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Whit Stillman has taken Austen’s
never-finished epistolary novella, Lady
Susan, reimagined it as a straight narrative, and added the hilarious new
character of Rufus, Susan’s apologist nephew, who aims to clear Susan’s good
name come hell or high water (even if he is doing it from "the ignoble
abode" of debtors’ prison ). Despite many indications to the contrary,
Rufus insists that Susan is, “the kindest, most delightful woman anyone could
know, a shining ornament to our Society and Nation.” Rufus then appends his
earnest tale with a collection of his aunt’s letters, which he claims have been
altered by Austen to cast the estimable Lady Susan in a bad light.
Impossibly beautiful, disarmingly witty, and completely self-absorbed,
Lady Susan Vernon, is both the heart and the thorn of Love &
Friendship. Recently widowed, with a daughter who’s coming of age as
quickly as their funds are dwindling, Lady Susan makes it her mission to find
them wealthy husbands——and fast.
But when her attempts to secure their futures result only in the wrath
of a prominent conquest’s wife and the title of “most accomplished coquette in
England,” Lady Susan must rethink her strategy.
Unannounced, she arrives at her brother-in-law’s country estate. Here
she intends to take refuge——in no less than luxury, of course——from the
colorful rumors trailing her, while finding another avenue to “I do.” Before
the scandalizing gossip can run its course, though, romantic triangles ensue.
With a devoted Austenian sensibility and absurd theological commentary,
filmmaker and writer Whit Stillman ingeniously reimagines and completes one of
our greatest writers’ unfinished works. As much homage to its muse’s perennial
influence as testament to its author’s brilliance, Love & Friendship is
a sharp comedy of manners, and a fiendishly funny treat for Austen and Stillman
fans alike.
Love & Friendship brings a healthy helping of scandal, along with
lots of laughs, to Georgian and Victorian London. Whit Stillman has also
created a film version of Love & Friendship, starring Kate Beckinsale and
Chloe Sevigny, opened in select theaters on May 13th.
An unusual heroine:
wicked Lady Susan
When reading Jane Austen's Lady Susan back in 2009,
I was thrilled to discover how daring Jane Austen had been to write such an
incredibly modern, atypical heroine for one of her works and I went on thinking
how thrilled she must have been herself while writing. Was young Jane
fascinated by her wicked creature? I actually think so. Lady Susan Vernon is a
totally free woman who, unlike Austen's major heroines, isn't molded by nor bent
to conventions, formality and good manners but bends them at her own
convenience.
Lady Susan reveals
herself surprisingly unconventional. I had always thought Emma was the most
“imperfect” and flawed among Austen’s heroines, but reading Lady
Susan then and now its revisitation, Love & Friendship by
Stillman, I realized Lady Susan is her most wicked creature.
May I use a sort of oximoron for such a unique character? Pleasantly evil, that's what Lady Susan Vernon is. Vain, selfish, enterprising, free, cold, deceitful loveless and emotionless, but anyhow one of the best written heroine in literature.
May I use a sort of oximoron for such a unique character? Pleasantly evil, that's what Lady Susan Vernon is. Vain, selfish, enterprising, free, cold, deceitful loveless and emotionless, but anyhow one of the best written heroine in literature.
Just like Mr
Manwaring or Reginald De Courcy, one can't but be charmed by “the most
accomplished Coquette in England” because she indeed “possesses a degree of
captivating deceit which” IS “pleasing to witness & detect”.
But If I have to
be utterly honest there is something I do NOT like in her: as a mother, I found
incredibly disturbing her indifference, if not cruelty, to her daughter,
Frederica. Her calculated subtle deceiving trick of faking an interest in her
daughter’s education - but in a boarding school far from home and everybody the
girl knew - in order to push her to marry Mr James, a man Frederica deeply
disliked, was awfully evil!
Whit Stillman’s version
Could a fine
Austenite like Whit Stillman resist the temptation of such an intriguing, brilliant character? Apparently he couldn't
and has adapted Austen’s epistolary novella
both in a new movie starring Kate Beckinsale and reimagined Lady Susan's story as
a straight narrative with a new narrator.
Stillman perfectly captures Austen’s irony and adds to that a second layer of
humor since the narrator of the story is Lady Susan’s Vernon’s nephew, Rufus Martin-Colonna De Cesari- Rocca, who calls Jane Austen “the spinster
authoress - a writer careless of both punctuation and truth, zealous
only to do the bidding of their Aristocratic patrons” - and tries his best to sing his aunt’s praises
in order to vindicate her entirely.
The result is a delightful, hilarious narration which made me smile all
through my rediscovery of Austen's novella and of her villainous heroine through Stillman's eyes and words and even
laugh out loud more than once.
The book contains also the original version of the novella, in the
epistolary form, as Jane Austen wrote it, so if you haven't had the chance to read it you can do it now and compare it to Stillman's adaptations.
