Seller
Jane Austen's Worthing
The Real Sanditon
Synopsis
During her stay in Worthing in late 1805 Jane Austen became friends with Edward Ogle, who was the driving force behind the chaotic little town's transformation into a well-ordered seaside resort. Then, in 1817, the year of her death, Jane Austen used Worthing as the background for her final, unfinished novel, Sanditon, one of whose main characters was based on Ogle.
This book gives a detailed account of the town Jane Austen knew in 1805, and explores in full the close links between Sanditon and early Worthing.
But this is more than just the snapshot of a single year. It is also the portrait of an era. Taking the first twenty-five years of the nineteenth century as his time frame, the author explains how Worthing changed and developed during this period, and paints vivid pictures of some of the people associated with the town.
We meet Worthing's most paranoid resident, the volatile reformed criminal John Mackoull, as well as notable visitors to the town such as the poets Byron and Shelley, the satirical writer Horace Smith, and Colonel Berkeley, the louche nobleman and part-time actor with a passion for young actresses.
Jane Austen's Worthing includes seventy-five illustrations, over a third of them in colour.
New & Used
Seller |
Information |
Condition |
Price |
|
| - | New | | Out of Stock |
What Reviewers Are Saying
'This wide-ranging book is a fine achievement.' * Sensibilities * 'A well balanced and carefully researched work.' * Austenprose * 'Edmonds discovers all manner of interesting insights, and introduces a cast of fiction-worthy colourful characters ... He is an honest and engaging writer.' * Sussex Life * 'Edmonds's handsome book ... provides thought-provoking comments and ideas on Jane's fascinating but unfinished last work.' * Jane Austen News Letter *