Showing posts with label Jane. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jane. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 10, 2015

First Impressions by Charlie Lovett

Sophie Collingwood has just graduated from college when her uncle Bertram, with whom she shares an all-consuming love of books and literature, dies suddenly in a fall. He leaves his flat and library to Sophie, but when she comes to take possession, she finds the books were sold to settle his estate. She fixates on the manner of his death and the loss of his library as she takes a job in a rare book dealer’s shop.

When two men contact her, each searching for the 2nd edition of an obscure collection of moral allegories by a little known 18th century clergyman, things start to heat up. Does the book prove her favorite author, Jane Austen, plagiarized Pride and Prejudice? Sophie is determined to settle this question as well as prove her uncle did not die in an unfortunate accident. And what about the American professor on holiday and one of the book collectors – neither of whom she can dismiss from her thoughts and dreams?


A bit of literary history, modern day sleuthing, and romance all combine to make First Impressions fairly entertaining. Frankly, I expected better characterizations and a slightly more plausible story line from Lovett whose Bookman’s Tale (see July 2013) I really enjoyed. But the allusions to Austen and her works, as well as the historical sections, make up for many of the weaker points.

CAS


Wednesday, June 13, 2012

Jane Bites Back by Michael Thomas Ford


Part of my work here involves reading books for discussion that I might not select otherwise. That being said, I am sometimes justified in my thinking a genre/author/style will not appeal to me and sometimes I am surprised. This is definitely the latter. I loved Jane Bites Back and read the two sequels all within ten days! This is definitely not serious reading, but who ever said it all has to have great literary merit to be worth reading? Anyway, I digress…

Jane Austen is a vampire running a bookstore in upstate New York. She was ‘turned’ (that’s vampire jargon for being made into one of the undead!) two centuries earlier and is just trying to live a quiet life within the confines of her state. She has to move periodically because she does not age, she tries not to build relationships because she can’t bear to hurt and be hurt when it’s time to move on, and ‘feeds’ only when required. She has been trying to get her latest novel, Constance, published but has been turned down by over 100 publishers. Suddenly, everything changes when her novel is accepted and becomes a bestseller, her feelings for a mortal get more complicated, and Lord Byron, her original seducer/vampire-maker, appears on the scene.
If you want to stick your toe in the water of ‘mashup’ fiction, consider Jane Bites Back. This is light, fun, and a true guilty pleasure.

CAS 

Sequels: Jane Goes Batty; Jane Vows Vengeance