AustenBlog...she's everywhere

28 September 2006

REVIEW: Mr. Knightley’s Diary by Amanda Grange

Filed under: Paraliterature, Staff Reviews — Mags @ 12:23 am

Mr. Knightley's Diary The Editrix’s affection for the Rev. Mr. Henry Tilney is well-documented, but we must confess to an occasional fling with Mr. Knightley of Donwell Abbey (and have been known to sit adoringly at Captain Wentworth’s knee whilst he tells sea-stories, but that is neither here nor there). Conceive our delight, then, when we were informed that Amanda Grange has followed up Darcy’s Diary with Mr. Knightley’s Diary. Such anticipation for Austen paraliterature titles has been dashed in the past, but we are happy to report that in this case, our anticipation was not excited in vain.

The squire of Donwell Abbey is fond of his country life: looking after his estate with the assistance of the redoubtable William Larkins, attending his whist club, dining at every house in the neighborhood, teaching his nephews to ride their first pony; and his fondest enjoyment is visiting his neighbor Mr. Woodhouse and his daughter, Emma. For a crusty old bachelor, Mr. Knightley spends an awful lot of time thinking about marriage, and an awful lot of time thinking about Miss Woodhouse. With so many concerns to distract him, a generous public must forgive that it takes him half the book (and the intercession of a dispassionate friend) to realize that this is not a coincidence. (more…)

27 September 2006

The Lost Memoirs of Jane Austen to be published. No, really.

Filed under: Jane in the News — Mags @ 11:08 pm

From Publisher’s Marketplace, which lists the latest book deals:

FICTION: WOMEN’S/ROMANCE
Syrie James’s THE LOST MEMOIRS OF JANE AUSTEN, written in a modernized Jane Austen style that weaves fact and fiction together seamlessly, and in which Jane Austen meets Mr. Ashford, falls in love, and has just the relationship her legions of fans and readers might wish for the beloved spinster, to Lucia Macro at Avon, in a good deal, at auction, by Tamar Ellman at the Laura Dail Literary Agency (NA).

Well, now we know where those Very Secret Diaries of Jane Austen used for MP1999 came from. ;-)

We suppose one can expect to see this in a year to eighteen months.

Discount for AustenBlog readers for PRIDE AND PREJUDICE play in New Jersey

Filed under: Stage — Mags @ 11:03 pm

We received some information from the Shakespeare Festival of New Jersey about their upcoming production of PRIDE AND PREJUDICE, as well as an education program with a Q&A with the adapter/director, Bonnie J. Monte. Also, we have been told that if you mention that you are an AustenBlog reader when you call for tickets, you will receive a 15% discount! All the information and links you need below the flip. (more…)

Jane Austen, Spinster

Filed under: Online — Mags @ 10:58 pm

We received a link to an essay about Jane Austen on the “Sexual Fables” Web site from the author, Martin Blythe. Well, it’s not really an essay, more of a hybrid essay/speculative semi-fiction type of thing. We could spork-fisk it, but it would be like shooting fish in a barrel, frankly. There’s just no sport in it. We thought we would open the floor for our readers to take a turn; or even praise it if you are so inclined. We are feeling magnanimous tonight. Also we think it’s actually kind of a neat idea, just a bit lacking in execution.

Jane Austen novels offered for new e-book reader

Filed under: Electronic Texts, Jane's Novels — Mags @ 10:50 pm

Our Gentle Readers may have seen the announcement about the new Sony e-book reader. We investigated which of Jane Austen’s novels might be available for the device and discovered not only the novels but several titles of Austen paraliterature as well.

We like e-books, and have the “Big Six” on our PDA at all times. One of our book groups is currently re-reading Mansfield Park in preparation for the JASNA AGM. We mostly have been reading it on the PDA, which we prefer to carry rather than our Chapman edition, fearing it might get ruined in transit. We are currently debating whether to bring the Chapman to Tucson (the e-book IS searchable, but the hard copy has all kinds of interesting collateral material that might come in handy for the quiz will provide the reader with additional insight into the novel. And just today we showed our co-workers the first sentence of Pride and Prejudice as part of a discussion about comma usage. :-) (When you work with word nerds, that sort of conversation is perfectly normal.) However, we most likely will wait for the price to come down on this device (by about half) or for something less expensive and, one hopes, using a universal format rather than something proprietary to one device.

