"Outside a dog a book is man's best friend, inside a dog it is too dark to read!" -Groucho Marx========="The person, be it gentleman or lady, who has not pleasure in a good novel, must be intolerably stupid." -Jane Austen========="I don’t believe in the kind of magic in my books. But I do believe something very magical can happen when you read a good book."-JK Rowling========"I spend a lot of time reading." -Bill Gates=========“Ahhh. Bed, book, kitten, sandwich. All one needed in life, really.” -Jacqueline Kelly=========

Saturday, November 29, 2025

2025 Novella November -- It's a Wrap


2025 Novellas in November is drawing to a close. I've ranked the novellas and short nonfiction I read this year for you.


1. Stay True: a Memoir by Hua Hsu -- 2022 short nonfiction (208 pages), my rating - 5 stars.
When Stay True won the inaugural Pulitzer Prize for Memoir or Autobiography in 2023 the committee had this to say about their selection:
Determined to hold on to all that was left of one of his closest friends—his memories—Hua turned to writing. Stay True is the book he’s been working on ever since. A coming-of-age story that details both the ordinary and extraordinary, Stay True is a bracing memoir about growing up, and about moving through the world in search of meaning and belonging (Pulitzer).

2. One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich by Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn -- 1962 classic novella (182 pages), my rating 4.5 stars.
The story is set in a Soviet labor camp in the early 1950s and features one day in the life of a prisoner Ivan Denisovich Shukhov. Shukhov is sentenced to ten years of hard labor in a gulag. Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn started writing One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich in 1957 after spending nine years in a Russian gulag himself.  In 1962 this story was cleared for publication. It was the first thing published about the Soviet gulags. In 1970 Solzhenitsyn won the Nobel Prize for literature. Instead of being proud of their citizen, USSR had his citizenship stripped and exiled him from his motherland. At the same time all of his books and writings were removed from libraries across Russia. Not until Gorbachev came into power in the 1980s, did his books once again circulate freely.  "The Soviet Union was destroyed by information – and this wave started from Solzhenitsyn's One Day" (Wiki). 
3. Teacher of Nomad Land: A World War II Story by Daniel Nayeri -- 2025 MG novella (192 pages), my rating - 4.5.
This guy can write! And here is the thing. He is writing about stuff I know nothing about, but should. Iranian-born, he brings stories forward that folks in the west know little about. For example, in Teacher of Nomad Land I learned that Iran was a point of interest during WWII because of its oil. The allies didn't want the Nazi's to gain a foothold there because the oil would just enhance their military prowess. Also, 1,000 Jewish children from Poland were given protection in Iran and eventually transported to Palestine. They were called The Tehran Children.

4. The Art Thief : A True Story of Love, Crime, and a Dangerous Obsession by Michael Finkel -- 2023 short nonfiction (223 pages), my rating - 4.5 stars.
The Art Thief is a well-researched tale of a psychologically complicated, misguided, narcissistic art lover who steals artifacts from museums, galleries, and castles throughout France, Germany, Belgium, and Switzerland over several years. He steals the art not for financial gain but because he loves the art and wants to have it to look at and to touch. Over the years he and his girlfriend stole over 200 pieces, worth millions, possibly billions. Spoiler alert: to write a book about an art thief, they have to get caught!

5. One Day, Everyone Will Have Always Been Against This by Omar El Akkad -- 2025 short nonfiction (208 pages), my rating - 4 stars.
This National Book Award recipient has much to digest within its pages. Clearly the author is frustrated beyond words at the world's seeming disregard for the plight of the people in Gaza. But he places the lion's share of blame on progressives and left-leaning people who give lip service to being horrified by the atrocities in Gaza at the hands of Israel, yet take no action to go along with their words and objectively support Israel's right to exist and self-defense. 
6. Jane Austen in 41 Objects by Kathryn Sutherland -- 2025 short nonfiction (209 pages), my rating - 4 stars.
Back in October I read a wonderful review of this book by Brona at This Reading Life. She began her review confessing she had dilly-dallied (my words, not hers) writing about the book because she wanted to write something about "e v e r y-s i n g l e-o b j e c t". After reading the book I see why she felt that way. I, too, would love to gush about these 41 objects, some directly and others tangentially, related to Jane Austen. Never fear. I don't have it in me and why should I anyway? After reading this I hope you want to read the book, so you'll find out for yourself.

