Lady Susan by Jane Austen


Lady Susan
Title : Lady Susan
Author :
Rating :
ISBN : 0486444074
ISBN-10 : 9780486444079
Language : English
Format Type : Paperback
Number of Pages : 180
Publication : First published January 1, 1871

Beautiful, flirtatious, and recently widowed, Lady Susan Vernon seeks an advantageous second marriage for herself, while attempting to push her daughter into a dismal match. A magnificently crafted novel of Regency manners and mores that will delight Austen enthusiasts with its wit and elegant expression.


Lady Susan Reviews


  • Ilse

    Good girls go to heaven, bad girls go everywhere.

    O Lady Susan Vernon, what a juicy jewel of a villainous character you are, a black diamond, repelling and fascinating at the same time, your wicked charm inspiring possibly an uncanny form of envy more than simple revulsion. Deceiving everyone with your angelic face and pleasingly mild manners of hypocrite virtue, your honeyed smile covers up a cold-hearted, calculating, selfish nature – and how cunningly sophisticated and feisty you are in comparison with those limp noodles of ‘contemptibly weak’ men who are so unlucky and naïve to get entangled in your scheming, just playthings and pawns in your frivolous and cruel games. Speaking your mind, confiding your real thoughts, motives and stratagems in the letters to your equally evil friend Mrs. Johnson, you drop the mask of amiable countenance, showing the hideous face of the ruthless, manipulative and coquettish seductress more ordinary women furtively fear or believe to be hidden behind an all too pretty face, an overkill of charm and overly refined manners – a treacherous face they’d be happy to expose, as your sister-in-law relentlessly expounds in her letters to her mother.

    However it might appear slightly preposterous in our present day context, and aside from your exasperating and vicious character, Janus-faced, unadulterated malignancy, lies, indulgence in power and dominance, abhorrent mistreatment of your poor daughter Frederica, your rather disgracefully merry recent widowhood (grief-stricken? not you) - isn’t your behaviour simply rational and comprehensible in the world of Jane Austen, an attempt to basically have a normal household again, regain status, avoid and overcome penury and ill reputation – after all, for women in your position, a sensible way of dealing with the ordeals of widowhood if not amongst the lucky ones to whom it brought wealth or even power? A la guerre comme à la guerre! What was to be expected for you as such a widow in the male-dominated society in that time and class? What was to be done? Did you truly have other alternatives than go on the hunt for a rich second spouse and foisting yourself upon the household of your late husband’s brother as an operating base to improve your circumstances, left behind with no home, no money, and nothing useful to do?

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    I am tired of submitting my will to the caprices of others; of resigning my own judgment in deference to those to whom I owe no duty, and for whom I feel no respect.

    In such a patriarchal world there is no convenient place for an unattached woman, regardless of her eventual valiant intelligence and shrewd machinations, and specifically not if ‘dangerously endowed with experience and independence’ and potentially unchaste like a widow, a figure to be feared and guarded against, knowing the game all too well. But she doesn’t set the rules of the game. And young Jane Austen – estimated to have written this delicious epistolary novella between 1793-94, not yet twenty years old - didn’t seem keen on endangering or shocking society by letting her amoral widow bask in her redeemed liberty and independence for long.

    Where there is a disposition to dislike, a motive will never be wanting.

  • Tharindu Dissanayake

    "This eclaircissement is rather provoking."

    Well...I guess only Austen could write something like this and getaway with a good rating. But it's not bad by any means. It seems, the author has had enough of principled characters, and decided to create kind of a super-villain with this one. And had done it really well.

    "Where pride and stupidity unite there can be no dissimulation worthy notice."

    This book defers from every other Austen book. It's short, and has an odd style of writing which uses letters sent by different characters, making each of them a POV, and the unforgiving protagonist doesn't redeem herself, even at the end. With all her machinations, manipulations and flirtations, cleverly hidden by her beauty and superficial manners, Susan Vernon is a leading contender for the most hypocritical character out of all her books.

    "Grace and manner, after all, are of the greatest importance."

    Austen's writing always make up for any other short-comings one might notice, a quality that doesn't faulter, even in this odd one out. Reading one of her books is always a treat. However, I think this is the first time I'm not really happy with one her endings. It came a little too quickly in my opinion, like she was in a hurry to get it over with. Other than that, I enjoyed reading Lady Susan.

    "Young men are often hasty in their resolutions, and not more sudden in forming than unsteady in keeping them."

    You should not expect this book to bear comparison with the rest of her work. This is a very quick, and easy read, without a complex plot line. But like I said before, she has a way with portraying characters that feels quite realistic, and entertaining at the same time, which makes reading any of her books a wonderful experience. I was going back and forth, as to whether or not I should read this one for a while now... I'm glad I did so. Rounding off what felt like 3.5-stars to 4.

    "Where there is a disposition to dislike, a motive will never be wanting."

  • Petra X was coming to terms it was over but then

    This is a very clever book indeed. Quite different from the rest of Austen's oeuvre, it is not the sort of book that you can imagine a teenager might be able to write. To conceive the character of a woman of 35ish and her use of sexual attraction and seduction for a 19 year old, as Jane was when she finished this, shows remarkable powers of observation and deduction. How much harder in the more sheltered world of the 18thC than the tell-all media-driven world of now?

