A Preview of Lady Vernon and her Daughter & Guest Blog with Authors Jane Rubino & Caitlen Rubino-Bradway

Lady Vernon and Her Daughter: A Novel of Jane Austen's Lady Susan, by Jane Rubino and Caitlen Rubino-Bradway (2009)There are some great writers who wrote too much. There are others who wrote enough. There are yet others who wrote nothing like enough to satisfy their admirers, and Jane Austen is certainly one of these. Margaret Drabble

I love this quote by Austen scholar Margaret Drabble. It is the opening line of her introduction to the 1974 edition the Penguin Classics Lady Susan, The Watson’s and Sandition, long before the Austen sequel industry would become its own book genre. Little did she know that other writers would take the next step to satisfy Austen admirers.  Thirty-five years later, we have literally hundreds of prequels, sequels, spinoffs and continuations to choose from. Most are inspired by Austen’s most popular novel, Pride and Prejudice. Proportionally – too many. So when I read the announcement last March of a new novel Lady Vernon and her Daughter based on Jane Austen’s novella Lady Susan, my heart leapt. A fresh concept! I knew of only one other sequel based on Lady Susan written by Phyllis Ann Karr in 1980, and long out of print. It was past time for Lady Susan to have her turn again. The authors, appropriately a mother-daughter team, Jane Rubino and Caitlen Rubino-Bradway have graciously offered this guest blog to share their insights about Lady Susan and their inspiration to write a new novel based on Jane Austen’s novella.

BOOK DESCRIPTION

In Lady Vernon and Her Daughter, Jane Rubino and Caitlen Rubino-Bradway have taken Jane Austen’s novella, Lady Susan, and transformed it into a vivid and richly developed novel of love lost and found–and the complex relationships between women, men, and money in Regency England.

Lady Vernon and her daughter, Frederica, are left penniless and without a home after the death of Sir Frederick Vernon, Susan’s husband. Frederick’ s brother and heir, Charles Vernon, like so many others of his time, has forgotten his promises to look after the women, and despite their fervent hopes to the contrary, does nothing to financially support Lady Vernon and Frederica.

When the ladies, left without another option, bravely arrive at Charles’s home to confront him about his treatment of his family, they are faced with Charles’s indifference, his wife Catherine’s distrustful animosity, and a flood of rumors that threaten to undo them all. Will Lady Vernon and Frederica find love and happiness–and financial security–or will their hopes be dashed with their lost fortune?

With wit and warmth reminiscent of Austen’s greatest works, Lady Vernon and Her Daughter brings to vivid life a time and place where a woman’s security is at the mercy of an entail, where love is hindered by misunderstanding, where marriage can never be entirely isolated from money, yet where romance somehow carries the day.

GUEST BLOG

Lady Susan is the title character of an early epistolary work written by Jane Austen in the early- to mid-1790s. Lady Susan Vernon is a beautiful young widow, a “dangerous creature” and “the most accomplished coquette in England.” In a series of letters, principally between Lady Susan and her friend, Alicia Johnson, and Lady Susan’s sister-in-law Catherine Vernon and Catherine’s mother, Lady deCourcy, we extract a portrait of a woman of pleasure, flirting with three admirers while disarming her wary in-laws and arranging a loveless marriage for her daughter. It’s a work that’s difficult to characterize; it is too sophisticated to be considered juvenilia, and it isn’t a fragment; yet, while it’s a complete work, it isn’t a fully realized novel.

It is not unlikely that some inspiration for Lady Susan came from the sensational French novel Les Liaisons Dangereuses, which appeared in England in the decade before Lady Susan was written. The Marquise de Merteuil’s, “…it seems to me scarcely possible for a woman who is offered such a golden chance – with so little risk – to reduce a male to despair could resist indulging in such a treat” is not very different in sentiment from Lady Susan’s, “There is an exquisite pleasure in subduing an insolent spirit, in making a person pre-determined to dislike acknowledge one’s superiority.” The Marquise’s contempt for the youthful affection of Cecile and Danceny resembles Lady Susan’s disdain for her daughter’s admiration of Reginald deCourcy, and Lady Susan’s scheme to force Frederica to marry Sir James is as coldly calculating as the Marquise’s plot to have Valmont seduce Cecile.

Jane Rubino had written a contemporary mystery series, and happened to be reading Lady Susan at the time she was thinking of writing a second series. The “Lady Susan mysteries” were quickly abandoned, and we began discussing turning the work into a historical novel with elements of mystery; that plan gave way to reconstructing the work – converting an epistolary novel to a third person narrative, as Austen revised Elinor and Marianne into Sense and Sensibility. In fact, we discovered a number of similarities between Lady Susan and Sense and Sensibility.  There are the dual heroines, dual romances, and a mother and daughter(s) displaced when the family estate passes to an heir.  We decided to approach the book as a “what if Jane Austen had revised Lady Susan, as she had done with Elinor and Marianne”?

In order to conform to Austen’s canon, we resolved to use Austen’s novels as our primary reference.  Austen’s heroines are flawed, but not malicious, so Lady Susan became a sympathetic character. Her conduct is not radically altered, but is motivated by economy, rather than “exquisite pleasure” – with that in mind Lady Susan became Lady Vernon.  While there are supporting players in Austen’s canon who are widows of independent means – Lady Catherine deBourgh, Mrs. Jennings, Lady Russell – Austen’s widows are more likely to be anywhere from women of modest means to downright indigent – Mrs. Dashwood, Mrs. Bates, Mrs. Smith, Mrs. Norris, Mrs. Thorpe. Austen’s heroines, moreover, are not women of high rank, and to have Susan Vernon the daughter of an earl (as suggested by that “Lady Susan”, but never stated in the work) would have taken her out of that tier from which Austen’s heroines are drawn.

