Books · Jane Austen · News · Rare Books

Austen on the Block

Auction picture - P&P 62309

314. [AUSTEN, Jane (1775-1817).] Pride and Prejudice: a Novel in Three Volumes. London: T. Egerton, 1813. 3 volumes, 12mo. Half-titles. Contemporary dark brown sprinkled calf, brown endpapers, gilt volume numbers to spine, green morocco gilt lettering pieces to style, with “Charleton” gilt-stamped to upper cover; half morocco folding case. Condition: intermittent foxing; rebacked preserving original spines, a little wear to extremities, exposure to several corners, renewed lettering labels. Provenance: Frida Best (bookplate); Susan Carnegie? with intriguing provenance of an early feminist author.

It is tempting to identify the ownership stamp with Charleton House, Montrose, the home, from her marriage in 1769 until her death in 1821 of the feminist writer and philanthropist Susan Carnegie: “…she learned to challenge the idea that women were intellectually less able than men, choosing instead to explain discrepancies in terms of women’s educational opportunities and their general treatment in a patriarchal society. Certainly in her correspondence Susan was fearless in drawing attention to a lack of respect or of rudeness on the part of male writers. Prior to her marriage to George Carnegie of Pitarrow (1726-1799), she acknowledged her future husband’s right to command her, but hoped ‘that he never will have [the] occasion or inclination to exercise it’. (Oxford DNB). On her death the estate passed to her grandson George Carnegie Fullerton, poet and sportsman. His extravagances resulted his sale of the three Ayrshire properties, and another other volume with this ownership stamp, a copy of Charles Emmanuel de Warnery’s Remarks on Cavalry, 1798, sold at Bonham’s in 2003.
First edition. Gilson 3; Grolier Hundred 69; Keynes 3; Sadleir 62b.

est. $50,000 – $70,000

[from the Bloomsbury Auctions Catalogue.  “Fine Books & Manuscripts, Literature and Americana” –  New York,  Sale June 23, 2009.  See the Bloomsbury website for more information on the sale.]

Jane Austen · News

On the Air and in your Inbox ~ All Things Austen

                                                                                                                                     penguin_logoPenguin.com has just announced a new program of  “Classics on Air” – the first program [and rightfully so!] is on “Why We Love Jane Austen” with Juliette Wells*, Alan Walker, and Stephen Morrison: listen in for this 30 minute episode…

 

 

Elda Rotor of Penguin Classics interviews Jane Austen scholar Juliette Wells about Austenmania, what it means to be a Janeite, etiquette in Austen’s time, and Pride and Prejudice and Zombies. Alan Walker, head of academic marketing, introduces listeners to Excellent Women by Barbara Pym on “Reading the Classics from A to Z.” And Stephen Morrison, associate publisher and editor in chief of Penguin Books, offers up the opening to Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice in his segment, “First Pages.”

 

jane austen centre logo

Also today, the Jane Austen Newsletter appeared in my email box, always a happy occurrence:  news items include an article on Sandy Lerner and the Chawton House Library; Jane Austen’s prayers by Linore Rose Birkard; Persuasion, the Twitter version; the National Gallery of Victoria exhibit of fashion during Jane Austen’s lifetime; a quiz on Austen manners; a reminder to vote in the Regency World Awards by June 30th; a follow-up on the production of the movie “Jane Austen Handheld“; and yet another article on the new book by Andrew Norman on Austen’s unrequited love…

You can sign up for the Centre’s monthly email newsletter here.

*Juliette Wells of Manhattanville College will be speaking at the 2009 JASNA AGM on “The Closeness of Sisters: Pride & Prejudice’s Influence on How We Imagine Jane and Cassandra.”

Books · Jane Austen · Literature · News

Silksoundbooks ~ Audiobooks read by your favorite actors

 I stumbled upon this yesterday – Silksoundbooks.com, an audiobooks website with some of your favorite actors reading their favorite classics:

silksoundbooks persuasion

Silksoundbooks is a collaboration of English and American actors who came together and decided to record their favourite literature for you to enjoy. Headed by Bill Nighy (Pirates of the Caribbean / Love Actually / Underworld), many of the artists involved believe so much in the project, that they have waived performance fees in favour of taking shares in the company.

Unlike some audio book download websites, we record all our audio books in the leading recording studios in London and New York, with some of the most experienced directors from the worlds of radio, TV & film…… we are sure you will hear the difference!

We started this project with one simple aim – to deliver great quality audio books to you at great value – Just $14.95 each! Enjoy!

