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New blog

Dear readers,

I am migrating Jane Austen’s World to a new blog platform and URL. For the time being I shall double post on both sites, but please bookmark this site for the future. I will be closing the old version of the blog in a month or so. Thank you for your support and comments!

Becoming Jane

I’m still digesting the movie and reading Jon Spence’s Becoming Jane Austen. Of the four of us who saw Becoming Jane, the one who knew almost nothing about Jane Austen enjoyed the movie the most. Her reaction was curiosity. She wanted to go home and reread Jane’s novels and to learn more about her personal life. She was also the only one of us who cried towards the end when Jane met Tom’s daughter. To me the scene seemed contrived to provide a neat, pat ending to a rather trite tale.

After the lights turned on in the theater, my fellow Janeite, Lady Anne, and I exclaimed (almost simultaneously), “Nice movie, terrible biography.” Two women in the row in front of us turned around, smiled, and agreed. We then briefly discussed “Amadeus,” which was also a good film, but which portrayed Mozart’s and Salieri’s relationship inaccurately.

Click here for my other post about Becoming Jane, and to access other sites about the film. I’ll write a more detailed critique about the film later, after finishing Spence’s biography.

For comments on this post, please click here.

I’m Tagged for a Nice Award

Lady Jane from has given me a ‘Nice Award.’ How sweet of her. (La! If only she really knew me!) Here are the criteria:

This Nice award is for those blogger’s who are nice people; good blog friends and those who inspire good feelings and inspiration. Also, for those who are a positive influence on our blogging world. Once you’ve been awarded please pass it on to 7 others who you feel are deserving of this award.

I would like to bestow a nice award on seven other bloggers I have come to admire:

  • Lori Smith of Following Jane Austen and Jane Austen Quotes, and author of A Walk With Jane Austen.

  • Josie Brown and Rita Abrams From Pride and Prejudice, the musical. These two talented women are allowing visitors to listen to a full song on their site each week. What a wonderful gift for Jane Austen fans.
  • Jane Fan from Austen-tatious, the first blogger to place Jane Austen’s World on her blog roll.
  • Regency Ramble. I love reading Michele Ann Young’s posts about the Regency Era and look forward to reading them every week.
  • Linda Merrill from Surroundings. Linda and I email each other frequently. Her interior design blog not only looks gorgeous, but her taste is exquisite.
  • Blog by Marius. Marius is sweet and gentle and nice, even as he snarks his way through the blogosphere. Now that takes talent!
  • Margaret Sullivan, the editrix from Austen blog. I thank her for visiting my humble blog and adding her insights or gently correcting my posts. Kudos MAGS. You’re Da Bomb!

I am in the process of migrating Jane Austen’s World from another blog platform and template. If you have found this blog, please bookmark this site, not the other. Thank you, and stay tuned for the changes to come!

To view my previous blog on Blogger, click here.

To view the Jane Austen’s World website, click here.


Often a journey is more pleasant if one slows down and savors it. I had hoped to review Lori Smith’s book, A Walk With Jane Austen: A Journey into Adventure, Love & Faith, in one fell swoop, but my busy summer schedule would not allow it. This was to my benefit. Everywhere I went I took Lori’s manuscript with me, like a comfortable friend. I discovered that this is no facile book to be read quickly, for Lori investigates such important concepts as faith, morality, and the decisions that change one’s life and set one on a different path.

In fact, this book resonated deeply with me, a fallen Catholic girl. Like Lori, I stayed in a monastery. Last week I was a guest of the Benedictine nuns for two nights, and experienced the same sense of peace that Lori describes in Alton Abbey, the monastery she stayed in when she visited Steventon (above) and Chawton Cottage. But unlike Lori’s silent monks, my nuns chattered like magpies and lived in the moment, working in the real world to bring home the bacon.

Lori describes her visits to Jane’s homes vividly, including Edward Austen-Knight’s Wedgewood china (above) with its geometric pattern of purple and gold around the edge, which he chose in London when Jane was with him. In fact, Lori weaves the personal details of Jane’s life and the details of her own past and present seamlessly in her exquisitely crafted journal.

We learn about the love the two elder Austens had for each other, and what a close-knit family they had created; how Henry championed Jane’s career and bragged about his sister’s authorship; how Edward waited just a tad long to invite his mother and sisters to live in Chawton Cottage; how close Jane felt to Anne Lefroy, who was 27 years her senior; and which character flaws Jane might have had in common with the spoilt and indulged Emma, whose picnic at Box Hill (below) resulted in Mr. Knightley scolding her for humiliating poor Miss Bates.

My favorite section in Part II is Lori’s description of the British Library. Its fascinating contents were a revelation on her part (See the previous post), especially the variety of rare and original manuscripts. This section of the books ends with Lori’s visit to Godmersham Park (below). She describes a horrendous journey on the A road that ended with the kind gesture of a cabby and a breathtaking view of Edward’s fabulous mansion. Lori’s next stop is Winchester, which begins the last part of the book. I can’t wait to read it.