In November 1814, Jane Austen's niece Fanny Knight wrote Austen a letter secretly requesting advice. Fanny wanted urgently to know whether she should continue encouraging her most ardent suitor, what the future would hold were she to marry him, and whether she, Fanny, was in love with him. Fanny evidently wished to turn over her love life to Austen's creative direction, and Austen's letters of response cooperate with this desire.
Today, many readers address to Austen's novels their deepest uncertainties about their love lives. Consulting Austen-themed divination toys for news about the future or applying to their own circumstances the generalisations they have gleaned from Austen's narrator, characters, or plots, they look to Austen not for anonymous instruction but for the custom-tailored guidance-and magical intervention-of an adviser who knows them well.
This book argues that Austen, inspired by her niece to embrace the most scandalous possibilities of the novel genre, sought in her three last-published novels to match her readers with real-world lovers. The fictions that Austen wrote or revised after beginning the advisory correspondence address themselves to Fanny Knight. They imagine granting Fanny a happy love life through the thaumaturgic power of literary language even as they retract Austen's epistolary advice and rewrite its results. But they also pass along the role of Fanny Knight to Austen's readers, who get a chance to be shaped by Austen's creative effort, to benefit from Austen's matchmaking prowess, and to develop nothing less than a complex love relation with Austen herself.
Industry Reviews
"Raff's sparkling reinterpretation of Austen's relationship to the didactic tradition will please and edify not only Austen-scholars and Austen-lovers, but also students of the history of the novel. She teaches us new things about that literary form's most charismatic mechanisms of narrative address, while she makes us realise anew the extent of the Austen novel's seductive powers." --Deidre Lynch, author of Janeites: Austen's Disciples and Devotees
"By means of intelligent close reading, Sarah Raff traces Austen-mania back to Jane Austen's rhetorical seduction of her niece Fanny Knight, and then the reader. Her intriguing new investigation of the secret in the sentences goes a long way towards explaining just how Jane Austen keeps us all in her thrall." --Jocelyn Harris, author of A Revolution Almost Beyond Expression: Jane Austen's Persuasion