In January of 2013, I joined a book group. The first book selected was
EMMA, by Jane Austen, which I
had never read. Beginning the book, I was surprised by how unlikable I found the
title character.
That book group didnβt work out, but, despite my rough start with
EMMA, Iβd been unceremoniously
drawn back into the world of Jane Austen. The richness of her language, her
distinctive voice, her modern appealβall had rekindled an old fire in my heart. Not
having read her entire oeuvre, I thought I might do so in the rest of 2013. Which
didnβt happen.
What I needed was accountability. So early in 2014, I went on MeetUp, punched in my
credit card number, and started my group. To my surprise, people joined! Over the
course of the year, we read all her completed novels in publication order and met in
a little cafΓ© to discuss them. Not surprisingly,
PRIDE AND PREJUDICE and
PERSUASION were big hits. There wasnβt a huge amount of agreement or
disagreement among the group members, but there were some unexpected revelations.
For one member, Jane Austen didnβt hold up at all. Other people, like I had
originally, found Emmaβs character extremely difficult to take. For most,
PERSUASION ended up being far
and away their favorite.
Despite my original dislike,
EMMA had become my favorite. I absolutely adore the rest of themβ
except that oddball,
NORTHANGER
ABBEY, which, to my mind, doesnβt deliver on the promise of a gothic premise.
(And which doesnβt have a very satisfying pairing.) I can even find some things to
enjoy and sustain my interest in
MANSFIELD PARK.
There are two basic reasons why
EMMA stands out for me. One because itβs so incredibly long and there
is so much going on within the pages. I think I could read (or listen to) this book
twice a year, every year for the rest of my life and find something new on every
read. Two because while a certain amount of pride and immaturity rule Emmaβs
character throughout most of the book, I believe what she does, she does out of
love. Sheβs not malicious. Now, I donβt believe intention is everything. Results and
outcome matter, too.
Isnβt that funny how sometimes weβre put off by the very thing that in the end
becomes our favorite? Many, many bestselling romances play with this theme with the
Enemies to Lovers trope. Jane Austen herself used it in
PRIDE AND PREJUDICEβone of the
most iconic love stories of all time. There have been so many times in my life where
I havenβt wanted to try something. Iβve been adamantβabsolutely certain that I wonβt
like it. Then, somehow (and by somehow I mean usually my husband cajoles me), I end
up trying it. And liking it. Iβve learned to be more open minded, to try instead of
making assumptions. Many times Iβve been surprised! Delightfully so.
I encourage you to expand your horizon this week. Find something you wouldnβt
normally do that you also havenβt done. Then give it an honest shot! Doesnβt have to
be big. Doesnβt have to get you outside of your comfort zone, though bonus points if
it does. Enjoy!
If youβre an Austen fan, hop onto Twitter or Facebook and let me know which book is
your favorite and why. Iβm on the hunt for good Austen FanFic, too, so please chime
in which Austen sequels or spinoffs were your favorite.
DEATH COMES TO PEMBERLEY wasnβt
my cuppa, but I fell head over heals for
LONGBOURN by Jo Baker. Chime in! Find me @Ingrid_Writer. Then join me
on Monday, March 21
st, when I celebrate my book release with twenty-one
days of Austen. #21DaysofAusten. In May, join me again for Austen Confessions.
#AustenConfessions
Ingrid Hahn is a failed administrative assistant with a B.A. in Art History. Her
love of reading has turned her mortgage payment into a book storage fee, which makes
her the friend who you never want to ask you for help moving. Though originally from
Seattle, she now lives in the metropolitan DC area with her ship-nerd husband, small
son, and four opinionated cats. When she is not reading or writing, she loves
knitting, theater, nature walks, travel, history, and is a hopelessly devoted fan of
Jane Austen.
England, 1811.
When John Merrick, the Earl of Corbeau, is caught in
a locked storeroom with Lady Grace, he has but one choiceβmarry her. He cannot bear
to tarnish any womanβs reputation, least of all Lady Graceβs.
Lady Grace
Landon will do anything to help her mother and sisters, crushed and impoverished by
her fatherβs disgrace. But throwing herself into the arms of her dearest friendβs
older brother to trap him in marriage? Never.
Corbeau needs to prove that he
loves her, despite her fatherβs misdeeds. After years of being an object of scorn,
not even falling in love with Corbeau alters Lady Graceβs determination to not bring
her disrepute upon another. However, if they donβt realize that the greatest honor
is love given freely without regard to societyβs censure, they stand to lose far
more than they ever imagined.
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