In Becoming Jane, Anne Hathaway’s Jane Austen visits Ann Radcliffe, author of The Mysteries of Udolpho, a popular novel of the time. While this visit is likely fiction, I can’t help but wonder what such a conversation might have covered. Although reading was an admirable pastime, fiction that could be considered romance—fictional escapes not based on historic figures—was frowned upon by many. ‘Romance’ described stories read purely for entertainment rather than the betterment of the mind. Shocking! Topping the list was the Gothic, unlikely to be displayed on your drawing room shelves. Hmmm. Nowadays, romance is the largest portion of the fiction market, yet still gets the ‘cut’ from serious literary readers!
Gothics
depended on wildly exaggerated tales of danger, and helpless women dependent on
brutish men. They included the supernatural and degrees of violence. I’m sure Jane
Austen read at least one of these tales, and had an opinion on Miss Radcliffe.
Was it admiration for her craft, or admiration for her timing and boldness to
write such fiction? After all, writers were often looked down upon, and a woman
writing for income? Not to be borne!
For
the 19th century reader, romances and particularly the new gothics
offered a bold departure from normal life—normal for Austen’s peers, that is.
Certainly, lower class women were degraded and used in ways the upper classes
wanted to ignore. In later years, poets and authors such as Edgar Allen Poe
continued to disparage the gothic genre, even Miss Radcliffe herself. She
stayed completely out of the public, and later wrote her classic The Italian to slow the shift in gothics
from terror to horror, of which she disapproved. (She told me. In a dream.)
(Kidding.)
Overall,
Austen’s work was an answer to the skewed world of gothic literature. She
placed her characters in all-too-real (again, for her peers) situations where
the major terror was making a faux pas at the dance. Her most famous hero is
also the most brooding. While the many men of Austen include the reckless and
the cads, Darcy makes himself acceptable by ravishing Lizzie’s mind, not her
body.
I’m
of the mind that Gothics and Austen are the parents of our own romance genre
today.
As
a child of the sixties and seventies, I grew up reading romantic suspense, and
gothics such as Mary Stewart, Phyllis Whitney, Barbara Michaels. These type of
stories fell out of favor because too many young women did too many stupid
things. Well, perhaps the genre has returned. Brutish behavior came back
recently, with much commercial success.
The
plot and characters in my novella, Alarmingly
Charming, part of the Austen in
Austin Vol 1 anthology, are based on Northanger
Abbey. To keep from going down that TSTL (too stupid to live) road, my
heroine is sweet, naïve, intelligent and imaginative, and not as flighty as her
Austen counterpart. She’s a wallflower and a bookworm. Many of us relate. My Kathryn
Morton realizes her value and strengths facing her own Tilney and Thorpe. I
think you’ll enjoy my parody of Austen’s parody:
ALARMINGLY CHARMING 1887 Austin Texas. As travel
companion to her condescending cousin, Philadelphian Kathryn Morton dreamily
anticipates a week in the Wild West as the best cure for meekness. After a long
rail journey and a steady diet of gothic dime novels, she shivers, despite the
Texas heat, at the ghastly tales of the Austin Axe Murderer. Kathryn has little
time to fret, given the competing attentions of quiet rancher Harmon Gray and
elegant gentleman Jonathan Wellington. With her new-found confidence and her
boundless imagination, she sets out to solve the mystery of Hyde Park Cemetery
before another student flees Austen Abbey. Only then can she return home to her
English-born parents as an independent American woman. A woman in love. But on
the stormiest of nights, Kathryn learns that solving the mystery may destroy a
future with the man she’s fallen for in a big Texas way.
Debra E. Marvin
Debra E. Marvin tries not to run too far from real life but the imagination
born out of being an only child has a powerful draw. Besides, the voices in her
head tend to agree with all the sensible things she says. She’d like to live
just a wee bit closer to her grandchildren, but is thankful that God is in
control, that He chooses to bless us despite ourselves and that He has a sense
of humor.
Other than writing light-hearted romances and
gritty gothics, she has pretty normal obsessions: fabric, peanut butter,
vacations, British dramas and whatever mystery series she’s currently reading.
Visit her at debraemarvin.com, the Inkwell Inspirations Blog, @debraemarvin on
twitter and Debra E Marvin on Facebook and Pinterest, but not her house because
she usually has dirty dishes. Check out her Amazon Author page to see what’s
next after Alarmingly Charming.
LINKS
20 comments:
Thanks so much for hosting me. I've long been a fan of your blog!
I look forward to chatting about this beloved subject!
Welcome to our online club, Debra. I hope we'll get interesting interaction on such a great subject. And good luck, everyone, in the giveaway contest :D
I've never read anything Jane Austen, but I love the era and would love to see what the characters have to offer. Thanks for the giveaway and good luck everyone.
I love that this variation is set in Texas!
denise
Deb's Alarmingly Charming is alarmingly wonderful. Or should that be charmingly alarming. No, wait. Wonderfully charming.
I loved this book and I look forward to Volume 2 ladies!
i love the cover for your work
Books about Texas are amongst my favorite locations as I have family history there.
thank you all for your comments and encouragement!
Debbie C, the books are certainly appropriate for any historical fiction fan, maybe especially for fans of western romances! You don't have to have any knowledge of the Austen heroines or plots to appreciate the stories, but that part is the fun part for Austen fans.
Hi DENISE! As you can imagine, we had no second thoughts about using Austin when we were brainstorming this collection of 8 (four here, four in Vol 2) Austen inspired stories. Austen in Austin was too good to pass up, and Austin is an incredible city!
Thanks SUZIE! We'll have great fun with the full eight. It was a treat and something to be proud of--to be able to pull 8 separate stories together with setting and recurring characters!
Hi CLAUDINE! Lovely to see you and we love your enthusiasm for our collection. You've been so kind to help promote! And I've enjoyed getting to know you as well
BOOKLUVER 88 - Author Roseanna White did our book covers. They ARE gorgeous, aren't they? Thanks for commenting!
SONJA - this was my first Texas-set story but it's big enough to provide an endless supply as you can guess. It's a favorite setting for many romance writers. I fell in love with Austin. I knew it was a special place, but digging into history adds to it.
Admin, if not okay please remove!
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This book sounds great!
Thanks, Karen! It was a lot of fun to work on because so much of the setting carries from story to story, and readers have enjoyed seeing characters make cameo appearances.
Great post, Debra! Your book sounds very intruiging. I love Northanger Abbey and like that you've changed the setting to Austin, Texas. I look forward to reading it!
Thank you for commenting, Katie. One nice thing about our Austen inspired stories is that we get to reference her and her books. Have a great weekend
I re-read Northanger Abbey earlier this year and really enjoyed it once mkre so to read another version of the story would be fantastic. Debra's take on it sounds very interesting.
This is on my TBR list. I look forward to reading.
Anji,
I do really enjoy Northanger's humor. Thanks so much for commenting! Catherine presented a challenge for 'modern' readers, due to her delightfully ditzy ideas, so I focused on what was special about her. My heroine Kathryn is completely without guile, or cynicism.
Thanks for commenting, BeckyC! I'm glad you've heard of the book and I hope you get to read it!
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