Saturday, 24 August 2013

Persuasion (38) - a romance that was never in doubt

I don't know whether I just wasn't in the right kind of mood for this book, but Persuasion, by Jane Austen, which I read on my Kindle didn't quite light my fire as much as I was anticipating it would. It could be that I sort of remembered the essence of the story, or maybe it was because I found myself getting confused between some of the characters, which was irritating. This is the tale of Anne Elliott, a thoroughly decent creature, who, following the early death of her mother, is, for some reason, virtually ignored by her vain father Sir Walter, and her eldest sister, Elizabeth. She has a stalwart friend, however, in Lady Russell, who lives near their home and in whom she confides. We discover that Anne was persuaded by this formidable woman to break off an engagement to a Mr Wentworth when she was just 19 years old, as the Lady didn't think it a suitable match. In the intervening years, her heart would compare any other suitor to her first beau, and they just didn't measure up. Now in her late twenties, Anne was convinced that she would never marry. When her feckless father runs into financial difficulties, he rents out their ancestral country pile and takes a house in Bath. Anne, while looking after her clingy, hypocondriac and married younger sister Mary, stays in the vicinity for a while, and finds the new tenants - Admiral and Mrs Croft - to be fine people, and she soon becomes an intimate of theirs, although she is nervous when she discovers that the Admiral is Mr Wentworth's brother-in-law. Inevitably, she and Wentworth (now a naval Captain) start to move in the same circles, and all the old feelings are stirred up once again. The remainder of the story is a bit of a will they, won't they affair, with a few twists and turns and misunderstandings. It is a romantic tale, but it didn't quite keep me gripped or in any doubt as to what was going to happen. I just wanted to shake the pair of them and get them to tell each other how they felt! Don't get me wrong, it's still a very enjoyable read, but it's no Pride and Prejudice.

My STAR rating: FOUR.

Length: 208 print pages
Price I paid: free on the Kindle.
Formats available: print, audio CD abridged, audio download unabridged, ebook.

No comments:

Post a Comment