Chronicles of The Pale by Clare Rhoden: Survival in a post-cataclysm world

‘How does anything live out there?’ Tad murmured.

Imagine a landscape more forbidding than Central Australia, the Sahara, the Atacana desert. A landscape still shifting with the after shocks of a cataclysmic event that, 197 years before The Pale begins, has destroyed most species. Clare Rhoden quickly establishes this ghastly world in our minds. At the same time she moves the narrative along with fascinating characters to care about.

 

What happens: Serviceman Tad patrols ‘the Pale’, the last place left that bears any resemblance to a city. Within the walls exist – you can hardly say ‘live’ – a hierarchical society of citizens who, like Tad, are partly liveware (tissue) and partly hardware. The Pale has wholly adopted technology and rationality as its survival mechanism. Subservience by the citizens to the poli-cosmos is the order of the day. (I think it no accident that the author’s use of ‘policosmos’ without a hyphen somehow gives it an overtone of ‘police state’.) Even so, there are unsettling signs in at least two Servicemen, Tad and his protégé Hector, of the Pre-catalcym human trait deemed most dangerous: empathy. The story of how this ‘weakness’ affects the Pale could have made a good novel in itself, I think, but Clare Rhoden interweaves it with so much more.

Outside the Pale, somehow life clings on. Here subsist the humans (fully liveware) of the Settlement. In their zeal to live up to Pre-cataclysmic ideals they have turned to biology. Strict breeding protocols result in a caste system. Beyond the Settlement roam Tribes. Some tribespeople have close bonds with the packs of Canini, wolf-like creatures. I defy any reader to not be fascinated by the Canini. Their codes and imperatives also serve as a contrast with the humans. All living things fear the Ferals, hybrids of biology and machine, a nightmare offspring of the former technological world. These scour the plains hunting biofuel i.e. flesh.

My thoughts: I particularly liked the depiction of how the mentality, society and even biology of humans could evolve to accomodate the need to survive and also to try to eliminate the weaknesses and disasters of Pre-Cataclysm humanity. In some dystopian stories all we really see, I think, is the last angry male humans mindlessly fighting each other to the last club and bullet. Here, to my relief, and I’m sure yours too, we have leaders, mostly female, relying on mutual respect, discussion, and the cross seeding of ideas between groups. This intelligent and thought provoking series looks at how the best attributes of we humans, empathy, hope, kindness, can have the power to lift us above struggle and misery.

Clare Rhoden’s website gives us more information about the Chronicles of the Pale ( The Pale, Broad Plain Darkening and The Ruined Land ) and  her other work.

Where to find The Chronicles of the Pale : From publisher Odyssey Books ,
From Amazon in Kindle and softcover.
Or, ask your friendly local bookstore to order the series in for you, My tip: order them all at once because you’re going to want to keep on reading.

Clare Rhoden also wrote The Stars in the Night and How to Survive Your Magical Family. Click on those links for my reviews.

Tell me a story, Babushka received a great Kirkus Review!

“Timely, with relevance to today’s difficult Ukrainian struggle as history is repeated.” — Kirkus Reviews Full review here. [PRE-ORDER] Buy it in pre-order here. [BOOK TOUR] Join us here if you can post a review anywhere. You’ll receive an ebook and a media kit! [WORLDWIDE GIVEAWAY] Find the clickable KittyBerry hidden in the cover here […] that is, click on the link just below.🙂

Tell me a story, Babushka received a great Kirkus Review!

The direction Baba’s story takes surprises herself as well as her granddaughter. This folk tale ‘about memories and families’ begins with a lovely cottage in the Ukraine and a little girl ‘poor of money but rich of soul.’ But all too soon the Monsters come. And everything changes forever. 

Mawson Bear reads about what happens to a little girl in the story that Babushka tells. The cover is from an older edition

What will happen to our princess and all the other children in this frightening world. After sad events, the little girl finds a matryoshka doll, and inside the doll a message of hope. Will the children be able to escape to safety? Listen closely, as Babushka unfolds her story.

Mawson’s Guardian says: This story is set during ‘The Holodomor’ in the Ukraine in the 1930s. I had no idea about the Holodomor. Here I am learning about it from a kids book. And its well worth grownups reading it too.
In 1932 in the time of Stalin, Soviet soldiers stripped the Ukraine of so much grain that millions died of famine. They transported thousands of people to Siberia. It is a hard story of awful history, here shown in a deftly written children’s picture book.

With this story of drama and hope, Carola Schmidt has, I think, created a wonderful little book that confronts a hard part of history that will intrigue grownups as well as children.

Boumund Bear and Mawson read three of Carola Schmidt’s books, Tell Me A Story Babushka, Babushka is Homesick and Chubby’s Tale.

About the Author: Carola Schmidt, the author of the Babushka Tales series, is a Pediatric Oncology Pharmacist. She has written scientific books on paediatric oncology and also, for children and their families, Chubby’s Tale . Mawson and friends proudly read and reviewed Chubby’s brave story here. You can find Chubby on Twitter and on Facebook.

