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Lady Vernon and Her Daughter

A Novel of Jane Austen's Lady Susan

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1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
In Lady Vernon and Her Daughter, Jane Rubino and Caitlen Rubino-Bradway have taken Jane Austen's novella, Lady Susan, and transformed it into a vivid and richly developed novel of love lost and found—and the complex relationships between women, men, and money in Regency England.
Lady Vernon and her daughter, Frederica, are left penniless and without a home after the death of Sir Frederick Vernon, Susan's husband. Frederick' s brother and heir, Charles Vernon, like so many others of his time, has forgotten his promises to look after the women, and despite their fervent hopes to the contrary, does nothing to financially support Lady Vernon and Frederica.
When the ladies, left without another option, bravely arrive at Charles's home to confront him about his treatment of his family, they are faced with Charles's indifference, his wife Catherine's distrustful animosity, and a flood of rumors that threaten to undo them all. Will Lady Vernon and Frederica find love and happiness—and financial security—or will their hopes be dashed with their lost fortune?
With wit and warmth reminiscent of Austen's greatest works, Lady Vernon and Her Daughter brings to vivid life a time and place where a woman's security is at the mercy of an entail, where love is hindered by misunderstanding, where marriage can never be entirely isolated from money, yet where romance somehow carries the day.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      August 10, 2009
      Inspired by Jane Austen's novella Lady Susan
      , this biting social comedy from mother-daughter duo Rubino (the veteran author) and Rubino-Bradway (the first-timer) is a delightful, worthy homage to Austen. In 19th-century England, Lady Susan Vernon is left nearly penniless after her honorable, wealthy husband dies and his unscrupulous little brother, Charles, bilks Susan and her daughter, Frederica, of their share of his fortune. Forced to rely upon the kindness of friends, the two spend several months bouncing from home to home. Subjected to the two-faced machinations of her social circle (particularly from Charles's wife, Catherine), Susan cleverly (and believably) turns several of her enemies against each other, using their own words. As in Austen's novels, securing a generous dowry and a “good” marriage (that is, one with money and status) is the all-important goal of every woman, but Susan is a dynamic character more than capable of delivering a shocking surprise.

    • Library Journal

      September 15, 2009
      The authors (Rubino writes a contemporary mystery series and a volume of Sherlockian novellas) have brought Jane Austen's fragmentary and unfinished 1795 epistolary novel, "Lady Susan", to life with this clever adaptation. Deftly quoting from and expanding on the original letters, they incorporate them into a sympathetic tale of a widow and her orphaned daughter deprived of their home and lifestyle by the untimely death of Lord Vernon. Forced to depend on the unwilling hospitality of her husband's heir, Lady Vernon does her best to adapt, all the while hoping to improve her daughter's fortunes, not to mention happiness, through an advantageous marriage. Though far more sympathetic than the original self-seeking Lady Susan, Lady Vernon is also the victim of relentless gossip and misunderstanding as she drifts from country house to country house, her vulnerable position highlighting the dangerous plight of women whose economic well-being was subject to the whims of their husbands and the good nature and generosity of the husbands' heirs. VERDICT A surprise ending and livelier, more fully realized characters will reward those familiar with the original and tempt others to read it for the first time. Austen fans will enjoy, although it may be a harder sell for standard historical fiction readers. [See also Monica Fairview's "The Other Mr. Darcy", p. 48, and Austen and Ben H. Winters's "Sense and Sensibility and Sea Monsters", p. 53.Ed.]Cynthia Johnson, Cary Memorial Lib., Lexington, MA

      Copyright 2009 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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