AustenBlog...she's everywhere

29 June 2008

The “real” Meryton? (Updated)

Filed under: Places — Mags @ 11:57 pm

Steve wrote to ask,

Do you know of anywhere where I might find more information on the theory of Harpenden as Meryton?

We were not even aware that WAS a theory, though it sounds vaguely familiar…anybody else have any idea?

ETA: Steve sent us another e-mail to say that he read of the theory in an essay in Persuasions 27, pp. 234-241. On the way out the door, we grabbed that issue of Persuasions and Deirdre Le Faye’s wonderful book, Jane Austen: The World of Her Novels, which has been referenced in the comments, and read up on the two theories during our train trip.

The essay in Persuasions is by Dr. Kenneth Smith, a lecturer in criminology, so presumably he’s into all that CSI stuff. ;-) He starts it off with a sentence that we think is just perfect to keep in mind:

Pride and Prejudice is a work of fiction, of course, and the Bennet family no more actually lived at Longbourn than Sherlock Holmes lived at 221b Baker Street.

Very true! That being said, Dr. Smith presents some very interesting information. We are told that Meryton is a market town and is about a mile from Longbourn. Another nearby market town is given the usual “Blank” name, and Elizabeth, Jane, and Maria Lucas pass through it on the way from London to their homes. Since they don’t pass through Meryton on the way back from the trip, Dr. Smith posits that Longbourn lies closer to London, likely south or southwest of Meryton. While Jane is vague on the details of the country villages and towns, she places the Gardiners’ London home on Gracechurch Street, which is a real street. Furthermore, when Elizabeth and the Lucases travel to Kent, they break their trip at the Gardiners’ house, which we are told is a trip of twenty-four miles. Harpenden lies twenty-four miles from Gracechurch Street. Also, there is a village about two miles away from Harpenden called Redbourn, which Dr. Smith posits might have inspired the name of Longbourn; though the hamlet of Harpenden Bury, which no longer exists, was probably a better location for Longbourn, being only a mile from Harpenden.

Dr. Smith also points out that a village and great house called Kimpton — the same name as the clerical living held for Wickham — is in about the same location that Netherfield Park would have been if Harpenden were indeed Jane Austen’s inspiration for Meryton.

Steve adds in his note that a family called Bennet owned a small estate in the Harpenden area. (We personally think that Jane got the name Bennet from Fanny Burney’s Cecilia, from which she took the title Pride and Prejudice and, we think, some other inspiration; though it’s quite possible that she chose the name Bennet from the family in the area since it was already in this book that she so enjoyed.)

Deirdre Le Faye adds a further clue in her book, that Longbourn lies within ten miles of the Great North Road, now called the A1000. She wrote that if the towns of Meryton and Blank lie to the west of this road, they are likely Hemel Hempstead and Watford; if they lie to the east, they are likely Hertford and Ware. Later in the book, she says, we can deduce that they lie to the east, so Meryton is Hertford and Blank is Ware. Ms. Le Faye also says that it is unlikely that Jane Austen ever visited Hertfordshire herself, but she had family connections in the area that could have told her about it; and we think it is quite likely that she used maps to keep the geography more or less straight in her head.

While these kind of mental exercises are a lot of geeky fun, we caution our Gentle Readers to not read too much into them. However, we find this sort of thing useful while writing fan fiction, and other writers likely will as well.

R.I.P. Bruce Lester (Mr. Bingley in P&P 1940)

Filed under: Jane in the News — Mags @ 10:03 pm

The Telegraph reported that Bruce Lester, who played Mr. Bingley in the 1940 film adaptation of Pride and Prejudice, has passed away at the age of 96.

Lester showed himself to advantage as Mr Bingley, the hero’s dapper and charming friend in MGM’s Pride and Prejudice (1940), which starred Laurence Olivier and Greer Garson. In later years he recalled how Greer Garson was too old for the lead, and the production was as over-the-top as one would expect from a studio bent on creating dreams over reality: “It was the biggest budget of my career and one that brought with it my own dresser, a bungalow on the lot and lunches where one could spot Greta Garbo, Salvador Dalí, Cary Grant and dozens of Munchkins from The Wizard of Oz.”

