch, and in the evenings and on weekends. Melissa and I had brainstormed an outline of the scenarios, so I had a starting point. Some of the scenarios were easy, because they were all out of my own books or were suggested by the novels themselves (such as How to Avoid Dancing with an Undesirable Gentleman) and some were more difficult. We had to abandon a couple of scenarios because I was unable to find sufficient information in time to write them. (I had six weeks between the time the proposal was accepted and the first draft was due.)

Incidentally, in your review you noted that the book seemed directed towards women. That was on purpose. because Jane Austen's heroines were young, unmarried women, and the idea was to imagine yourself in the place of one of her heroines. However, I knew a lot of male Austen fans would be reading it, and older female fans, so I persuaded the editor to let me add information geared towards these readers. I knew that a real Janeite would find it all interesting!
Tony Grant in Bath, down the road from
the Jane Austen Centre
Why did you choose to write in a formal, evocative of the period, sort of way? ( I love the words and language you use by the way.)

Thanks! Really, that's how I write most of the time; I tend to use long sentences with lots of semicolons (and I am also a parentheses fiend). I love authors who use language elegantly. One of the best books I've ever read, prose-wise, is Lolita by Vladimir Nabokov. The first paragraph gives me goosebumps--the more so because I am torn between adoration of the elegant economy of the language and revulsion at the subject matter. Jane Austen's prose also frequently gives me goosebumps, and the stories are certainly more pleasant.

Some other authors whose use of language I really admire and love to read are Harper Lee, J.R.R. Tolkien (when he's writing the hobbits and not being all King James Bible, though really some of that I like, too), Stephen King, Dorothy L. Sayers, and Georgette Heyer. You might hear a bit of each of those authors--and of course Jane Austen--in my writing.

Would you like to have lived in the Georgian period?

Yes and no. I'm a bit of a frustrated sociologist so, like Jane Austen, I'm interested in men and women, and would like to travel through time and just see how things were back then. But the inconveniences and lack of mod. cons.* keep me happy right here in the 21st century.

*See, I can talk Brit too when I try. ;-)

Amanda Vickery has recently produced a series of programmes called, At Home with The Georgians. I don't know whether you have seen it on your side of The Atlantic? If you were to turn The Jane Austen Handbook into a TV series what locations would you use to illustrate various themes in your book?

I haven't seen it, but I know of it and it seems very interesting! Like that time travel trip I mentioned above, but you get to come back.

A big piece of the book would have to be set in the country, as so much of it is how one travels to the country, how one runs a country house, how one amuses oneself in the country, etc. But I think, like many of Jane Austen's heroines, at some point we have to go to either London or Bath, because the city has its attractions, as well. Plus I love Bath!


Sunday, May 29

Jane Austen Trip Throwdown

Scenario: You are in London for a week-long vacation, and you have only one full day planned for a tour outside of Town. Where would you book your visit?
Steventon Church. Image @Tony Grant
  • Steventon, Jane Austen's childhood home and the place of her birth, where she wrote her Junvenilia, Sense and Sensibility, Pride and Prejudice and Northanger Abbey? You can still enter the church where she was christened and attended Sunday service.
The landing on the stairs just outside Jane's bedroom in Chawton Cottage.
Image @Tony Grant
  • Chawton House and Chawton Cottage, where she wrote her mature novels Emma, Persuasion, and Mansfield Park? The Jane Austen House Museum is located here.
Candle snuffer, Bath. Image @Tony Grant
  • Bath, a city she disliked but featured in Northanger Abbey and Persuasion? The Jane Austen Centre is located on Gay Street where she once lived.
Winchester Cathedral. Image @Tony Grant
  • Winchester and Winchester Cathedral, where she spent her last days and was buried.
I'd take a day-long excursion to
Steventon
Chawton
Bath
Winchester


  
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Saturday, May 28

A Modern Pride and Prejudice

A new Pride and Prejudice film is in the works. Written by Bonnie Mae, the story presents a modern twist on Jane Austen's classic. Click on this link to join the Facebook page and learn about the details.