7. Seascraper by Benjamin Wood -- 2025 novella (176 pages), my rating- 4 stars.
Seascraper is one of the group-read books for this year's 'Novellas in November' challenge. I was pretty excited to read it as I'd noticed it was on the Booker Prize longlist, giving it literary cred. But as I started reading I thought, "oh no, I don't think I can read this if scraping for shrimp is all it is." But when Edgar comes to town, Thomas starts to imagine a different life for himself, the book became much more interesting to me.

8. Theory and Practice by Michelle de Kretser -- 2025 novella (197 pages), my rating - 3.75 stars.
The narrator of the book is a first-generation immigrant from Sri Lanka. She is living in Melbourne and is attending Grad School in English Lit. Her thesis relates to Virginia Woolf, specifically analyzing three of the author's works on feminism and the "generated self." The narrator says that Woolf single-handedly saved her during her teen years. But theory is one thing especially when it comes up against real-life experiences. Calling yourself a feminist is one thing but attending a school where the professors in the department are predominantly male is a whole other thing. As the narrator reads more about Woolf she realizes if she, a Sri Lankan female with golden-brown skin and from a humble background, was to meet the author today, Woolf would dismiss her on either a racial or a classist basis, or both. Theory is one thing. But the practice of that theory is whole other thing.

9. Audition by Katie Kitamura -- 2025 novella (197 pages), my rating - 3.5 stars.
Two people meet for a lunch. She is an accomplished actress. He is young man, young enough to be her son. Who are they to each other? Audition is a story in two parts and those two parts don't seem to be connected. They are just confusingly next to each other but they both can't be true can they? My head swam as I read Audition, trying to make sense of the puzzle I was presented. Confusion reigned and then the book ended. I was desperate to talk in person to anyone else who had read the book.


10. Invisible Cities by Italo Calvino -- 1972 Classic novella (165 pages), my rating - 3.5 stars.
As I listened to the audiobook I was aware that there was structure to the book. There were 55 different cities described by Marco Polo to Kublai Khan as each chapter had a title that seemed to have a repeating pattern. But audiobooks don't allow the eyes to play with patterns needed for understanding. Think of those kid books where the reader gets to choose-your-own-story, making decisions along the way which alter the outcome. This book is just quite a bit more complex than those. The puzzle and the form are just as important as the stories in this one. It is very mathematical and a genius work. However, its genius was lost on me, an audiobook listener. I did appreciate the beauty of the prose and at some point I told myself to quit trying to figure out what was going on and just let the words flow over me.

11. We the Animals by Justin Torres -- 2011 novella (128 pages), my rating - 3 stars.
I'd describe We the Animals as a boy book. It reminded me of a cross between The Clockwork Orange (violence and destruction); Catcher in the Rye (lost/confused boy(s) on the loose in a city); and Lord of the Flies (boys left to their own destructive devices). The three brothers, written in the incantatory royal "we", are growing up almost feral.

12. White Nights by Fyodor Dostoevsky -- 1849 Classic novella/short story (62 pages), my rating - 2 stars.
The story is set in St. Petersburg and opens with the unnamed narrator walking around the city in the summer, dejected and alone. One evening he happens upon a woman who is also alone and he ends up fighting off her would-be attacker. The two strike up a friendship, of sorts, meeting several more nights for conversations where they share their stories of loneliness and woe. The narrator falls in love with the woman but she is promised in marriage to another. 

Honestly, I do not recall how or when I heard about White Nights but what I heard made me want to read it. Reviewers gushed about the beauty of this love story. I had high expectations, which were quickly dashed as soon as I started reading. I love a good love story as much as anyone but it fell flat for me.
It's a wrap! Now I start amassing my list of novellas I want to read in 2026.

