Synopsis: When aspiring writer, Sophie Elliot, receives
the keys to the family townhouse in Bath, it’s an invitation she can’t turn
down, especially when she learns that she will be living next door to the house
that Jane Austen lived in. But, Sophie’s neglected ancestral home is harbouring
more than the antiquated furniture and nesting mice, though initially Sophie
tries to dismiss the haunting visions of a young girl. On discovering that
an ancient glove belonging to her mysterious neighbour, Josh Strafford, will
transport her back in time to Regency Bath, she questions her sanity, but
Sophie is soon caught up in two dimensions, each reality as certain as the
other. Torn between her life in the modern world, and that of her ancestor who
befriends Jane Austen and her fascinating brother Charles, Sophie’s story
travels two hundred years across time, and back again, to unite this modern
heroine with her own Captain Wentworth. Blending fact and fiction together the
tale of Jane Austen’s own quest for happiness weaves alongside, creating a
believable world of new possibilities for the inspiration behind the beloved
novel, Persuasion (from the author’s site)
Searching for Captain Wentworth is different from Jane Odiwe’s
previous Austen-inspired novels, Willoughby’s Return and Mr Darcy’sSecret. Not only because it deals
mainly with characters and events connected with Austen’s last novel, Persuasion
- while the others continued the stories of Sense and Sensibility and Pride
and Prejudice respectively - but
especially because the author adds a spicy ingredient to her narrative to avoid
writing the usual sequel. She adds time travelling and creates two parallel
narrative levels between which the protagonist, Sophie Elliot, unexpectedly and
inexplicably moves. She gets
involved in a series of different adventures and is torn between two
men. Is it possible to fall in love with two differently handsome,
kind, extraordinary gentlemen ,
one living in Jane Austen’s time and one in the modern world? Make your acquaintance
with Charles and Josh in Jane Odiwe’s new book and you will find yourself
sympathizing with the heroine.





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