My Jane Austen group is reading Persuasion - eleven years since we last did it - because 2017 is the 200th anniversary of its publication. Of course I've read it several times, so, as you'll know from my other Austen re-reads, my aim here is to focus on reflections from this read rather than to … Continue reading Jane Austen’s Persuasion, Vol. 1
19th century literature
Vale Jane Austen: on the 200th anniversary of her death
Today, July 18, marks the 200th anniversary of Jane Austen's death. Unfortunately, because I am travelling I am unable to join my local Jane Austen group's wake to commemorate her, but I had to do something of course, so I've decided to write a post on Austen biographies. I'm partly drawing from my group's recent … Continue reading Vale Jane Austen: on the 200th anniversary of her death
Northanger Abbey musings (2)
A month ago I posted some musings arising from the first part of my current slow read of Northanger Abbey with my Jane Austen group. In this post I'll share some reflections on the rest of the novel, Chapters 20 to 31, which is the part that encompasses our "heroine" Catherine's arrival in and departure from the Abbey. On the art of fiction … Continue reading Northanger Abbey musings (2)
Northanger Abbey musings (1)
My Jane Austen group is reading Northanger Abbey - again - because this year is the 200th anniversary of its publication. However, I did write about the novel when we did it in 2015, so what to do? Well, the thing is that every time I read Austen something else pops into my mind to think about … Continue reading Northanger Abbey musings (1)
Kate Chopin, Fedora (Review)
Time methinks for another Library of America (LOA) Story of the Week, particularly since one of their recent offerings was one of my favourite American authors, Kate Chopin. "Fedora" is the sixth story by Chopin I've discussed here, and is probably the shortest, more of a "sketch". In fact its original title was apparently "“The Falling in Love … Continue reading Kate Chopin, Fedora (Review)
Louisa Atkinson, A voice from the country: January (Review)
Louisa Atkinson, as I wrote in a post a few years ago, was a pioneer Australian writer. She was a significant botanist, our first Australian-born woman novelist, and the first Australian woman to have a long-running column in a major newspaper. It was a natural history series titled A Voice from the Country which ran in The Sydney Morning Herald for … Continue reading Louisa Atkinson, A voice from the country: January (Review)
Friedrich Gerstäcker, Australia: A German traveller in the Age of Gold (Review)
Friedrich Gerstäcker's Australia: A German traveller in the Age of Gold was first published in its original German, as Australien, in 1854. Gerstäcker did prepare, at that time, an English language version of his travels, but the section on Australia, at least, was much shorter than his German edition, and is all English readers have been able to … Continue reading Friedrich Gerstäcker, Australia: A German traveller in the Age of Gold (Review)
Louise Mack, The world is round (Review)
I've had Louise Mack's debut novel, The world is round, on my TBR for about 20 years. Published in 1896, when she was 26 years old, it's a fairly straightforward tragicomedy about a young well-to-do 21-year-old girl, Jean, who aspires to be a writer, and the two men who love her, the 30-plus-year-old self-confident, successful lawyer-and-writer Musgrave, and … Continue reading Louise Mack, The world is round (Review)
Monday musings on Australian literature: Louise Mack
I promised in my Reading Highlights post that my first review of the year would be for a book from my TBR pile, and so it will be - hopefully in a couple of days. However, I suspect that the book, and maybe even the author, will be unknown to most of my readers here so I've decided … Continue reading Monday musings on Australian literature: Louise Mack
George Augustus Sala, The tyranny of pie (Review)
When I decide to write about a Library of America (LOA) Story of the Week it is usually because it's by a favourite author (like Willa Cather, Kate Chopin, or Edith Wharton), or by an author I want to read but haven't yet (like John Updike or Washington Irving) or on a topic that interests me … Continue reading George Augustus Sala, The tyranny of pie (Review)