    Unlike all Austen's other books, this is in no way a comedy of manners, this is a single-minded depiction of the manipulative and rapacious Lady Susan.

    Lady Susan is a beautiful and very charming widow whose greatest delight in life is to trump it over all other women, to lure their men, their husbands and suitors, no matter what age into her sphere. As a widow she needn't stop at flirtation and promises of future, married delight and she doesn't. The book talks of a married man staying the night with her. She is a scandal wherever she invites herself, but the men cannot resist her.

    She has two main aims, one is to get her milk-and-water daughter whom she has no feelings for married to as wealthy a man as possible in as short a time as can be managed. Her other aim is to marry money herself.

    This plot is quite secondary to the absolutely brilliant drawing-out of her character via letters. Jane's marvellous technique of an epistolary novel each letter detailing the writer's perception and judgement of Lady Susan is among the best writing of any of her novels. The moral issues she brings out are tailored to the character of the letter writer - some admire and encourage her, some do so falsely because she brings interest to their boring country lives and some thoroughly disapprove of her and try to protect the daughter who cannot stand up to her cold and dismissively cruel mother.

    But where it is let down and probably why it wasn't submitted for publication until more than 50 years after Jane Austen's death is that the ending is abrupt and quite badly-written. It is as though Jane knew that she had to punish Lady Susan for her adultery but could not quite find the right device in which to bring it to that conclusion, so the end is a summary of what happens and is very, very disappointing.

    This was, like most of Austen's books, a solid 5 star read, but for the ending. So 4 stars.

  • Henry Avila

    Lady Susan Vernon 35, but looks much younger is exceedingly pretty , gentle with great manners , well spoken, intelligent the perfect woman until you know her... newly widowed from a kind man Mr.Vernon, ( no first name is given) he had foolishly let her spend all his money... a daughter 16, Frederica almost as beautiful as she, who the Lady ignores , hates and torments, a bothersome thing. The notorious flirt, has chased men both married and single throughout England, (her late husband looked the other way, to avoid scandal) and continues a few months after his death, angering jealous wives, Lady Manwaring the latest, the gullible victim Mr. Manwaring , set around the turn of the 19th century ...With little money Lady Susan accepts Charles Vernon's, her late husband's brother, invitation to stay a while in his home with the family, wife Catherine and children the Vernon's are noted for their generosity. Lady Susan turns on the charm which no man can resist, but it's different with women they can see through the outrageous lies, Catherine Vernon grows to dislike her intensely and feels sorry for her distressed niece, Frederica, the daughter has been deposited in a cheap boarding school. Susan is always plotting in this epistolary novella, everyone's writing letters to their confidants, friend or relative, revealing their true feelings in a polite society it is the only way. Catherine to her mother Lady De Courcy, still signing them Cath. Vernon, propriety must be kept. Her brother Reginald, needs to see the coquette it would be fun he thinks but at 23, he is out of his league, the visit is disastrous, falling in love with the older attractive woman, that his family doesn't approve and the sister is powerless to stop, Catherine knows no brother would listen to a sister's warning, in regards to romance . The unexpected arrival of Sir James Martin, uninvited to the Vernon's house is quite a bit awkward, the silly , immature, unintelligent young man wants to marry either Susan or the shy daughter Frederica but he has plenty of money. Lady Susan has written close friend Mrs. Alicia Johnson, the desire to marry off the daughter to this tiresome gentleman, her machinations must succeed or at last resort, the rather unthinkable marry him herself, she desperately needs the cash. Colossal Trouble with a capital T, follows Susan, she goes to London to get Frederica the nervous daughter... so distraught, she flees her school but was caught, not desiring to be forced to marry Sir James the undesirable, later both left Charles Vernon's mansion, soon afterwards to live in a small apartment in London, Susan is waiting to elope with Reginald who at this time is visiting his concerned parents, and the terrified Frederica, James... Then the lovesick Mr. Manwaring appears and the utterly heartbroken, anxious Lady Manwaring , also...the always unperturbed, beautiful, resilient Lady Susan will need all her enormous talents to persevere...The much too short novella, has one of the best female villains in the history of literature ... A final thought, this is my last Jane Austen novel she only wrote seven, if you count Lady Susan and I read , each captivating one a very talented lady and I can't think of another more appropriate word for her, thank you for the entertainment but even further, the enchantment.

  • Emily (Books with Emily Fox)

    I read the book then watch the movie for BookTubeAThon 2018 and I have to say... they have some differences and the movie might be a bit better. It's so silly and funny and can't recommend it enough!

  • Margaret M - Hiatus - I will respond when I can

    “What could I do! Facts are such horrid things!!!”

    One of Lady Susan Vernon’s many eye opening and indecent phrases in this scandalous little book. A woman who would make many women flinch and men recoil, for the audacious and brazen way that Lady Susan declares her intentions and goes about seducing the man she intends to marry now that she is a widow. This story is set in a very rigid and conservative society, where women had their ‘place’ which makes this ‘conquest’ all the more exciting because the hunted becomes the hunter and makes no apologies for it.

    Her antics were shameless, her methods devious, her attitude selfish, and plans bodacious which made her such a 'deliciously corrupt character' and brilliant in this story.

