Helpful Score: 3
If you are looking to this book as an expansion on "Pride and Prejudice" or as Jane Austen fan fiction, you are going to be greatly disappointed. The primary characters of "P & P" only make very ocassional appearances. But if you are looking for a well researched book on the conditions of those in the servant class in Regency England as fiction, then this is the book for you. Very well written but dark tale of how the servant characters came to be servants and the unending drudgery of the life as a servant. I found this book to be a fascinating read but it won't be everyone's cup of tea.
Helpful Score: 2
I enjoyed Longbourn. It's fun to see what life might have been like "downstairs" during the events of Pride and Prejudice. The author seems to have researched the period well and never loses the period voice the way other Austen spin-off writers sometimes do. I cared about the characters; they were well-drawn and seemed true to life. Baker also does a great job at not interfering with the Pride and Prejudice characters - again, something that other spin-offs are guilty of. It's clear from the book just how much the servants' lives hung on the family's choices, but how little the family knew of what was important to the servants.
Helpful Score: 1
I liked this very much, as a thought experiment -- what was going on, below stairs, as the events of Pride and Prejudice unfolded? Who were the walk-on characters, most of them left nameless by Austen, who attended Elizabeth and Jane and the other Bennets, who were the ghostly presences around the Bingleys and Mr Darcy, attending to their every whim? Is it possible that there's more to the story that Jane Austen gives us?
Of course there is -- that's the novelist's job, to focus the reader's attention on what they want us to see, to the exclusion of all the other stories going on around it. Jo Baker cleverly shifts our focus to a different set of characters, to different perspectives on characters we thought we knew, and to a different train of events.
I liked this, but I didn't think it was resoundingly successful -- not in an "I shall cherish this as much as P&P, and keep them side by side on my shelf" sort of way. It was fun. (Possibly not quite the right reaction for a book that deals with some serious issues, but serious can be fun.) It was very interesting -- having re-read P&P recently, Baker's scholarship and attention to detail in following Austen scene-by-scene was mostly a delight.
I enjoyed, but didn't always agree with, Baker's fresh perspective on some familiar characters: annoying Mr. Collins is presented as more socially awkward, and just very, very young. Mrs Gardiner, the Bennet girls' London aunt, and such a calm a common-sensical contrast to their own neurotic and embarrassing mother, achieves that inner calm by cheerfully neglecting her own children, and dumping them on other people's servants whenever possible. We're reminded that Mrs Bennet's silliness, and her "poor nerves," which have been a timeless gift to British character actors like Alison Steadman and Brenda Blethyn, were probably a direct result of the horror of her efforts to give her husband a male heir, and save his estate from entail.
Mr Wickham, you'll be glad to hear, is irredeemable, in anyone's book. Even worse, if anything. But Mr Bennet, heretofore every #Team Lizzie's favourite dad, does not come off well at all ...
Yeah ... maybe. The sycophancy and pretentiousness of Austen's Mr Collins doesn't suggest someone who would, when Austen wasn't listening, be kind to the servants. Mrs Gardiner was a creature of her time, when children were meant to be seen and not heard -- by their doting-at-a-remove parents, anyway. To have a servant commenting on how quick she was to palm them off on others seems like an anachronism.
And to be fair to Austen, she was the first to point out that, for all his caustic wit, Mr Bennet was weak. Weak to marry the flighty and (even then) neurotic Miss Gardiner. Weak not to think ahead, and plan for his entailed estate being lost to his five daughters, leaving them as much at the mercy of the pitiless economic realities of the time as their servants were. Weak for treating his daughters' future plight as a sort of personal entertainment, and ignoring just how precarious their position in society could be. To twist the knife, and completely blacken an already grayscale character, Baker introduces a plot thread for Mr. B. that isn't even hinted at in P&P. Which seems a little like cheating ...
Of course there is -- that's the novelist's job, to focus the reader's attention on what they want us to see, to the exclusion of all the other stories going on around it. Jo Baker cleverly shifts our focus to a different set of characters, to different perspectives on characters we thought we knew, and to a different train of events.
I liked this, but I didn't think it was resoundingly successful -- not in an "I shall cherish this as much as P&P, and keep them side by side on my shelf" sort of way. It was fun. (Possibly not quite the right reaction for a book that deals with some serious issues, but serious can be fun.) It was very interesting -- having re-read P&P recently, Baker's scholarship and attention to detail in following Austen scene-by-scene was mostly a delight.
I enjoyed, but didn't always agree with, Baker's fresh perspective on some familiar characters: annoying Mr. Collins is presented as more socially awkward, and just very, very young. Mrs Gardiner, the Bennet girls' London aunt, and such a calm a common-sensical contrast to their own neurotic and embarrassing mother, achieves that inner calm by cheerfully neglecting her own children, and dumping them on other people's servants whenever possible. We're reminded that Mrs Bennet's silliness, and her "poor nerves," which have been a timeless gift to British character actors like Alison Steadman and Brenda Blethyn, were probably a direct result of the horror of her efforts to give her husband a male heir, and save his estate from entail.
Mr Wickham, you'll be glad to hear, is irredeemable, in anyone's book. Even worse, if anything. But Mr Bennet, heretofore every #Team Lizzie's favourite dad, does not come off well at all ...
