I've always seen Jane Austen as an intimidating author, not from her style but by how everyone raves about her. She is the supposed grandmother of romantic drama, better known as chick lit, and most people say she is their favourite author for a number of reasons. I have never read anything of hers before nor have I seen any of the movie adaptions from her works, I did dabble in Emma for my High School course but at the time I found the book so thick that I knew there was no way I was going to be able to get through it at sixteen (I can even quote my teacher, "I was made to read this book in High School and I hated the thing, it wasn't until I went back to it in my adult life, maybe more than ten years later, that I truly felt I could appreciate Emma"). I have set myself a personal challenge this year to complete a number of specific books, and I have chosen Emma to be the one 'I should have read in school'. Before I tackle it though, I needed to know if I could do it, so I did some research on how best to start with Jane Austen and found this.
Love And Freindship (Not Love and Friendship - but we'll let the Goodreads librarians continue to argue this) is such a delightful read, It's hilarious! The character is such a drama queen you want to slap your forehead at all of her antics, but how she tells her story and brushes over things in her ansy pansy way is what makes this such a great book. Jane Austen makes fun of the cliches of romantic fiction centuries before they were ever considered cliche, she's a genius! Do you remember the fainting damsel trope? well, I do say it appears on almost every page.
I took away a star for the execution of the letters. I just didn't understand who was writing to who in the initial stages and it was rather confusing. Once the narrative starts however, it runs much better although still in letter form.
The character Laura is asked to write about her life in a serious of letters to her best friends daughter, more or less to warn her about the harshness of the world from a woman who has "simply had it the worst". She details how she fell in love and was LITERALLY married to the man of her dreams from their second sentence, how she's whisked away to his abode, only to have his sister hate her, then her husband dies! Conveniently her parents die three weeks after she is married and gone so naturally there should be money left to her, or is there? The antics that this woman and her 'best friend, not best friend' Sophie get up to on their quest are hilarious! They need money but they can't bare to carry a large sum around so will just spend it on silver buckles. The ending is gold, so I won't spoil it here, I'll only say that the mind of this then fourteen-year-old author is a gifted mind indeed. I may actually be able to sit through the two-page description of Emma's bouquet of flowers now.