AustenBlog...she's everywhere

31 March 2006

Digital Jane

Filed under: Electronic Texts, Jane in the News — Mags @ 12:25 am

Sharp-eyed Alert Janeite Laurie wrote to tell us about a BBC article on the future of e-books. She noticed that the second photo in the article, which displays a close-up of a page in an e-reader, reveals that the book being read is Mansfield Park. Laurie wondered if Jane Austen’s novels will be included in the launch of the new Sony e-book reader device and library. We speculate that it is likely, since Jane Austen’s novels are popular and, most importantly, out of copyright, and therefore free to Sony.

However, after the incident recently where consumers listening to their legally-purchased Sony CDs on their computer had spyware installed, without their knowledge, that inserted a backdoor on their system that could have been exploited for nefarious purposes by Internet evildoers, we are extremely suspicious of any system they would provide. Sony will take advantage of lack of copyright on Jane Austen’s books to provide them in their library, though they will protect THEIR properties like Jack Russell terriers. But enough of the editorial. From the article:

But I have to say, PDA novels are not particularly easy to use.

First you will have to download, install and activate some reader software on your mobile device and there are several different makes to choose from (Adobes and Microsofts among them).

And you also have to make sure that the novel you want is available in a format which matches the reader software.

And even when you get all that working, the experience still does not match reading a good book.

Penguin Books’ e-publisher Jeremy Ettinghausen says: “Well, I think one of the major issues is that the book isn’t a bad piece of technology. The book is cheap, durable, you can do lots of things with it. You can make notes on it and, unlike perhaps the vinyl record or even the CD, it’s not a bad piece of kit.”

We like e-books. We have all six of Jane Austen’s major novels on our PDA, Enrico (yes, after Henry Tilney). We have amused/annoyed our fellow Janeites more than once when they ask idly, “What was that quotation from Emma again?” and we whip out Enrico, open the e-book, and use the search feature to find the quotation in question. And the Palm eReader allows one to insert bookmarks and make notes anywhere we like. We buy our e-books from Fictionwise, and try to choose those that come in several formats. We sometimes have a version on our PC and another on the PDA. And we avoid that Microsoft encryption thing like the plague.

That being said, we don’t see e-books replacing the regular paper sort anytime soon, except perhaps for textbooks and other specialty items, especially books that are regularly updated. However, we find the portability of the PDA e-books is just fabulous. We are never without something to read!

29 March 2006

P&P3 DVD Giveaway

Filed under: Jane in the News — Tasha @ 9:39 pm

Edge Boston is having a giveaway for a PRIDE AND PREJUDICE DVD Package that includes a copy of the DVD and an “I’m With Darcy” t-shirt. It doesn’t look like you have to live in Boston in order to enter, but you do have to live in the US (or at least have a mailing address there). The giveaway ends April 6, which is next week.

It’s JA time on BBC7!

Filed under: Audio — Tasha @ 6:42 pm

Alert Janeites Julia and Lynne wrote to tell us that in addition to broadcasting MANSFIELD PARK (which we posted about previously), BBC7 is also doing broadcasts of EMMA (from Thursday the 30th to Saturday the 1st at 10 am, 9 pm and 2 am) and PERSUASION (from Monday the 3rd to Thursday the 6th at the same times). From the looks of it, Juliet Stevenson (from E2 - thanks Julie P!) will be featured in PERSUASION.

It looks like BBC7 is a Friend of Jane, even if V.S. Naipaul isn’t!

NOT an F.O.J: V.S. Naipaul

Filed under: Jane in the News — Tasha @ 6:30 pm

Mags, brace yourself. We have Dorothy on standby with a huge pot of Orange Pekoe.

In an article on the Beeb, V.S. Naipaul rants about authors from Ernest Hemingway to Jane Austen:

The author slates Dickens for his “repetitiveness” and cites the experience of reading Jane Austen’s Northanger Abbey as a revelatory one.

“I thought halfway through the book, ‘Here am I, a grown man reading about this terrible vapid woman and her so-called love life.’

“I said to myself, ‘What am I doing with this material? This is for somebody else, really.”

Look at it this way, Mags: at least he didn’t say anything about Da Man!

(Thanks to Alert Janeite Sophia J for sending this in!)

Photos from BECOMING JANE set

Filed under: Becoming Jane — Mags @ 9:35 am

Alert Janeite Hiba posted this link in comments for another post with photos from the first couple of days of shooting for BECOMING JANE. The costumes pass the initial sniff test. Let the games begin! ;-)

Edit 8:40 p.m. EST: Also thanks to Alert Janeites Vanya_Elda and Cinthia for sending in the news–we were not home and didn’t check e-mail last night or it would have been posted then! Thanks to all who send us news–we could not do without you.

