Why I Love Jane Austen
A Guest Post by Lana Long
I can sum it up in one
word: escapism. Don’t get me wrong; I
enjoy reading books that deal with hard-hitting issues—issues that are real and
difficult—but for the most part watching one nightly newscast can provide
enough reality to last a few weeks. When it’s late at night, the kids are
sleeping, the dog is sleeping, the husband is sleeping, everything is real
quiet and the day’s activities are slipping into memory, I want to spend my
last waking minutes in a world that’s interesting, satisfying, and nice.
That is why I love Jane
Austen.
The social propriety of
Austen’s works fascinates me. All of Austen’s novels struggle with the
hierarchy of society. In Pride and Prejudice, Darcy fights his
feelings for Elizabeth because she’s not quite up to his social standing. In Persuasion, Anne pines for her lost love
because she allowed her family to convince her that Wentworth isn’t good
enough. In Sense and Sensibility, Willoughby
leaves Marianne when the risk of lost fortune becomes all too real. Willoughby
is not a hero, and in the end Marianne comes to see that love doesn’t need to burn
bright and hot to be real. Society tries to deflate these characters, tries to
ruin their chances at happiness, but they fight through it and come out
stronger, better off, and at peace. All except Willoughby, but that lout
deserves what he gets.
That is why I love Jane
Austen.
The physical world of
Austen’s novels is like a mythical place to me after growing up in the 20th
century western United States. In Austen’s world, people live in houses the
size of apartment buildings. They travel by coach, horseback, or they walk. If
they’re wealthy enough, they summer in the country, winter in London, and vacation
or convalesce in Bath. Servants take care of the family (don’t insinuate to
Mrs. Bennett that she can’t afford a cook), drive them from place to place,
work the land, and take care of the estate. Quaint villages and abbeys sustain
small communities. Without wealth, people become isolated in their communities
due to the time and cost to travel from one place to another. The characters in
Austen’s novels—affluent or not—find ways to traverse this world and allow the
reader to glimpse the countryside, the city and everything in between at the
dawn of the nineteenth century in England.
That is why I love Jane
Austen.
In Austen’s novels, the
family structure and the roles of men and women are so foreign but at the same
time so simple. What would it be like to spend all day sewing, playing the
piano, reading, drawing, or walking in the garden? At the same time the women
find themselves helpless because they aren’t allowed to learn anything besides these
activities. In Sense and Sensibility,
Elinor is powerless to find a way to care for her sisters and mother after her
half-brother inherits her father’s estate and doesn’t care for his sisters as
promised. Emma‘s friends, the Bates, live off kindness and a small living,
because Miss Bates never married and her father is deceased. It’s not
necessarily easier for the men. If you’re not the oldest son your choices are
limited to clergy, military or another profession deemed acceptable by the
gentry. Still, these people fight
against the rules of gender and birth order. They are funny, kind, caring... frustrating
and irritating, but they are always likeable and I cheer their success and
mourn their losses, even Emma. And most of all, there’s a happy ending; our
heroines and their friends find love and peace, and their foes find discomfort
and an unfulfilling future.
That is why I love Jane
Austen.
So why did I choose Mansfield Park for an adaptation out of
all the Austen works? First, it’s a great story. The story is of Fanny Price, a
young girl, coming of age away from her immediate family, who is too poor to
rear all of their offspring. Fanny is required to uphold expectations set upon
her by her caregivers, her wealthy aunt and uncle, but she is never to be
rewarded for living up to those expectations because her true parentage is
lowly. She’s in love with a boy, her best friend, who’s falling in love with
someone else and by all of society’s rules unattainable even if he was
available. The story felt ripe for a modern Young Adult novel.
That is why I love Jane
Austen.
Second, well, I hadn’t seen
Mansfield Park retold. It would take your hands, my hands and twenty of our
closest friends to count the number of times Pride and Prejudice has been adapted. I’m not complaining; I love
it. Other Austen works need the opportunity to be discovered through modern
retellings as well. As a teenager I read Emma
because of the movie Clueless. Jane
Austen’s been gone for almost 200 years and we still read her novels and draw
inspiration from them because they are truly great stories.
***
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Our big launch week prize basket
includes: Journal
with a cover inspired by Jane Austen's Mansfield Park (as is this novel), note cards with an
orchid design (Favor's favorite flower), a hard cover edition of To Kill a Mockingbird (Ethan's favorite book), and a cool
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***
About Lana Long
As a devoted
fan of young adult novels herself, Lana Long is thrilled to be gracing the YA
world with her first novel, Finding Favor.
Many years of daydreaming and several writing classes and workshops have
contributed to the development of Finding
Favor as well as to her inevitable future books. Through her experiences at
Lighthouse Writers in Denver, the Big Sur Writing Workshop in California, and
the Rocky Mountain Fiction Writers Colorado Gold Conference, she has learned an
amazing amount about writing novels.
Although
writing serves as a relaxing process, Lana is also grounded by her family, by
her work as a church treasurer, and by volunteering at her kids’ elementary
school.
She hopes that her
books provide readers with the same entertainment she herself finds in YA
novels. If you enjoy a good coming-of-age story featuring enthralling
characters, check out Finding Favor
and read more of Lana’s thoughts at www.lanalongbooks.com.
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