Blake Ritson added to cast of Mansfield Park 2007

Filed under: Mansfield Park 2007 — Mags @ 1:00 am

The news trickles out slowly…Alert Janeite Arwen posted in comments that Company Pictures’ Web site now lists Blake Ritson as one of the stars of MP2007 along with Billie Piper. The listing would make one think he is playing Edmund Bertram, wouldn’t it? He’ll make an awfully pretty Edmund, if so.

STYLE
Authoritative, cool, natural, animated, warm, smooth, rich, boyish.

Ah-MMMM! Too good for the likes of Edmund the Wanker, that’s for sure. (Yes, as a matter of fact the Editrix does have issues with Mr. Bertram the younger. Thanks for asking.) Check out the samples on the agency site; Blake has a lovely voice.

“Playing With Canons” to include Northanger Abbey stage adaptation

Filed under: Page, Stage — Mags @ 12:53 am

The complete text of Lynn Marie Macy’s stage adaptation of Northanger Abbey (which incorporates scenes from Ann Radcliffe’s novel The Mysteries of Udolpho) will be included in Playing With Canons, an anthology of plays based on works of classic literature. No news yet on how to order the book, but we will let you know. The book will be available on October 17.

26 September 2006

Austen character relationships inspire search engine technology

Filed under: Jane in the News — Mags @ 1:55 am

Pray excuse us whilst we indulge our Inner Geek, but dude! How cool is this? Maps of character relationships in Jane Austen novels have been used to program a new kind of search engine that works semantically–in other words, like the human brain works.

In its simplest form, semantic indexing can recognize synonyms, or for example a search in an inventory database for “fruit” could turn up documents listing “apples” and “oranges.”

[. . .]

Most impressive of all has been the graphic visualization of novels. Coburn says this particular demonstration began with a close collaboration with a Spanish professor who wanted to make a searchable ebook reader for Don Quixote.

“Later,” Coburn says, “we started adding as many Project Gutenberg texts as possible, in whatever languages we happened to know — English, French, German, Polish, Russian.”

To this, Coburn added some software to visualize the semantic data in the database, and the search software became a powerful tool for plot visualization. He began using it to make visualizations of characters in Jane Austen novels, charting their various interactions through the course of the narrative. “And the algorithms seemed to do a really good job of detecting how the characters interacted!”

He’s since applied this visualization tool to other novels, including Samuel Richardson’s Clarissa — one of the largest novels in the English language — and the classic Chinese novel Dream of the Red Chamber.

Check out the map of character relationships in Emma!

We must, however, recommend to the programmers that they not feed the engine The Mysteries of Udolpho, because the failure of Mrs. Radcliffe to fix upon a single hero and heroine will break the thing permanently.

So THAT’S where the pond scene came from!

Filed under: Audio — Mags @ 1:49 am

Alert Janeite Sarah wrote to tell us that Jane Austen was featured on the “Ruth Harrison, Reference Librarian” skit during the radio show A Prairie Home Companion this past weekend.

TK: OK, Miss Harrison. See you tomorrow. — (DOOR OPENS, CLOSES). (SHE DRAWS A SIGH OF RELIEF) (FOOTSTEPS) At last. I’m alone. Free. Free to work on my novel. Broken Bindings. (FOOTSTEPS, CUPBOARD DOOR OPENS, GLASS IS SET ON TABLE. LIQUID IS POURED IN. RUTH SIPS FROM IT. SHE SIGHS.) Oh my, that surely hits the spot.

TR (BRIT LADY): You should lock the library door, Ruth.

SS: (GASP) It’s — it’s the picture of Jane Austen on the wall — and her lips are moving.

TR (BRIT LADY): Of course they’re moving, Ruth. I’m talking to you. Pour me some of that sherry.

SS: Sherry??? Miss Austen— I can’t believe you’re saying that.

TR (BRIT LADY): When I wrote “Pride and Prejudice,” I was higher than a kite. Good and tanked up on port wine. I drank it by the pitcher.

SS: By the pitcher???

TR (BRIT LADY): In the unexpurgated version, Mr. Darcy had the body of a young elk and we cavorted together. An editor took out the cavorting. That’s what killed me. Not consumption.

SS: Miss Austen, this is so unlike you—

TR (BRIT LADY): What do you mean? You expected me to be all buttoned-up just because I’m a spinster?? Wearing a frumpy dress with high necklines and a bonnet? Ha. This is the real me. (ZIP, PLOP)

SS: Oh my gosh—

TR (BRIT LADY): This red satin blouse too much for you, Ruth?