AustenBlog’s sincere condolences to his family and friends. Thanks to Alert Janeite Lisa for the link.

Oh dear.

Filed under: Online — Mags @ 10:00 pm

We repeat: oh dear.

26 June 2008

“…in a state of alteration, perhaps of improvement”

Filed under: Places — Mags @ 1:53 am

All those scratch-off tickets that Bridget Jones bought are going to a good cause. Chawton Cottage will receive £500,000 from the Lottery Fund for improvements.

A museum spokesman said: “This time we are aiming to fulfil, and hopefully exceed, 21st century visitor expectation.

“The money will be spent moving all sales out of the house to create an even more homely feel, and, to enable the long awaited reopening of the kitchen.

“A new learning centre will perform the function of the old Granary meeting room and will have the added bonus of some interactive exhibits while demand for an audio/visual facility will also be realised.” The Heritage Lottery Fund award comes as the museum prepares to mark next year’s bicentenary of Jane Austen’s arrival in Chawton in 1809.

We can’t wait to see the improvements!

Anne Sharp’s presentation copy of Emma sells for £180,000 - updated

Filed under: Jane in the News, Jane's Novels — Mags @ 1:45 am

We know a lot of our Gentle Readers are waiting breathlessly for this news, so we picked up our jaw off the table as soon as we received it and made haste to blog.

Reuters reports that the presentation copy of Emma once owned by Jane Austen’s friend, governess Anne Sharp, has sold at auction for the record-setting price of £180,000, or approximately $353,500.

The book, one of 12 presentation copies, was given by Austen to her friend Anne Sharp, who had been governess to the children of Austen’s brother Edward.

The three-volume set of “Emma” had been expected to fetch between 50,000 and 70,000 pounds.

“The family are delighted with the price fetched today.

We’ll bet! More later, we’re sure!

ETA: In comments, Alert Janeite Boris pointed us to an article at the BBC site that reveals (sort of) the identity of the seller and how the book came into their possession.

The British vendor, who wants to remain anonymous, is descended from a family that married into the family of Richard Withers, who was left property belonging to Ms Sharp when she died.

So it’s a family heirloom of sorts. Also there is a little bit of context for the sale:

In March, Bonhams sold a rare, inscribed first edition of JRR Tolkien’s The Hobbit for a world record-breaking £60,000.

And in November last year, it sold a first edition of Emily Bronte’s Wuthering Heights for £114,000.

The Guardian and The Daily Mail have articles about the auction as well.

The candidate builds her platform

Filed under: Janeites Run Amok, Online — Mags @ 1:41 am

The campaign continues!

We’re the Editrix and we approve this message.

Songs and Music of Jane Austen CD set available at BBC America Shop

Filed under: Jane in the News — Mags @ 1:40 am

Alert Janeite Carola sent us a link to an interesting item at the BBC America Shop — a 2-CD set of music from Jane Austen’s time, some from her own collection!

This meticulously researched set brings you music collected by the Austen family during Jane’s lifetime—including pieces Jane copied by hand—to entertain their guests and themselves.

Cool!

Welcome to readers of the Los Angeles Times Jacket Copy Blog

Filed under: Jane in the News — Mags @ 1:39 am

Carolyn Kellogg linked to AustenBlog yesterday from the Los Angeles TimesJacket Copy blog in a post about the mourning locked auctioned last week. We are still v. v. curious to know who bought not only the locket but the first edition of S&S and the presentation copy of Emma and–did anyone at all buy the miniature of Tom Lefroy? Nothing on the radar about that one…hmm.

