![]() ![]() The other participants in this charade serve to confuse her as well as any characters. ![]() Sure, she’s always longed deep-down for her real life to be full of gallant men and the quaint customs of the Austen books, but play-acting it for three weeks is just a full-on reminder of how pitiful both her real and fantasy lives are. Jane fumbles her way through what she considers an embarrassing charade. She gets to wear authentic clothes, a bonus, but she has to hand over her modern devices, which she is not pleased about. If she doesn’t play the role absolutely correctly, she could be kicked out. On the flight, Jane prepares herself for the experience by familiarizing herself with Regency customs. Embarrassed, she decides to just go on the vacation and look her demon in the face before she flings it aside to look for men who actually exist today. Having a serious thing for Pride and Prejudice‘s Darcy but no serious history of real, full-bodied, contemporary romances of her own, she realizes she probably has a bit of a problem. Jane Hayes, the heroine of the novel, gets to go on a three-week Austen-style immersion vacation in England when her rich great-aunt dies and leaves her a paid-for package deal. It was Hale’s first venture into adult fiction from her award-winning young-adult writing, and she does a fine job of addressing more mature readers’ interests without adding “mature content.” Many books have been written to meet the needs of Austen-addicted modern women one of the most fun is Shannon Hale’s Austenland. ![]()
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