SS: You forgot to button it, Miss Austen.

TR (BRIT LADY): I like it like that. And the leopardskin pillbox hat.

SS: So is platinum blonde your real hair color ?

TR (BRIT LADY): Today it is. I’m my own woman, Ruth. And you are, too. You just have to be strong. Just be strong, Ruth. Be strong…..(DISSOLVING DREAMSTATE)

SS (DREAMY): Be strong….be strong…..be strong.

We laugh, but wasn’t that version of P&P published recently?

You can listen to the episode online (must have evil Real Player, boo hiss) or read the transcript.

Margaret Atwood: Friend of Jane?

Filed under: F.O.J. (Friends of Jane) — Mags @ 1:40 am

Alert Janeite Jessica also let us know about a Q&A with the novelist Margaret Atwood in Vanity Fair. She doesn’t exactly confess to F.O.J.ship, but…well, you be the judge.

Who are your favorite writers?

I never tell. The others will hear about it, dead or alive.

Who is your favorite hero of fiction?

I never tell that, either. (Live in hope, Mr. Darcy.)

Hee hee.

Nora Ephron: Friend of Jane (but we knew that)

Filed under: F.O.J. (Friends of Jane) — Mags @ 1:20 am

Anyone who saw YOU’VE GOT MAIL, which Ms. Ephron wrote and directed, would not be surprised to learn that one of her favorite books is Pride and Prejudice.

Favorite book: “The Woman in White,” by Wilkie Collins. Also “Pride & Prejudice” — “although that’s such a boring choice.”

Only if you don’t really mean it, Nora.

Thanks to Alert Janeite Jessica for the link!

24 September 2006

Information about New York stage production of NORTHANGER ABBEY

Filed under: Stage — Mags @ 4:39 am

We received a press release from Theater Ten Ten in New York City about their upcoming stage production of NORTHANGER ABBEY, which will run from October 20 through November 19, 2006. (more…)

While the woman you love lives, and lives for you

Filed under: Jane in the News — Mags @ 4:21 am

Alert Janeites Bobbie and Caroline wrote to tell us about the latest column from Dear Margo, in which a lovelorn swain asks for advice because he has a crush on another woman and his wife is jealous. The other woman is…Jane Austen. (more…)

Anne Hathaway admits that BECOMING JANE is a Made Up Story

Filed under: Becoming Jane — Mags @ 3:57 am

Our Gentle Readers will no doubt forgive us as we do the Superior Dance. Hit it, Dorothy!

Anne Hathaway is interviewed in the Times in reference to THE DEVIL WEARS PRADA and talks a little about BECOMING JANE.

Hathaway seems to have things mapped out. In her next outing, Becoming Jane, she will be pursuing the well-worn route to big-league affirmation by playing English, as none other than Jane Austen. In this UK Film Council romp,

Romp?

shot in Ireland, she stars as the young author opposite James McAvoy’s Irish lawyer, Tom Lefroy — their doomed affair purportedly launching Austen on her literary trajectory.

“Purportedly,” indeed.

A sort of Shakespeare in Love take on proceedings, Hathaway says.

Not at all. As we’ve explained before, if it was a SHAKESPEARE IN LOVE-type film, then the indications that it was a Made Up Story would be honestly telegraphed early on. In that film, William Shakespeare drinks out of a mug that says “Souvenir of Stratford-upon-Avon,” which indicates to the audience “we’re having a little fun with Will here.” If Jane drinks out of a teacup labeled “Souvenir of Hampshire, Jane Austen Country!” or some similar metaphorical wink at the audience is employed, not only would we would be thoroughly delighted, but the comparison would then be valid. Until then, it’s just a Made Up Story.

Here’s where things get tricky, for the “Austenites”, as she calls them,

We prefer Janeites, dear. Probably not a bad idea to learn this now.

are already mobilising, crying excessive artistic licence. “We don’t have documented evidence.

HA!

What we do have is the letters and hearsay, and probably, on our behalf, some invention.

HA HA!!!!

A few things are out of sequence.

A few things are MADE UP!

But everything that we see between Jane and Tom could possibly have happened.”

And this blog could possibly win the Pulitzer Prize, and the Editrix could possibly become Queen of all the Russias.