What were the favorite novellas or short nonfiction books you read this month?

-Anne

Friday, November 28, 2025

Reviews for Three Novellas: WE THE ANIMALS; SEASCAPER; TEACHER OF NOMAD LAND

I'm wrapping up 2025 Novellas in November by reviewing the last three short novels I've read for the challenge.



We the Animals by Justin Torres
Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2011. 128 pages.

This short novella is set in upstate New York. Three mixed-race boys tear through their childhoods both wild and imaginative. Their parents love each other but often do battle or disappear in a myriad of ways, leaving the three on their own for food or supervision. There is a euphoria to belonging to others like these boys belong to each other. The youngest of the three is unnamed throughout and the narrator of the story. He realizes throughout that he will eventually have to leave this bound as he views the world differently than his brothers. Described as "a coming-of-age story that is sly and punch-in-the-stomach powerful." 

I'd describe We the Animals as a boy book. It reminded me of a cross between The Clockwork Orange (violence and destruction); Catcher in the Rye (lost/confused boy(s) on the loose in a city); and Lord of the Flies (boys left to their own destructive devices). The three brothers, written in the incantatory royal "we", are growing up almost feral. When I checked other ratings and reviews on Goodreads, males rated the book generally higher than female readers (an observation, not scientific) which makes sense to me. I couldn't even begin to relate to these boys and how they kept themselves busy. For example, in one scene the boys sit around the table wearing raincoats and smash tomatoes with a hammer. (The mess!) I appreciated the writing techniques, which were quite unique, and the story under the story about trying to find oneself (LGBTQ) but I still didn't care for it.

This book came to my attention when it was listed on the NYT Best Books of the 21st Century last year. My recommendation, however, is lukewarm with a rating of 3 stars.



Seascraper by Benjamin Wood
Scribner, 2025. 176 pages.

Seascraper is described as a "mesmerizing portrait of a young man hemmed in by his class and the ghosts of his family's past, dreaming of artistic fulfilment." The story is set in Longferry, a fictional coastal town in northwest England. It is based on the author's hometown of Southport. Thomas lives with his single mother on the edge of abject poverty. He dutifully goes to the beach with his loyal, working horse every day to scrape up the few shrimp he can find. He does this work because it is what he was taught to do by his grandfather. But his heart isn't in his work. What he wants to do is write songs and, hopefully, perform them in public some day. When Thomas is hired by a Hollywood director, Edgar, to show him around the beach, he starts to see his life through a different lens. The confidence he gains from his interactions with Edgar creak open the doors to another life for Thomas.

Seascraper is one of the group-read books for this year's Novellas in November challenge. I was pretty excited to read it as I'd noticed it was on the Booker Prize longlist, giving it literary cred. But as I started reading it I thought, oh no, I don't think I can read this if scraping for shrimp is all it is. But when Edgar comes to town, Thomas starts to imagine a different life for himself, the book became much more interesting to me.

In the end Thomas even sings and records a song he writes after having a very real dream about his father. I listened to the audiobook and was treated to the actual song, sung beautifully by the author. Lovely.

My rating, 4 stars.



Teacher of Nomad Land: a World War II Story by Daniel Nayeri
Levine Querido, 2025. 192 pages.

The year is 1941. Though Iran is a neutral country in World War II, both the British and Soviet armies are occupying the land and Nazi spies are lurking about.

Bakak and his little sister, Sana, are recently orphaned. Their father, a teacher among the nomads, was killed accidentally by the military, mistakenly thinking the nomads were the enemy. The two children, trying to devise a plan where they can stay together, decide Babak should to take up his father's old job but first they will have to intercept the nomads as they trek toward winter ground. Bakak straps his father's blackboard on his back and carries the textbooks in his arms that he will need. Sana, more resourceful than her brother, is prepared to forage for food.

After being rejected by the nomads, the siblings need to return to their hometown and hatch a new plan. Along the way the meet a Jewish boy who is hiding from a Nazi Spy. Suddenly all the children are in a race for survival. At one point, hungry and afraid, the children seek the help of a British soldier. Can children from different parts of the world find a way to communicate what they need without a common language?

