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Having studied European history at Princeton and counterterrorism with the CIA, Stephanie Barron is as qualified as anybody to do the impossible: write a plausible mystery novel about Jane Austen. Barron's basic conceit is surprisingly persuasive: the same qualities that made Austen a brilliant writer make her an ace detective, namely, her quick wit and her psychological acuity. Barron's cause is also aided by her deft marshaling of historical detail the textiles alone (Sprigged muslin! Bombazine!) are worth the price of admission and, of course, a dash of genuine erotic friction between Jane and the roguish Lord Harold. Barron is scrupulously faithful to the historical record, so we know that Jane will never actually get married. But shouldn't we let her and Barron and ourselves have a little fun along the way?
TIME Magazine ("If You Read Only One Mystery Novel This Summer...")
Delightful... Ms. Barron's skillful rendering of Austen's style, attuned to picking up the most delicate fluctuations in social behavior, reveals it to be an ideal vehicle for the classic cozy murder mystery. Who knew?"
The New York Times Book Review
Barron does a wonderful job of evoking the great British estates and the woes of spinsters living in that era... often echoing the rhythms of the Austen novels with uncanny ease."
Entertainment Weekly
Happily succeeds on all levels: A robust tale of manners and mayhem that faithfully reproduces the Austen style and engrosses to the finish."
Kirkus Reviews
Well-conceived, stylishly written, plotted with a nice twist... and brought off with a voice that works both for its time and our own."
Booknews from The Poisoned Pen
A lighthearted mystery... the most fun is that "Jane Austen' is in the middle of it, witty and logical, a foil to some of the ladies who primp, faint and swoon."
The Denver Post
Historical fiction at its best."
Library Journal
People who lament Jane Austen's minimal lifetime output... now have cause to rejoice."
The Drood Review of Mystery
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