Showing posts with label book review. Show all posts
Showing posts with label book review. Show all posts

Friday, March 20, 2020

Jane Austen Fan's Reading List

With many people in social isolation, reading material becomes indispensable. But what to do if you have ran out of all of your Jane Austen, including letters and Juvenilia? 

Where to turn next? Here, I will suggest six (plus one) novels to read if you need a Jane Austen fix. 

1. Belinda by Maria Edgeworth
Belinda is a young lady who is introduced to the world of wealth and dissipation by the charming Lady Delacour. The lady in question uses her wit and vivacity to conceal her fears of a terminal illness. There are misunderstandings, petty jealousies and a falling out. Belinda is courted by several young men and there is much speculation over whom she would choose.

This is a charming story. While Belinda is a bit colorless, Lady Delacour is a delight. And this is one the few novels of its kind where one of the principal characters is a person of color. I demand they make it into a mini-series!         

2. Cecilia, or Memoirs of an Heiress by Frances Burney
Poor Cecilia has the double inconvenience of being an heiress and having too many guardians. She has to navigate London society and meet with every kind of vice and folly that late 18th century England had to offer. The novel is more of a character study, and you will delight in the absurdity of some of the people our Cecilia has to meet along the way.

Unlike the sedated novels of Austen, this one is a lot more over the top. The villains are a bit more dastardly and the heroine is a little more precious. But it's a fun ride.   
 
3. Camilla, or A Picture of Youth by Frances Burney
The Pybus family
This novel is about the Tyrold family and their various relatives and dependents. Camilla is the middle of three sisters. Her eldest sister Lavinia is sweet and gentle, and her youngest sister Eugenia is very intelligent, but due to a childhood illness and an accident is considered plain. They also have a mischievous brother, a rich uncle, a silly cousin, and a wealthy ward. Camilla is meant to be an heiress, but then she is disinherited. Love matches are made and broken, abductions and forced marriages occur, people lose their wealth and end up in debtors' prison. But in the end everyone gets what they deserve.

This novel can perhaps be best described as a book Jane Austen would have written if she had never outgrown her Juvenilia. It is exceedingly fun, but the plot is not very plausible.                   

4. The Italian, or the Confessional of the Black Penitents by Ann Radcliffe
Most people think of Mysteries of Udolpho when they think of Radcliffe. But I would argue that The Italian is much more manageable and entertaining. While Mysteries are a little tedious and somewhat predictable, this Gothic novel gave me a few genuine chills.

The noble Vincentio di Vivaldi loves the virtuous Ellena di Rosalba. But she is poor and obscure, and his mother, jealous of their family's position enlists the help of her confessor Schedoni to stop the marriage. The Inquisition gets involved and things get pretty dark. But not too dark. In the end the villains are punished and love triumphs.

5. Evelina, or the History of a Young Lady's Entrance into the World by Frances Burney 
Evelina is a girl of uncertain parentage (her father had never recognized her) who would have lived out her life in peaceful retirement if not for her grandmother. Mme Duval returns to England and claims her granddaughter. She intends to make her more worldly.

Evelina is pursued by the eligible Lord Orville and the unprincipled Sir Clement Willoughby (hey, I've seen that name somewhere before!). She makes many social blunders, is accused of being an impostor, but in the end is reunited with her father and finds happiness.

6. The Female Quixote; or, The Adventures of Arabella by Charlotte Lennox 
If Northanger Abbey pokes gentle fun at Gothic novels and those who love them, The Female Quixote does the same for French romance novels. Arabella is wealthy, noble, and intelligent. But she thinks that everything she reads in romance novels to be true. (I feel you, Arabella!) She constantly makes social blunders (but is generally completely oblivious to them) and mistakes ordinary situations for beginnings of adventures.          

The novel is funny and entertaining, and never turns into an outright farce. You laugh at Arabella's silliness, but can't help but admire her absolute faith in her own vision of the world.   

+ 7. The Monk: A Romance by Matthew Gregory Lewis
Post image
If you're feeling adventures and a little naughty, this is a novel for you. A Gothic romance that feels like an 18th century draft for a Game of Thrones book. The monk Ambrosio is wise and virtuous, but he is prideful, too. He is seduced and then falls into one sin after another. There are imprisoned nuns, specters, magic potions and incest.

It may come off as a little hokey to a modern reader, but the story has enough twists and turns to be very engaging.

Have you read any of these novels? Which one is your favorite?   