Carola’s Amazon Author Page is here where you can find these books and her other titles listed.

You can also read here about: Babushka is Homesick.

Scotland The Brave on Lake Windermere

Scotty Bear is on a cruise boat on Lake Windermere under an overcast sky

Welcome to the adventures of Scotland The Brave in the UK of Great Britain. With his Guardians, Scotty explored LondonStonehenge and Bath, Exeter and PlymouthGlastonbury, Cardiff and Ludlow, and Chester, and Liverpool. (You can catch up with the story by clicking those links.)

Next, they mounted their trusty Tour Bus and traveled due north to the Lake District in Cumbria . This is a land of great rugged hills with marvelous names like Brow Haw, Skidded, and Dow Crag.

Location of Windermere

CUMBRIA.  They were passing through a land with much history. According to the Romans, the Carvetii tribe were here long ago. The Romans came and conquered them, as Romans tended to do. When the Romans finally left, around 400 CE, a little Brittonic kingdom grew up around here called Rheged.

About 300 years later, Rheged was swallowed up by its neighbour, the Saxon kingdom of Northumbria. Later came the Vikings to settle and trade. And then of course came the Normans. For a classic children’s story about those times, take a look at The Shield Ring. by Rosemary Sutcliff.

Guardian Mark is forever astonished at how much history the various peoples of Britain have managed to squash into such little bits of land. And the sheep graze on.

LAKE WINDERMERE. These days, thousands of tourists like Scotty and his Guardians pour in to the Lake District. This is another kind of invasion, but a much nicer one. Tourists come there to hike the great hills and to go boating on the big lakes of Windermere and Coniston Waters. Beatrix Potter lived in the Lake District and Wordsworth fell in love with it.

Scotty cruises Lake Windermere in the Lake District of England

Windermere is 11 miles long and up to a mile wide. (The English have yet to invent Kilometers). We arrived on The Lakeside and Haverthwaite Steam Train which runs from Haverthwaite to the southern end of Lake Windermere. From the piers at Lakeside Station we set out to cruise on this lake renowned in poems and novels.

Lake Windermere in the Lake District of England

Scotty loved the cruise. Between showers of rain he popped out on to the deck and took in the hills and sights all around. He wanted to write a Romantic Poem about it tradition of the Romantics inspired by the Lake District. Perhaps he could have sketched the scenery too. However, his paws struggle with quills.

Lots of people like to sail on the lake. There were sailing vessels moored everywhere and a lot of boat houses and little jetties.

There are fine houses and holidaying places around much of the shore, and a lot of woods.

Eventually they arrived at a town called Bowness. They wandered about the fore-shore and admired the holiday attractions and parks and gardens.

Birds mob tourists at Bowness
Birds at Bowness

If you are braver even than Scotland the Brave, you might risk going down on to the little beaches where you can get mobbed by swans and ducks. In their determination to get a bit of food, the smaller birds will even land on you. The rain drifted away and Scotty posed for another ‘Scottie’ or selfie or two.

Scotty at Bowness and Windermere

Guardian Mark tried rather hopelessly to identify the hills and peaks that are visible from the lake. Scale Head, perhaps? Claire Height maybe. And perhaps Castlewood Hill and Black Braw and Great Green How were somewhere in the distance. What splendid names, anyway.

We boarded the tour bus and travelled north through beautiful countryside. We were now making our dash for Gretna Green just as in all the finest Regency Period romances.

In the next episode, Scotty crosses an invisible border to arrive in Scotland at last. Don’t miss that one! (Click on the FOLLOW buttons so as to not miss anything.)

Scotty is the star of a very special book called When A Brave Bear Fights Cancer: A Get Well Soon Gift by Carola Schmidt. In the book, Scotty a little bear who gets a bad sickness called cancer. He’s worried and often scared because cancer is scary.  But the doctors and nurses and other patients help him. The book is to help kids feel much more brave when they are getting treatment. It’s available in paperback and Kindle. Look for the brave little bear wearing trews on the cover.

You can also see Scotty in all the books by Mawson. One is called It’s A Bright World To Feel Lost In (in that one he delivers the post) and another is She Ran Away From Love (he delivers the post again.) In Dreamy Days and Random Naps you can see him being a king and also a superb guitarist. Don’t miss that one! This is what the books look like:

Mawson’s Guardian says: You can find Mawson’s books on this Link here, and on his Writer-Bear Page on Amazon.

Robyn Reviews: Finding Bear

‘Finding Bear’ is another heartwarming children’s book from Hannah Gold, a rallying cry to help the planet that’s also engaging and full of action. Whilst it doesn’t quite have the same magic as ‘The Last Bear‘, it’s an enjoyable read. A year after her adventures on Bear Island, April feels lost. No-one at school understands […]

Robyn Reviews: Finding Bear

This Review is from ‘Never Imitate Book’ reviews, a grand source of lively reviews which Mawson’s Guardian recommends. Plonk a paw on the blue link above to follow the excellent book reviews.

