Jane and His Lordship’s Legacy: Being a Jane Austen Mystery (Book 8), by Stephanie Barron – A Review

From the desk of Laurel Ann Nattress: 

It is 1809, a significant year in the life of our esteemed authoress Jane Austen. After close to five years of being shuffled about England between relatives, the three unattached Austen ladies: widower Mrs. Austen and her two unmarried daughters Jane and Cassandra are given permanent refuge by Jane’s elder brother Edward Austen Knight in the village of Chawton. They will live at Chawton cottage the former residence of the recently deceased steward of Edward’s vast estate there. Still privately grieving the tragic death of her dear friend Lord Harold Trowbridge (The Gentleman Rogue) nine months prior, Jane arrives in the village to find an uneasy welcome to the Squire’s family. It appears that the villagers are unhappy that the widow of Edward’s former steward was asked to vacate the cottage in favor of his family, and more seriously, Edward as an absentee Squire has been remiss in his duties since the death of his wife Elizabeth the previous year.

Within hours of Jane’s arrival at the cottage, she receives an unexpected visit from contemptuous Mr. Bartholomew Chizzlewit, attorney to the family of His Grace the Duke of Wilborough. Performing his duty as the family solicitor, he deposits on Jane’s dining-parlor floor a curiously carved chest announcing that she is listed as a legatee in Lord Harold’s Last Will and Testament. His bequest (should she agree) is that she accepts his personal papers and diaries, “a lifetime of incident, intrigue, and conspiracy; of adventure and scandal; of wagers lost and won,” and write his life story! After the Duke of Wilborough’s family contested the legacy in a London court and lost, they are bitter about the arrangement and hold it against Jane. Not only is this startling news, the thought of reliving the Gentleman Rogues life, far before she met him, and then through his entire life as a spy for the British government, is both curious and painful to her. When the huge chest is removed into the cottage’s cellar, another startling discovery brings Jane’s first day at Chawton to a scandalous close. A body of a man lies rotting and rat eaten on the floor.

Jane’s brother Henry arrives the next day and the inquest into the mysterious death begins by the local authorities with Jane and Henry in assistance. After Lord Harold’s trunk is stolen, Jane is convinced that it contains information that someone did not want her to discover. Could the theft be linked to the Wilborough family trying to cover up their son’s notorious life? Or, could it be the newcomers to the neighborhood, Julian Thrace, a young London Buck who is rumored to be the illegitimate heir apparent to the Earl of Holbrook vast wealth, and his half-sister Lady Imogen, the Earl’s acknowledged heir? Or, is the dead body in the cellar a personal vendetta by the bitter Jack Hinton, eager to make trouble for the Austen family? He claims to be the rightful heir to the Knight family estate of Chawton that Jane’s brother Edward inherited. There are suspects and motives, suppositions and accusations galore for our observant and clever Jane to ponder and detect before she solves the crime.


MY REVIEW

One chapter into the eighth novel in the Being a Jane Austen Mystery series and I am totally convinced that Jane Austen is channeling the actual events of her life through author Stephanie Barron. She has so convincingly captured her witty, acerbic, and penetrating voice that I am totally mesmerized. Like Jane, I am still grieving the tragic death of her secret crush Lord Harold. Reading his letters and journals was like bringing him back to life. Delightful torture for those Gentleman Rogue fans such as myself. This mystery was very well-plotted and fast-paced, but Barron really shines with her incredible historical details and the fact that in this discriminating Austen-obsessed mind, no one will ever be able to match her unique ability to channel my favorite author’s voice so perfectly.

5 out of 5 Stars


BOOK INFORMATION

  • Jane and His Lordship’s Legacy, Being a Jane Austen Mystery (Book 8), by Stephanie Barron
  • Bantam Books (2005)
  • Mass market paperback, eBook, & audiobook (384) pages
  • ISBN: 978-0553584073
  • Genre: Historical Mystery, Austenesque Fiction

AMAZON | PUBLISHER | ADD TO GOODREADS

We purchased a copy of the book for our own enjoyment. Cover image courtesy of Bantam Books © 2005; text Laurel Ann Nattress © 2011, austenprose.com, an Amazon affiliate. Updated 16 October 2023.

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21 thoughts on “Jane and His Lordship’s Legacy: Being a Jane Austen Mystery (Book 8), by Stephanie Barron – A Review

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  1. I loved the first in teh series and I am on the second. They are written so well, Stephanie does a wonderful job with the language and style of writing as if she lived in the time of the books. I can’t believe I never knew about these before. I look forward to reading the whole series.

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  2. I’ve been reading each book each month and loved them. I wondered what was going to happen after book 7 with the death of one of the big characters. This book was a page turner!

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  3. I haven’t gotten to read any of these yet in the series. I would love to. I really enjoyed this review. It explained so well what we could look forward to. I guess I didn’t realize it contained some actual places and timing from Austen’s real life. I enjoy mysteries but I just haven’t really combined my favorite genre much.

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  4. I have the other books from this series but I haven’t gotten to reading them yet. But when I bought the books, I was intrigued to read about Jane Austen in a mystery book. I think she would be a good detective! Thanks for the give away.

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  5. I find Jane to be the most intriguing character in this book. I agree with Laurel Anne regarding Stephanie Barron’s skill as capturing the essence of Jane. Out of all of the sequels, mash-ups and reimagining of Austen’s work this series will always set the standard for the genre.

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  6. I really liked the Lord Harold character, and was very sad to learn of his tragic death. I had hopes for Jane and Lord Harold getting together. Ms. Barron is total genius when she writes as Jane. I have read three books in her series so far, and am looking forward to reading more.

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  7. I’m intrigued by how Stephanie Barron has expertly used Jane Austen’s timeline – moving into the cottage – to plausibly explain why a murder would have happened. Looking forward to reading this one.

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  8. I was sad to hear of Lord Harold’s death, but glad to know that we still find out more about him through his journals and letters. Can’t wait to read this book.

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  9. I’m still working on getting one…how sad. One is actually on it’s way however as we speak. I’m not on the reading challenge. Probably a good thing as I’ve about knocked myself reading as many Heyer’s as insanely possible. These do sound so intriguing and I am looking forward to hearing more about what everyone thinks so I can at some point catch up.

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  10. I’m sorry I missed your challenge. I enjoyed the first four of this series very much, but somehow never managed to read any subsequently. I think these novels are well written and enjoyable, and will put the series on my list for a re-read/read.

    There is an underlying sadness in these books for me though. Lord Harold is such a perfect partner for Miss Austen. I find it sad that she never found a life partner like him who would value her as he ought.

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  11. Since reading this review and Stephanie’s blog at the Austenesque Extravaganza, I want to read her books. Her command of the language and beautiful writing has drawn me in, and I am sorry I ovelooked her work. I plan to remedy my oversight ASAP!

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