Score one for the wife

Filed under: Jane in the News — Mags @ 1:33 am

From Financial Week:

And we hope you’ll find considerable fuel for thought in our wide-ranging package of stories on everything from building a better corporate 401(k) plan to avoiding IRS scrutiny of tax-deferring variable prepaid forward contracts. Not exactly beach reading, I know. (Semi-embarrassing revelation: The wife will not allow me to bring to the beach this year any book that’s about money. “Unless it’s Jane Austen.”)

Ha!

Camp Jane

Filed under: Jane in the News — Mags @ 1:32 am

Now, this looks like fun: a camp teaching preteen girls about life in the 1800s.

The girls sew a sampler, a reticule as well as make a bonnet and dolls all the while learning about life for a young girl in that time period.

The girls get to learn card games of the period and about gardening with herbs. All of them keep a journal, and there are daily tea parties.

The week ends with a tea party where the campers get to invite one guest to join them.

“This is the best camp I have been to,” Lauren said as she headed back inside the camp workroom.

We want to go to Camp Jane!

23 June 2008

Weekend Bookblogging: Jane Austen Lives Edition

Welcome to another end-of-the-Weekend Bookblogging, in which we discuss Jane Austen’s books and books about and inspired by Jane Austen and her work.

Several Alert Janeites wrote to tell us about a book sold to Ballantine that will probably be published in a year or so called Jane Bites Back.

Liz Scheier at Ballantine won a four-way auction for Michael Thomas Ford’s Jane Bites Back, taking world English rights to three books via Mitchell Waters at Curtis Brown. The novel presents an undead Jane Austen, frustrated by nearly 200 years of writer’s block and 116 rejections of an unpublished novel she finished just before turning into a vampire; she’s becoming increasingly irritated that the rest of the world seems to be getting rich and famous off of her works and her life. The two follow-up books will be derived from the first. Waters said Ford, the author of many books for young readers and adults, is likely to publish this under a pseudonym; pub date still undecided.

Might be fun, might be a total mess. We can’t wait to find out! Thanks to Alert Janeites Lisa, Liz, and Kerri. (Incidentally, we’ve heard about another book that brings Undead Creatures, but not vampyres, into one of Jane Austen’s novels, but are sworn to secrecy for the nonce. More news when we can share it.) And it looks like the author is not the only one with such an idea. (Thanks to Alert Janeite Lisa for that link.)

Amanda Grange is busy writing Henry Tilney’s Diary (which we know will make many of our readers happy) and is blogging the process at the Historical Romance UK blog. The first entry was posted on June 6 and the second on June 21.

Baja Janeite wrote to tell us that the latest number of the Gifted Education Press Quarterly includes an article titled “Jane Austen (1775-1817) and the Sensibility of Giftedness.” We don’t have access to this publication but would love to hear more about it from someone who does.

Alert Janeite Luciana wrote to tell us about a new Portuguese/English bilingual edition of Pride and Prejudice to be released in Brazil. If it works the same way as the similar edition of Persuasion, Orgulho e Preconceito has the story in English on one page and Portuguese on the other. Great for learning English OR Portuguese!

Alert Janeite Liz pointed us to an article in the BBC about the Melissa Nathan Awards for Romantic Comedy that included a quote from Joanna Trollope:

Trollope believes chick lit started far earlier than Bridget Jones, beginning with many women’s ultimate literary heroine - Jane Austen.

“What else was Jane Austen but a writer of romantic comedy?” she asked. “And these days, the best of the genre does measure up to good literature.”

Back there again, are we? Please to not be pigeonholing Jane Austen, kthx.

For all you Web 2.0 types, take part in an online reading group via Twitter. DailyLit, a service that delivers a chapter of a book to users’ e-mail each day, is joining up with Twitter, a microblogging service, to create an online reading community that is reading P&P (and/or two other books if you like) and talking about them both on the DailyLit forums and via Twitter. The reading groups have already started, but you can still join. The Editrix just signed up and will be tweeting her comments. Join us!

