Google+

8.08.2014

Austen in August/Book Beginnings - Among the Janeites

This is a meme hosted by Rose City Reader.  They ask that you post the first line(s) to the book you are currently reading and share some feelings on the book.  I'm tweaking this a bit and I'm going to share first lines of books/stories, written by, about, or in the theme of Jane Austen. Since today is August first this is also our start to Austen in August! This year it is being hosted by Jenna over at Lost Generation Reader.

I'm repeating a Book Beginnings today.  Yesterday Among the Janeites by Deborah Yaffee turned 1 and in celebration I'm revisiting the beginning of that book.

Chapter 1 - Dressing The Part

The bottom drawers of Baronda Bradley's dresser are filled to overflowing with kid gloves, ballet slippers, stockings, feathers, lace collars, nineteenth-century coins, smelling salts, period playing cards, drawstring reticules, a vintage sewing kit - all these accessories with which she augments the breathtaking Regency outfits she wears to each year's Annual General Meeting of the Jane Austen Society of North America. A walk-in closet holes her thirty size 6 gowns - the green-and-orange with stripped silk overlay, which premiered in Seattle in 2001; the flowered silk brocade day dress, from Los Angeles in 2004; the square-necked, pale-pink georgette with hand-embroidered bodice; the dark red with cutout sleeves and matching long velvet coat; the lace-and-silk confection so daringly low-cut that, at the Vancouver ball in 2007, she armed her friends with the cod word ("Shakespeare!") to deploy if they noticed a hint of areola peeking out.

And so begins this Deborah's account of her journey through the fandom she calls her own. You can find Deborah's book through all major book sellers.  Austen in August is a perfect time to pick up this book!

1 comment:

  1. This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.

    ReplyDelete

Hi Janeites! Thank you for visiting our website. We invite you to comment on our content. Of course, Lady Catherine would believe us all to behave like gentlemen and ladies, so please let us not disappoint her.

Also, please leave comments in English, as only Lady Catherine, had she ever studied a foreign language, would be a great profient enough to read such comments. (Merci! Arigato! Gracias!)