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Jane and the Genius of the Place: Being the Fourth Jane Austen Mystery af Stephanie Barron
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Jane and the Genius of the Place: Being the Fourth Jane Austen Mystery

af Stephanie Barron

Serier: A Jane Austen Mystery (4)

MedlemmerAnmeldelserPopularitetGennemsnitlig vurderingSamtaler
250622,398 (3.83)4
Info:

Bantam (2000), Mass Market Paperback, 384 pages

Medlem:meerka
Samlinger:Dit bibliotekVurdering:*****
Nøgleord:Faux Regency, British, borrowed
Recently added bylisa211, pt1208, muriellh, privat bibliotek, Clio12, seriesbookgirl, CatVonDee, bvwest, conjtart, missprice
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Engelsk (5)  Fransk (1)  Alle sprog (6)
Viser 1-5 af 6 (næste | vis alle)
One thing to enjoy about these mysteries the denseness of the language - there is a weighty story that isn't resolved too quickly. I particularly enjoyed the historical aspects regarding the ongoing French war pursuits. ( )
  tjsjohanna | Apr 5, 2009 |
A little less than genius, but still fun
July 2001

In this, the fourth of the Jane Austen Mystery series by Stephanie Barron, we are once again drawn into a tale more sordid than the ones we are used to from Jane Austen. Jane attends Canterbury Race Day with some of the Austen clan, witnessing the excitement over straining horses, and being shocked by Mrs. Grey, a rich Frenchwoman with a good taste in racehorses, a genius at shocking the populace, and the bad fate to end up brutally strangled by Race Day's end. Once again, our fictional Jane is close to the investigative action -- this time, it's her brother Neddie, local magistrate, who is in charge of discovering the murderer. There is an obvious suspect, the man who owned the carriage in which Mrs. Grey's body was found (scandalously undressed!), but Mrs. Grey had made enemies of much of the people of the Kentish neighborhood.

As is usual, Stephanie Barron weaves in cultural information of the day -- one starts with some knowledge of the low pursuits of cock-fighting, high-stakes card parties, and speculation on horseracing, but by novel's end one has learned of the new perspectives in landscaping "improvement", a bit on current women's fashions, British troop movements in holding off Napolean's armies, and the financial ramifications of the Napoleanic wars in general. Not all of the historical information is pleasant to learn; Barron reminds us a little bit too often of the August heat making it a necessity for quick inquests and burials. I'm sure the coroners of England were happy when the inquest jury no longer had to examine the corpse for themselves.

As an avid reader of Agatha Christie, I figured out a few of the mystery's puzzles early on, but though I could tell =how= the murder was done, I couldn't tell =who= did it. There are some odd, distracting bits of plot, I believe; however, I do appreciate the little bit of =Emma= that was stolen for the use of this book. It makes for interesting pitfalls; a devoted Janeite will be able to recognize phrases, dialogue, and plot taken from Austen's works, but Barron uses them for her own end and the unwary reader can be caught in surprise twists to the Austen originals. I found the ending of the novel somewhat unsatisfying, but the novel as a whole is entertaining. ( )
  meepbobeep | Mar 8, 2009 |
Although I did not enjoy this book as much as the last one it is still a great read. We have our sleuth, Jane Austen, delving into the world of espionage. The book is set in Kent in August of 1805. It was during this time that England was under threat of an invasion by Napoleon, and when a local woman is found dead in another man's chaise, Jane and her family don't at first connect the death to treachery and espionage. The lady had what was called a "reputation". Not many mourn the beautiful and brazen Francoise, but Ned, Jane's brother is the county magistrate, so he must find the killer. He enlists the help of the intrepid Jane. I really like these characters, and I have to keep reminding myself that this Jane Austen is not the real one. This is a wonderful Regency series. ( )
  Romonko | Feb 15, 2009 |
Jane Austin as fiction
  kattykathy | Sep 1, 2007 |
I always enjoy these novels even though I guessed the ending on this one. ( )
  bookheaven | Mar 19, 2007 |
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Amazon.com (ISBN 0553578391, Mass Market Paperback)

Serious scholars might disagree, but it seems to at least one amateur Austenite that Stephanie Barron has captured Jane Austen's voice perfectly in her scrupulously researched and scrumptuously written mysteries starring the celebrated English novelist. "There are not many uses for a baronet's daughter, but the steady management of a gentleman's household may safely be described as one of them," Barron writes in the fourth book in this remarkable series, a line that could have been plucked from anywhere in the actual canon. Jane is talking about her sister-in-law Elizabeth, who runs her brother Edward's Godmersham estate in Kent. It's here that Jane comes for a visit in the summer of 1805--and gets caught up not only in a murder mystery but the planned invasion of England by Napoleon, which ended in the Battle of Trafalgar.

Austen, of course, had all the qualities of a good detective: the superb attention to detail, fervid imagination, and salty disdain for pretension. Barron makes excellent use of these attributes, plopping Jane Poirot-like into the middle of a crime at the Canterbury Races, then surrounding her with mysterious and possibly sinister figures involved in aiding or thwarting Napoleon's plans.

The writing, as stylized as it is ("There is nothing like the country for the rapid communication of what is dreadful"), never gets in the way of Barron's carefully plotted story, and in the end most readers will find they've managed to satisfy their appetites both for Austen and for mystery. First-timers will be delighted to hear that the three earlier books in Barron's series (Jane and the Unpleasantness at Scargrave Manor, Jane and the Man of the Cloth, and Jane and the Wandering Eye) are available in paperback. --Dick Adler

(hentet fra Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:57:55 -0400)

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