Jane and the Wandering Eye: Being a Jane Austen Mystery (Book 3), by Stephanie Barron – A Review

From the desk of Laurel Ann Nattress:

I confess to being a silly, shallow creature when it comes to my partiality to fine art and the stage. Show me a beautiful Regency-era portrait by Thomas Lawrence or Richard Cosway, mention famous Drury Lane actors Sarah Siddons and her brothers Charles and John Kemble, and my sensibilities rival Marianne Dashwood’s fondness for dead leaves. Mix in my favorite author Jane Austen embroiled in a murder mystery centered around artists and actors in Bath, and I am in a sensory swoon.

Jane and the Wandering Eye is the third novel in the popular Being a Jane Austen Mystery series in which the famous authoress uses her astute skills of observation and logic as an amateur sleuth to solve a crime. In 1804 Jane, her sister Cassandra and their parents are residing in Bath. Despite the jollity of the Christmas season, Jane is “insupportably bored with Bath” and its social diversions, many of which are outside her means. She is, however, happy to accept a commission from her particular friend and Rogue-about-Town Lord Harold Trowbridge to spy on his niece Lady Desdemona. The young ingénue has recently fled London and the unwanted attentions of the Earl of Swithins to seek refuge in Bath with her grandmother the Dowager Duchess of Wilborough. Jane, her brother Henry and his wife Eliza attend a masquerade party at the Duchesses Laura Place residence in honor of Bath’s Theatre Royal players. Also in attendance is Madame Lefroy, Jane’s neighbor, and dearest friend. During the party they witness a drama unfold as tragic as any Shakespearean play. The theatre troupe’s stage manager Richard Portal is found stabbed to death with Lord Harold’s nephew Simon, Marquis of Kinsfell standing over him with a bloody knife in his hand and an open window behind him.

Mr. Elliot the local magistrate is summoned and witnesses questioned. Since everyone was in costume it is difficult to follow the events of the evening, but he soon learns that the key suspect, the Marquis in the Knight costume, was seen arguing with the victim, Mr. Portal in a white Harlequin costume, and challenged him to a duel. They were separated and Mr. Portal was asked to leave the party, later reappearing as a corpse in an anteroom with a knife through his heart. Curiously, a miniature portrait of an eye is found on his body. Under protest, the Marquis is charged with murder and thrown in the local goal. What started out for Jane as a mild request to observe and report on Lord Harold’s niece has now turned into a scandalous murder by his nephew, drawing him to Bath, and into Jane’s confidence. Taken with his charm, intelligence, and family drama, she cannot refuse him anything and they join forces to investigate the facts, unravel the crime, and discover the murderer.


MY REVIEW

Warning. If you blink too long in the first chapter you might miss significant clues. Stephanie Barron hardly lets us breathe for fear we would miss something. The dense and fast-paced events had me furiously writing notes to keep the facts and characters straight. It is unusual to have a murder transpire so quickly, but I enjoyed the build-up and the shock of the reveal. The mystery progresses from Jane Austen’s perspective as we read her lost journals edited by the author with added footnotes. The historical detail is entrancing to me. Not only do we follow events and people from Jane Austen’s life, but the social and cultural details were amazing in their depth and interest. At times I found the prose thick and heavy, craving a bit of brevity in the language, but overall Barron does an excellent job at early nineteenth-century Austen-speak. Her dialogue was even more engaging. The characterization of Jane’s parents Rev. and Mrs. Austen’s ironic divergence in personalities was entertaining, her brother Henry and gadabout wife Eliza’s joie de vivre delightful, and roguish Lord Harold was well, just dishy enough to curl any hard-hearted spinsters toes. *swoon*

Having the advantage of previously reading all the novels in this series before, I can firmly attest that Jane and the Wandering Eye is my favorite in the series. I loved the historical detail on art and the lives of its creators, actors and their social machinations with aristocrats, and all the intimate dealing of Jane Austen and her family. Originally published in 1998, I can honestly say that with a decade of study and appreciation of the Regency-era behind me, this mystery was even fresher, more intriguing, and enlightening the second time around. I recommend it highly.

5 out of 5 Stars


BOOK INFORMATION 

  • Jane and the Wandering Eye: Being a Jane Austen Mystery (Book 3), by Stephanie Barron
  • Bantam Books (1998)
  • Mass Market Paperback, eBook, & Audiobook (336) pages
  • ISBN: 978-0553578171
  • Genre: Historical Mystery, Austenesque Fiction

AMAZON | BARNES & NOBLE | PUBLISHER | BOOKSHOP | GOODREADS

We purchased of the book for our own enjoyment. Cover image courtesy of Bantam Books © 1998; text Laurel Ann Nattress © 2011, austenprose.com, an Amazon affiliate. Updated 14 October 2023.

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25 thoughts on “Jane and the Wandering Eye: Being a Jane Austen Mystery (Book 3), by Stephanie Barron – A Review

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  1. I have not read any of her books, but love the idea of Jane Austen solving a mystery. I want to start with the first book but you make me want to grab this one:)

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  2. A mystery novel is just what is called for as the Rainy season approaches here. I would be curious to see how Jane’s detective skills are written out and like to be challenged in a mystery. I do hope to read it this Spring, it looks intriguing!

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  3. They are all great, and I think #11 is on the way. I finally broke down and got them all electronically (of course right after they raised the price :()
    I recommend to everyone, as they are so well written.

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  4. Desdemona is my favorite character in this book. I also enjoyed her as a character in Jane and the Madness of Lord Byron which came out last fall.

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  5. I’ve been reading my way slowly through this series over the past year and thoroughly enjoying it. With my own limited theatre background this book was particularly delicious. Great period details and a fascinating mystery while, as usual, Stephanie Barron plays with the characters in Jane’s novels in creating the characters and incidents around her fictional lady sleuth.

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  6. I’ve been reading these books completely out of order and just finished Jane and the Madness of Lord Bryon. Having read that I want to get a hold of the earlier ones and find out more about the story behind Jane and Lord Harold…

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  7. I am a fan of detail in books I read. It sounds like this will have some interesting information on the theatrical sector of this time. I have not yet been lucky enough to read any of the books in this series. I’ll have to check the local library. If they don’t yet have them, I’ll see if I can get them to order them.. The director is a big Jane Austen fan so I may have some luck.

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  8. Jane Austen was a novelist way advanced for her time, and her “Pride & Prejudice” and “Sense & Sensibility” are two of my most favorite novels of all time. To take that, and turn it into a mystery, I think, is a marvelous and novel idea. Plus, I’d love to see how the author handles writing via Jane Austen’s perspective. Thank you for hosting this giveaway!

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  9. I really enjoyed this one and was waiting for this post. I’ve taken the challenge for reading this year and have read all 3 of the books and have already purchased the others to read as you review them. I was holding off reading book 4 but now have permission to go ahead. Thanks for your reviews!

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