The Telegraph has listed a poll of The Top 50 Books of All Time. To Kill A Mockingbird (yay, our favorite non-Jane Austen novel!) came in first, and P&P came in at No. 4.

What Kate’s Reading has posted a review of The Family Fortune, a modern-set retelling of Persuasion, which we liked but never got around to reviewing for some reason, so we’re glad that Kate has!

Alert Janeite Julianne sent us a link that lists Jane Austen as great beach reading. We have to agree (particularly Persuasion and Sanditon).

That’s it for another Weekend Bookblogging. Until next time, Gentle Readers, always remember: Books Are Nice!

Winners announced for JASNA Puget Sound High School Essay Contest

Filed under: Austen Societies and Events — Mags @ 12:58 am

The winners have been announced for JASNA’s Puget Sound Region’s High School Essay Contest, and the winning essays have been posted on the region’s website. Congratulations to the winners and we encourage our Gentle Readers to check out the essays!

Jane Austen Weekends in Vermont

The Governor’s House in Hyde Park, Vermont, will hold four Jane Austen weekends from August 2008 through January 2009.

A leisurely weekend of literary-inspired diversions has something for every Jane Austen devotee. Slip quietly back into Regency England in a beautiful old mansion where Jane herself would feel at home. Take afternoon tea. Listen to Mozart. Bring your needlework. Share your thoughts at a discussion of Persuasion and how the movie stands up to the book. Attend the talk entitled “The Time of Jane Austen”. Test your knowledge of Persuasion and the Regency period and possibly take home a prize. Take a carriage ride. For the gentleman there are riding and fly fishing as well as lots of more modern diversions if a whole weekend of Jane is not his cup of tea. Join every activity or simply indulge yourself quietly all weekend watching the movies. And imagine the interesting conversation with a whole houseful of Jane’s readers under one roof. Dress in whichever century suits you. It’s not Bath, but it is Hyde Park and you’ll love Vermont circa 1800.

It sounds like a pretty good deal! We’d love to hear from anyone who attends.

The Jane Austen Book Club to be released in New Zealand on June 25

Filed under: The Jane Austen Book Club — Mags @ 12:49 am

Gameplanet is listing a release for The Jane Austen Book Club on June 25, and TVNZ is giving away a prize pack that includes the DVD, a copy of the book, and a DVD of S&S–it’s unclear which version, but since the giveaway is sponsored by Sony we’re guessing S&S95. The competition ends July 9, so get your entries in!

18 June 2008

Hair locket and S&S first edition sold at auction

Filed under: Jane in the News — Mags @ 1:52 pm

Alert Janeite Lisa sent us a link to an article about the auction of Jane Austen-related items yesterday. The locket containing a lock of what might be Jane Austen’s hair sold for £4,800 and a first edition of Sense and Sensibility sold for £30,000 after fierce bidding.

The auction was held at Dominic Winter Book Auctions of South Cerney and in spite of the lack of absolute proof (the name of Jane Austen is written in hair within the piece) transatlantic interest and a desire to believe attracted much competitive bidding.

The buyer was Holybourne Rare Books of Alton in Hampshire who bought the lock for an Austen-collecting client.

*coughSandyLernerJKRowlingcough*

(The former being quite likely–an Alton firm? Remember Ms. Lerner has a longterm lease of Chawton Great House. But we stress we are speculating, and joking a little; we can think of several Janeites on both sides of the Atlantic who not only could afford such a piece but would be interested in acquiring it.)

ETA: Oooh, check out this quote from the BBC:

“The truth may never be known and at the end of the day I don’t think it was an expensive gamble for a serious Austen collector used to spending five-figure sums.”

Now we’re REALLY curious as to who bought it! :-D

The previous lot, an excellent original condition set of a first edition of Jane Austen’s first book, Sense and Sensibility, attracted much fiercer competition with the room bidders battling against seven phone lines.

The final hammer price of £30,000 was to a phone bidder against a pre-sale estimate of £10,000-15,000.

