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The Jane Austen Remedy
The Jane Austen Remedy: It is a truth universally acknowledged that a book can change a life | Ruth Wilson
2 posts | 3 read | 5 to read
An uplifting and delightfully bookish memoir about an 89-year-old woman who reclaims her life by re-reading each of Jane Austen's novels. As she approached the age of seventy, Ruth Wilson began to have recurring dreams about losing her voice. Unable to dismiss her feelings of unexplainable sadness, she made the radical decision to retreat from her conventional life with her husband to a sunshine-yellow cottage in the Southern Highlands where she lived alone for the next decade. Ruth had fostered a lifelong love of reading, and from the moment she first encountered Pride and Prejudice in the 1940s she had looked to Jane Austen's heroines as her models for the sort of woman she wanted to become. As Ruth settled into her cottage, she resolved to re-read Austen's six novels and rediscover the heroines who had inspired her; to read between the lines of both the novels and her own life. And as she read, she began to reclaim her voice. The Jane Austen Remedy is a beautiful, life-affirming memoir of love, self-acceptance and the curative power of reading. Published the year Ruth turns ninety, it is an inspirational account of the lessons learned from Jane Austen over nearly eight decades, as well as a timely reminder that it's never too late to seize a second chance.
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Teresereading
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I was approaching sixty when questions about what it means to be happy assumed a special significance in my life, setting me on a new path that led to a careful re-reading of Jane Austen's six novels.
A long one!
#firstlinefridays @ShyBookOwl

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batsy
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This book sounds great and something of interest to #pemberlittens @sprainedbrain

The piece on the author is lovely. I found the excerpt above particularly inspiring 💕 https://www.theguardian.com/books/2022/apr/10/rereading-jane-austen-has-transfor...

Centique Thank you for posting this. What a life affirming interview! I love the idea of reading arcs too, that fits so well with how I feel reading books that really move me. This has really painted a vision of how I want to live my 70s and 80s! #goals 2y
batsy @Centique Exactly my feelings 💕 I love that she is still so curious and engaging with reading in a way that challenges perceptions. Also the doctorate 🙌🏽 2y
DivineDiana This is fascinating! Broke my buying ban, and just ordered it! 😞 2y
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Sophronisba I love this so much. My go-to different-every-time book is Great Expectations but now I'm feeling the urge to reread Austen. (Also, I honestly believe that a love of reading is one thing that can take you into a happy and fulfilling old age. I am only 50 now but I am happier than I have ever been and when I think of my later years I imagine myself curling up on a comfortable couch with a glass of wine and Middlemarch or Trollope or Willa Cather.) 2y
batsy @DivineDiana A ban meant to be broken? 😁 2y
batsy @Sophronisba I love this for what it says, too. And maybe I'm simplifying it too much but the people I know who seem to have a tendency to nurture their inner life (either through reading/writing/art or doing absorbing things that is both work and pleasure) seem more fulfilled, or maybe less likely to expect others to fulfill their needs. If that makes sense. Perhaps that helps as one gets older, too. It's a lovely piece that gives hope 💕 2y
sprainedbrain Oh, I love this! Thank you for sharing. ❤️ 2y
batsy @sprainedbrain So inspiring 💜 2y
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