Saturday, April 13, 2013

Carmilla - A Gothic Horror Reviewed

It is hardly news to anyone that we live in a vampire obsessed society. The Twilight saga is barely over and they are already talking about a reboot. Then there are The Vampire Diaries that have been renewed for season 4 and True Blood is about to start their 6th season. So where does this fascination with the undead creatures of the night that suck blood come from?

'Dracula!' you say.

Oh, no! There is a vampire novella that pre-dates Dracula by 25 years and can be credited for starting the lesbian vampire genre, which I am told is very popular.

Carmilla  from Gothic Classics: Graphic Classics Volume 14, by Lisa K. Weber 

Created by Joseph Sheridan Le Fanu, an Irish Gothic writer, Carmilla was published in 1872 and tells a story of a beautiful young woman who becomes an object of desire and victim of a female vampire.   


~ ~ ~ Beware of Spoilers ~ ~ ~        

Illustration for Carmilla from The Dark Blue by D. H. Friston, 1872

Our innocent protagonist Luara lives a quite and retired life with her father in a castle in Styria (Austria), when a mysterious young woman named Carmilla comes to reside with them. Laura is both attracted and repulsed by her strange new friend and her sudden and violent outbursts of extreme sensibility. Things start getting particularly sinister when a wasting illness hits the peasant girls in a nearby village. Laura is also affected and becomes languid and slow, just like her bosom buddy Carmilla. But all mysteries are solved and the villain is vanquished when a friend of the family, General Spielsdorf, who had lost his beloved niece to a similar affliction, comes to visit the family.
 
Carmilla is a truly horrid novel. And if Catherine Morland of Northanger Abbey had been born a generation later, I am sure this would have been her absolute favorite. I cannot recommend it enough.The atmosphere is dark, heavy and spooky and vampire lore is a little different from what is considered canon today. The way the villain is defeated is particularly gruesome. And while our protagonist Laura is a little dull, Carmilla has plenty of layers.

 Funeral, illustration by Michael Fitzgerald for Carmilla in The Dark Blue, January 1872
Carmilla was by far the most engaging character in the novella. She appears to be sweet and innocent and is liked by everyone, but has inexplicable moments of rage. Her relationship with Laura is complex. On the one hand she is attracted to her and suffers from the knowledge that her passion will eventually kill her lover, but, at the same time, she almost revels in the knowledge that they are connected through love, death and blood. Carmilla is romantic and languishing, but also monstrous.

By the end of the story, Laura learns that vampires' desire for their victims resembles passionate love and that they often stalk their victims. Sounds familiar? I could not help but notice that the relationship between Edward and Bella from the Twilight saga closely resemble that of Carmilla and Laura. Both are very intense, stalker-like, obsessive and morbid.

Carmilla graphic novel, Gothic Classics: Graphic Classics Volume 14illustrated by Lisa K. Weber 

Many people find fault with Twilight for supposedly making vampires less monstrous and more emotional, brooding and, yes, sparkly. But to be fair, the handsome vampire type has been around since Polidori's The Vampyre and vampires of Anne Rice can out-brood anyone. Carmilla also falls into the tortured and brooding vampire category. And while sparkling may seem a little silly, there is a lot of common vampire lore that is just as asinine. Why are vampires afraid of mirrors, for example, as they are in The Last Man on Earth? Or what's with all the garlic? A good portion of spaghetti bolognese could kill the most powerful of them.    

The Moth Diaries, a YA novel loosely based on Carmilla, adapted into a film in 2011  

Twilight is often criticized for portraying an abusive and dysfunctional relationship as romantic and attractive. But based on Carmilla's example we could argue that vampire stories have always glamorized dysfunctional relationships. While Le Fanu probably wrote the lesbian subtext to titillate and scandalize his 19th century audience, that is not what makes Carmilla's relationship with Laura problematic. Carmilla's  passion for her victim is all-consuming, selfish , dishonest and very abusive. After all, the end result of it will be Laura's death.


That is why Carmilla reminded me so much of Twilight. In both stories, the vampire has obsessive, possessive and intense feelings for the human character. The stories, however, end very differently. While in Carmilla the vampire is destroyed and Laura is free to live her life, though she never quite goes back to being herself, in Twilight the vampire 'wins' and turns his lady-love into a vampire.

The Vampire Lovers (1970) based on Carmilla with Ingrid Pitt and Madeline Smith

Considering that Carmilla is a story about a vampire and her lesbian lover, I am very much surprised that Hollywood has not tried to cash in on this gem of a story in recent years. There have been quite a few screen adaptations of the novella or inspired by it, but none of them seem to have been all that memorable.

For all you aspiring screenwriters out there, take note, a script based on Carmilla could be your big break!

