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Jane Austen Ruined My Life

janeaustenruinedNow the only friendship I still had, however unexpected, had been upended.  I was tired of being adrift.  Tired of romance and attraction and all the complications and ruination it entailed.  Tired of trying to find some pattern, divine or not, in what had happened, what was happening to me.  Most of all, though, I was tired of Jane Austen ruining my life. – p.146

Emma Douglas has just found her husband cheating on her, and she blames Jane Austen’s novels (as well as her parents’ own happy marriage) for leading her to believe that there are always happy endings.  Devastated by her personal and professional life, she travels to England in search of Jane Austen’s missing letters, where, coincidentally, she also bumps into her old college friend Adam.

I really enjoyed Beth Pattillo’s ‘what-if’s’ concerning Austen’s personal life and letters, particularly her take on which of Austen’s books most closely mirrored the author’s (imagined) life.  I was also fascinated by Emma’s treks around Austen’s old haunts and the real personal history of the author.  Mixing fact and fiction, this book is a fun and quick read that most Austen fans will appreciate.

2009, 270 pp.

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[Disclaimer: This copy was obtained from my public library.]

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