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Loading... Midnight in Austenlandby Shannon Hale
![]() Austenland (87) No current Talk conversations about this book. I really enjoyed this novel it was a great blend of vintage and modern story telling. there was several twists in the plot that I didn't see coming. If I had to chose I would say that I preferred the parts of the novel set in Austenland however I get that the back story was essential to get the thorough benefits of the main parts of the novel. I'm hoping that I can go back and read Austenland after reading this as I'm sure I will enjoy it too! You don’t NEED to read the first one but it’s better if you do. It’s fun to see all the parallels to Austen and other period works, but you can still enjoy it without being familiar with any other book. SPOILERS BELOW Totally knew Mallory was the murderer when he pulled the short straw, but had fun anyway. The premise sounded fun and started off okay, but by the middle Charlotte's self blaming became so tiresome and all the characters were one dimensional. The plot was thin and the cobbled together mystery made no sense really. Pretty awful and disappointing. At least I finished it quickly. I doubt I would read this author again. We can't really blame poor Jane for inspiring such mediocrity. no reviews | add a review
Belongs to SeriesAustenland (2) Has the (non-series) prequelWas inspired by
Divorced American Charlotte Kinder takes a trip to Regency staged Pembrook Park in Kent where she plays parlor games, learns country dances, and even lets herself be courted by her assigned suitor, the brooding, magnetic Mr. Mallery. But her vacation becomes more Northanger Abbey when she catches a fleeting glimpse of a dead body in a secret room. No library descriptions found. |
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![]() GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)813.6Literature English (North America) American fiction 21st CenturyLC ClassificationRatingAverage:![]()
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Unlike Jane Hayes in the previous book, Charlotte Kinder is not a lifelong Austenite. However, after her divorce, she falls in love with the books and decides a trip to Austenland is a well-deserved treat. I, for one, heartily agree. A trip to Austenland is always well-deserved. Some familiar cast members return: Elizabeth Charming, Mr. and Mrs. Wattlesbrook, and Colonel Andrews light up the page. Hale uses this second installment in the Austenland series to explore these characters' backgrounds, and I really appreciated it. Additionally, you learn more about the business of running Austenland, and that helped make the setting feel more real.
That said, Charlotte, like I said, is a dunderhead. To spice up the guests' time at Austenland, Col. Andrews creates a little mystery for them to solve, but then Charlotte stumbles into a service closet and thinks she's solved his mystery until she runs into a corpse... which she also thinks for some reason is part of the Col. Andrews's medieval nun mystery. At one point, she even sees tire tracks and is convinced this is also part... of a mystery about nuns. It doesn't help that Hale beats readers over the head with how clever Charlotte is. Somehow, Charlotte is so clever that she creates a website business that makes her millions of dollars and yet she can't tell that she stumbled into a storage closet. Additionally, somehow she is never confident to the point where her husband is shocked to hear her sounding confident despite the fact that she's been running a successful business for years. It just doesn't add up.
Overall, I feel like I'm reading about an aspirational everywoman. She's not too confident or too smart to alienate readers and prevent them from seeing themselves as her, and I think that's the point. Unfortunately, it just makes Charlotte seem like not a real person, in my mind.
That said, the mystery is pretty good, and it flows pretty well. It's also a short, quick read, so it's perfect for some light reading. For me, personally, I'm still waiting for that perfect book where the Austenite heroine has a basic understanding of the Regency era and cares about more than just Mr. Darcy. (