Cast overview:
Maia Petee ... Elizabeth Bennet
Caleb Grusing ... Mr. Darcy
Christina Lafon ... Jane Bennet
Mark Mook ... Mr. Bingley
Eve Cohen ... Mrs. Bennet
Jon Diack ... Mr. Bennet
Shannon Coca Urban ... Lydia Bennet
Christina Rizzo ... Kitty Bennet
Ashley Drake ... Mary Bennet
Jenna Hawkins ... Miss. Bingley
James Hawthorn ... Mr. Wickham
Tiffany Heinsohn ... Charlotte Lucas
A.C. Earing ... Mr. Collins
Mark Mitten ... Mr. Fitzwilliam
Cynthia Sharp ... Mrs. De Bourgh

Darcy and Elizabeth

Cast

Thursday, May 26

My Byron-inspired "13 Piccadilly Terrace circa 1815

Inquiring reader: Tracie Bylo Hitching of the blog, Mad, Bad, and Dangerous to Know, creates the most exquisite miniatures. Her latest project is a reproduction of Lord Byron's town house. The result is a miniature structure that looks incredibly realistic and accurate.


Compare these images with the real thing:

Bath townhouse. Image @Tony Grant


Wednesday, May 25

Special Jane Austen Today Discount at the Jane Austen Gift Shop

Fabulous news, Janeites!

By using our special coupon code name, JaneFanShops, you are eligible for a discount to some fabulous Jane Austen themed gifts. Want to know something even better? This week, the Jane Austen Gift shop is featuring a 3 for 2 sale. That's right. If you purchase two items, you will receive the third for free. On top of that you will receive the coupon-related discount.


The sale starts today, May 25th and will last through June 1st. Click here to enter the Jane Austen Gift Shop and shop to your heart's delight. Don't forget to type JaneFanShops in the coupon field during check out and click 'update.'

Simple. Easy. And cost effective. Our bargain loving Jane would be proud. Click here.

Tuesday, May 24

Sense and Sen­si­bi­lity, Octo­ber or Novem­ber? part 2

Last February I wrote a post for Jane Austen Today about the discrepancy of a publication date for Sense and Sen­si­bi­lity: Octo­ber or Novem­ber?

I continue having doubts, but reading the Laura Engels' introduction to Sense and Sensibility, Barnes & Noble edition, while it does not provide certainty, it is at least an explanation. What caught my attention in the Introduction (picture below) was this excerpt:

"The inicial advertisement for the novel, which appeared in the Morning Chronicle on 31, 1811, refers to the author as 'A Lady'."


Indeed, the book should have been printed when it was announced and I only regret not having found a newspaper picture on that date. With this information I figured that the Cambridge edition [¹] possibly chose the advertising date - October - as the publication date. An Oxford edition chose the month of November, for reasons unknown to me..

[¹] Note that the date of Cambridge issue is Oct. 30th, and the advertising on the Morning Chronicle says 31 October. Would there have been advertising in other newspapers on October 30?

Posted by Raquel Sallaberry, Jane Austen em Portugues

Monday, May 23

Jane Austen Pride and Prejudice Throwdown

How well do you know your Pride and Prejudice? The following quotes come from characters in the book. Who spoke these words? Extra points if you know the context!

Pride and Prejudice, 2005
1. If a woman is partial to a man, and does not endeavour to conceal it, he must find it out. -
a. Elizabeth Bennet  b. Charlotte Collins c. Jane Bennet

2. A lady's imagination is very rapid; it jumps from admiration to love, from love to matrimony, in a moment. - a. Elizabeth Bennet  b. Miss Bingley  c. Mr. Darcy

3. Laugh as much as you choose, but you will not laugh me out of my opinion. -
a. Elizabeth Bennet   b. Lydia Wickham  c. Jane Bennet

Who spoke these words in Pride and Prejudice?
1. a Elizabeth Bennet
1. b Charlotte Collins
1. c Jane Bennet
2. a Elizabeth Bennet
2. b Miss Bingley
2. c Mr. Darcy
3. a Elizabeth Bennet
3. b Lydia Wickham
3. c Jane Bennet