The International edition of Newsweek also mentions BECOMING JANE in an article about the recent spate of biopics coming out of Hollywood.

And what about Jane Austen, the original doyenne of chick lit?

Grrrrrr….

Maybe a sprightly, well-connected singleton working the room and trading gossip at a lavish dinner party?

Yeah. Sure. Whatever. (Not!)

Adrien Brody, who plays the Spanish bullfighter Manolete in a forthcoming film, says he wondered how audiences would react to his depiction of such a beloved icon, whom he strongly resembles. So far, they seem pleased.

We swoon, off-topically. :-D

Bite me, Mr. Darcy

Filed under: Page — Mags @ 3:40 am

We heard from Marta Acosta, the author of Happy Hour at Casa Dracula. Marta wrote that her book

mentions Pride & Prejudice in the first pages as the protagonist, Milagro De Los Santos, longs for “an Eliza Bennettish existence: a house filled with family and friends, the agreeable conversation of a kind and compassionate sister, and the promise of dances and engagements.”

This is a comedy of manners with a paranormal element. Also featured are other elements that Austen fans will recognize, such as the charming brother and sister who come to a country house and wreck havoc.

Reading the description of the book on Marta’s Web site, we were amused by this bit:

Then one night, at a book party for her pretentious ex-boyfriend, she meets an oddly attractive man. After she is bitten while kissing him, she falls ill and is squirreled away to his family’s estate to recover.

The idea of Mr. Darcy as a vampire delights us to no end, though we are not sure that the plot of the book exactly echoes that of P&P.

(And yes, we are keeping very weird hours again. Normalcy SHOULD return in a week or so. Yeah, right.)

21 September 2006

THE JANE AUSTEN BOOK CLUB film is cast

Filed under: Screen, The Jane Austen Book Club — Mags @ 1:37 am

This is very exciting news at AustenBlog World Headquarters. Cast members have been announced for a film version of Karen Joy Fowler’s novel The Jane Austen Book Club (which we knew was optioned but not that it was going forward).

Maria Bello, Jimmy Smits, Emily Blunt, Josh Lucas and Ellen Burstyn will star in Robin Swicord’s (Little Women, Memoirs of a Geisha) adaptation Joy Fowlers bestselling novel “The Jane Austen Book Club.”

The story centers on six Californians who join to discuss Jane Austen’s novels. Over the six months they meet, marriages are tested, affairs begin, unsuitable arrangements become suitable, and love happens.

Swicord is also set to direct the film in Los Angeles, which begins filming early November.

Who the heck is Jimmy Smits playing in that film, we wonder? Daniel, perhaps? Hmmm….it would be nice to think he is playing Grigg, because we would have to be carried out of the theater feet-first when he started nattering on about Northanger Abbey, but we suspect that Our Lady of the Fangirls doesn’t love us quite that much. Josh Lucas will most likely be playing Grigg. (The Editrix lobbied Ms. Fowler herself to get her Sweet Babboo in the role. We figured it was our only shot the fulfillment of a dearly-held dream: hearing the Adge utter Austen dialogue. Ms. Fowler kindly agreed that he would be delightful in the role, but she might just have been humoring the scary fangirl.) Maria Bello will probably play Prudie, and Emily Blunt will probably play Allegra, and Ellen Burstyn will likely play Bernadette. Who will play Jocelyn and Sylvia? Hmmm.

We are a little concerned about the involvement of Robin Swicord. LITTLE WOMEN and MEMOIRS OF A GEISHA were not what we would call faithful adaptations.

She’s still everywhere

Filed under: Jane in the News — Mags @ 1:11 am

Not to mention all over the map! The Jane Austen allusions are coming thick and fast this week!

Alert Janeite HeatherL sent us a link to an article about a boxing match that contained a number of delightful allusions to Jane Austen and her work. This first bit sounds like it came off the Feature page, not the Sports page:

Accustomed to speedy plots and flimsy characters in disguised screenplays written to pass hours in an airport hangar, who of such readers, anymore, has time for the subtlety and irony of an author like Jane Austen? Really, who but a writer driving from Phoenix to Las Vegas could possibly enjoy reading or listening to Northanger Abbey?

*raises hand*

Oh, you weren’t talking to us then? Sorry. :-D

Irony, that literary device wherein a novelist implies something very different from her words’ meanings, is lost on many of today’s readers, too – and consequently abandoned by our bestselling writers. But there was a time when a master like Jane Austen invented characters who spoke in double and triple meanings, and Ms. Austen’s readers stopped and considered every possible intention of her characters’ words.