    The Plot

    Lady Susan is a beautiful and charming woman who has been left a widow at the age of 35 with a 16-year-old daughter, Frederica. A woman who possesses many other talents too which she puts to ‘good’ use in securing herself a gentleman husband. And her sights have been set on her sister-in-law’s brother Reginald, who is quickly bewitched by her charms, flirtatious ways and coquettish behaviours.

    As well as beautiful, witty, and high spirited, Lady Susan is also conniving, self centred and a moral delinquent whose seductive machinations have drawn the interest of men who are disarmed by her, but also the attention of the women who ridicule her.

    Written in letter form, the true intentions of the manipulative widow are unapologetically and unashamedly laid bare. So much so that the reader has no work to do but sit back and savour the mischievous exploits and cunning handiwork of a seductress at work.

    Review and Comments

    It is true that these types of stories amuse me to no end. Here we have the beautiful stylish and charming woman who exudes class, wealth, and sophistication, but the person on the inside is devious, immoral, and audacious which should be detestable. However, in a society that places so much emphasis on outward appearances, respectability and formality, these characters are all the more fascinating for me, because they are huge contradictions of themselves.

    Wickedly scheming and manipulative – and so I was hooked.
    Shockingly ambitious and improper – I just love it.
    Disgracefully ignoble and disreputable - oh give me more.

    I loved that Jane Austen created this book character and was incredibly mature to write such a story at a young age. However, to appeal to the moralists, it was said the young Jane Austen could not afford to let her heroine succeed with such an audacious plan for fear of upsetting its illiberal and myopic readers of the times. Forgivable for succumbing to culture pressures because the 19-year-old Jane Austen goes on to write Pride and Prejudice, and others, which really does challenge the delicate and conciliatory role of women.

    Nevertheless, this was a very worthy and elegantly written story about a fascinating and intriguing book character. One I’d rather not know but one I am happy to indulge because Lady Susan is wickedly immoral, energetic, enterprising, and cunning, and so added much spice and drama to this story.

  • Anne

    I had to look up what an epistolary novel was.
    Embarrassing, I know.
    Swear to god, my first thought was, isn't that what they did to me when kid #1 was born? Then, no. wait. that was an episiotomy. Bless.

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    Alright, since I know I can't possibly be the only person in the world who didn't know the definition, I'm going to save the rest of you the 10 seconds it takes to Google it.
    All it means is that this story is told through letters that were written back and forth between the characters.
    I thought that might suck.
    And yet, it did not suck.

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    What is the point of this story, you ask?
    For me it was this:
    Lady Susan is proof that men have always loved a bitch.
    They are, in general, also quite easily duped by a beautiful woman.
    And obviously vice versa, but we're not talking about stupid women today, are we? Go sit down.

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    I have to admit that while I thought she was a deplorable mother, and being a serial husband-snatcher isn't the way to go about making new friends, her devil-may-care attitude toward society was (for me) quite hilarious. She was awful. But I think you almost had to be awful if you were going to have any fun back in the day.
    And boy, did she manage to have some fun.

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    Lady Susan Vernon isn't necessarily the character you're rooting for, but she is the main character. And that is important, ladies.
    Because I think most women need to learn to how to turn on their inner Lady Susan every now and then to get what they want.
    Recommended.

  • leynes

    Why has no one ever told me that this is Jane Austen's BEST BOOK? This was utterly delightful... and petty, and scathing. And overall jaw-dropping. Who knew 19-year-old Jane was this saucy and hilarious? Turns out Jane really was that bitch. I am in shock, honey.

    Lady Susan is a short epistolary novel by Jane Austen, possibly written in 1794 but not published until 1871, since Austen never submitted it for publication.

    ...where there is a disposition to dislike a motive will never be wanting;
    Lady Susan Vernon, a beautiful and charming recent widow, visits her brother-in-law (her late husband's brother) and sister-in-law, Charles and Catherine Vernon, with little advance notice at Churchill, their country residence. Catherine is far from pleased, as Lady Susan had tried to prevent her marriage to Charles and her unwanted guest has been described to her as "the most accomplished coquette in England". Among Lady Susan's conquests is the married Mr. Manwaring.

    Catherine's brother Reginald arrives a week later, and despite Catherine's strong warnings about Lady Susan's character, soon falls under her spell. Lady Susan toys with the younger man's affections for her own amusement and later because she perceives it makes her sister-in-law uneasy. Her confidante, Mrs. Johnson, to whom she writes frequently, recommends she marry the very eligible Reginald, but Lady Susan considers him to be greatly inferior to Manwaring.

    Frederica, Lady Susan's 16-year-old daughter, tries to run away from school when she learns of her mother's plan to marry her off to a wealthy but insipid young man she loathes. She also becomes a guest at Churchill. Catherine comes to like her—her character is totally unlike her mother's—and as time goes by, detects Frederica's growing attachment to the oblivious Reginald.

    Later, Sir James Martin, Frederica's unwanted suitor, shows up uninvited, much to her distress and her mother's vexation. When Frederica begs Reginald for support out of desperation (having been forbidden by Lady Susan to turn to Charles and Catherine), this causes a temporary breach between Reginald and Lady Susan, but the latter soon repairs the rupture.

