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Editorial Content for The Real Jane Austen: A Life in Small Things

Contributors

Reviewer (text)

Michael Magras

Some readers may wonder whether Jane Austen was fully aware of the naughty double entendre she had written when she had Mary Crawford, speaking in MANSFIELD PARK of the many admirals she has known in her lifetime, say, “Of Rears and Vices I saw enough.” But as Paula Byrne points out in THE REAL JANE AUSTEN, her excellent new biography, Austen wasn’t naïve. In 1757, Article 28 of the Royal Navy’s Articles of War made sodomy a hanging offence. Indeed, several soldiers were convicted of the crime (as it was then considered) and summarily executed. The stereotype of Austen is that she was a genteel lady who knew little about the real world. Byrne, however, gives ample evidence that Austen not only was aware of contemporary events but also commented upon those events with a sly and not always genteel wit. The “Rears and Vices” line was no accident.

"One of the many pleasures of Byrne’s book is that she shows us an Austen who was much more than a refined yet fearless chronicler of pre-Victorian manners.... a well-researched and carefully crafted labor of love."

One of the many pleasures of Byrne’s book is that she shows us an Austen who was much more than a refined yet fearless chronicler of pre-Victorian manners. Byrne begins each chapter of her “experimental” biography by describing an object that was meaningful to Jane Austen, or as Byrne puts it, “a real thing, some of them coming directly from [Austen’s] life, others evoked by her novels” in an attempt to “cast new light on Austen’s life and her fictional characters.” The result is as much a history of late 18th- and early 19th-century England as an appreciation of Austen’s artistry.

The first object Byrne describes is an engraving of Lyme Regis, a West Dorset coastal village. Byrne writes that Austen loved the sea and fainted when her father, the rector of Steventon Parsonage, decided in 1800 that the family was moving inland to Bath. Her passion for the seaside appeared often in her novels, albeit briefly, as in PERSUASION, when characters “walk directly down to the sea” after dinner at a Lyme Regis inn. Austen then moves the action of the novel indoors to the home of Captain Harville and gives us detailed descriptions of the retired man’s carpentry work: “He drew, he varnished, he carpentered, he glued; he made toys for the children…” Byrne writes that attention to minute detail is “the essence of Austen’s art, as it is of Dutch realism in painting,” and goes on to argue that handmade children’s toys bring life to Austen’s fiction in the way that pearl earrings and latticed windows enliven the paintings of Vermeer.

One chapter begins with a 1783 silhouette commissioned by Thomas Knight, “a wealthy but childless gentleman from the county of Kent,” to mark his adoption of Jane’s older brother Edward; Austen would borrow this event for MANSFIELD PARK. Another chapter uses a handwoven shawl from Kashmir as a lead-in to the Austen family’s connections to Bengal, including Jane’s cousin Eliza, who married a much older man and gave birth to his child, just as Eliza Williams, the 15-year-old ward to Colonel Christopher Brandon, had John Willoughby’s child in SENSE AND SENSIBILITY. And the “laptop,” a wooden writing box Austen’s father gave her when she was 19, is the device on which Austen wrote the original drafts of PRIDE AND PREJUDICE and NORTHANGER ABBEY.

The most intriguing chapter begins with the three vellum notebooks in which Austen copied her earliest stories and sketches: a parody entitled “History of England,” a “fragmentary story” called “Evelyn,” and an unfinished version of “Catharine, or the Bower,” in which a bright young girl is horrified by the uninformed political opinions of a female friend and an aunt. Readers familiar only with the daintiness of the published novels might not recognize the purveyor of black humor in these pages. The stories include “a child who bites off her mother’s fingers, a jealous heroine who poisons her sisters, numerous elopements,” plus a decidedly un-Austen collection of alcoholics, gamblers, drunks and killers.

One can be forgiven a fascination with minutiae of the lives of celebrated people one likes. If you adore Jane Austen, then you may be thoroughly entranced by a chapter that chronicles her love of shopping and all the stockings, shoes and muslin veils she bought for family and friends. Other readers might be bored. But there’s no denying that THE REAL JANE AUSTEN, which is being released to coincide with the 200th anniversary of PRIDE AND PREJUDICE, is a well-researched and carefully crafted labor of love.

Teaser

In this well-researched and highly entertaining biography, Paula Byrne gives us a Jane Austen many readers may not recognize: a woman who enjoyed black humor and was well aware of the political scene of her time. Byrne uses artifacts from Austen’s life as a starting point for her engaging chapters on the events that shaped Austen’s worldview and inspired some of the most beloved scenes and characters in all of English literature.

Promo

In this well-researched and highly entertaining biography, Paula Byrne gives us a Jane Austen many readers may not recognize: a woman who enjoyed black humor and was well aware of the political scene of her time. Byrne uses artifacts from Austen’s life as a starting point for her engaging chapters on the events that shaped Austen’s worldview and inspired some of the most beloved scenes and characters in all of English literature.

About the Book

THE REAL JANE AUSTEN offers a startlingly original look at the revered writer through a variety of key moments, scenes, and objects in her life and work. Going beyond previous traditional biographies which have traced Austen’s daily life from Steventon to Bath to Chawton to Winchester, Paula Byrne’s portrait --- organized thematically and drawn from the most up-to-date scholarship and unexplored sources --- explores the lives of Austen’s extended family, friends, and acquaintances. Through their absorbing stories, we view Austen on a much wider stage and discover unexpected aspects of her life and character. Byrne transports us to different worlds --- the East Indies and revolutionary Paris --- and different events --- from a high society scandal to a petty case of shoplifting, She follows Austen on her extensive travels, setting her in contexts both global and English, urban and rural, political and historical, social and domestic --- wider perspectives of vital and still under-estimated importance to her creative life.

Literary scholarship has revealed that letters and tokens in Austen’s novel’s often signal key turning points in the unfolding narrative. This groundbreaking biography explores Jane's own story following the same principle. As Byrne reveals, small things in the writer's world --- a scrap of paper, a simple gold chain, an ivory miniature, a bathing machine --- hold significance in her emotional and artistic development. THE REAL JANE AUSTEN introduces us to a woman deeply immersed in the world around her, yet far ahead of her time in her independence and ambition; to an author who was an astute commentator on human nature and the foibles of her own age. Rich and compelling, it is a fresh, insightful, and often surprising portrait of an artist and a vivid evocation of the complex world that shaped her.