A note before the review: I’m so sorry to do two Austen-esk books in a row. This was not planned. I intended to do the “Locked Door Mystery” prompt for this week. I diligently read through Nine Perfect Strangers. The title was on a Goodreads list for this type of mystery. Let me just say with much anger and disappointment, it is NOT a locked door mystery. Yes, there is a locked door, but there are no murders, no wondering “who done it,” no intrigue. Nine Perfect Strangers is another example of a mediocre best seller. The plot slogged, and the pacing was terrible. I was spitting angry after finishing a 400+ page book on Monday for Friday’s blog. Needless to say, I’ve been buried in Scargrave Manor all week.
I also considered this story for the “Something I’m Passionate About” category. It was a toss-up. I have so many free books from friends, family, and the library. And I’m passionate about books. So really, any book fits the “passionate” prompt.
Anyway…
Stephanie Barron penned the title in 1995, but unlike other older books I’ve read recently (I’m looking at you, Elizabeth Peters and MC Beaton), the material holds up. Being a historical cozy mystery, we are completely in 1802-3 for the duration of the novel. And some of the sexism, misogyny, and racism of older books can be passed off as historical rather than anything cringey.
The style of the book sounded very Austen, and this is probably only the second retelling of her stories that I have truly liked. The author must have worked so hard to not only get the sound of Austen’s prose but the feel of her personal writing. That alone makes this a wonderful story.
But for all those other Austen fans out there—Cozy Mysteries with Jane herself! I can’t think of a better selling point. Rosemary was kind enough to give me five of the titles. So I have plenty of warm reading for the rest of this cold winter. (I promise this should be the last Austen on the blog, though…)
The only problem I had with the story was knowing there would not be a romance subplot. Jane never married and as far as we know, didn’t have another love interest after her refusal of marriage to Harris Biggs-Wither.
I give Jane and the Unpleasantness at Scargrave Manor Four Carriage Rides around Hyde Park.
No comments:
Post a Comment