28 March 2006

All the latest publications

Filed under: Nonfiction, Page, Paraliterature — Mags @ 12:17 am

We are remiss in updating our list of the latest publications of interest to Janeites. Lady Russell, we assume, has already received her shipment at her lodgings in Bath. (more…)

In Jane Austen’s footsteps

Filed under: Online — Mags @ 12:04 am

Lori Smith of Following Austen has posted a lovely description of wandering around the environs of Steventon, Jane Austen’s home until age 25, and some photos of her adventures as well.

We can speak from experience that many natives of the area, when asked for directions to Steventon, return only a blank look, never having heard of it–though they stand only a few miles away. It is a very retired, tiny village, and like Lori we felt it was much like Jane might have known it. If you get a chance to go, do so. Don’t miss the Jane Austen’s House Museum at Chawton, either. Hampshire is lovely country and it is easy to understand why Jane loved it so.

27 March 2006

Somewhere, William Larkin weeps

Filed under: Jane in the News — Mags @ 10:58 pm

An article about Kent quotes Jane Austen’s letters and points out that her brother Edward’s main property was Godmersham in that county.

People get so horribly poor and economical in this part of the world that I have no patience with them,” wrote Jane Austen from Hampshire. “Kent is the only place for happiness; everybody is rich there.”

She was thinking, I should imagine, of the Kent of the great country houses - silver furniture at Knole, baronial halls at Penshurst Place, the troubadour romance of Leeds Castle. Her brother, Edward, inherited Godmersham Park, near Canterbury, and Jane often visited him there.

We were, however, distressed, in a mild confused Mr. Woodhousean sort of way, by the following tidbit:

Some of this Kent remains. Although the EU paid for most of the apple trees to be grubbed up, to replace tasty Kentish apples with cardboardy Golden Delicious

We had our Jane Austen moment du jour tonight in the local food emporium, where we purchased some lovely Gala apples, very good for this time of year, and decided that William Larkin must have sent over another bushel. (A baked apple is very wholesome, you know.) We dare say Mr. Larkin would be most distressed by this rooting-up business. And what will Miss Fairfax have for her mid-morning snack? Dear, dear.

Jane Austen for Dummies

Filed under: Nonfiction — Mags @ 12:14 am

The Editrix attended a JASNA regional event on Saturday, at which Professor Joan Klingel Ray, the president of JASNA, spoke. It was a wonderful event, and Professor Ray is a fantastic speaker–if you get a chance to hear her, definitely go! But a piece of news we really wanted to pass along was that Professor Ray told us that she is in the process of writing Jane Austen for Dummies. We cannot WAIT to get our copy! According to Amazon, it is due this August.

26 March 2006

Now this is what we call a “Special Edition”

Filed under: Screen — Mags @ 11:38 pm

Alert Janeite Maria B. wrote to tell us about a special 10th anniversary edition of the 1995 PRIDE AND PREJUDICE miniseries (P&P2) that will be released in September 2006. There was an anniversary edition released a while back, but this seems to include some actual new things. From the listing on Amazon:

DVD Features:

  • Available Audio Tracks: English (Dolby Digital 2.0 Stereo)
  • 10th Anniversary Limited Edition Collector’s Set
  • Gold embossed green fabric slipcase
  • Newly remastered widescreen print

Bonus Disc Features:

  • Jane Austen BIOGRAPHY episode
  • An exclusive new retrospective documentary about the making of the classic series
  • A 120 page deluxe companion book The Making Of Pride and Prejudice
  • Interviews with cast and crew

We know there are some who will be very happy with the remastered DVD. :-) And we assume that the documentary is the one that was broadcast on British TV last year and that the Making of P&P book is the one that everyone probably has already. :-)

And may we add, as an editorial aside, that it’s about sodding time that this series has received this treatment?

24 March 2006

PRIDE AND PREJUDICE to be available as legal download

Filed under: Pride and Prejudice (2005) — Julie B. @ 1:41 am

The BBC reports that AOL will soon be offering legal downloads of movies, and PRIDE AND PREJUDICE will be among the first offered.

Fans will pay £19.99 for a DVD of their chosen film plus two digital copies to keep indefinitely - one for their home computer and one for a portable device.

Universal said it could “completely revolutionise” how people watch movies.

There is a catch, of course.

However users will not be able to burn copies of the films to DVD themselves and the files will be compatible only with PCs and Windows software.

So how long do you suppose it will take for some enterprising young spirit to figure out how to work around that “can’t burn a DVD” feature?

23 March 2006

Precedence

Filed under: Jane in the News — Mags @ 2:17 am

Once again the question comes up: what famous people from history would you invite to lunch?

This article suggests both Jane Austen (but the author really should read Northanger Abbey first; might be rude otherwise), Alexander Hamilton and Benjamin Franklin, coincidentally three of the Editrix’s choices. She would flirt outrageously with Mr. Hamilton while keeping an ear open for the conversation between Miss Austen and Mr. Franklin, which no doubt would be absolutely hilarious.

Review of Jane Austen in Scarsdale

Filed under: Paraliterature — Mags @ 2:09 am

Westchester.com reviews Paula Marantz Cohen’s new book, Jane Austen in Scarsdale, a modern retelling of Persuasion. Unsurprisingly the perspective is more from a Westchester-resident point of view than a Janeite one, but a few of the Austenish details sneak through.