[from the website]

Check out the website at Silksoundbooks.com and see the catalogue of 64 books currently available, all are unabridged and exclusive to this project. Here is a sampling of books and the readers [but alas! no Richard Armitage, yet …  can we petition for him?!]  Part of the delight is to find a good number of actors / actresses related to Jane Austen films in some way, and two of Austen’s novels:

  • Jane Austen.  Persuasion, read by Olivia Williams
  • Jane Austen.  Northanger Abbey, read by Lynn Redgrave
  • Elizabeth Gaskell.  My Lady Ludlow, read by Susannah York
  • Henry James.  Washington Square, read by Jennifer Ehle 
  • Emily Bronte.  Wuthering Heights, read by Juliet Stevenson
  • Charlotte Bronte.  Jane Eyre, read by Emily Woof
  • Fanny Burney.  Evelina, read by Finty Williams, Judi Dench and Geoffrey Palmer
  • Mary Shelley.  Frankenstein, read by Derek Jacobi
  • Joseph Conrad.  Heart of Darkness, read by Toby Stephens
  • Gustave Flaubert.  Madame Bovary, read by Julie Christie
  • Henry James.  The Aspern Papers, read by Jeremy Northam
  • Henry Fielding.  Joseph Andrews, read by Rufus Sewell
  • George Eliot.  Mill on the Floss, read by Fiona Shaw
  • Hans Christian Andersen.  The Snow Queen and other Fairy Stories, read by Greta Scacchi
  • Thomas Hughes.  Tom Brown’s Schooldays, read by Hugh Bonneville

And this is just a short listing!  Visit the website and experience this feast – I have already downloaded Washington Square read by Jennifer Ehle [a.k.a. Elizabeth Bennet!] to my ipod – it is easy to do [you will need a current version of Java] and quite wonderful listening! 

silksoundbooks washington square

Further reading:  an article in The Guardian when the site was first launched; and another at Timeout.com

Books · Jane Austen · News · Regency England · Social Life & Customs

New Release ~ “Behind Closed Doors: At Home in Georgian England”

Just a heads-up on this book to be released October 12, 2009: 

Behind Closed Doors: at Home in Georgian England, by Amanda Vickery.  Yale University Press, 2009. [can be pre-ordered for $45.00]

Here is what the Yale University Press website has to say:

In this brilliant new work, Amanda Vickery unlocks the homes of Georgian England to examine the lives of the people who lived there. Writing with her customary wit and verve, she introduces us to men and women from all walks of life: gentlewoman Anne Dormer in her stately Oxfordshire mansion, bachelor clerk and future novelist Anthony Trollope in his dreary London lodgings, genteel spinsters keeping up appearances in two rooms with yellow wallpaper, servants with only a locking box to call their own.

 

Vickery makes ingenious use of upholsterer’s ledgers, burglary trials, and other unusual sources to reveal the roles of house and home in economic survival, social success, and political representation during the long eighteenth century. Through the spread of formal visiting, the proliferation of affordable ornamental furnishings, the commercial celebration of feminine artistry at home, and the currency of the language of taste, even modest homes turned into arenas of social campaign and exhibition.

   

Amanda Vickery is reader in history, Royal Holloway University of London, and the author of The Gentleman’s Daughter: Women’s Lives in Georgian England, which won the Whitfield, Wolfson, and Longman-History Today prizes. She is also the co-editor, with John Styles, of Gender, Taste and Material Culture in Britain and North America, 1700–1830.

… a definite addition to your want list – and if you don’t already have it, you must also add Vickery’s previous work …

book cover - gentleman's daughter

The Gentleman’s Daughter: Women’s Lives in Georgian England [Yale University Press, 1998; softbound edition, 2003] is already on my toppling TBR pile(s).  Here are a few [of the many] reviews of this earlier work, the winner of several history/ literary awards:

Books · Jane Austen · News

“Deck the Halls”… with Zombies??

Now it has all gone over the top, or perhaps I have been secretly transported to another planet? or landed in a Jane Austen time-travel spin-off into a zombie-controlled society?

This has nothing to do with Jane Austen, so pardon the aside – other than the Pride & Prejudice and Zombies book is getting more press than the original ever could hope for.  But I today saw release news on the following book by Michael P. Spradlin, due out in late October 2009, just in time for the holidays – I am speechless to be quite honest – any thoughts out there??

 

Zombie Christmas carols

“]Zombie_1 christmas carols
Illustration by Jeff Weigel from the book

[though I can’t help but think that Dickens would love this ~ zombies in chains and all that!]

Books · Jane Austen · News

“Holy Austen, Batman!” Pride & Prejudice #3

Please see the post below for information on our JASNA-Vermont June 7th event on Austen & Fashion

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Marvel P&P #3

The third issue of the Marvel Comic Pride & Prejudice will be released on June 10, 2009.  Visit Comic Book Resources for a preview [click on the cover and continue through 7 pages of text] ~ a must-have for your P&P collection!