I'll tell you what. I am a Daniel Nayeri fan. This is my second book I've read by him and both were excellent. Three of his published books have won an award: Everything Sad is Untrue won the Printz Award in 2021; The Many Assassinations of Samit, Seller of Dreams won a Newbery Honor in 2024; and this book won the National Book Award in 2025 for best Young People's Literature. The guy can write! And here is the thing. He is writing about stuff I know nothing about, but should. Iranian-born, he brings stories forward that folks in the west know little about. For example, in Teacher of Nomad Land I learned that Iran was a point of interest during WWII because of its oil. The allies didn't want the Nazi's to gain a foothold there because the oil would just enhance their military prowess. Also, Jewish children from Poland were given protection in Iran and eventually transported to Palestine. They were called The Tehran Children. 

Nayeri writes for children. This book's audience is for those kids in middle grades, 5-8. I initially thought the book was targeted at young adults until I started reading, then I realized it was aiming for a younger set. That explains the relative quickness of the action along the way. My husband listened to the audiobook with me and we both enjoyed the story a lot but noticed that we weren't the target audience. I actually think, with a little tweaking, it would make a very good adult book. The story is so illuminating. Though a middle grade book, it still qualifies as a novella at 192 pages.

Don's rating: 3.5 stars, mine: 4:5 stars.






-Anne

Thursday, November 27, 2025

Nonfiction Review: ONE DAY, EVERYONE WILL HAVE ALWAYS BEEN AGAINST THIS


Title:
One Day Everyone Will Have Always Been Against This by Omar El Akkad

Books Beginnings quote:


Friday56 quote (from page 22, the last preview page):

Summary:
On Oct 25th, after just three weeks of the bombardment of Gaza, Omar El Akkad put out a tweet: “One day, when it’s safe, when there’s no personal downside to calling a thing what it is, when it’s too late to hold anyone accountable, everyone will have always been against this.” This tweet was viewed over 10 million times. 

One Day Everyone Will Have Always Been Against This chronicles the deep fracture which has occurred for Black, brown, indigenous Americans, as well as the upcoming generation, many of whom had clung to a thread of faith in western ideals, in the idea that their countries, or the countries of their adoption, actually attempted to live up to the values they espouse. (Publisher) 

Review: This National Book Award recipient has much to digest within its pages. Clearly the author is frustrated beyond words at the world's seeming disregard for the plight of the people in Gaza. But he places the lion's share of blame on progressives and left-leaning people who give lip service to being horrified by the atrocities in Gaza at the hands of Israel, yet take no action to go along with their words and objectively support Israel's right to exist and self-defense. Conservatives don't bear the brunt of El Akkad's disdain because they are who they say they are -- hard-liners, racists who generally hate anyone who is brown-skinned, reflexively supporting Israel no matter what. I guess he is saying the right has no answers and he doesn't expect their help. Since I'm a progressive, I felt chastised as I read. But it was a wakeup call, too. I'm glad the book received the award so it will receive some attention and hopefully wake up a bunch of us "slacker left-leaning progressives" (and hopefully others) with this call to action.

As Don and I discussed after finishing the audiobook, he was more critical ranking it with 3 stars. His biggest complaint was how the book -- he called it a long opinion piece -- called us out for our apathy without many constructive suggestions of ways to help. Call our congresswoman? She's a Democrat and her party isn't in power? Then what? 

As we listened we found ourselves going back in time since the book was clearly written during President Biden's term. The book was already in the publishing stages when the 2024 election went to Donald Trump. We couldn't help wonder whether the author has any different feelings toward the Biden administration's approach to Israel's war on Gaza since things have certainly gotten no better under Trump. There was no postscript to the audiobook to answer this question. One thing so many people don't seem to understand about politics: when you are frustrated by the party in power (especially one you largely agree with) and kick them out, the other side is going to be worse. At least Democrats have been advocating for a two-state solution and self-determination for Palestinians for decades. Trump and his acolytes only want tough talk in support of Israel, and want to raze Gaza to redevelop the coastline with luxury resorts for the rich and powerful. 

