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In this riveting, gorgeously illustrated book, Sutherland... has identified 42 objects - one for each year of Austen's life . . . the great advantage of Sutherland's pick and mix approach is that it allows us the buried stories, side angles and overlooked corners that get squeezed out in more conventional treatments of Austen's life.- Kathryn Hughes, Sunday Times, March 2025 More than 200 years after Jane Austen’s death at the age of just forty-one, we are still looking for clues about this extraordinary writer’s life. What might we learn if we take a glimpse inside the biographies of objects that crossed her path in life and afterwards – things that she cherished or cast aside, or that furnished the world in which she moved, or that have themselves been inspired by her legacy?Among objects described in this book are a teenage notebook, a muslin shawl, a wallpaper fragment, a tea caddy, the theatrical poster for a play she attended and the dining-room grate at Chawton Cottage where she lived. Poignantly, the last manuscript page of her unfinished novel and a lock of hair kept by her devoted sister, Cassandra, are also featured. Objects contributing to Jane Austen’s rich cultural legacy include a dinner plate decorated by Bloomsbury artists Vanessa Bell and Duncan Grant, Grayson Perry’s commemorative pot from 2009 and Mr Darcy’s wet shirt, worn by Colin Firth in the 1995 BBC adaptation.This is a different kind of biography, in which objects with their own histories offer shifting entry points into Jane Austen’s life. Each object – illustrated in colour – invites us to meet Jane Austen at a particular moment when her life intersects with theirs, speaking eloquently of past lives and shedding new light on one of our best-loved authors.
Kathryn Sutherland is Senior Research Fellow, St Anne’s College, Oxford.
ContentsAcknowledgementsA chronology of Jane AustenIntroduction: A life in objects Jane Austen: A life in objects1 Portrait of Jane Austen, c. 18102 Mrs Austen to Mrs Walter, 20 August 17753 The Revd George Austen’s bookcase4 ‘Volume the First’ 5 Marianne Knight’s dancing slippers6 Marriage register, St Nicholas Church, Steventon7 Betsy Hancock/Eliza de Feuillide8 ‘Juvenile Songs & Lessons’: Jane Austen’s music book9 A muslin shawl10 The trial of Mrs Leigh Perrot11 Silhouette of Cassandra Elizabeth Austen12 A flower spray13 Frances Burney, Camilla, 179614 A letter, 26–27 May 180115 Portrait of Jane Austen, 180416 Wallpaper fragment17 Martha Lloyd’s Household Book18 Austen family quilt19 Jane Austen’s writing table20 Four Wedgwood serving dishes21 Theatre bill for The Clandestine Marriage, Covent Garden, 1813 10422 Front door, 50 Albemarle Street, London23 Emma, the Windsor Castle copy24 A life in banknotes25 Jane Austen’s pelisse26 The Octagon Room, Bath27 The donkey carriage28 A lock of hair29 Dining-room grate30 A sermon scrap31 Caroline Austen, ‘My Aunt Jane Austen’, 186732 The Cobb, Lyme Regis, Dorset33 Chris Hammond, illustration for Sense and Sensibility, 189934 Memorial window, Winchester Cathedral35 Danish translation of Pride and Prejudice, 190436 Jane Austen plate, Charleston, 1932–3437 Rex Whistler’s costume designs for Pride and Prejudice, 193638 Mr Darcy’s shirt39 A tea caddy40 Grayson Perry, ‘Jane Austen in e17’, 200941 Last wordsNotesFurther readingImage creditsIndex
A stunning, sophisticated and thought-provoking journey through Austen's life, written by a world expert. This book is small but so, so beautiful, and utterly perfectly formed.