Complicated as an Austen character, then, Marco Antonio Barrera promoted his left hand, to Rocky Juarez and three ringside judges and the postfight press corps afterwards, without once treating what he’d done with his right. Remember, it was Rocky Juarez’s job to make the first round of last Saturday’s rematch something like Round 13 of their May bout. Just go forward and maul the old man, Rocky!

But about five minutes into their rematch, when Rocky Juarez got Marco Antonio Barrera in something of a clench and set about roughing-up the veteran, Barrera launched a right uppercut devastating enough to move Juarez a step backwards and change his commitment to infighting for the next half-hour. And while Barrera only landed this same right uppercut a handful of times through the rest of the fight, he threw it repeatedly to remind Juarez of its potency.

And so, like a nineteenth-century novelist, Marco Antonio Barrera used subtlety and irony to create a technical work that pleased him as its creator. But here is where Mr. Barrera and Ms. Austen differ. Where Jane Austen’s works occasionally allow readers to deceive themselves and expect a different outcome from what they’ll later discover, Ms. Austen’s surprise endings are always pleasant for her readers.

Or perhaps it’s better put this way: Jane Austen’s novels do not wear raised and shiny script on their covers, they do not feature portraits of half-naked barbarians with blood-drenched swords, and most importantly, the teasers on their back covers do not promise five hundred pages of explosions and savagery. Marco Antonio Barrera events, and their prefight campaigns, it seems, do assure their potential buyers that something quite different from what happened last Saturday night is in the offing.

Nobody made this point better than Mr. Barrera himself, instants after “Too Close to Call’s” final bell. In a surprising show of hostility, Barrera yanked his mouthpiece out and yelled at Juarez that Rocky had both lost the fight and failed the lesson Marco Antonio Barrera, as his teacher, had given him. This image of Mr. Barrera as the professor and Rocky Juarez as the confounded student also was a repeated theme at the postfight press conference.

But if Marco Antonio Barrera was justified in calling himself Juarez’s master – by virtue of ringside judges’ marks in his favor – so too were Mr. Barrera’s disgruntled fans justified in reminding him that he’d promised to turn MGM Grand into a gladiator pit, not a classroom. Ringside reviews of Mr. Barrera’s lesson also varied greatly, with some on press row scoring the fight 116-112 for Barrera and some scoring it 115-113 for Juarez.

So, perhaps Professor Barrera’s lecture lacked clarity. Or perhaps last Saturday’s fans, like their fiction-reading contemporaries, have let their tastes deteriorate to where only what is at first obvious is pleasant to them. Hard to say – but it should be just the thing to contemplate on a long drive home from Las Vegas, Jane Austen playing in the background.

This is fabulous stuff. And incidentally, we are of the opinion that Henry Tilney could go a few rounds with some Pet of the Fancy and perhaps pop one in over his guard. Oh, yes.

Slightly more prosaic is an article in the Washington Post about literary-themed bed and breakfasts, including one with a Jane Austen room.

It took all of five minutes to settle into the Jane Austen Room. It is a homebody’s nest: welcoming queen-size bed, reading chair with lamp, and a stereo, made to look like a Victrola, for listening to recorded readings from “Pride and Prejudice.” Flopping from one comfortable perch to another, book in hand, I was at home.

Sounds lovely! But then…

Elizabeth Alexander, manager and co-owner, re-tooled this 116-year-old Queen Anne house into a bed-and-breakfast for book lovers. A different literary star inspired each of the three guest rooms. The Langston Hughes Room is decorated with a portrait of the famed poet, an LC Smith typewriter and other period pieces from the Harlem Renaissance, Hughes’s heyday. The Robert Louis Stevenson Room is filled with works by the author, paintings of seaside settings he favored and other nautical touches. And the Jane Austen Room exudes a Victorian aura.

D’OH! They would have been better off with the nautical touches.

From Desk Incomprehensible, we have a blog entry from the Orlando Sentinel blog called Shakespeare’s Coffee (great name) about upcoming books that should fly off the shelves.

1. Abundance: A Novel of Marie Antoinette by Sena Jeter Naslund (Morrow): Explore the lush, world of pre-revolution France through a detailed portrait of its most notorious queen. Richly researched, Naslund offers a humanizing characterization of a young woman born to wealth and accepting of her role as a tool for political maneuvering. With Sofia Coppala’s new Marie Antoinette film coming soon, Marie is going to be the new Jane Austen literary darling for a while. This book looks like the best of the crop.