  
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Answer Key: Scroll below






Answer Key: 1. Elizabeth Bennet 2. Mr. Darcy 3. Jane Bennet

Sunday, May 22

Lyme's Literary Links

"Politely drew back and stopped to give them way." Persuasion illustration. Brock illustrates the moment Anne Elliot meets William Elliot on the Cobb in Lyme Regis.  Image @Wikimedia Commons
The Lyme Regis Museum now has a blog! One of its announcements might interest our friends across the Pond:

Thursday 26 May 2.30pm - LYME’S LITERARY LINKS: David Coates will talk about great literary figures who have been inspired by and lived and worked in Lyme. Jane Austen, who wrote about Lyme in Persuasion, and John Fowles in French Lieutenant’s Woman are the most notable, but also children’s author and illustrator Beatrix Potter, who came to Lyme in 1904 and wrote about the town in Little Pig Robinson; J R R Tolkein, author of The Hobbit and Lord of the Rings, who regularly visited Lyme for his summer holidays between 1905 and 1910; Henry Fielding, novelist and playwright, who visited Lyme as a young man and tried to elope with a 15-year-old heiress; Francis Palgrave, poet and editor of the poetry anthology Golden Treasury; P G Wodehouse, G K Chesterton and Ivy Compton-Burnett.

Lyme Regis Museum

Saturday, May 21

A Copy of The Watsons, a Rare Jane Austen Manuscript, for Sale at Sotheby's

An extremely rare manuscript handwritten by Jane Austen will go on sale at Sotheby's, London on July 14th of this year. The novel
is unquestionably rare. Original manuscripts of her published novels do not exist, aside from two cancelled chapters of Persuasion in the British Library.

The novel is considered around a quarter completed and the manuscript has 68 pages – hand-trimmed by Austen – which have been split up into 11 booklets.
Fragment of the Watsons at the Morgan Library
The Pierpont Morgan Library in New York owns the first 12 pages, which I had the privilege to view last year at A Woman's Wit: Jane Austen's Life and Legacy exhibit. Click here to see a facsimile of those pages.
The Watsons manuscript shows how Austen's other manuscripts must have looked. It also shines an interesting light on how she worked. Austen took a piece of paper, cut it in two and then folded over each half to make eight-page booklets. Then she would write, small neat handwriting leaving little room for corrections – of which there are many. "You can really see the mind at work with all the corrections and revisions," said Heaton.
Only this manuscript and a couple of canceled chapters of Persuasion in Jane's hand have survived. They show her creative mind at work.
At one stage she crosses so much out that she starts a page again and pins it in. It seems, in Austen's mind, her manuscript had to look like a book. "Writers often fall into two categories," said [Gabriel] Heaton, [Sotheby's senior specialist in books and manuscripts]. "The ones who fall into a moment of great inspiration and that's it and then you have others who endlessly go back and write and tinker. Austen is clearly of the latter variety. It really is a wonderful, evocative document."

Friday, May 20

Friday Fop

The Regency was known as a raucous era, one at which the Victorians looked askance. This Thomas Lawrence portrait of John Lord Mountstuart of Bute is quite revealing in a way that the modern viewer will find startling. Frequent Jane Austen Today contributer, Tony Grant, hinted at the  unabashed display of his male prowess in a post he wrote for Jane Austen's World, as does Blake Gopnik in The Daily Beast:

John Lord Mountstuart of Bute
I don’t count myself a sex-obsessed Freudian, but one of the more notable features of many of Lawrence’s portraits is the cling of his male sitter’s breeches, and how revealing of all things masculine they are – as was noted even when said portraits were painted. - Buy This Man Some Underarmour

Thursday, May 19

Look What's New at the Jane Austen Centre's Online Gift Shop

I visit the Jane Austen Centre's Online Gift Shop frequently, but not enough, for I discovered many new items that I had not seen before. Here is a sampling.

Calender, diary, and journal

Mugs

Pride and Prejudice book box

Monday, May 16

Join Jane Austen at the Classroom Salon

This post was published by Mags at Austenblog, who also graciously allowed me to publish it on this blog.

We are pleased to announce that the Gentle Readers of AustenBlog, as well as Janeites everywhere, have been invited to join a discussion of Sense and Sensibility at Classroom Salon, a free discussion platform from Carnegie Mellon University. Using this tool, one may select any section of text, make comments, answer questions, and see and respond to the comments and questions. The Salon team at Carnegie Mellon is starting to post the text of Sense and Sensibility so that you can now join fellow Janeites inside the novel. The Editrix has contributed some discussion questions as well.