The format, of course, had to go – the novel-in-letters is unwieldy – but we converted as much of the letters as we could into dialogue or exposition.  The use of letters was retained, however, as Austen frequently used letters to advance the plot, or reveal critical information. There are the letters of Mr. Darcy and Mrs. Gardiner in Pride and Prejudice, Isabella Thorpe’s self-centered correspondence to Catherine Moreland in Northanger Abbey, and, of course, Frederick Wentworth’s proposal in Persuasion.

Finally, we decided to dedicate Lady Vernon and Her Daughter to one of Caitlen’s favorite professors, Mary Ann Macartney.  While Jane has always been an Austen devotee, Caitlen’s love of Austen really developed in college, in an intensive Austen seminar.  Ten Austen fans in a small room every other day will fuel your fanaticism no matter what, but it was Dr. Macartney’s passion and attention to detail that really inspired Caitlen.   Our dedication is a small way of saying thanks for hers.

AUTHOR BIOS

Jane Rubino is the author of the Cat Austen mystery series, as well as a volume of Sherlockian novellas.

Caitlen Rubino-Bradway is the author of the middle grade novel, Ordinary Magic, and contributed to the story collection, Jane Austen Made Me Do It. She lives and works in New York City.

  • Lady Vernon and her Daughter, by Jane Rubino and Caitlen Rubino-Bradway
  • Broadway Books (November 2, 2010)
  • Hardcover, eBook, & audiobook (336) pages
  • ISBN: 978-0307461674

Cover image, book description, guest blog, & author bios courtesy of Broadway Books © 2010; text Laurel Ann Nattress © 2009, Austenprose.com

20 thoughts on “A Preview of Lady Vernon and her Daughter & Guest Blog with Authors Jane Rubino & Caitlen Rubino-Bradway

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  1. Don’t mind me, I’m a purist meanie with Austen ! Lucky I don’t run a blog or no-one would be allowed any fun with different forms of interpreting Jane’s novels. ;-0
    Only my opinion, J. Austen intended Lady Susan’s charecter to be an extravagent aristocrat. Admittedly, Jane probably couldn’t publish Lady Susan as a female Lovelace in early C19th and the letter format is unwieldy for conveying converse- yet allows a reader direct access to a charecter’s intimate thoughts…. Hmm. I’m really in in two minds on revising Lady Susan into third-person narrative, but it will be an iteresting evolution for LS and may appeal to modern readers. …Ooh! I’m tempted to hope ‘Lady Vernon and her Daughter’ my increase Lady Susan’s poularity, so maybe we’ll get a screen adaptation; eventually. Btw, I enjoyed the book-trailer, very entertaining.
    Congradulations on publication of ‘Lady Vernon and her Daughter’. Already seems highly anticipated. :)

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  2. Lady Susan would make a great little BBC movie adaption! The actors could really get into these characters and have a ball with it. The sets would be devine!

    It’s always fun for me to read about someone’s experiences in a intense Austen course, like Caitlen took. And also the intern from last summer who actually went to England and posted here. That was FUN! Thanks for sharing the author’s with us, I’m sure they had as much fun as I did here today.

    By the way, I’m going to try out my new avatar today! Hope it works!

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    1. I declare, just realized in the book trailer, the daughter part of the writing team; Caitlin Rubino-Bradway is one of the cast !

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  3. I have read a few sequels to Pride and Prejudice and so far, they’ve not lived up to expectation and I have not remembered anything about them the moment I closed the book. But after reading this guest blog, as well as Laurel Ann’s review of Lady Vernon and her Daughter, I am truly looking forward to reading this! I feel it’s a very well researched and honest attempt at what Jane Austen might have done herself, rather than just another sequel, prequel, or off-tangent story.

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  4. My list gets longer and longer and longer. I’m not sure how I will ever catch up on all my reading! This looks like an excellent book, I must add it to my paperback swap list!

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  5. This I have to read–Lady Susan as a sympathetic character?! I get that she was motivated by economy, but I’m still not buying into her being, well, nice. I like the idea of turning the story into a novel as JA did with S&S, though.

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  6. personally, i am just impressed that a mother and daughter could write together. well done ladies! i love my mom, but i can’t imagine writing a novel with her. i look forward to seeing the outcome of your collaboration!

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  7. This novel sounds fascinating. Sometimes I have trouble reading novels based on Austen’s writing, but this one really looks promising. I love it that they are dedicating it to a professor. I too attained my love of Austen through an intensive course on Jane Austen at my university.

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  8. I’m just now catching up with everything. I finished Lady Susan earlier this week and gave it a review today. I just loved the book, and I think the idea of this one–Lady Vernon and Her Daughter–sounds fascinating!

    I’d love to be entered. Thanks.

    Becky

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  9. I think having a mother and daughter working as a team on this novel will add an interesting viewpoint. It is nice to see a sequel that does not have Darcy in the title. I love P&P but it would be nice to see more paraliterature focused on other Austen works. I would really like to see a novel written from the viewpoint of Georgiana. Does any one of any recommendations?

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  10. Looking forward to this one as well, please enter me!
    Thank you!
    marieburton2004 at yahoo dot com

    PS to Melly.. I enjoyed Brocklehurst’s Darcy & Anne, which is from Anne’s POV but is still a fun quick read. (with Georgiana as well of course).

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  11. I saw the video trailer for this one on amazon (beautifully done!) and now I am very eager to read it! Thank you for the opportunity!

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