Clearly there are no easy answers and this conflict has been going on for thousands of years. Sigh.

The audiobook was narrated by the author, El Akkad, which I really appreciated. A bit about the author is probably warranted: Omar El Akkad was born in Egypt. He and his family were forced to leave their home due to the politics in the country. His father relocated the family first to Qatar for a few years. When he was 16 his family moved to Montreal, Quebec, where Omar finished high school. Eventually he got an entry-level job at the Globe and Mail newspaper and worked his way up to an investigative reporter. Often he received assignments because he was a Muslim or because he was an Arab, as if he would be the only one to understand the issue. Now he and his family live in Portland, Oregon.

Our ratings: Don -- 3 stars; Anne -- 4 stars.
Challenges: Nonfiction November and Novellas in November (for short nonfiction, 208 pages.)




Sign up for The Friday56 on the Inlinkz below. 

RULES:

*Grab a book, any book
*Turn to page 56 or 56% in your e-reader (If you want to improvise, go ahead!)
*Find a snippet, but no spoilers!
*Post it to your blog and add your url to the Linky below. If you do not add the specific url for your post, we may miss it! 
*Visit other blogs and leave comments about their snippets. Expand the community. Please leave a comment for me, too!  


Also visit Book Beginnings on Friday hosted by Rose City Reader and First Line Friday hosted by Reading is My Super Power to share the beginning quote from your book.


You are invited to the Inlinkz link party!

Click here to enter
-Anne

A Thanksgiving Feast of Books



Thanksgiving Bookish Tag -- 

Originally created by Becca and Erica @Fangirlscity on Youtube.

I hope you enjoy and have a wonderful day on Thursday!

A Feast of Books. Enjoy.

(I've read all these books. I liked some better than others!)

 1. Bread - What book is purely fluff, and has no real plot line?

Ursula K. Le Guin's Book of Cats
A purrpurri of the literary legend's quirky and winsome cat poems, mediations, and drawings.
(My grandcats, Fred and George, insisted I include this book.)

2. Turkey - What book made you want to fall asleep?

Wolf Hall by Hilary Mantel
It not only made me want to fall asleep, I did fall asleep when we were listening to this tome on a car trip. At 600+ if would have been a long nap. It is a good book but so soporific.

3. Gravy - What book makes the whole series worth reading?

Lirael by Garth Nix, #2 Old Kingdom 
The series has six books dribbled out for publication over 26 years from first to last. I loved them all but this one I loved the best. Could it have something to do with the Disreputable Dog?

4. Stuffing - What book is stuffed full of action scenes?

No Country for Old Men by Cormac McCarthy
The setting is the Texas-Mexico border. The time is our own, when rustlers have given way to drug-runners and small towns have become free-fire zones. The action, disaster, and horror is none-stop.

5. Mashed Potatoes - What book looked good, and then wasn’t?

Christmas Cupcake Murder by Joanne Fluke.
Bah, Humbug!
My note after I finished it -- "Not my idea of a mystery. The book is good if you want/need new cookie or cupcake recipes. Otherwise, I don't recommend it."

6. Cranberries - What book has the sweetest romance?

Princess Bride by William Golden
Princess Buttercup and Wesley,of course, and a sweet love story alongside a swashbuckling tale all in one.
If you've seen the movie and not read the book, you are are missing a delight. 


7. Corn - What’s the corniest book you’ve ever read?

Three Men In a Boat by Jerome K. Jerome
So many groaners and slapstick situations. Corny, very corny.
(We always have Crazy Corn Casserole with our turkey!)

8. Green beans - What book is too long and needs to be shortened?

Harry Potter and The Order of the Phoenix by J.K. Rowling 
I love the series but this book is just too long at 898 pages. It needs a good editor to slash some of those pages.

9. Pumpkin Pie - What book do you read to get out of a reading slump?

Any book by John Green
The Anthropocene Reviewed is full of essays, so it would be a good choice to break through a reading slump.