A few things you should know about this Austen playground:

1. This is the latest, the greatest and the coolest, but it’s also a beta. It’s not difficult to use and there are basic instructions (which you can annotate and improve), but you’ll need to find your own way without too much guidance. An adventure!
2. The Sense and Sensibility beta is limited, so you’ll need to be one of the first fifty people to sign up. If you’re not, they’ll put you on a waitlist.
3. A new chapter will be opened for annotation about once a week.
4. If there is sufficient demand, the Salon team will start to post Jane’s other works as well.
5. The beta is completely free. It’s always possible that the University might decide to commercialize the platform at some point in the future, but the inventors are hoping to always maintain a free version.
6. Don’t worry if you’re the first or second or third commentator. Responses will breed more responses, and with lots of participation, we’ll have a rich, crowd-sourced online version of Sense and Sensibility.

How to Sign Up:

1. Go to http://www.classroomsalon.org/redirect/redirect.aspx?action=viewSalon&id=172 (new link; will take you directly to the S&S Salon)
2. Enter a name, email address and password and the registration code “Facebook Jane,” then click on Sign Up.
3. Sign in. This should take you to the Sense & Sensibility Salon.
4. Click to Join the Sense & Sensibility Salon.
5. You will receive email notification when you’ve been approved by the Salon owner. When you receive the approval, just click on the link in the email and you’re in.

Before you start annotating and engaging, you might want to have a look at the “Working with Documents in a Salon” document in the Salon. Feel free to annotate this document, as well.

Chapter 1 opens on Sunday morning, May 22 at 7 a.m., so sign up now and be the first on your block.

Happy Annotating!

NOTE: Classroom Salon works best in Firefox.

Sunday, May 15

Masterpiece Classic Showdown

This season, PBS offered a variety of films on Masterpiece Classic. Tonight, the last installment of South Riding will be shown. Adapted by Andrew Davies (who also wrote the screenplays for Pride and Prejudice 1995, Emma, Sense and Sensibility, Bridget Jones, Brideshead Revisited, and Little Dorrit), South Riding is about a spinster schoolteacher who returns to north England to work has a headmistress at a local girl's high school. The leads in this moody and brooding post World War I drama are Anna Maxwell Martin (Bleak House) and David Morrissey (Sense and Sensibility). Making another appearance in a Masterpiece Classic this season is Penelope Wilton, who also starred in Downton Abbey. After tonight, all three episodes will be available online until June 14th.
Penelope Wilton as Mrs. Beddows in South Riding
While Downton Abbey and Upstairs Downstairs were the runaway hits so far, there were two other MP classics shown.This week's question is: Which of the films did you watch? All? None? Or just s few? Curious minds want to know.

165 Eaton Place (Leamington Spa) in Upstairs Downstairs

Logan (Matthew Macfadyen, Pride and Prejudice) and Freya (Haley Atwell, Mansfield Park) in Any Human Heart
Anna Maxwell Martin and David Morrissey in South Riding
Downton Abbey (Highclere Castle)

In 2011, I Watched the Following Masterpiece Classics
Downton Abbey
Any Human Heart
Upstairs Downstairs
South Riding


  
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Saturday, May 14

Brighton Pier

Jane Austen fans know about Lydia Bennet's escapades in Brighton, which resulted in her elopement with Wickham. Tony Grant. a frequent contributer to this blog, took images of the pier in that ancient British resort town, whose origins go back to the days of the Saxons when the town was known as Brighthelmstun (although it is conjectured that it was a place of some note for the Romans a well).
Royal Pavilion close up. Image @Tony Grant
The town grew in popularity after the Prince Regent made it his resort of choice. In 1822, five years after Jane Austen's death, a Chain Pier was erected. At 1,134 feet in length, with a promenade 13 feet wide, and with an admission fee of 2 pence (or subscription fee), one can imagine that visitors had ample opportunity to meet new friends and greet acquaintances along their leisurely stroll.
Chain Pier, 1836
Today,  Brighton looks vastly different.