    Lady Susan decides to return to London and marry her daughter off to Sir James. Reginald follows, still bewitched by her charms and intent on marrying her, but he encounters Mrs. Manwaring at the home of Mr. Johnson and finally learns Lady Susan's true character. Lady Susan ends up marrying Sir James herself, and allows Frederica to reside with Charles and Catherine at Churchill, where Reginald De Courcy "could be talked, flattered, and finessed into an affection for her."

    Lady Susan is one of her own, a unique character with few parallels in 19th-century literature. She is a selfish, unscrupulous and scheming woman, highly attractive to men. She is perfectly unashamed of her relationship with a married man. All in all, she really is that bitch. And none of us can stop her. She subverts all the standards of the romantic novel: she has an active role, she is not only beautiful but intelligent and witty, and her suitors are significantly younger than she is. Although the ending includes a traditional reward for morality, Lady Susan herself is treated more leniently than the adulteress, Maria Bertram, in Mansfield Park, who is severely punished.
    My dear Alicia, of what mistake were you guilty of marrying a man of his age! – just old enough to be formal, ungovernable and to have the gout – too old to be agreeable, and too young to die.
    This entire book was a riot. The writing style is scathing. Young Jane had such balls for writing this because she kept it 100% real. Albeit satirical and exaggerated, the characters in Lady Susan, especially the women, feel much more REAL than in any other Austen novel. The way Lady Susan and Alicia talk about men is exactly how I imagine early 19th-century women to gossip and chatter. They are truly something else!

  • Maureen

    *3.5 stars *

    Lady Susan is recently widowed - she’s an attractive woman, who uses that gift to its full advantage, especially when it comes to luring unsuspecting men!

    A novel told entirely in the form of letters, Lady Susan is an outrageous character - a mean, two faced schemer and gold digger, with a complete lack of moral compass, but of course, she makes for such an interesting character. A rather abrupt ending, but it’s an entertaining read, peppered with some amusing dialogue.

  • Katie Lumsden

    Always a delight.

  • Tadiana ✩Night Owl☽

    Jane Austen's novel about a femme fatale, the lovely and devious Lady Susan.

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    This early epistolary Austen novel follows the young(ish), attractive and recently widowed Lady Susan Vernon as she schemes her way around England, leaving emotional wreckage in her wake. Lady Susan is a unique main character for Austen, two-faced, mean-spirited and amoral ... yet witty and intelligent.

    Lady Susan is trying to marry off her young daughter Frederica, whom she despises as stupid and insipid - well, she is pretty insipid, actually - to Sir James, a rich young man, while maneuvering to marry someone even richer herself. When she's banished from a home she was visiting (for seducing the husband, Lord Mainwaring), lacking better options, Lady Susan invites herself and her daughter Frederica for an extended stay with her dead husband's brother and his wife. The wife, Catherine Vernon, is one of the few people that sees through Susan's façade.

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    Catherine's handsome young brother and the family heir, Reginald De Courcy, soon arrives for a stay as well. He's initially laughingly suspicious of Lady Susan, whose reputation has preceded her.

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    But Lady Susan, all sweetness and distressed loveliness, is gradually able to convince Reginald that she's been unfairly maligned. Meanwhile she's writing letters to her friend, Alicia, confiding all her devious plans.

    The plot thickens when Susan's shy daughter Frederica, desperately trying to avoid being married off to the oblivious Sir James, starts to fall for Reginald and begs him to help her evade her mother's plans for her. Susan's got all she can do to juggle all her lies and schemes, keeping Reginald on the hook while also continuing her relationship with Lord Mainwaring, who's still hanging around her. Just keeping her options open!

    Lady Susan isn't a particularly deep or layered story; it was early days yet for Jane Austen. Other than Lady Susan herself and her foe Catherine Vernon, the characters are pretty much one-dimensional. But it's a fun read with many witty lines and an intriguing and unusual main character, and it's interesting to see Austen developing her style and craft. Half the fun in this book is reading Susan's explanations to Alicia of how completely she's tricking everyone around her. Even when I was getting anxious for her latest victim, Reginald, to wake up and smell the coffee, I was getting a kick out of how gleefully deceitful and amoral Susan is.

  • Candi

    I grabbed this satisfying little treat just in time to finish out the old year and ring in the new. I love Jane Austen, and Lady Susan is the only piece (besides her unfinished novel, Sanditon) which I hadn’t read yet. I should say, I’ve read all of her major works and now want to read whatever else remains out there. This was entertaining. Stylistically, I prefer a straightforward novel when it comes to Austen. This one was written in the epistolary format. In its favor, the letters offer quick glimpses of not just the heroine’s voice but also the thoughts of those who fell along her conniving path. That made for a few laughs!

    “I congratulate you and Mr. Vernon on being about to receive into your family, the most accomplished coquette in England.”

