Sunday, 2 July 2017

Sanditon

1st July was the designated day for starting Sanditon.

I'm immediately feeling an infinity with the main characters.  I too got lost along that coastline several years ago when an incident at home meant that instead of being the passenger of the car driving us down to the south coast, I ended up being the driver.  Let's not go into details but just say that my husband will never, ever be allowed to try and 'fix the roof of the shed' singlehanded on the day before a family weekend away.  One emergency paramedic visit later and dosed up on painkillers and anti spasmodic medicine to try and relieve the muscles in his back, I was unexpectedly promoted from co-driver to 'person responsible for getting us to the south coast and back'.  With no sense of direction, no Sat Nav (they weren't available to your average family back then!) two squabbling kids in the back seat and a husband who had fallen asleep due to all the medication in his system, it was hardly surprising that I drove all the way, parked up in a sea front car park in a wonderfully triumphant manner, woke up husband with a 'ta dah!  we're here!' comment only to be told we weren't in Eastbourne, but Hastings.  

So, you see, after just a few pages, I'm already sympathetic to them.  I love the way that all these years since it was written, the circumstances behind their initial misfortune is still being played out nowadays.  So many stories of people typing the wrong name into a sat-nav and ending up at the wrong end of the country without realising it - technology may be here but the same old mistakes are still being made!  

It's been a while since I've read a book from this era, I've been avidly reading mysteries and psychological thrillers recently so this is a huge culture shock but it's good to shake things up a bit and it's really obvious how much styles have changed over the years.  Jane Austen certainly did love her commas and long sentences!  

So, even though it's given me flashbacks and stirred up the whole family joke of my awful sense of direction, I think I'm going to enjoy it.

5 comments:

This West London Life said...

Glad I'm not the only one finding her sentences a little on the long side! It's been a while since I last read any Jane Austen and, although I'm only a few pages in, it's not really grabbing me. I've already decided Mr Parker is a bit of an idiot!

Patio Postcards said...

Great review. I still cannot find a copy, not even online. My library ladies are trying to find me an electronic version ... fingers crossed.

Julie Kirk said...

Stories are contagious,like yawning, or nits. Someone kicks things off and then everyone's for their own!

I wonder if the Other Lady will be observing all the same grammar rules. I guess she will (have you seen the nktefrim her in the back? I skin read parts to avoid spoilers but ... she seemed to patronize Austen a bit! Which is a bit rich really!)

Julie Kirk said...

Stories are contagious,like yawning, or nits. Someone kicks things off and then everyone's for their own!

I wonder if the Other Lady will be observing all the same grammar rules. I guess she will (have you seen the nktefrim her in the back? I skin read parts to avoid spoilers but ... she seemed to patronize Austen a bit! Which is a bit rich really!)

Maggie said...

I have been a bit slow starting and am still waiting for my copy. Interesting about the long sentences. I'm wondering if my daughter could be related to Jane Austin or in the wrong era. Proof reading some of her university assignments I begin to wonder if she was taught punctuation at school!