Image @Tony Grant

Image @Tony Grant

Under Brighton Pier. Image @Tony Grant

Along Brighton Pier. Image @Tony Grant

Antique Centre. Image @Tony Grant
Looking out a window at Brighton Pier. Image @Tony Grant

Friday, May 13

Friday Funny

While many of you have seen this image, some of you have not. Rumor has it that the "artist" made changes, darkening Cinderella's hair and changing the colors of the stepsisters' gowns. Still, this is clever. Enjoy.


Wednesday, May 11

Regency Fashion: Polychrome Embroidered Men's Waistcoats

1760, embroidered cloth of silver waistcoat. Image @Christie's
Polychrome silk embroidery, which used a variety of colors, was popular for men's waistcoats in the 18th and 19th century. These exquisite and expensive garments, worn under coats, had become a fashion statement and a way of displaying one's wealth and individuality.
1780 embroidered silk waistcoat
1800-1815 French silk vest. Image @Metropolitan Museum of Art

Polychrome silk thread embroidery "became fashionable in the reign of Elizabeth, and from c. 1590 to 1620 a uniquely English fashion arose for embroidered linen jackets worn informally or as part of masquing costume. These jackets usually featured scrolling floral patterns worked in a multiplicity of stitches. Similar patterns worked in 2-ply worsted wool called crewel on heavy linen for furnishings are characteristic of Jacobean embroidery. - Under Creative Commons License: Attribution

Tuesday, May 10

Emma Dolls: Pullip Special

These Pullip dolls are arranged in Regency settings. They will appeal to the little girls in your life or the little girl in you.



What are Pullip dolls? Wikipedia has an answer: "Pullip is a collectible fashion doll created by Cheonsang Cheonha of South Korea in 2003. Pullip has an oversized head on a jointed plastic body, with eyes that can change positions and wink...New editions of Pullip dolls are released on a monthly basis. Additional limited-release exclusives are sold occasionally. Each has a unique name with distinct face make-up, hair, outfit, accessories, and box.

Between 2003 and 2010 there have been over 100 Pullip doll releases. The regular monthly releases of Pullip are 'limited' in that only a certain amount are made, this number is known only by the manufacturer."


Contributed by Raquel Sallaberry, Jane Austen em Português

Sunday, May 8

Jane Austen Photoshop Throwdown

Gentle readers, We all know how photoshopping has made us wary of the veracity of photographs, causing us to ask: Is what we see real? Or not real? Take Kate Middleton, for instance. We all know she has a spectacularly small waist and slim figure. So why did the magazine editors of Grazia feel the need to photoshop her wedding picture? No wonder 21st century women rarely like their own figures.


Suppose editors had felt that Jennifer Ehle and Kate Winslet were too zaftig to play Lizzie and Marianne respectively? How would you have felt if their fine rounded figures had been artificially thinned?

Lizzie loses weight in front of our eyes, from right to left.

Beautiful Kate stretched and thinned (on the right).
Fair is only fair. Let's reverse the process for Gwynneth's Emma. Heaven only knows how Keira Knightley would look if she had been stretched to a curvier weight.
Gwynnie with full arms and cheeks
This week's question asks: What would Jane Austen have said of photoshopped images? Which answer fits your thoughts best? Perhaps you can think of a more appropriate phrase!

What would Jane have said of photoshopped images?
"I do not think this at all agreeable."
"No one can be esteemed whose vanity stretches the truth."
"Nothing amuses me more than the natural manner in which one regards one's own image."
"I cannot think well of an artificial method that sports with a woman's image."
"I have few pretensions, for I rather like myself."



  
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Friday, May 6

Quiet Blog

Gentle readers, I broke my foot and thus the blog will be quieter than it has been for a while. Thank you for your patience! Meanwhile, to keep you amused, I shall pair an image with a Jane Austen quote in a few posts until I regain my energy.

Mr. Knightley (Jeremy Northam) drinks tea
During the Georgian era, tea was a new luxury item that was kept under lock and key. Jane Austen estimated that the consumption of tea at Godmersham was 12 lb. A quarter. - Jane Austen and Food, Maggie Lane


Tuesday, May 3

Kaitlin Saunders Talks About Her Book: A Modern Day Persuasion

Ahh…romance… (as I let out a contended sigh) Let me tell you what inspired me to write A Modern Day Persuasion, which is a modern day approach to the beloved classic, and my personal favorite, Persuasion.

