I recently reread the Austenland duology, which put me in the spirit for some of the real thing. I’ve reread a fair amount of Jane Austen in the not too distant past, but it had been a long time for Persuasion, so I decided to listen to the audiobook.
Persuasion follows the story of Anne Elliot, who is seven-and-twenty and unmarried (horror!) In her youth, she loved a sailor, Captain Wentworth, but was persuaded it was an unwise match. She gave him up, but misses him still. Now he’s back in England, a wealthy and successful man, but seems quite cold to her when they begin to move in the same social circles.
This is the main plot thread, but Persuasion is full of family dramas involving Anne’s two rather unlikable sisters, foolish father, and host of in-laws. This book is so very Austen, in that for whole stretches not a great deal happens besides going for walks and having intensive debates about relative ranks in social circles. It’s an interesting social study, and the soothing kind of book where you know nothing very bad is going to happen–despite a life-threatening injury to one character, and financial crises of others.
Anne is a bit of a puzzle to me. She’s unfailingly kind and sensible, with a genius for putting up with other people’s foibles and still liking them (in the case of her sisters, for example). She’s not as witty as Elizabeth Bennet, but also not quite so self-effacing as Fanny Price (who I actually like, though I believe I’m a minority!) I got frustrated with her at times though, I think because I brought modern sensibilities to a very different social setting. Anne encounters Captain Wentworth–misses him–wonders how he feels about her–and does nothing! But I imagine there was nothing much for a well-bred young lady of the time to do, and perhaps Austen’s original readers would have taken that for granted. Continue reading “Book Review: Persuasion by Jane Austen”

I don’t often pick books up at random anymore, but I chanced to see an interesting title at the library the other day. It turned out to be an excellent find: Jane, Unlimited by Kristin Cashore.