Jane Hartwell, lady's maid to Miss Julia Bertram of Mansfield Park, escapes the pitfalls of the Bertram household only to be hounded by bounty hunters in the streets of London, in this complementry novel to Jane Austen's famous "Mansfield Park"
A romance. Well sometimes they turn out well. Not this one. Too much dialog. Book was more like 3 short stories to me. The author did not seem to know where she wanted to go with the story. I am sorry to have wasted my time on it..
This was quite a fascinating book. It starts as a spinoff from one of Jane Austin's books, Mansfield Park.
In this novel we follow Jane Hartwell, a country girl who first comes to Mansfield Park as a maid/ ladies maid just as the main adventures of Austin's story kick off. Unlike many other Austin inspired novels, our main characters are not those of the Austin novel, Fanny Price and Edmund are barely mentioned, instead we see more of the servants and the other members of the cast, and rarely in flattering light.
As the play comes crashing down with Sir Thomas' return from abroad, Jane Hartwell leaves Mansfield Park and the second part of the novel starts. It is a radical change!
The author clearly wants us to know more of the social inequality, the issues of the day, the unpleasantness that is never more than touched upon in Austin novels. This is exactly the sort of work of fiction I enjoy reading, but following on from an Austin inspired novel it was confusing and I think it gave the novel a sort of literary schizophrenia, I had to put it down for a while at this stage and read something else. The two types of novel are so very different that they do not run smoothly from one to the other.
Very well worth reading though, for anyone who likes reading this era! Unlike Austin or her many fans it is not purely a romance there is much more historical information than you get in many similar era novels. I found the writing style nice and easy to read as well, with none of the pretension that sometimes ends up in historical novels.