    Lady Susan has been recently widowed and is about to spend some time with her brother-in-law and his wife. Her reputation precedes her. She also has a daughter who plays a role in her scheming, though quite unwillingly. But really, what was a woman in her position to do during those times? She’s clever, beautiful and ambitious and will do what must be done in order to secure her future and that of her daughter. Who can blame her? Well, to be fair, plenty of folks would love to see her fail. She’s much more interesting as a manipulator than a meek little mouse would be in this situation. In fact, there’d be no point in Austen writing the story otherwise! I’m glad I read this, though I’d probably not recommend it as a starting point to Austen. It’s short on plot and the characters are not fully developed, but it has the Austen wit and charm I so adore.

    “I am tired of submitting my will to the caprices of others – of resigning my own judgment in deference to those, to whom I owe no duty, and for whom I feel no respect. I have given up too much – have been too easily worked on…”

  • Piyangie

    In this epistolary novella by Jane Austen, we are presented with "the most accomplished coquette in England"- Lady Susan. Driven by the necessity to survive in her status of widowhood, she draws on many schemes to advance her position, the first and foremost being contracting a second marriage for her. At the same time, she works on several plans to get rid herself of her encumbrance - her daughter. Some of her schemes backfire, but she never relents and artfully manages to secure her a life of wealth and comfort.

    Lady Susan is selfish, manipulative, and shameless. To secure her an opulent lifestyle, she would stoop so low and do whatever within her power, even if it involves directing her flirtatious attention to a married man. Her conduct is totally outrageous for a titled woman in the Regency period. However, we may have been able to tolerate her with all her scandalous behaviour had her conduct towards her own daughter been kind and considerate. The shocking wickedness with which she treats her daughter deprives Lady Susan of any redeeming quality. She robs her daughter's education and makes her appear as a simpleton. Throughout the read, one feels nothing but anger and utmost contempt towards this scheming lady. Incredibly, however much she's disliked, she generates interest in the reader as well, for Lady Susan is a charming villain. Only Jane Austen could create such an outrageous character which the reader despises while being interested in at the same time.

    Austen is well known for her realistic portrayal of society and her powerful observation of people who invariably became characters in her work. She presents her characters impartially, without judgment, allowing the reader to find on their own the blacks and whites of them. In Lady Susan too, this characteristic style is evident. I love this impartiality of Austen. That gives us enough space and freedom to be our own judges.

    Lady Susan is written in the epistolary style, which is a stark contrast to her natural descriptive writing style. The writing is clever and bold and is full of sarcasm, wit, and humor. I truly had fun reading it, often laughing aloud, and cheering every time her wicked plans are thwarted. Although Lady Susan was one infuriating character, she vastly entertained me.

    This short novella by Austen is less well known. Nevertheless, it shouldn't be overlooked, for its short content, it is filled with so much richness.

  • Sherwood Smith

    I've noticed over the years that a lot of Austen fans (the ones who tend to want to confine Jane Austen to a tiny box of preciousness, or who only value her as a romance writer, or who have only seen the films) seem oblivious to this tight, short, ninety-percent-finished epistolary novel. Or they pretend it doesn't exist, because it is not very romantic.

    I understand there's to be a movie version, which gives me deep misgivings. If it's played seriously, with a Dangerous Liaisons overlay of postmodern immorality, I will be pretending it doesn't exist.

    But the actual novel Austen wrote, probably when she was in her late teens or early twenties? That I reread every few years, half-hearing how much fun it must have been for the home theater-loving Austen family to read out loud. It has two drawbacks: the male characters are all pastiches from eighteenth century novels, and it wasn't finished.

    But it has two pluses: it is really a battle of the Titans, between the female characters, whose personalities come alive delightfully, especially Lady Susan, who is (as she is introduced right at the outset) a complete coquette. And two: it wasn't finished, which permitted Austen to end it with an early version of the deliciously witty narrative voice that stands out so brilliantly in her subsequent work.

    In it we also see certain themes: presumably Lady Susan has the highest rank of any of the characters, for to be called "Lady Firstname" meant you were daughter of an earl or higher. And the higher ranks do not do well in any of Austen's novels--a distinction from, for example, Georgette Heyer, who invented an alternate England in which birth will always tell.

    We also see that what women thought matters. What women did mattered. Austen's work is all female gaze.

    It was never published in her lifetime. I can imagine that she thought it a fun experiment--worth reading aloud in the family circle to laugh over--but it didn't have enough heft to turn into a novel as she did with the other two she wrote in the 1790s, the epistolary novels that became P&P and S&S.

    Her "proper" heroine, Frederica, is as boring as she is trite, and ditto Reginald de Courcy, the hero. The subsidiary characters take over the story, especially Lady Susan and her cheerfully awful friend Mrs. Johnson, with some great comic cameo roles, like Sir James.

  • Luís

    Lady Susan, 35, is beautiful and intelligent but also (or above all) bitchy, treacherous, manipulative, hypocritical, a liar and so on. That's still a lot for one woman!! The exchange of letters, which all revolve around this woman, confirms to us a little more, with each interaction, how detestable she is. A little epistolary book that reads quickly, and we again appreciate Austen's intelligent pen, full of finesse and irony. I still regret the few pages since we cannot fully immerse ourselves in Austen's universe.

  • Luffy

    Lady Susan is a very artful book, where its artfulness lies in the author's understanding of the mechanism of Regency society. I have the feeling that the me from 5 years ago would not have appreciated the book as much as me now. The novel is almost a novella. It is rueful to realise that books with more ambition than this one have all been half forgotten by all but the most immersed of proponents.