Proof of that old Antiques Roadshow maxim: the “worth” of an item is exactly what someone is willing to pay for it on a particular day. But first editions are a dime a dozen (well, we guess judging by the sale price, really 3.6 million pounds a dozen, ha-ha) but most of the public interest of this auction was in the locket.

“If we had been able to prove it conclusively I’m sure there would have been a lot more bidders and a much higher price.”

We wonder if the buyer will go about attempting to test the item? Hmm. (Yes, that is a hint, if said buyer reads this blog, and if you do, can we interest you in several dozen copies of The Jane Austen Handbook? Good investment, sure to be a collector’s item one day…)

We also would like to commend Dominic Winter Book Auctions (you can surf around for photos of the locket) for allowing the interest in Jane Austen to inform their marketing efforts related to this piece and not making stuff up to get in the papers. Well played, sir.

P.S. We’re out of town for a couple of days (geek conference) so if you’ve sent us news, we’ll post it soon! We wanted to get up this news as there was so much interest in the auction.

15 June 2008

Lefroygate: the Janeites respond

Filed under: Jane in the News — Mags @ 11:44 am

The revolution has begun, Gentle Readers!

Although Lefroy became a successful lawyer in Ireland, he was a conservative reactionary who staunchly opposed Catholic emancipation and almost every other proposal to improve the lot of the Irish people in the first half of the 19th century. In short, he was not a suitable match for someone of Miss Austen’s intelligence, sense of humour, and independence of spirit.

A life spent shackled to Mr Lefroy might well have denied us the pleasure of Emma Woodhouse, Fanny Price and Anne Elliot.

So there!

Sudsing up down under

Filed under: Jane in the News, Screen — Mags @ 11:43 am

The Age addresses the age-old question: what is it with that Jane Austen anyway? And unlike most articles of this type, actually comes up with an answer of sorts.

But the stories themselves still feel modern. The things that distinguished Austen in her own lifetime and separated her from her peers - the lack of hysteria, the sly satire, the quotidian detail, and a succession of heroines as smart as they’re feisty - make it easy for a 21st-century audience to connect - as does Austen’s firm entrenchment in the middle-class (at least in today’s terms), in both her life and work.

It’s a social strata that’s easy to identify with. We know that if Austen’s families were around today, they’d be living in Balwyn, driving Japanese four-wheel-drives, buying frocks at David Lawrence and holidaying in Noosa.

Austen’s world was ordinary. And we like that.

The cultural references are a bit lost on us, but we agree with the general drift: as we’ve said many times, on this blog and in interviews, etc., Jane Austen wrote about people, and while societies change, people, in their essence, do not.

What also becomes clear, though - especially watching several stories in succession, as the ABC has invited us to do - is that, stripped of much of the nuance of Austen’s prose, the bedrock of the stories is pure soap. And that, surely, must be a powerful contributing factor to her enduring popularity. (Indeed, the devotion of some Austen fans is awfully like that of soap fans, who discuss characters as if they’re real people and dissect plot developments with the enthusiasm and attention to detail of senior military strategists.)

She says that like it’s a bad thing.

Even Austen’s masterwork, Pride and Prejudice, is riddled with similar tricks and happy accidents. Otherwise unconnected characters turn out to be related or well-acquainted; impromptu trips enable key encounters to occur; unlikely emergencies allow true natures to be revealed, all just in the nick of time. If any writer of contemporary TV drama tried tricks like that, they’d be howled down.

Yeah, they would be accused of imitating Jane Austen. ;-)

It was, of course, something to which Austen was fully alive. In Northanger Abbey, screening tonight, she plays with the whole idea of the absurdity of fiction, to considerable comic effect. But not many of the television adaptations of Austen bring the original funny. Two hundred years (and the varying quality of the scripts) has sapped a lot of the gags and what we’re really left with is a succession of sudsy romances - albeit delightful ones - elevated to art by the Austen brand.

