Austen Years: A Memoir in Five Novels | Rachel Cohen
An astonishingly nuanced reading of Jane Austen that yields a rare understanding of how to live About seven years ago, not too long before our daughter was born, Jane Austen became my only author. When Rachel Cohens father died and shortly before she gave birth to her first child, she turned to Jane Austen to make sense of her new reality. Simultaneously grief-stricken and buoyed by the birth of her daughter, reading Austen became Cohens refuge and her ballast. She was able to reckon with difficult questions about mourning, memorializing, living in a household, paying attention to the world, reading, writing, and imagining through the novels. Austen Years is a deeply felt and sensitive examination of Cohens relationship to Austen, and to her own family, winding together memoir, criticism, and biographical and historical material about Austen herself. And like the sequence of Austens novels, the scope of Austen Years widens successively, with each chapter following one of Austen's novels. We begin with Cohen in Cambridge, Massachusetts, where she raises her small children and contemplates her fathers last letter, a moment paired with the grief and social bonds of Sense and Sensibility and Pride and Prejudice. Later, moving with her family to Chicago, Cohen grapples with her growing children, teaching, and her fathers legacy, all refracted through the denser, more complex Mansfield Park and Emma. With unusual depth and fresh insight into Austens life and literature, and guided by Austens mournful and hopeful final novel, Persuasion, Rachel Cohens Austen Years is a memoir of grief and family, a love letter to a literary master, and a powerful consideration of the odd process that merges our interior experiences with the world at large.