    Lady Susan, her daughter Frederica, and Reginald form a love triangle that makes us want an ending that, when it finally arrives, is excellently delivered. The bit part players in the book have more voice in it because of the nature of its epistolary structure. People who see through Lady Susan's wiles are given a stage to punctuate Lady Susan's web of lies with a running commentary that lends weight to the book.

    I gave this book 4 stars because I was not half pleased with the ending. Endings like this do not hurt as much as they would in the hands of a lesser writer. But this is a book written by a young Jane Austen. She is young, but still her talent is evident. The ending is made of the stuff of Victorian commonality. I loved the book because of it. The first two thirds of the book make the third act a desirable outcome. This is because so much worse could have occurred.

    I have yet to read All of Jane Austen's bibliography. I worried before reading Lady Susan. My wavering hopes tussled with my acquired pessimism and the thirst for more of Austen finally won out. I understand those who, like me, have taken a star from their ratings. Comparisons with Pride and Prejudice, are inevitable, though unfair. I have, however, no illusions as to one of Austen's books. Turns out even the most unique voice from Victorian literature is not infallible. We will have to take proof of the pudding, won't we?

    I am slightly indignant by the low rating for this classic. Some may have felt cheated by all these letters and maybe they felt being robbed of witnessing the craftiness of the titular character. The skill of Austen patches up these deficiencies and even in this less ambitious form shows more than glimpses of the author's genius. I was thoroughly entertained by Lady Susan. This is the type of book that deserves to be called a classic. It is a book that has a prepossessing sketch of human nature, with the reader being delighted by the duplicitousness of one and the reactiveness of others. Lady Susan won me over, and that is reflected in my rating, and review.

  • Bradley

    I haven't read an Austen novel that I disliked.

    I mean, she's good enough to turn what should be an epistolary slog through social mores into a delightful and spiteful and nearly-tragic romp. Who else can do that?

    The voices of each character in each letter evokes such verve and personality and a great sense of persistent presence that I'm frankly quite shocked. The plot was rather simple. It's about making good matches and getting involved in other's love-lives. *shock* *no* *say it isn't so*

    But even so, it's done with such reserve and sometimes with such plain nasty cattiness that I can't help but swing this way and that throughout the novel, just trying to get a handle on what the *truth* is.

    What is Lady Susan really hiding? What did her daughter do? What the hell with Mrs. Vernon? Jeeze.

    For such a short novel, made entirely of letters, it really managed to get under my skin and keep me on my toes. Amazing!

  • Jenny Lawson

    Lady Susan is the perfect villain you love to hate. Not the best Jane Austen but one I'd missed until now. Sort of ends too quickly though.

  • Diane

    This is a clever and delightful novella from Jane Austen that wasn't published until decades after her death. I was excited to read it after Whit Stillman adapted it into the movie "Love & Friendship."

    The story is told in a series of letters, with the main character being the beautiful, selfish and manipulative Lady Susan Vernon. Lady Susan is skilled at making men fall in love with her, and is used to getting her way. In the story, she is trying to catch a husband for her daughter, but she's also distracted after getting involved with a married man, and she's busy trying to find relatives who will support her. A widow who doesn't like spending her own money, she would prefer to take advantage of the hospitality of friends and family.

    Lady Susan is a very different heroine than we're used to seeing from Jane Austen. She is witty and clever, to be sure, but she does not seem ashamed of her immorality or schemes, whereas less scrupulous characters in other Austen novels always get punished for their bad behavior. Instead, Lady Susan finds a way to triumph, despite the many lessons of literature that say she should end up a ruined woman.

    I didn't know what to expect from this novella, and I came away impressed. Written when Austen was about 20, this is an early work that really shines. Highly recommended for Austen fans.

    Favorite Quotes
    "I was so much indulged in my infant years that I was never obliged to attend to anything, and consequently am without those accomplishments which are necessary to finish a pretty woman. Not that I am an advocate for the prevailing fashion of acquiring a perfect knowledge in all the languages arts and sciences; it is throwing time away; to be mistress of French, Italian, German, music, singing, drawing etc., will gain a woman some applause, but will not add one lover to her list. Grace and manner after all are of the greatest importance."

    "There is exquisite pleasure in subduing an insolent spirit, in making a person pre-determined to dislike, acknowledge one's superiority."

  • Carol She's So Novel꧁꧂

    Possible alternative titles...

    Lady Fortune Hunter?

    Mistress of Deceit?

    Mommie Dearest?


    This early work (written around 1794, but not published until 1871* well after JA's death) was Jane as I had never seen her!

    This is the first time an epistolary novel has truly worked for me and it works because all the characters are completely unguarded in their letters.



    My dear Alicia, of what a mistake were you guilty in marrying a man of his age! Just old enough to be formal, ungovernable, and to have the gout; too old to be agreeable, too young to die.


    I was really surprised by how ruthless Lady Susan was and I do have a sneaking admiration for her, although I pity her daughter and anyone else who gets in her way!

    Facts are such horrid things!


    Like that ever stopped Lady S!

    Readable and great fun! Even if you don't normally enjoy JA's books you might like this one!