And therein lies our dissatisfaction with so many film adaptations of Jane Austen’s work.

13 June 2008

Jane Austen Regency Week in Alton and Chawton

Filed under: Austen Societies and Events — Mags @ 8:05 am

Now this is what we call a party! The towns of Alton and Chawton in Hampshire–Jane Austen, of course, lived in Chawton and it is the location of the Jane Austen’s House Museum–are holding a Jane Austen Regency Week from June 21 through 29, 2008.

Events include lectures, plays, a Regency Supper, a fashion show and craft market, an Open Day at Chawton House (which is not really open to the public on a regular basis), and all kinds of activities. There is a map to follow the “Jane Austen Trail” through Alton and Chawton, a walk that Jane herself made regularly. We’re sending Dorothy to plunder the sofa cushions at AustenBlog World Headquarters once again, just in case we can dig up enough for plane fare. This sounds like a great time for Janeites.

Friday Bookblogging: All Jane Edition

Greetings, Gentle Readers! It’s time for another review of news items and posts about Jane Austen’s work to start off your weekend.

Scotland’s National Library is opening an exhibition featuring items from the John Murray Archive related to Jane Austen.

The display, which will open next week, includes a sales book showing that the second edition of Mansfield Park sold only 36 copies.

Oh dear! But we’re sure the exhibition will be fascinating. The exhibition is open every day; Monday-Friday from 10 a.m. until 8 p.m., Saturday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., and Sunday from 2 to 5 p.m.

If you’ve ever wanted to study Jane Austen’s work at Oxford but can’t afford plane fare, here’s your chance, sort of. Oxford University will present an online course on Jane Austen’s work from September through December 2008.

Many readers enjoy Austen’s novels but cannot define the qualities that make them so special and enduring. This course will help you to analyse Austen’s style and techniques, and give you a greater knowledge of the novels’ context, which will enhance your understanding and enjoyment of reading them.

Sounds like a great course, but a bit spendy for those of us outside the EU.

Writer’s Block discusses reading Jane Austen to improve your writing.

But what Austen did, that many writers, if not most, can and could not, was to not only encapsulate the spirit of the age, but she also captured the spirit of the human condition. Underneath all the 18th Century finery lays a picture stripped bare of all the outer pretension. There are just people: sensible people, vain people, silly people, innocent people, conflicted people, horrible people…and the list goes on. The outer aspects/attributes of them all might change, but the inner drives and motivations are remarkably unchanged from age to age. Pick up any Austen story, and you’ll find the emotions you felt when you were this age, or the exact sketch of your best friend or worst enemy at that age.

So true! And we say that all the time. Fashions change, societies change, but people do not, and Jane Austen wrote about people.

And a couple of fun blog posts to round off this week’s Bookblogging. First, Xantippe posts about the Amazing Jane Austen Diet. No, not white soup and negus, but listening to audiobooks of Jane Austen’s novels while on the treadmill! What a great idea! And the Baklava Shed Coalition tells us that Jane Austen is selling off her plants. She’s selling off her plants kind of like how That Lefroy Boy is Mr. Darcy, but at least he admits he’s delivering his content with a wink!

That’s it for this week’s Friday Bookblogging. Until next time, Gentle Readers, remember: Books Are Nice!

Dorothy: send a footman to Bedlam to make sure they have our reservation

Filed under: Northanger Abbey 2007 — Mags @ 7:39 am

The Australian Jane Austen Season continues this week with Northanger Abbey 07. And look! It’s lush with straining bosoms!

Eighteenth-century Bath reveals itself to be a city of simmering depravity and barely concealed lust in this rollicking adaptation of Jane Austen’s 1798 novel. Young men in taut breeches smirk and stare suggestively at the story’s innocent heroine, Catherine Morland, as she and her coquettish new friend, Isabella Thorpe, walk the streets and attend lively balls.

The spork is calling us, Gentle Readers.

 

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