Shepherd Center Book Club discussion

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2018 Books > Aug-Austenland

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message 1: by Meredith (new)

Meredith | 107 comments Mod
Talk about the August selection here.


message 2: by Meredith (new)

Meredith | 107 comments Mod
Here's the imdb page for the movie.

https://www.imdb.com/title/tt1985019/...

This is one time where the movie is as good as (maybe better than) the book. That would be due to the author writing the screenplay...

If you can't get through the book, feel free to just watch the movie.


message 3: by Christine (new)

Christine Austenland opens, “It is a truth universally acknowledged that a thirtysomething woman in possession of a satisfying career and fabulous hairdo must be in want of very little, and Jane Hayes, pretty enough and clever enough, was certainly thought to have little to distress her” (1). How does this sentence set the stage for the novel? Compare it to the famous first sentence of Pride and Prejudice: “It is a truth universally acknowledged, that a single man in possession of a good fortune, must be in want of a wife.” Which of these universal “truths” is actually true, if either?


message 4: by Christine (new)

Christine Jane’s great-aunt Carolyn set the whole Pembrook Park adventure into motion. What do you think Carolyn’s intentions were in sending Jane to this Austenland? Do you think Jane fulfilled those expectations?


message 5: by Christine (new)

Christine Jane comes to wonder what kind of fantasy world Jane Austen might have created for herself: “Did Austen herself feel this way? Was she hopeful? Jane wondered if the unmarried writer had lived inside Austenland with close to Jane’s own sensibility—amused, horrified, but in very real danger of being swept away” (123). Is it possible to guess at Austen’s attitude toward romance by reading her work? Why or why not?


message 6: by Christine (new)

Christine What might Jane Austen think of Austenland, if she were alive today? Could she have possibly anticipated how influential her novels would become, even for twenty-first-century audiences? Could she ever have imagined a fan like Jane Hayes?


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