Many of you, like myself, probably adore the multiple adaptations of Jane Austen films like Pride and Prejudice, Sense and Sensibility, Emma, Mansfield Park, and of course Persuasion. Yet, how many have the patience to tackle the Napoleonic-Era verbiage novels? Thus came my inspiration to introduce my friends to the magic of Jane’s pen in a language a modern day woman can relate to.

So whether you have read Jane Austen’s classics as is and are looking for another Austen-inspired novel to wet your romance-appetite, or you’re curious about sinking your teeth into what has spellbound both women and men for the past several hundreds of years in a 21st Century approach, you’ve found the right book.

My number goal while tackling the modernization of Jane's classic was to stay as close to the original as possible. Too many Austen-inspired novels and movies today stray too far from the beloved premise and therefore miss the mark. I didn't want to make that same mistake. My novel is a modern day adaptation.

Some circumstances had to be updated to make it more believable in this day and age such as Rick's career-gaining fortune, the fact that Anne, as a modern day girl, would have a job, and a better explanation for her family's retrenchment to Bath. It was also important to minimize the emphasis that Mr. Elliot, the man pursuing Anne, is her cousin. Those are just a few to mention, but when reading the book, one will find a handful of others. These “updates” don't mean drastic changes to characterization and circumstances like adding characters not in the original, etc. or giving them off-the-wall histories.

Persuasion, with all it's ups and downs, is a feel-good story. A Modern Day Persuasion takes its cue from the original, playing up Anne's heartbreak while also adding in satiric tid-bits, complementing Jane's already wonderful sense of humor. I hope my readers enjoy this modern approach, re-introducing themselves to a familiar friend, Anne, as they follow her present-day love story.

Author Bio: Kaitlin Saunders is proficient on the works of Jane Austen and finds that literature written by Austen serves to give her inspiration. At age sixteen, Kaitlin began her literary career writing her first screenplay, titled, “Caroline,” later bringing this period piece to life. Directing and producing this film, it gained popularity after being aired on local television. She was recently married and enjoys cuddling up with her husband to watch BBC.



Monday, May 2

Is Mr. Middleton the new Mr. Bennet?

The Daily Mail described Michael Middleton's role in the Royal Wedding as thus:
His role has, in short, been most unusual – stripped of the few patriarchal pleasures still allowed to the rest of us embattled blokes. He may have found himself reflecting on the life of Denis Thatcher. Or possibly even Jane Austen’s Mr Bennet, father of five daughters.
Prince William, Catherine, and Michael Middleton
Ah, Mr Bennet. When Jane Austen wrote him into Pride And Prejudice, she succeeded in creating a kind of literary patron saint for dads with daughters.
He, of course, had good daughters (Jane and Elizabeth) and bad daughters (Mary, Kitty and Lydia). Lizzie was his closest confidante, whose marriage to the vastly eligible Mr Darcy, must have been a mixed fortune. But his younger daughters were dimwits or debauchees. 
Happily for Michael Middleton, his own girls Kate and Pippa seem modelled from the same clay as Elizabeth and Jane.
Read more: The Daily Mail

Seen on the Blogosphere

Advice Success from Jane Austen, by author Beth Patillo on Guideposts
I fell in love with Jane Austen more than 25 years ago when I was a college student spending a semester in London. Here are some of the many lessons I've learned from her over the years.

Queen Victoria's Wedding Drew a Crowd Too! at Two Nerdy History Girls
Queen Victoria's wedding spawned wedding souvenirs and adoring crowds. Sound familiar? The two girls, Loretta and Susan, quote The Mirror of literature, amusement, and instruction,1840.

Keepsake Editions on Old Grey Pony
In which Reb discusses two Keepsake reissues of Jane Austen's classics: Pride and Prejudice illustratedby Hugh Thompson in 1894, and Sense and Sensibility illustrated by Chris Hammond in 1899.

Sunday, May 1

Pride and Prejudice in Two Minutes

This link came from the Jane Austen Community: A Truth Universally Acknowledged on FaceBook. Good reason to join that group.