Thursday, March 26, 2015

Guest Post and Giveaway: Young Jane Austen by Lisa Pliscou


Today I'm pleased to welcome writer and guest poster Lisa Pliscou. She has a fascinating new title available, and today she is visiting The Calico Critic to share a few thoughts on the young Jane Austen, as well as offer a nice giveaway. Thanks to Lisa for such an intriguing essay, and for the contest as well!  

What Jane Read: A Turning Point 

I’m really excited to be here, and to share with you a little bit about my upcoming book, Young Jane Austen: Becoming a Writer, a new biography for adults which focuses on Austen’s childhood, her creative development, and the intriguing connections to her mature work.

The first part of Young Jane Austen is made up of 20 short chapters, each one highlighting a significant event in Jane’s early years, and each one illustrated by the artist Massimo Mongiardo.

The chapter called “Reading” focuses on a big turning point in young Jane’s life.

When Jane Austen was eleven, her formal schooling — which entailed two stints in boarding schools, neither of which it seems she particularly enjoyed — ended. But once again established at home, she was fortunate to have the run of her family’s unusually extensive collection of books, as well as the library of her neighbors, the Lefroys, to which she is said to have free access.

By all reports, the young Jane was a voracious reader, and omnivorous in her tastes: poetry, plays, novels (both elevated and trashy), sermons; essays about manners, society, life; books about history and books about travel.

Thinking of this, I was fascinated to read an article in The Atlantic called “Secrets of the Creative Brain,” in which neuroscientist Nancy C. Andreasen comments, “Many creative people are autodidacts,” thriving in an environment in which they can pursue their interests at their own pace.

And in his insightful book Creativity: The Psychology of Discovery and Invention, Professor Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi says:

“You cannot transform a domain unless you first thoroughly understand how it works. . . . the old Italian saying seems to apply: Impara l’arte, e mettila da parte (learn the craft, and then set it aside). One cannot be creative without learning what others know, but then one cannot be creative without becoming dissatisfied with that knowledge and rejecting it (or some of it) for a better way.”

What spot-on descriptions of the young Jane!

Not only did Jane have hundreds of books available to her, she also belonged to a family that was lively and intellectual — one in which people not only read, they wrote, too. A great many letters came and went; Mr. Austen, a rector, wrote sermons, and Mrs. Austen, witty, sometimes acerbic poetry. Jane’s older brothers wrote essays and poems, as well as bits and pieces of plays.

So it is, perhaps, not totally surprising that around age 11 or 12 Jane shifted from being a passive reader to a more critical, responsive one. Still, what a huge shift it was, and particularly so given her age!

She began writing little notes in the margins of books — little comments — when she found something that seemed silly, misguided, or outright wrong to her.

For example, in a history book that favored the Tudor queen Elizabeth over the Scots queen Mary Stuart, Jane wrote firmly, No. No. A Lie. And: Another lie.

At some point in her youth, Jane wrote up several imaginary marriages for herself in her father’s parish register. How fun to see the names “Fitzwilliam” (Mr. Darcy’s first name in Pride and Prejudice) and “Edmund” (as in Mansfield Park’s love interest Edmund Bertram) show up. It’s easy to imagine kind, indulgent Mr. Austen laughing at young Jane’s literary prank!

And going back even earlier, Jane had a French textbook given to her when she was eight. In it, many years later, we see — in a child’s scrawl and presumed to be Jane’s — the decidedly non-academic sentences Mothers angry fathers gone out and I wish I had done.


From Claire Tomalin's Jane Austen: A Life


I find these anecdotes charming, and very moving and exciting and well. These pranks, these scribbles, represent Jane’s very first “baby steps” in her journey toward becoming a writer. She is becoming dissatisfied, as Csikszentmihalyi describes it; she has begun to transform her domain.

Something as small, as simple, as decisive as No. No. A Lie: in these few words we can glimpse the promise of the brilliant writer she is soon to become.




Giveaway: Young Jane Austen by Lisa Pliscou
(U.S. and Canadian Mailing Addresses Only)


a Rafflecopter giveaway





About the Author

Lisa Pliscou is an acclaimed author of both fiction and nonfiction — funny, thought-provoking, educational, inspiring — for adults and children, with a highlight on the coming-of-age experience.