Marvel comic P&P #3 page 6

[from Comic Book Resources.com]

Posted By Janeite Deb

Jane Austen · Jane Austen Circle · News

Jane’s ‘Dear Dr. Johnson’*

I direct you to my Bygone Books Blog for a short post on Samuel Johnson with news of an exhibit at the Huntington Library…

samjohnson_banner

[* from Letter 50, to Cassandra Austen.  Le Faye edition, p. 121]

Books · Jane Austen · News

Maya Slater’s ‘The Private Diary of Mr. Darcy’

In my previous very short  review of Mr. Darcy’s Diary by Maya Slater, I make mention that I liked this book more than any of the other what-Mr. Darcy-was-thinking sequels [not that I have read them all.]  The American edition published by Norton is to be released on June 15th [as always, check with your local independent bookseller; and it is now available for pre-order on Amazon, Barnes & Noble, & Borders]

Note that the American title is The Private Diary of Mr. Darcy [so as not perhaps to be confused with Amanda Grange’s Mr. Darcy’s Diary published in 2007].

book cover private diary darcy

 

and though perhaps I am quibbling, I do much prefer the British edition cover …  I like my Mr. Darcys to be left to MY imagination…

book cover mr darcy's diary

Here is a Booklist review: [from the Amazon.com site]

It is a truth universally acknowledged that Jane Austen’s Mr. Darcy is one of the most fascinating heroes in literature. Other writers have tried, with varying degrees of success,  to capture some of that old Darcy magic. This time around, we are made privy to Darcy’s secret diary. Though the story presented in the diary entries adheres to the structure of Pride and Prejudice,  the Bennets, even including Elizabeth herself, are very much in the background, while other characters, such as the Bingleys and Darcy’s sister Georgiana, play a larger role. While trying to fend off his growing attachment to Lizzie, “an undersized young lady of doubtful family,” Darcy recounts his day-to-day activities—managing his estate, looking after his sister, engaging in pastimes with his disreputable friend Lord Byron that would make the ladies at Longbourn blush. Austen knockoffs should always be judged on their own merits, and if the Darcy presented here isn’t quite her Darcy, or yours, the book is still a smart and entertaining period piece. –[Mary Ellen Quinn]

Jane Austen · News · Regency England

In My Mailbox ~ ‘Jane Austen’s Regency World’

JARW_39_Cover

 

 

 

The latest issue [ May / June 2009, No. 39] of Jane Austen’s Regency World showed up in my mailbox the other day ~ always a happy occasion ~ and cram-packed with great articles:

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

GUEST ESSAY-   Dr. Andrew Norman on “Jane’s Demon Lover”   [Norman is the author of Jane Austen: an Unrequited Love] – he posits that perhaps the large gap in Austen’s letters to her sister between 1801 and 1804 may be due to Austen and Cassandra having had a falling out … all over a man of course…

HOW DO YOU SOLVE A PROBLEM LIKE MARIA -The Prince and Mrs Fitzherbert – the Royal mistress who refused to keep quiet  [Pictured on the cover of the new issue is Maria Fitzherbert, the not-so-secret wife of the future King George IV]

PRIDE & PREJUDICE & ZOMBIES – Read Joc Bury’s review of the controversial new book

TAKING A PEEK – Regency erotica revealed – is our image of Georgian morals tainted by Victorian values?

JANE’ S JUVENILIA – Publishing Jane’s early writing

BETWEEN THE COVERS – Sue Wilkes on Regency women’s magazines  – were they saucy or sermonizing?

Also in this issue:

  • Vote for the Regency World Awards 
  • The new educational facility at Jane Austen’s House Museum
  •  Maggie Lane looks at openness and reserve in Jane’s writing
  • Tom Lefroy’s enthusiasm for white coats and Tom Jones
  • JASNA’s Susan Allen Ford on “Elegant Extracts”
  • and all the usual informative regular features

For more information or to subscribe, see the Jane Austen Magazine at the Jane Austen Centre website; the Centre’s online newsletter has also just been released  [and also see the magazine’s new website at Jane Austen’s Magazine.co.uk  [though this seems to not be up to date with the latest issue]]

Books · Jane Austen · News

‘Pride & Prejudice’ ~ The Comic Book [part 2]

P&P marvel comic

 

Marvel Comics has made the first issue of their Pride & Prejudice Comic Book available for free viewing online:

See the Marvel Comics site and select “Open” for the complete issue.

 

 

And issue No. 2 has just been released on May 13, 2009 and is available for $3.99.

THE STORY:
Vanity and pride are different things, though the words are often used synonymously. Two-time RITA award winner and multiple RT Reviewer’s Choice winner Nancy Butler and artist Hugo Petrus continue their adaptation of one of the greatest romantic comedies ever told! In this issue: What is UP with that Darcy guy? Dude’s just being a jerk. Forget it, Lizzy, better to spend time with the cute military man that just rode into town…

P&P marvel comic 2

 

P&P marvel comic 2header

“What to Think When he Thinks You’re Thinking”

[Read my previous post on this comic book series here.]