Get ready! Once you meet her, you can't but be charmed.
PURCHASE LINKS:
EARLY PRAISE:
""Lady
Susan is finally getting some long overdue respect…an eccentrically cheeky
tribute."― Alexandra Schwartz, New Yorker
"A merry comedy of pride, prejudice, and duplicity.... Silly, sly,
eccentric characters and brisk chatter make for a diverting romp."― Kirkus
Reviews
"Witty and delightful."― BookPage
"Both quirky and hilarious."― Publishers Weekly
"Lady Susan remains deliciously wicked." ― Julia
Felsenthal, Vogue
"Stillman worships Austen and [the book and film] show a deep familiarity
with her life, work, and times."― Laura Miller, Slate
"Stillman has a fine eye for social niceties."― Library
Journal, Editor's Pick
WHAT READERS ARE SAYING
“Haven't
even finished reading this book -- but find it truly remarkable. A new Jane
Austen, worthy of the original! Imagine that Mr. Collins undertook to rewrite
Pride and Prejudice, attempting to rehabilitate his own reputation and that of
Lady Catherine de Bough. That gives you an idea of the approach -- but the
language is so lovely and the ironies so delicious! I have been laughing out
loud, reading passages to my husband. My plan is to finish the book, re-read
Jane Austen's unfinished Lady Susan -- and then return and re-read this one.
Then I will press my copy on my most discerning friends ...” – Sharon Kay Stout
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Whit
Stillman was born in Washington, D.C., and attended Harvard, where he was an
editor of the Harvard Crimson before working in book and magazine publishing.
He has written and directed five films, including the award-winning Metropolitan, Barcelona, The Last Days of
Disco, and Damsels in Distress,
as well as the TV show The Cosmopolitans.
His first novel, The Last Days of Disco,
won the 2014 Prix Fitzgerald. He has written for the Wall Street Journal, Harper's,
The Guardian, Vogue, and other publications. Visit his unofficial website
for updates
on this latest Amazon series The
Cosmopolitans, and follow him on Twitter as @WhitStillman
and on Facebook.
LOVE & FRIENDSHIP – THE JANEITE BLOG
TOUR
June 13 – 24, 2016
A
cyber-celebration in which Jane Austen fans join in their desire
to see a much
maligned Personage vindicated, a certain
Spinster
Authoress exposed and justice prevail.
Award
winning writer-director-filmmaker Whit Stillman tours the blogosphere June 13
through June 24, 2016 to share his latest release, Love & Friendship: In Which Jane Austen's Lady Susan Vernon Is
Entirely Vindicated. Thirteen popular book bloggers—card carrying Jane
Austen fans one and all—will feature interviews, book excerpts and reviews of this
highly acclaimed novel. A fabulous giveaway contest, including hardcopies of
the book will be open to those who join the festivities.
THE LOVE & FRIENDSHIP JANEITE BLOG
TOUR SCHEDULE
- June 13 AustenBlog (
Interview) - June 14 The Calico Critic (Review)
- June 15 Diary of Eccentric (Excerpt)
- June 16 Laura’s Reviews (Review)
- June 17 My Jane Austen Book Club (Review)
- June 17 Confessions of a Book Addict (Excerpt)
- June 20 Austenesqu
e Reviews (Review) - June 20 Austenprose (
Interview) - June 21 So Little Time…So Much to Read (Excerpt)
- June 21 Luxury Reading (Review)
- June 22 Just Jane 1813 (Review)
- June 23 Savvy Verse & Wit (Excerpt)
- June 24 Austenprose (Review)
Grand
Giveaway Contest
In
celebration of the release of Love &
Friendship: In Which Jane Austen's Lady Susan Vernon Is Entirely Vindicated,
Mr. Stillman’s publisher, Little, Brown & Co has kindly offered a chance to
win one of three hardcover copies of the book!
To enter the giveaway contest, simply leave a
comment on any or all of the blog stops on the The Love & Friendship Janeite Blog Tour starting June 13, 2016
through 11:59 pm PT, June 30, 2016. Winners will be drawn at random from all of
the comments and announced on Austenprose on July 1, 2016. Winners have until July
07, 2016 to claim their prize. Shipment is to US addresses. Good luck to all!
5 comments:
Thank you for sharing your thoughts and being part of the tour.
Great fun read, I had to share. :D And I'm so glad to be part of this awesome blog tour! Thanks to you, Karyl, for dropping by and commenting.
Bonjour!
I have not read Lady Susan but the revisitation by Ms Stillman is most appealing. I have seen the posters in the metro of Paris announcing that the film Love & Friendship coming out soon (June, 22nd) and since then I have not been able wait to go and watch it and discover this "pleasantly evil" character!
I desperately wanted to see this film, unfortunately, I couldn't quite align my schedule with the theater which is bit of a distance from my home.
denise
Wonderful post and a fun story.
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