Non-Genre
Reading
Why Jane Austen is one of my favorite authors
And why I think modern readers have trouble with Mansfield Park
Then,
about equally, are letters, journals, biographies, and cultural
studies from any period, and 19th Century literature--though I
have a weakness for Smollett, Richardson, Fielding, Defoe, Lennox, Burney, and of course I love Spectator and
other non fiction of the 18th Century. I am particularly interested
in women's voices across time--how they observed their world,
and reacted to it, and how people behaved. Favorites: Liselotte von der Pfalz, Fanny Burney's
letters and diaries, the letters of Madame de Sevigny, Lord Chesterfield's
Letters, Saint-Simon's diary, George Selwyn's and Walpole's letters, as well as Mary Wortley Montagu's.
Other
frequent rereads are Mrs. Gaskell's Cranford,
and Wives
and Daughters. (In fact, I consider this to be one of
the finest novels of that century; one can see its influence on
George Eliot's Middlemarch,
which is another favorite.)
I
like a lot of Trollope, but I think my favorite is The
Duke's Children, despite the nonsense about a woman who
has dared to fall in love without the man giving her leave (by
choosing her first) being thus rendered unpure and spiritually
shop-worn. The characters in this book are so memorable, I
reread it anyway. Of course Anthony Hope's romantic work--I delight
in The
Dolly Dialogues and P.G. Wodehouse, especially the earlier
works.
Biographies
I really admire are Juliet
Barker's of the Brontes; E.F. Benton's As We Were and
Penelope Fitzgerald's The
Knox Brothers. I also enjoy dipping into Henry James'
essays on literature, even though I don't particularly admire
his fiction.
Then
there are authors whose alien minds fascinate me--like Evelyn
Waugh, and Edmund Wilson (essays, not his fiction, which I find
dreadful). Nabokov is another whose nonfiction I appreciate more
than I do his fiction.
Recently
I have been reading the letters of Claire
Clairmont. Fascinating view of how intelligent and creative
people during the Romantic Era grow up. Claire and Mary Shelley
are often considered prime examples of the Romantics; their letters
speak to many of the concerns women writers in particular face
now. Interesting side bits are their reactions to the Year
Without a Summer (in fact, if it hadn't been for that terrible
weather, might Frankenstein
have been written at all?) A worthwhile read is swapping between
Mary's letters and Claire's and Byron's, with what remains of Shelley's letters and diaries after his family went through them
in order to transform him into Saint Percy.