10. Dog/Cat - What’s your favorite Thanksgiving food that you would steal from the table?

Dog here. I vote for turkey and gravy.
I'll even eat a few green beans, if I must.

Have a lovely day wherever you live, even if you don't celebrate Thanksgiving. Just eat good food today and be grateful for all you have.
-Anne

Wednesday, November 26, 2025

Nonfiction November, Week Five: New to My TBR and It's a Wrap!



Nonfiction November Week 5 and November Wrap Up. New to my TBR hosted by Deb Nance at Readerbuzz



New to my TBR: 
  • Is a River Alive? /Robert Macfarlane (Unsolicited Feedback)
  • I Contain Multitudes / Ed Yong (Read All the Things)
  • Fenwomen:Women in an English Village / Mary Chamberlain (What? Me Read?)
  • Wild Thing: The Life of Paul Gauguin /Sue Prideaux (Volatile Rune)
  • Killing Stella /Marlen Haushofer (Intrepid Angeleno) (Whoops, not nonfiction, but it is a novella I want to read, translated from German.)
  • Replaceable You: Adventures in Human Anatomy / Mary Roach (Who recommended this? Sorry I missed you.)
  • Murderland: Crime and Bloodlust In the Time of Serial Killers / Caroline Fraser (My husband's cousin) 
  • Things in Nature Merely Grow / Yiyun Li (NYT 100 Notable Books of 2025 list)



Nonfiction books read during this challenge:


Nonfiction titles reviewed this month in addition to above books:

-Anne

Nonfiction November: Jane Austen

All my reading challenges seem to be coalescing right now: Nonfiction November, Novellas in November, and #ReadAusten2025. In fact, sometimes I am a little overwhelmed by it all. Here are my reviews of two books I've read this month which fit, or partially fit, into all three challenges:


JANE AUSTEN

Jane Austen in 41 Objects by Kathryn Sutherland
Bodleian Library Publishing, 2025. 209 pages, including index and notes.

Back in October I read a wonderful review of this book by Brona at This Reading Life. She began her review confessing she had dilly-dallied (my words, not hers) writing about the book because she wanted to write something about "e v e r y-s i n g l e-o b j e c t". After reading the book I see why she felt that way. I, too, would love to gush about these 41 objects, some directly and others tangentially, related to Jane Austen. Never fear. I don't have it in me and why should I anyway? After reading this I hope you want to read the book, so you'll find out for yourself.

The covered objects form the breadth of Austen's life, so it is fitting that the book begins with her chronology: from the marriage of her parents in 1764 and ending in September 2017 when JA becomes the face of Bank of England £10 note. The author, Kathryn Sutherland, introduces her book by asking us to "imagine a life story as a house clearance -- that's how for many of us it finds shape, as objects are passed on, memoires stirred and made." Oh boy, do I agree with that sentence after spending the last two months helping my mother muck out her house where she's lived to the past thirty years. My siblings and I bickered over who would get what prized possessions: My older sister got the family clock. my younger sister got the silverware and the beloved Tiffany-style lamp, I got the elephant table, and my brother got whatever he wanted since he was kind enough to not fight us for our favorite objects. Each object held memories for all of us.

The 41 objects are arranged chronologically too, after the 1st object, the only known portrait of Jane Austen done by her sister. Each object is accompanied by a brief description of the object and then what is known to have happened to this object since JA's time. In the case of this well-known graphite and watercolor sketch (4 1/2 x 3 1/8 inches), it was sold at Sotheby's in May 1948 as part of the collections formerly owned by Charles Austen's granddaughters. It was purchased by the NPG, The National Portrait Gallery, in London.

The Chawton House, where Jane, her mother, and her sister were living at the time of Jane's death is now a museum. Many of the objects described in the book are on display there. It is obviously a destination spot for many Janites like myself. And when I do go, I will have a better idea what I am looking at. This house was officially opened to the public in July 1949 and has slowly resumed something of an identity of what it was like when Jane lived there. Some of the objects where actually hiding on the grounds and have been restored to their former spots in the house. For example, a fragment of the green leaf wallpaper when an old stove was moved. The design, now known as "Chawton Leaf", was reproduced by historic specialists and printed using the traditional hand-blocking techniques of old. It now hangs in the dining room.