Yeah ... maybe. The sycophancy and pretentiousness of Austen's Mr Collins doesn't suggest someone who would, when Austen wasn't listening, be kind to the servants. Mrs Gardiner was a creature of her time, when children were meant to be seen and not heard -- by their doting-at-a-remove parents, anyway. To have a servant commenting on how quick she was to palm them off on others seems like an anachronism.
And to be fair to Austen, she was the first to point out that, for all his caustic wit, Mr Bennet was weak. Weak to marry the flighty and (even then) neurotic Miss Gardiner. Weak not to think ahead, and plan for his entailed estate being lost to his five daughters, leaving them as much at the mercy of the pitiless economic realities of the time as their servants were. Weak for treating his daughters' future plight as a sort of personal entertainment, and ignoring just how precarious their position in society could be. To twist the knife, and completely blacken an already grayscale character, Baker introduces a plot thread for Mr. B. that isn't even hinted at in P&P. Which seems a little like cheating ...
This is the best book of fiction I have read in a long time. The writing is excellent, the story absorbing. Everything about it is much more realistic than most fiction. It shows what it was really like to be a servant back in the days before indoor plumbing and other modern conveniences. Also portrays the clueless perspective of those being served, as they can afford to be oblivious to the realities of the lives of people living in their own homes, and how their own actions affect them.
Much more realistic than Downton Abbey.
Best of all, the main characters are strong, enduring, and admirable.
Much more realistic than Downton Abbey.
Best of all, the main characters are strong, enduring, and admirable.
A well written story told from the servant's point of view. An interesting story line and much detail kept me interested.
Longbourn is a well written page turner about the characters and events of Pride & Prejudice seen from their servants' viewpoint. That said, this darkside flip version does not ring entirely true to me. I can't say it couldn't all have happened that way, but I did not feel that the liberties taken with Mr. Bennet's character in particular seemed plausible. But it is a cracking good read and I would recommend it. Just keep in mind that it's not the Bennets as we knew them. What Jane Austen herself would have thought of it, I can't imagine.
The characters and events of Jane Austen's Pride and Prejudice"
provide the background, while the dour lives of their servants who were barely mentioned and mostly unnamed, provide the focus in this keenly observed view of "the lower orders."
The resulting picture of the underbelly of Austen's society world becomes almost a pastiche of a Thomas Hardy novel.
provide the background, while the dour lives of their servants who were barely mentioned and mostly unnamed, provide the focus in this keenly observed view of "the lower orders."
The resulting picture of the underbelly of Austen's society world becomes almost a pastiche of a Thomas Hardy novel.
Review first published on my blog: http://memoriesfrombooks.blogspot.com/2014/01/longbourn.html
Longbourn is the home of the Bennett family from Pride and Prejudice. This is the story of the home help in that household - the housekeeper, the maids, and the footman.
I have several reasons why I did not enjoy the book. First, even though this is a book about the housemaids, I did not expect as much description of laundry and cleaning as this book contains. It becomes unpleasant reading especially as some descriptions speak of the hygiene and other habits that renders the cleaning necessary. Again, it may be central to the "downstairs" view, but I find the detailed descriptions unnecessary to the story of this book.
Second, a significant section of the book is devoted to a flashback providing one character's back story. This story becomes a story of war and of the horrific aspects of war. Again, the back story may be central to that character, but it is unexpected and jarring in what is otherwise a tale of home and family life.
Third, Mrs. Hill is the Longbourn housekeeper with secrets of her own. One she keeps to maintain her husband's position. The second she keeps for the sake of societal propriety. Again, both "secrets" and story lines seem not to flow with the book.
Fourth, the story of Sarah the maid and her lover is resolved rather quickly. The are separated, and he is on the run. Then, she finds him, and all is well. It seems a little far fetched.
The fourth relates to Pride and Prejudice. This book portrays most of the characters from Pride and Prejudice as relatively unlikable. That may well be the "downstairs" view of them, but to me, it becomes a deterrent to enjoying the book.
Overall, I am able to set aside the fact it is based on Pride and Prejudice and its treatment of those characters. Even otherwise, I am unable to enjoy the book.
Longbourn is the home of the Bennett family from Pride and Prejudice. This is the story of the home help in that household - the housekeeper, the maids, and the footman.
I have several reasons why I did not enjoy the book. First, even though this is a book about the housemaids, I did not expect as much description of laundry and cleaning as this book contains. It becomes unpleasant reading especially as some descriptions speak of the hygiene and other habits that renders the cleaning necessary. Again, it may be central to the "downstairs" view, but I find the detailed descriptions unnecessary to the story of this book.
Second, a significant section of the book is devoted to a flashback providing one character's back story. This story becomes a story of war and of the horrific aspects of war. Again, the back story may be central to that character, but it is unexpected and jarring in what is otherwise a tale of home and family life.
Third, Mrs. Hill is the Longbourn housekeeper with secrets of her own. One she keeps to maintain her husband's position. The second she keeps for the sake of societal propriety. Again, both "secrets" and story lines seem not to flow with the book.
Fourth, the story of Sarah the maid and her lover is resolved rather quickly. The are separated, and he is on the run. Then, she finds him, and all is well. It seems a little far fetched.
The fourth relates to Pride and Prejudice. This book portrays most of the characters from Pride and Prejudice as relatively unlikable. That may well be the "downstairs" view of them, but to me, it becomes a deterrent to enjoying the book.
Overall, I am able to set aside the fact it is based on Pride and Prejudice and its treatment of those characters. Even otherwise, I am unable to enjoy the book.