Sylvestre Le Tousel as Fanny Price, writing to her brother, amid her “nest of comforts” (which includes many books) in 1983 BBC Mansfield Park
“Our books, dear Book Browser, are a comfort, a presence, a diary of our lives. What more can we say?” (Carol Shields, Mary Swann).
“La bibliothèque devient une aventure” (Umberto Eco quoted by Chantal Thomas, Souffrir)
Dear friends, readers — lovers of Austen and of books,
Over on my Ellen and Jim have a Blog, Two, I provided the four photos it takes to capture most of my books on and by Anthony Trollope, and explained why. You may also find a remarkably informative article on book ownership in England from medieval times on and what makes up a library. I thought I’d match that blog with a photo of my collection of books by and on Jane Austen, and in her case, books about her family, close friends, specific aspects of her era having to do with her. Seven shelves of books.
I have a second photo of 3 wide shelves filled with my DVD collection (I have 33 of the movies and/or serial TV films), my notebooks of screenplays and studies of these films, as well as books on Austen films of all sorts. These three shelves also contain my books of translations of Austen into French and/or Italian, as well as a numerous sequels, many of which I’ve not had the patience or taste to read but have been given me.
My book collection for Austen is smaller than my own for Trollope because even though I have many more books on her, she wrote only seven novels, left three fragments, some three notebooks of juvenilia, and a remnant of her letters is all that survives. For each of her novels or books I have several editions, but that’s still only seven plus. By contrast, Trollope wrote 47 novels and I won’t go on to detail all his other writing. OTOH, there are fewer books on him, and the movie adaptations of his books are in comparison very few.
There’s no equivalent movie for The Jane Austen Book Club where members vow to read all Jane Austen all the time
So although I won’t go to the absurdity of photographing my many volumes of the periodical Persuasions, and what I have of the Jane Austen Society of Britain bulletin like publications, I can show the little row of books I’m reading just now about her and towards a paper for the Victorian Web.
The project includes reading some Victorian novels written with similar themes, and Henry James’s Spoils of Poynton; for me it is true that Austen is at the center of a group of women (and men too) writers and themes that mean a lot to me, so I have real libraries of other women writers I have read a great deal of and on and have anywhere from two to three shelves of books for and by, sometimes in the forms of folders:
these are Anne Radcliffe (one long and half of a very long bookshelf), Charlotte Smith (two long bookshelfs), Fanny Burney (three, mostly because of different sets of her journals), George Eliot (one long and half of another long bookshelf), Gaskell (two shorter bookshelves), Oliphant (scattered about but probably at least one very long bookshelf). Virginia Woolf is another woman writer for whom I have a considerable library, and of course Anne Finch (where the folders and notebooks take up far more room than any published books).
As with Trollope starting in around the year 2004 I stopped xeroxing articles, and now have countless in digital form in my computer; I also have a few books on Austen digitally. The reason I have so many folders for Smith, Oliphant, Anne Finch (and other women writers before the 18th century) is at one time their books were not available except if I xeroxed a book I was lucky enough to find in a good university or research library. You found your books where you could, went searching in second hand book stores with them in mind too.
One of my favorite poems on re-reading Jane Austen — whom I began reading at age 12, and have never stopped:
“Re-reading Jane”
To women in contemporary voice and dislocation
she is closely invisible, almost an annoyance.
Why do we turn to her sampler squares for solace?
Nothing she saw was free of snobbery or class.
Yet the needlework of those needle eyes . . .
We are pricked to tears by the justice of her violence:
Emma on Box Hill, rude to poor Miss Bates,
by Mr Knightley’s were she your equal in situation —
but consider how far this is from being the case
shamed into compassion, and in shame, a grace.Or wicked Wickham and selfish pretty Willoughby,
their vice, pure avarice which, displacing love,
defiled the honour marriages should be made of.
She punished them with very silly wives.
Novels of manners! Hymeneal theology!
Six little circles of hell, with attendant humours.
For what do we live but to make sport for our neighbours
And laugh at them in our turn? The philosophy
paused at the door of Mr Bennet’s century;
The Garden of Eden’s still there in the grounds of Pemberley.The amazing epitaph’s ‘benevolence of heart’
precedes ‘the extraordinary endowments of her mind’
and would have pleased her, who was not unkind.
Dear votary of order, sense, clear art
and irresistible fun, please pitch our lives
outside self-pity we have wrapped them in,
and show us how absurd we’d look to you.
You knew the mischief poetry could do.
Yet when Anne Elliot spoke of its misfortune
to be seldom safely enjoyed by those who
enjoyed it completely, she spoke for you.—– Anne Stevenson
The Jane Austen Book Club meets in a hospital when a member has a bad accident
Gentle readers, I can hardly wait to see the second season of the new Sanditon on PBS; my daughter, Laura (Anibundel) much involved with WETA (PBS) nowadays, writing reviews and such, who has read the fragment and books about Austen tells me it is another good one.
Chapman’s classic set (appears as Christmas present in Stillman’s Metropolitan): for our first anniversary Jim bought me a copy of Sense and Sensibility in the Chapman set (1924, without the later pastoral cover)
Ellen
There are societies for Charlotte Smith (small and has met twice), Burney (not so small and meets every other year), George Eliot (I’m not sure), Gaskell (it seems the size of the Burney group and meets yearly) and of course several (different sized) societies for Woolf. Of course JASNA is huge, and subdivides into regions; the British Jane Austen society takes members from all over the UK and commonwealth; there is also an Australian Austen society (as there is an Australian Trollope one). Reading groups for Austen and Trollope abound but not these others.
Dear Ellen,
It is my intention to read your list thoroughly later this evening, but now, while drinking a quick cup of tea, I skimmed through and noticed your RW Chapman edition. I found an OUP Illustrated P&P edited by him in 1970 and subsequently bought the complete set. Is that the edition you have? The binding is quite different. It is still my very favourite edition, although I now have at least two other complete sets including the Cambridge Edition which is always rather disappointing to use.
About the time I found the P&P, I was given Elizabeth Jenkins biography of JA and it sparked an interest in books analysing her work. Some of those collected over the years are insightful and some are far less so.
Best wishes
CEH
My reply:
My dear I didn’t list my books separately. Here this is:
https://www.librarything.com/catalog/ellenandjim&tag=austen
https://www.librarything.com/catalog/ellenandjim&tag=austen+sequel
446 books.
The one pictured is the Chapman set with more modern covers than the original individual volumes Jim gave me early on as gifts.
I too first read Elizabeth Jenkins — perhaps at age 18 or so – and she was part of my original love for Austen.
Ellen
“That explains things well. I was a teen when given Elizabeth Jenkins too, more than 50 years ago now.”
My reply: Yes. I’m 75 and was 18 when I found, bought and read Jenkins’s book — a used book store in Manhattan on 59th Street, the Argosy had such treasures. 5 floors of it with an old fashioned elevator. There I found my first copy of Burney’s diary (3 volumes later 19th century). Ellen
IN reply to someone else on my style: I have been told numerous times by people I’ve met and talked to in physical life (like students) that I sound like someone talking; that they can hear my voice.
[…] believe I could do the something similar (write a similar photo blog) of my Jane Austen library: it would take two photos, one full bookcase of books by and on Austen (same size bookcase so 7 […]