    * I'm really surprised this was originally published in the Victorian era when this novel is so amoral!





    https://wordpress.com/view/carolshess...

  • Beatriz

    Aunque parezca increíble, es mi primer libro de Jane Austen. Leí en un foro que Lady Susan era una buena elección para introducirse en su obra y, al terminarlo, a mí también me lo parece.

    A pesar que el libro está completamente escrito de forma epistolar, es muy fácil seguir los acontecimientos y conocer las motivaciones de los personajes a través de las cartas que se envían entre ellos, aunque quizá hubiera sido de ayuda alguna introducción, porque al principio cuesta entender la relación entre los personajes. La historia engancha mucho e iba para las cuatro estrellas hasta que… llegó el desenlace: increíblemente apresurado y me quedó al debe un escarmiento más significativo para la odiosa Susan Vernon. Quizá se deba a que esta historia fue publicada de manera póstuma, pero aun así, por ese final, le bajo una estrella.

    No sé si será una constante en las obras de Austen, pero al menos en ésta hay un notorio desdén hacia el género masculino. Unos más y otros menos, pero todos son caracterizados como personajes ñoños y cortos de entendederas, que son hábilmente manejados por la astucia femenina. Interesante.

    Debo reconocer que me gustó mucho más de lo que me esperaba y probablemente lea otros libros de esta autora.

    Reto #3 PopSugar 2017: Un libro de cartas

  • Trish

    Most people don't even know that Jane Austen ever wrote this book. Yes, it is a book indeed. Only 80 pages long, which is next to nothing when compared to the other 6 novels, but, in only 80 pages Jane Austen manages to build a great stage for yet another funny, witty, sarcastic and engaging tale through a series of letters back and forth between several people.

    The situation is that the titular Lady Susan, a widow, is a terrible flirt and apparently a master match-maker. We discover her flirtiness, her not really good relationship with her daughter, as well as how she manages to alternately wrap certain people (even when they were prejudiced against her) around her fingers.

    Lady Susan would be an unlikely heroine in any story but the existance of this character is even more surprising when remembering how old this story is. Oh, how much I would have loved to see Regency England react to her! :D

    I usually don't like people of such a character as Lady Susan's (she's unkind towards her daughter, she is manipulative, she is cold and dismissive and happily sleeping around finding it quite alright so long as she is discreet), but in this case it was simply funny as hell and most of the people involved in this novel definitely deserved being played. After all, it's the usual Regency setting where looks are most important and where pretentiousness and superficiality rule.

    Though short and obscure due to when it was penned, this is again a masterful work of a fantastic female author.

    A short time ago I watched the BBC production of this story and was quite disappointed (which I had not expected) so I started this with a bit of reservation, but the book - although quite short and different from the bigger novels - was wonderful.

  • Emma

    Lady Susan. What an interesting character- stirring up trouble, flirting, scheming, lying, plotting, seducing and trouble making...quite a contrast to Elizabeth Bennett!

  • Kalliope




    MULTIFACETED PRISM


    Reading this wonderful novel I felt as if I were holding a multifaceted prism, and with each new epistle, I was twisting it to another of its sides, and looked in wonder into wonder it.

    With every slight shift in viewpoint, the light unveiled a different aspect: of the engaging story; of the captivating characters; of the elusive nature of fiction; of the actual art of narration.

    Not only was each letter advancing a plot but it also made me wonder if there was an unmediated way of looking, since each side, each letter, had a bearing on the others. And even if one of its sides appeared to have its position as the original source, the constant shifting was gradually producing a greater and greater impression of unreliability.

    In particular one of the facets, one of the letters, reminded me of how indiscernible is human intent.

    What a smart young writer, this Jane Austen at nineteen was!

  • Susana

    (review in English below)

    Gostei mesmo desta minha primeira experiência com a escrita de Jane Austen - que foi também a sua primeira obra.

    Retrospectivamente, acho que podia haver alguma caracterização física dos personagens e dos ambientes. Mas, na verdade, durante a leitura não lhes senti a falta.

    A história é-nos transmitida apenas através de cartas, trocadas entre alguns dos personagens, com excepção do final (que me desapontou um pouco por causa disso mesmo) mas a autora conseguiu manter uma excelente dinâmica, conjugada com uma escrita irrepreensível.

    Fiquei, obviamente, com vontade de ler mais obras de Austen, e gostava de o fazer por ordem cronológica.

    Recomendo especialmente a quem goste de romances de época, de uma boa escrita e do formato epistolar.

    I really enjoyed this first experience with Jane Austen's writing - which was also her first work.

    In retrospective, I think it would've been nice to have some physical characterization of the characters and of the settings. But, truth be told, I didn't miss it while reading the book.

    The story is conveyed only through letters that are exchanged between some of the characters, with the exception of the ending (on which I was disappointed for that same reason) but the author managed to maintain a great dynamic, combined with impeccable writing.

    I obviously want to read more from Austen and I'd like to do it in chronological order.

    I recommend it, of course, specially to those who like "epoch romance", good writing and epistolary novels.