Her work has been praised by the Wall Street Journal, the Los Angeles Times, the Chicago Sun-Times, Publishers Weekly, Booklist, the Associated Press, The Horn Book, and other media.

Her forthcoming book, Young Jane Austen: Becoming a Writer, is a biography for adults that’s sure to intrigue anyone interested in Jane Austen, in writing and the creative process, and in the triumph of the artistic spirit.

“Like the very best of books, Young Jane Austen exists well beyond labels,” says Beth Kephart. “It is an empathetic biography and an empathic search, a reflection on a singular person and an engaging, universal treatise on creative fervor.”

Also coming next year is a new edition of Lisa’s first novel, Higher Education, praised by David Foster Wallace, Mary Robison, Tara Altebrando, and others, with a new afterword by Jeff Gomez.

As well as being an author, Lisa worked for many years “on the inside” in the publishing field. After graduating with honors from Harvard University with a degree in English and American Literature and Language, she went on to employment in top-tier publishing houses in NYC, including Random House and the Penguin Group, where she served as managing editor of the adult division at Viking Penguin and as a senior editor for Viking Children’s Books. She’s also been a longtime independent editor, and helped create and manage courses at Stanford University’s innovative, world-renowned publishing program.

A native Californian who’s lived all over the country, Lisa has recently returned to her home state, settling happily in the Sacramento area with her family.



Connect with Lisa








19 comments:

  1. That's interesting about her becoming a critical reader so young and hilarious about the notes in her French workbook. Nice informative post!

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    1. Glad you enjoyed it, Sophia! As someone who's never been able to write in the margins of books, I found this aspect of Jane's creative development particularly fascinating!

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  2. I can't wait to read this book, I've heard really good things about it. Thanks for the giveaway!

    Danielle C

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    1. Thanks, Danielle! I appreciate your feedback. :)

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  3. I loved the Narnia series and was probably starting to read some romance novels!

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    1. I'm glad this post sparked memories of your reading experiences at this age, Susan. I loved the Narnia series, too -- and Pippi Longstocking, big-time!

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  4. Oops-- I accidentally deleted a comment! Putting it back here!

    *********************************

    I do not admit any knowledge of my reading habits at that age; it's a private shame. ;-) Thanks for introducing me to this great new book; I love to learn more about my favorite authors!

    Please be advised the Twitter Follow prompt in the Rafflecopter has the wrong name -- it should be @LisaPliscou (that's who I followed when I claimed the credits anyhow). See https://twitter.com/LisaPliscou

    I feel very lucky to have this chance to win the book since it could definitely capture my imagination. Cheers, Kara S

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    1. Thanks to Kara for the heads up on that Twitter error-- got it fixed!

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    2. Thanks, Kara! I felt I learned so much about Jane Austen as a child, I was inspired to do my best to share it with others.

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  5. I read Gone With the Wind the summer I was 12. That book cemented my love of historical fiction and I have been reading that genre ever since.

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    1. I was just about that age when I read Gone with the Wind as well, Terry! It made an indelible impression on me. In fact -- I just blogged about seeing the film for the first time . . . in which I admit to my stubborn insistence that Clark Gable as Rhett Butler is NOT sexy. A controversial stance, I know! ;)

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  6. I was probably reading the Little House series, among others......
    even back then, I enjoyed reading series......

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    1. I'm so enjoying this thread as it's reminding me of my own great reads! The Little House series! Obsessed with it! Thanks, cyn209!

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  7. I had started reading Dickens by the time I was 10 or 11, can't remember why I did but I read a lot of them, this is having read all the books in the very small children's library

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    1. I would love to know which of Dickens' novels you started with! I first read "David Copperfield" in high school, but didn't really start to enjoy Dickens until I was in my 20s . . .

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  8. Looking forward to reading your book!

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    1. Thank you so much! Would love to know what you think of it! :)

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  9. A delightful giveaway and lovely feature. I began reading real novels when I was 8 years old and the entire Anne of Green Gables series in hardcover from the library since that was what existed at that time. Then Nancy Drew and onward. Many thanks. saubleb(at)gmail(dot)com

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    1. Thank you so much for your kind words. Yes, yes, yes to the Anne of Green Gables series and Nancy Drew! And now I'm currently rereading the Betsy-Tacy books!

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