For those who want to read the novella, it can be found on Wikisource or Gutenberg.

Saturday, April 14, 2012

Book Review: Belinda by Maria Edgeworth

Oh, Belinda, how I love thee, how I loathe thee!

I picked up Belinda, written by Maria Edgeworth in 1801, for the pure and simple reason that it was mentioned in a Jane Austen novel (Northanger Abbey to be precise). I was haunted by a burning question: "Why is it Miss Austen gained such popularity among modern readers, while many of her equaly famous contemporaries sank into obscurity?" After reading a number of novels written in the late 1790s and early 1800s, I realized that the simple truth is that Jane is just much more modern. Many critics have berated her for concentrating on small private family affairs instead of big historical events, but that's exactly what ensured her continuing appeal. Her themes are personal and therefore timeless.

Belinda suffers very much from being written 200 years ago. The the moral and ethical norms have changed so much that the villains often come off as appealing and the heroes seem like downright reprehensible human beings.

The Plot: Belinda Portman is a young lady just entering society at behest of her matchmaking aunt Stanhope. She is placed with a fashionable bel esprit Lady Delacour. At first, Belinda is fascinated by this woman, but when she learns her sad history she begins to pity her and becomes her one and only true friend. Belinda becomes the object of admiration of one Clarence Harvey, but he has a secret of his own. For the past few years he has been educating a young lady, whom he calls Virginia St. Peirre, planning to make her his wife. At the same time, Lady Delacour begins to think that Belinda is scheming to marry Lord Delacour.  Belinda leaves Lady Delacour and finds herself with the Percivals, the embodiment of a perfect happy family. Lady Delacour, who believes that she is dying from breast cancer, finally agrees to submit to the treatment and discovers that her disease is not of that nature. She patches things up with Belinda, her estranged husband and her abandoned daughter. In the meantime, Belinda is accosted by a new admirer, a young and handsome West Indian  and Mr. Percival's ward, Mr. Vincent. But he too has a secret that may ruin their chance at happiness.

BEWARE OF THE SPOILERS!

Let's start with the good stuff. Belinda is a novel that is very easy to enjoy. The style is light and accessible, the language is neither complicated nor dated. The pacing is excellent and the author doesn't feel the need to dwell on the beauties of mountains and lakes for five pages. There is a lot of humor and the plot is never dull without being too melodramatic.

Edgeworth, at least in the first edition, doesn't shy away from some pretty controversial and dark issues. She talks about breast cancer and its effects on a person's social position. She brings up interracial marriage which her characters seem to accept as absolutely ordinary (though clearly her readers did not see it the same way because this subplot was removed from the third edition). She is not afraid to mention mistresses, laudanum addiction or female dueling. Her range of topics is much broader than that of her contemporary Jane Austen and she really knows how to bring her characters to live through dialogue.

But while the plot and style are superb, I do take issue with some aspects of the novel.

Heroes & Villains: The novel should have been called Lady Delacour because it is her story. Belinda Portman suffers from the common heroine malady of being too perfect. She does make a few blunders in Volume I, but by Volume II she gains so much self-control and maturity that as a character she becomes completely uninteresting.

Lady Delacour leads a life of dissipation and keeps her daughter Helena at a distance
Lady Dalacour, on the other hand, is absolutely fascinating and surprisingly modern. She grows and learns from the first page to the very last. She makes mistakes and jumps to conclusions, but she sees when she is in the wrong and is not too proud to make up for her shortcomings. She is clever, witty, courageous, and it is no wonder that she is dissatisfied with her lot in life. The world of the early 19th century England does not have much to offer her in the way of occupation. The only thing that she is allowed and expected to do is to become the perfect mother and wife, a role that she accepts with apparent delight, but it is still clear that she could have done so much more with herself under different circumstances.

Lady Delacour dressed as Elizabeth I with Clarence Harvey kneeling at her feet  
Our hero is the dashing, brilliant and handsome Clarence Harvey. Edgeworth spends a lot of time trying to convince us that he possesses all possible virtues. And I'm with her on that up until we come to the story of Virginia St. Pierre. This is one of the places where you can feel how old the book is. In short, Clarence becomes disillusioned with artifice and coquetting of society ladies. He decides to follow the ideas of Rousseau and educate himself a wife in simplicity and seclusion. He comes across a young orphan (the story doesn't specify how old she is, but it can be assumed that she's about fifteen) in a forest and pretty much takes the girl away from all her friends and everything she has ever known and puts her under the protection of an elderly lady, leaving her to live and be educated in seclusion, while he goes out and enjoys all the pleasures of society, while grooming the kid to be his obedient, docile and simple-minded wife. When he meets Belinda, he realizes that he likes her better and starts thinking of how he can avoid marrying Virginia.