  • Jan-Maat

    A curiosity among Jane Austen's works both as it is a novel of letters and in that the title character is evil - or if not evil then anti-social in the sense that she is a disruptive force in restrained polite Georgian society. She is alluring and scheming ostensibly to win a new husband for herself and one for her daughter too, ostensibly I say because there is no imperative to do so, neither woman is pregnant and they seem to have plenty of money, her motivation seems to be more more about an assertion of power, she schemes, not because she particularly wants a man, but because she can. I was conscious throughout that Austen was an Anglican writer, the proper role for a woman is to live within that religious framework, she might do so with wit and charm or with innocence and simplicity, but Lady Susan violates that and seems to play at breaking up marriages and thinks that the ideal marriage (for herself) is one in which she is reasonably certain to inherit the husband's wealth fairly quickly (but only due to natural causes, there's no sense of her being a murderess .

    As a consequence the view of society is a curious one, the men have to be almost powerless before Lady Susan, her conversation can win them over and convince them - most of the time, women can see through her pitiful deceptions and lies, but struggle to convince brothers or husbands of how frightful this woman is. A few men seem to have some immunity to her allure, almost as disturbing one woman appears to be actually Lady Susan's friend, This is hard to swallow as we only see the character using people it is unlikely she could form friendships - but the epistolary form of the story requires it, and without it we would not see her rage and desire to punish others when she is thwarted.

    There is in a widow and a mother directing the marital future an inversion of the established social order in favour of a more Darwinian one (the female chooses), but we might notice that Austen does this in her later novels too but more subtly, within the confines of an ordered and orderly society, the difference here is that Lady Susan is seen and sees herself as disruptive and domineering - spoiling other peoples' plan (which are tacitly appropriate) in favour of her own, which gives us a faint melodrama, a battle of a single rebellious ego against all comers, determined purely to have her own way and to be in control by means of manipulation.

    It is interesting to see Austen play with the epistolary format and with having a wicked main character, and it is fun but not entirely successful - it is another one of her works which was never published in her lifetime. The best line, I felt came in the authorial conclusion that the story "could not, to the great detriment of the Post office Revenue, be continued longer".

  • Celeste   Corrêa

    As heroínas de Miss Austen não só sabem o que querem, como desenvolvem planos para conseguirem lá chegar.
    Mas Lady Susan (35 anos) é distinta das outras: é uma vilã; viúva há quatro meses, não a melhor das mães de uma filha de 16 anos, eloquente, intriguista, ambiciosa, confiante dos seus talentos e beleza recorre a estratégias censuráveis para voltar a casar com um casado ou com um solteiro. Nessa época, os homens casados podiam separar-se e voltar a casar o que não era válido para as mulheres. O que interessa? Lady Susan é viúva, pode casar – tal como hoje, 9 meses após a viuvez.
    Romance epistolar, 41 cartas trocadas entre diversas personagens que analisam todos os receios sobre os estragos que Lady Susan possa provocar. As cartas entre a protagonista e a sua melhor amiga são genuinamente cómicas pois nem uma nem outra nada escondem.
    O livro – muito bem arquitectado -, encerra com uma conclusão genial; Aqui transcrevo um pequeno excerto:

    «Esta correspondência, por uma reunião entre algumas das partes, e separação entre as outras, não poderia, para grande prejuízo dos rendimentos dos Correios, continuar por muito mais tempo.»

    O final é feliz e surpreendente, mesmo sabendo do tudo que a heroína é capaz. Miss Austen era uma satirista e criou uma personagem, que apesar dos seus defeitos e carácter intriguista e manipulador, consegue agradar e divertir.
    O livro está adaptado ao cinema com o título «Amor e Amizade», estranhamente; Miss Austen escreveu outro livro com esse título.

    «Se há alguma coisa de que me envaideço, é da minha eloquência. A prudência e a estima resultam seguramente do domínio da linguagem, como a admiração está ao serviço da beleza, e aqui tenho oportunidade que chegue para o exercício do meu talento, já que a maior parte do tempo se passa em conversa.»

  • Teresa

    Reread -- I read it in this edition:
    https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/5...

    If
    Northanger Abbey is considered a Minor work, then this is a minor Minor work, with Northanger Abbey being a major Minor.

    Austen's writing here reminds me of her juvenilia (see
    Love and Freindship), though here it's much more accomplished (especially considering how young she still was at the time of its writing) and not as (purposely) silly and over-the-top as the juvenilia. With her early work one sees the process of Austen teaching herself how to write a novel, especially in this short novel's conclusion, reminding me of the much more effective ending of
    Mansfield Park.

  • Dannii Elle

    This early Austen novella was penned in an epistolary manner, which provoked an abundance of shared gossip and cutting remarks to feature. Almost all were centred around the figure of Lady Susan, who looked younger than her age and used it to her advantage when pursuing the married men of her village.

    I found this viciously witty, gorgeously juicy, and delightfully wicked, which, in short, means it differs greatly from the Austen I have grown to come and love in her more renowned full-length novels. I would have loved to see more of this young Austen's work as her creation of an early femme fatale was sharp and astute.

  • L A i N E Y

    My first epistolary novel, quite fun infact. I thought it would be unengaging but no, Austen managed to be her witty self and created such wicked titular character, Lady Susan Vernon.

    Eventhough the ending was little rush and not as I would have liked, I still like it, big part of it because I like Lady Susan herself.