Huh? We guess she means “the new literary darling, like Jane Austen was last year.” HA! Little does she know. ;-)

Lastly in our Pantheon of Allusion, we have an article in the Herald about why people torture themselves reading unpleasant memoirs such as James Frey’s.

One would-be writer was told by an agent that the memoir market was “massively crowded”, to the extent that “it’s really only the things that leap off the page and grab me by the throat that I can take on … the kind of thing readers expect from openings like A Million Little Pieces, for instance”.

(Frey’s opening line is: “My four front teeth are gone, I have a hole in my cheek, my nose is broken and my eyes are swollen nearly shut.” Jane Austen eat your heart out.)

That just made us laugh, and in a good way! We are connoisseurs of fine snark here at AustenBlog.

PERSUASION 2007 and MANSFIELD PARK 2007 filming news

Filed under: Mansfield Park 2007, Northanger Abbey 2007, Persuasion 2007 — Mags @ 12:59 am

An article about Granada International’s distribution of MANSFIELD PARK 2007 (yawn…tell us WHO IS IN THE BALLY THING already, willya?) contains a single interesting tidbit: filming starts this month.

We had a bit of a nap and are feeling perky, so we beg our Gentle Readers’ indulgence whilst we engage in a bit of wild speculation. (Please note: WILD SPECULATION. As in UNCONFIRMED BY ANYONE IN AN OFFICIAL POSITION OF ANY KIND. As in THE EDITRIX MADE IT UP TO AMUSE HERSELF. End Disclaimers for the Dull Elves.)

NA2007 started filming first, correct? P2007 began a little later, and MP2007 will begin a bit later yet. (And whatever happened to S&S2007? Not to mention MISS AUSTEN REGRETS?) Let us then assume that the airing order of the films will be: NA, P, MP.

And we could totally be talking out of our netherfield. Here endeth the Made Up Bits.

Also, Alert Janeite Arwen posted in comments that Hayley Atwell’s online CV states that she is indeed playing Mary Crawford. We would LOVE to know about other cast members (hint, hint, producers!).

Alert Janeite Maisy wrote to tell us that a Bath resident posted on the C19 forum that she received a notice from Quite Persuasive Films that PERSUASION 2007 will be filming along the Royal Crescent on October 5. (Ahoy Bath Residents! Two words: Camera Phone! Four words: Undying Gratitude of Editrix! Just saying!)

The poster said that the notice also contained the following, which Maisy kindly copied and sent to us:

You may be aware that a good proportion of the book is set in Bath, and the Producers and the Director want to show Bath in all its glory. We are in the process of arranging filming in the Pump Rooms, Assembly Rooms and other private locations.

Now THAT’S how you get the Janeites on board, Gentle Readers. Well done, Quite Persuasive Films! Well done, indeed!

If we hadn’t missed Talk Like a Pirate Day, we would say “Avast, ye scurvy dogs of Northanger, and prepare to be boarded and sailed to Bath! Yes, we know it’s inland! This is a metaphor, savvy? ARRRRRGH!”

17 September 2006

More cast members posted for Persuasion 2007

Filed under: Persuasion 2007 — Mags @ 10:41 pm

Alert Janeite and Internet Hound SylviaM wrote to tell us that the cast list for PERSUASION 2007 at IMDB.com has been expanded. We should note that IMDB is not always correct and these roles are unconfirmed, but we have no conflicting data and have no reason to disbelieve this list. Along with the previously announced cast members (Sally Hawkins as Anne Elliot, Rupert Penry-Jones as Captain Wentworth, and Anthony Head as Sir Walter Elliot), the following parts are listed (and thanks to SylviaM for providing most of the photo links!) (more…)

Novelist Jane Hamilton: Friend of Jane

Filed under: F.O.J. (Friends of Jane) — Mags @ 10:14 pm

The Chicago Sun-Times has a profile on Jane Hamilton, author of The Book of Ruth and The Map of the World, in which she mentions that she enjoys Jane Austen’s work.

With little to do at night, (Must be nice! –Ed.) Hamilton reads a book a week. Among her favorite authors are Henry James, Alice Walker, Jane Austen, Alice Munro, Louis Moore, John Updike and John Cheever.

 

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