3.5
The reading experience of this book can only be described as pleasant. Mild. Enjoyable. Pleasurable and easy to read, but does nothing particularly revolutionary for me. In my quest to recreate an experience similar to reading Jane Austen, Susan Ferrier was the first author I have tried whose name is often mentioned in tandem. I think this book perhaps develops to be a little more like Austen in the latter half, and occasionally we see a similar wit shining through, but I don’t think generally their writing styles align, and its a disservice to compare this story, and Ferrier’s far broader, sweeping writing style, to something it is not. That being said, I definitely preferred the second half of the story to the first, where the melodramatic style tapered off and the characters became far more likeable. And ultimately I was just so surprised by how easy and fun it was to read this book - if you are looking for non-heavy going classics, this is one I would definitely recommend.
The book is structured strangely - for a third of the book we follow a character (Lady Juliana) that the story isn’t really about. It is akin to a long detailed prologue to the story of our true heroine, Mary Douglas, Lady Juliana’s daughter. While the first portion is easy to read and immersed in the best atmospheric setting of Scottish landscape, it is made truly insufferable by the character of Lady Juliana, who is selfish, naive, frustrating, melodramatic, entitled - name a bad quality and it is likely she will fulfil it. Indeed, she is intended to be like this, but I did not like reading about her and this long ‘prologue’ to Mary’s story could definitely have been shorted. The writing at this point felt very dramatic also, many exclamation points scattered here and there, and though it felt ironic at times, it was a little grating. Luckily, as mentioned before, this becomes less so as the book progressed. Reading a little into the context of this novel I learned that originally Ferrier worked on the novel with her friend, who wanted the novel to be more in the gothic style. Perhaps this early style is the remnants of that working relationship, or maybe just an effect of Lady Juliana’s character which seeps into the writing style.
As we moved into Mary’s lifetime, I was worried that she was going to be another character of the irritating kind, only this time the bland, good, nice character, but in this I was pleasantly surprised. While she is good, she has a sense of humour and is willing to laugh at her own desire to follow the rules, and for that I really liked her. And thus I enjoyed her portion of the novel a lot more. Though the characters originally felt very ‘stock’ character-like, the second half introduces a lot more interesting, flawed characters, including my personal favourite, the icon herself, Lady Emily. Lady Emily is the character that felt the most like a real person to me (because though Mary may be sufferable in her goodness, she still feels like a character), and she has the best lines in the book, filled with scathing sarcasm. Though she can be a little self centred, I loved her relationship with Mary. And what is also interesting about Lady Emily is that she kind of defies some of the ideas that Susan Ferrier presents in this novel about education. For Ferrier, it seems that the effects of poor education are damning, yet for Lady Emily she contains some core goodness which allows her to transcend the teachings of Lady Juliana. I liked this a lot - that Ferrier pointed out how the effect of poor education can be very situational. One might marry for money and be happy, or one might be miserable. The real problem is what drives people to make these decisions - namely, a lack of education (particularly female). Throughout a lot of the book is brought up the question of what a valuable education entails, whether that is accomplishments, skills, morals, all, none. And we see the effect of one woman’s poor, neglected education have an effect through her family line, as she, never given any role model as a mother, is expected to then act as a mother to both her children and the children of her brother, who she in turn neglects, and those children suffer.
Whilst this story felt on the placid side, there was still a lot I gained from it, and I’m really glad that I got to read it. I only wish that more of Susan Ferrier’s novels were in print/easy to find, because her writing is so pleasurable to read and I am so interested to see what else she has written. This novel grew on me slowly, gradually warming up, until I left it with a feeling of fondness for its contents. It is also so fascinating to me how some books simply are forgotten and lost to time; this book is hard to find and almost unknown in popular literature, and yet Ferrier outsold Austen in her day. I think this novel is still worthy of notice and certainly deserved the recognition it received in its time, and I would definitely recommend it to any reader of classic literature.