Our hero, ladies and gentlemen!

Needless to say, this part of the story I do not like. By modern standards our hero comes off as rather creepy. While we're assured that he never takes advantage of his ward, when people begin to assume that she's his mistress, he is shocked and angered. For a man who lived in the world, that reaction seems a little silly. What did he expect people to think?

Paul et Virginie became a popular subject for artists in late 18th century
Clarence's ward  is the most tragic and abused character in the whole book. Clarence deprives her of everything that is familiar to her. He even takes away her name. Feeling that her name, Rachel, is not romatic enough, he dubs her Virginia St. Pierre after a character in St Pierre's novel Paul et Virginie, essentially stripping her of the last shred of her identity. While she is never physically abused, her psychological abuse goes pretty deep. She lives in constant fear of displeasing her guardian and being thought ungrateful. She is willing to undergo physical pain to please Mr. Harvey, an idea he finds "charming" (a psychopath, if I ever saw one). Her ideas of sincerity and feminine modesty are so warped that she cannot express her feelings and almost ends up marrying Clarence against her will. Her father, who had abandoned her and her mother many years ago, comes back and wants to be reunited with her. Mind you, he only thinks of her because his second wife (a wealthy window) and their son had died. Despite her father being a real cad, she is eager to please him and shows him the same servile submissiveness that marks her relationship with Clarence.

To Edgeworth's credit, she does not condone this. Throughout the whole episode she makes it clear that Clarence's idea is silly and would never work. Simplicity and sensibility are not enough, and rationality and ability to govern one's thoughts and feelings are much more important virtues. Everyone gets out of this affair and get to marry those they want, but Virginia's psychological scars are not going anywhere.

Mr. Vincent is a gambler fond of the E O table, game of chance similar to modern roulette 
She drives this same lesson home with Mr Vincent, a rich West Indian creole, who falls in love with Belinda and almost marries her. Mr. Vincent is a passionate man with a strong sense of honor and generosity. However, he believes that some people (he thinks himself one of them) possess integrity and honor naturally and don't need reason to govern them. In the end, he almost loses his entire fortune at an E.O. table. Belinda breaks off their engagement, worried that uniting her life with a gamester might result in disaster. When the Virginia situation is resolved, Belinda marries Mr. Harvey.

This is can be an interesting commentary on virtues and flaws then and now. While most modern women would probably avoid getting involved with a gambler if they could,  a man who pretty much kept a girl hostage for several years, grooming her to be his wife when she was old enough to marry, would not be most women's first choice either.            

Mrs. Freke convinces Lady Delacour to take part in a female duel
This brings me to another interesting supporting character - Mrs. Harriet Freke, a straw feminist if there ever was one. Originally Lady Delacour's closest friend, she switches camps and beings to conspire against her ladyship. Mrs. Freke likes to wear men's clothes, talk loudly about the rights of women and device all sorts of frolics including female duels. She is also cruel, vengeful and a bully. Edgeworth has no sympathy for this character. Mrs. Freke has no redeeming qualities; she is just cruel for the fun of it. Yet when I read about her, I keep wondering what her backstory is. How did she grow up to be so interested in masculine pursuits in a society that would not have tolerated them in a young woman? Why did she become so malicious? Harriet Freke is not an appealing character, but she is an engaging one. She serves as an occasional foil for our heroes, but she's never upgraded to a full-scale villain. And to be honest, with heroes such as these, who needs villains?

Belinda and Lady Delacour attend a masquerade ball in dressed as a tragic and a comic muse
Of course, it is unfair to judge a piece of literature from two hundred years ago by modern standards of ethics and morality, but for all its flaws, the novel must have been very progressive for its time. It does talk about some very serious topics such as slavery; and while Juba, Mr. Vincent's black servant, is represented as a very stereotypically superstitious and childlike, he is also brave, loyal and kind. Edgeworth paints a popular picture of the 'noble savage', but she seems to imply that Juba's shortcomings are not inbred. They come from his education and there is no indication that she thinks he is somehow inferior by nature.

Despite its flaws, Belinda is a great novel. Edgeworth knows how to tell a good story and how to create compelling characters. While Belinda may be flawless she is still good-humored and witty. And while the ethics of her characters are often dated, they are allowed to be funny and interesting. If you're a fan of late 18th and early 19th century novel, I highly recommend this one.      
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