bunnyboo: A portrait of Jane Austen (austen)

It’s been a long road… getting from there to here… It’s been a long time… but my time is finally near... Uh, pay no attention to the Enterprise reference. I am one of the few people who loves that opening (and that series), and it always pops into my head when I think ‘It’s been a long time.’ However, it has very little to do with Sense and Sensibility, so let’s move on!

 

Spoilers for a 200-year-old book within... )
bunnyboo: A portrait of Jane Austen (austen)

Sense and Sensibility won the coin flip. It’s been a while since I’ve read Austen, and it’ll be interesting to go through her first published book in comparison to the others I’ve read. Here’s my progress so far.

 

Spoilers for a 200-year-old book within... )
bunnyboo: A portrait of Jane Austen (austen)
Hello! I actually finished Emma on Friday, but I got too lazy to post anything about it.

Spoilers for a 200-year-old book within... )

As for my next book, I'm thinking of a little something that starts with "The" and ends with "Hobbit."
bunnyboo: A portrait of Jane Austen (austen)
Spoilers for a 200-year-old book within... )
bunnyboo: A portrait of Jane Austen (austen)
I finished the first volume! 

Spoilers for a 200-year-old book within... )
bunnyboo: A portrait of Jane Austen (austen)
Woo! I've officially (according to Goodreads) made it 25% through Emma! It was a slow start, but things really picked up when the delicious, delicious relationship drama started.

Spoilers for a 200-year-old book within... )
bunnyboo: A portrait of Jane Austen (austen)
I think Emma is very influenced by Austen's earlier satirical works. In comparison to Northanger Abbey, Emma Woodhouse is somewhat similar to Isabella Thorpe in her guiding and manipulation of a naïve, beautiful acquaintance. Emma's friendship feels more genuine, but the desire to matchmake is still there - Isabella wanted Catherine to marry her brother, after all.

Where they differ is their motives. Isabella's were entirely selfish, a grab at a supposed fortune through their connection with the Morlands, and Emma's are still selfish (born, to me, out of a desire to plan other people's lives because she knows best) but ultimately good-intentioned.

I wonder if this was an intentional return to this character concept - just explored in a different light and more thoroughly. I'll keep an eye out for further comparisons. 
bunnyboo: A portrait of Jane Austen (austen)
Hey, I started reading Emma again! Many apologies to [personal profile] perhin_madoc_gamgins for my laziness. I know we were going to read along together but now I'll have to catch up! :)

Anyways, I think there's some interesting parallels between Emma and her father, Mr. Woodhouse, which might be explored later in the novel. They're both very self-assured (Mr. Woodhouse knows best about "wholesomeness," and Emma is entirely certain about her matchmaking), they both have a selfish nature (Mr. Woodhouse especially, but Emma too - shown through her disregard for others' independent thoughts and actions), they're both narrow-minded and self-centered (Harriet Smith's friends must be unsuited for her; her superior beauty and nature must be wasted in Highbury. Everyone must be feeling the same as Mr. Woodhouse. Change must be the most terrible thing ever.) and they both are controlling and manipulative in a good-natured way (Emma is dead set on her matches, and Mr. Woodhouse does his best to keep everything the same and to his liking). I'm sure someone's done a psychological analysis of these characters. ;)

I think where they differ so far is that Emma takes a more proactive role, while Mr. Woodhouse is a passive influence on others - a benign "oh I wish you did it my way" kind of guy.

At this point, I'm most interested in Harriet Smith's actual character - is she as perfect as Emma thinks she is?


bunnyboo: A portrait of Jane Austen (austen)
I'm not very far in yet, but I've been enjoying Emma. It has this really light-hearted, semi-biographical tone that reminds me of Northanger Abbey - in a good way! I absolutely adore Mr. Woodhouse. He's just a lovable downer at times, an understandingly selfish yet overall benign personality. I can't wait for the shenanigans that will arise from his interactions with Emma.

Speaking of Emma, I'm not quite sure about her yet, but I do love her repartee with Mr. Knightley. It's, for lack of a better word, really cute - teasing without being cruel.
bunnyboo: A portrait of Jane Austen (austen)
 I promised myself I would wait longer between Austen novels, but I couldn't resist when I saw Emma on the shelf at the library. After Persuasion, it's been the most recommended to me of her books. I've never seen Clueless or this year's adaptation of the original (though it does look tempting) so I'll be going into it fresh once I finish up with Dracula.
bunnyboo: A portrait of Jane Austen (austen)
I thoroughly enjoyed Northanger Abbey, partly due to the introduction (which I read after the novel) and notes by Alfred Mac Adam in the Barnes & Noble Classics edition. They were so helpful in understanding the text as you went through the novel and in reflecting on it after you'd finished. I'd recommend it, and I hope I can find some other classic books in the same style. (Looks like the same person also did introductions and notes for some of H.G. Wells' books)

Spoilers for a 200-year-old book within... )

Overall, I would rate this higher than Pride & Prejudice. I'll be taking a little break between Abbey and my next Austen book (mostly because I rely on public libraries), and I'll start reading Jane Eyre next.
Oct. 27th, 2020 08:49 pm

Fic Ideas

bunnyboo: A portrait of Jane Austen (austen)
A letter writing fic where multiple Austen heroines write to each other? An "Agreeable Letters" Club maybe?

Oh! Oh! A Lovecraft-esque horror story?

One last one: a very elderly Lizzie Bennet advising Sherlock Holmes?

I don't know what it is, but reading P&P has really made me want to write again.
bunnyboo: A portrait of Jane Austen (austen)
I've been reading through Northanger Abbey after my first dip into Austen - Pride and Prejudice. Overall, I find it so much easier to read and get into!

Maybe it's because I got over the hurdle that is 19th century English and now have some background on the time period, but I don't feel like I have to stop every couple of paragraphs to "translate" what happened and take a break. I can just pick it up and put it down.

I do like how much more obviously satirical it is, and I feel more of a connection to Catherine than I did to Lizzie Bennet. There's a lot of tongue-in-cheek references to contemporary novels and novel writing in general that sometimes feels too on the nose and meta. But I do like how the author herself is a character of sorts!

I've just gotten to the titular Abbey and really enjoyed the relationship drama between the Morelands, Tilneys, and Thorpes so I hope there's more of that. That's not to say that I don't enjoy the mystery of the Abbey (and those dread inducing pieces of furniture!) but that drama was what I loved about P&P too.

I'm hoping to finish off Abbey in the next few days and move on to Jane Eyre (I've "read" it before as a young reader's edition). Wish me luck!

Tags

Style Credit