Another item found on the Chawton grounds was a dried flower spray for the hair found in the rafters of an out-building. Jane and her sister comment about wearing flowers in their hair for some event in one of their many letters sent to each other over the years. Could this be the actual flowers they referred to? As I read about how objects like this were found and authenticated, I sat with my mouth open. It is minor miracle that so many objects known to used by or about a woman who lived 250 years ago can still be traced.

I thoroughly enjoyed every minute exploring the objects in this book and now I commend this book to you. Ask for it at your library.

Challenges: Nonfiction, Novella (short nonfiction is accepted), and Austen-related. a trifecta!






The Friendly Jane Austen: A Well-Mannered Introduction to a Lady of Sense and Sensibility by Natalie Tyler
Penguin Putnam, 1999.

Oh boy, I had fun with this book. Ms. Tyler has done her homework and gives Jane Austen fans what they want...more information about Austen. To begin with she asks the question, How Do We Love Jane Austen? Let Us Count the Ways. The reader then takes a quiz to determine what type of fan school he/she belongs in: Janite; Gentle Jane; Ironic Jane; or Subversive Jane. Not surprisingly, I am a Janite through and through. (And who knew my love of Paul McCartney helps qualify me for this delineation?)

Next up, Part 1 covers Jane's early life and her juvenilia. What was it like living in those days? What about her siblings and parents? Where did she live and why did they move? How did her writing grow and change? All these questions and more were answered in this section. Text would often be broken up with text boxes with information which seemed like little asides. For example, one text box contained the names of famous people who lived during the same time as Austen---Beethoven, William Wordsworth, and Sir Walter Scott being three on the list. Illustrations related to Austen done by relatives are infrequent but add a nice touch. For example, Jane's niece, Anna Lefroy, made a nice drawing of the Steventon Rectory where Jane was born and lived until she was 24. My favorite bits in this section were samples of and explanations of Jane's early writings. Short quotes from her various stories were shared. And a timeline explanation of each of her pieces of "juvenilia" is very helpful to my understanding.

Part II explains each of her major works in detail. In addition to her own research, Tyler interviews college professors with knowledge related to Austen. Each interview is recorded in a short dialogue with the professor answering only one or two questions. For example, Why aren't Austen's novels considered part of Romanticism movement? or Why study Austen? There is a quiz in each of the seven sections in this part. I just took the quiz: Letter Writing in the Novels. The directions were to match the characters that wrote the following letter with its intended character recipient. I did pretty good but didn't know the quote from Sanditon nor did I guess this one. Can you? (Name the book, the character writing,  and the character recipient. No cheating.)
"A poor honorable is no catch, and I cannot imagine any liking in the case, for, take away his rants, and the poor Baron has nothing. What a difference a vowel makes!---if his rents were but equal to his rants." 
As I reread Sense and Sensibility, Northanger Abbey, and Persuasion this year I found the chapters on those books particularly helpful. See my review of Persuasion where I quote from this book often. After reading the section II out of order I went back and read about her other four books (Sanditon, though incomplete at the time of JAs death, was included.) I had the hardest time reading the chapter about Mansfield Park because so many people don't like Franny Price as a character. A whole list of famous authors writing snarky comments about Fanny was included. Poor Fanny!

Part III is about Jane Austen's legacy---the film adaptations, the continuations, sequels, and spin-offs, JASNA, JA retreats, etc. Since the book was published over 25 years ago, this section was woefully outdated so I just skimmed through it. 

I love the book so much I want Natalie Tyler to update it and put it back in circulation so you can all read it, too. I'm guessing your public library won't have a copy of it, but keep your eyes out for it at used bookstores. That is where I found my copy. It contains too much information to take in at once and I know you will want to go back and look up something in it every once in a while.


 Challenges: Nonfiction November, Jane Austen-related.



 

-Anne