The trials and tribulations of Anne’s life, coping with her own needs, those of her students and family members provides a counterpoint to the sterotypical Scarsdalians, who are not shown with any softer, more altruistic and less self-serving sides of their characters.

Other examples of Cohen’s fine characterizations are those of Anne’s grandmother, her wastrel father, self-absorbed sister. The impending sale of the ancestral Tudor home is quite realistic, from the language of the listing details to the suggestions of how to make the house more attractive so it will fetch a higher price.

22 March 2006

Upgrade

Filed under: Housekeeping — Mags @ 10:59 pm

We installed the latest version of WordPress tonight–they say it’s a security upgrade. Let us know if you have any problems.

21 March 2006

The formula for genius

Filed under: Jane in the News, Nonfiction — Mags @ 10:57 am

Einstein Edison said that genius was composed of 10 percent inspiration and 90 percent perspiration, and it seems that Paul Johnson agrees, at least in relation to Jane Austen. A review of his book Creators in the Wall Street Journal quotes part of Mr. Johnson’s assessment of Jane Austen.

Austen had no demon. There is no magic about her novels…. They can be explained. They are the discernible result of huge natural talent, honed, improved, and made superlative by ‘much labour’ (as she put it), experience, and self-restraint.

Sounds about right to us. :-)

Thanks to Alert Janeites Marion and Susan for writing to us (separately) and sending the quotation from the review, which is only available to WSJ subscribers.

EDITED because we confused our geniuses (though we are never confused about Jane Austen!)

MANSFIELD PARK on BBC7 digital radio, starring Amanda Root

Filed under: Audio — Mags @ 12:01 am

Alert Janeite Marybeth wrote to tell us that BBC7 digital radio will be broadcasting a radio play of MANSFIELD PARK, starring Amanda Root. (We have it on tape! It’s pretty good.) The play will be broadcast Monday the 27th to Wednesday the 29th at 10 am, 9 pm and 2 am (GMT we imagine), and you can listen online for up to a week afterward, so make haste!

20 March 2006

Jane Austen and Casual Friday

Filed under: Jane in the News — Mags @ 11:54 pm

This just made us laugh.

According to a recent worldwide survey by SonicWALL, a computer network security firm, 10 percent of telecommuters work in the nude. Thirty-nine percent wear sweats. And only 44 percent of women and 30 percent of men reported taking a shower on their don’t-bring-your-funky-body-odor-to-work days.

This means that if all remote and mobile workers suddenly materialized into their central downtown offices, they would make Casual Friday look like a regency ball from a Jane Austen novel.

Well, it’s not like they had Super Speed Stick in Jane Austen’s time or anything.

BECOMING JANE shooting location details

Filed under: Becoming Jane — Mags @ 11:44 pm

An article about films currently in production in Ireland includes a tidbit of news about BECOMING JANE (as well as repeating the stuff we’ve been snarking for the past several weeks).

Top actresses Dame Maggie Smith, Julie Walters and Brokeback Mountain starlet Anne Hathaway will begin shooting scenes in Charleville Castle in Co Offaly as well as in Ardmore Studios just outside Bray, Co Wicklow.

A castle? Goodness. We dare say that it inspired that well-known Gothic novel Northanger Abbey, set in a crumbling castle on a lonely moor… (or was that Longbourn? Can’t keep ‘em straight).

(Private to lurking media: that was a joke.)

Also, Alert Janeite Jen P. sent us this article, which also repeats the usual crap and also says, to our high amusement,

They had to do a biopic at this point…after Bride and Prejudice, Bridget Jones’ Diary and Clueless, they’re beginning to run out of ways to re-tell Austen novels as well.

Obviously they haven’t been to any Austen fan fiction sites lately! Of course, a film studio would actually have to PAY the fan fiction authors to use one of their stories…

Short breaks in Jane Austen Country

Filed under: Places — Mags @ 10:28 pm

Visit Winchester has put together a two-day package in Hampshire just for Jane Austen fans. There is a choice of two inns at two different price points, and the package includes lodging, a dinner, a one-hour tour of Jane Austen’s Winchester, entry to Jane Austen’s House Museum, and the Jane Austen Pitkin guide.

We were amused by this sentence:

Perfect for Janeites and fans of the Pride and Prejudice film alike.

One would think they would be the same cohort. Wouldn’t one?

Getting in touch with your inner Lizzy

Filed under: Jane in the News — Mags @ 10:05 pm

Nicole Laskowski wrote a very sweet editorial about how she and a college friend came to love Lizzy Bennet (and Pride and Prejudice) in spite of themselves.

It makes sense to me why she has become Austen’s most widely known, most celebrated heroine. Because Elizabeth Bennet defines the word classic.

Jane Austen wrote that Lizzy was “as delightful a creature as ever appeared in print.” We concur.

 

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