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You are at Mark’s blog called Baffled Bear Books. Mark is a dark coffee tragic, bibliophile and Guardian of Mawson Bear, a Ponderer of Baffling Things and one of this bright world’s few published bears.

Runaway Weddings: We Dash To Gretna Green

Welcome back to the adventures of Scotland The Brave in the UK of Great Britain. With his Guardians, Scotty explored London, Stonehenge and Bath, Plymouth, Glastonbury, Cardiff and Ludlow, and Chester, and Liverpool. (Note: This post also appears on Mawsonbear.blog)

Scotty the Brave in his trusty steed or tour bus at last heads to Scotland

Next, they mounted their trusty Tour Bus and travelled to the Lake District. (Catch up with the story by clicking those links.) Now they are bound at last for Scotland. From Bowness-on-Windermere, the road took them through Cumbria and up past Carlisle.

Map of Scotty's route from Lake Windermere to Gretna Green
Dash to Scotland

To the Famous Blacksmith’s Shop:  Two miles over the border with Scotland they came to the village of Gretna Green where Scotty readily identified the Famous Blacksmith’s Shop by the big words, “Famous Blacksmith Shop” written on it.

Photo of the Blacksmith's Shop at Gretna Green under a rainy sky

REGENCY NOVELS: This place was important for eloping couples and it still is for every reader of Regency Period novels. Scotty sometimes joined our Teddettes Jane Austen Bookclub as they read all the novels of Jane Austen and Georgette Heyer. Many ‘Regency’ novels feature an elopement to Greta Green. In Pride and Prejudice, for instance,  when Lydia Bennet elopes with George Wickham she leaves a note to say their destination is Gretna Green. (In fact, they stay in London and are tracked down by Mr Prejudice. But I digress.)

The Tedettes Jane Austen Book Club with their Regency novels
Tedettes Jane Austen Book Club

The Dash for Gretna Green: Thousands of eloping couples made their ‘dash’ across the border to reach this very building, often with furious fathers and jilted fiancés in hot pursuit. We couldn’t look inside The Famous Blacksmiths Shop because a wedding was being conducted at that very hour. Although that particular couple had not eloped (as far as we knew) they were still getting married over the famous anvil. But why an anvil?

The old Blacksmiths Shop in Gretna Green painted white with black trimmings and chimneys

Runaway Weddings: Gretna’s “runaway marriages” began in 1754 when a new marriage law for England and Wales meant a parent could veto the marriage of a person under the age of 21. But in Scotland, if a declaration was made before two witnesses, almost anybody had the authority to conduct the marriage ceremony. The blacksmiths in Gretna Green became known as “anvil priests” . For nearly 200 years the blacksmiths married couples over the now famous Marriage Anvil. The ringing sound of the hammer banged down on the anvil would signify that another couple had been joined in marriage.

The Guardians clasp hands under the handclasp sculpture at Gretna Green

These days hundreds of couples still marry here and also renew their vows here. In the picture above, Scotty’s Guardians were actually trying to shelter from the rain but since they were on the spot they did a handclasp as well.

View when passing though Dumfries and Galloway

On to Glasgow: From the border to Glasgow is 110 miles, not so far at all really, but this stretch of country, now called Dumfries and Galloway, holds much history.

View when passing though Dumfries and Galloway which have lots of wind turbines

For a long time it was wild ‘Borders’ country, which neither English nor Scottish crowns fully controlled, and where the fearsome reivers stole cattle and spread strife. (The ancestors of one of the Guardians had been among these dread reivers. More of that later.) All these events had taken place in the countryside sliding by outside Scotty’s window seat in the bus.

In the next episode, Scotty sails on bonny Loch Lomond. Don’t miss that one! (Click on the FOLLOW buttons so as to not miss anything.

Scotty is the star of a very special book called When A Brave Bear Fights Cancer: A Get Well Soon Gift by Carola Schmidt. In the book, Scotty a little bear who gets a bad sickness called cancer. He’s worried and often scared because cancer is scary.  But the doctors and nurses and other patients help him. The book is to help kids feel much more brave when they are getting treatment. It’s available in paperback and Kindle. Look for the brave little bear wearing trews on the cover.

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You can also see Scotty in all the books by Mawson. One is called It’s A Bright World To Feel Lost In (in that one he delivers the post) and another is She Ran Away From Love (he delivers the post again.) In Dreamy Days and Random Naps you can see him being a king and also a superb guitarist. Don’t miss that one! This is what the books look like:


Mawson Bear and his friends Caddy Bear and Bomund Bear hold books by Mawson

Mawson’s Guardian says: You can find Mawson’s books on this Link here, and on his Writer-Bear Page on Amazon.

Firefighters Memorial in Kings Park , Perth

Fire Season is well and truly on us in Western Australia, with big bush blazes already in November and now summer even hotter. (And as I write this there are awful fires across the world in California.)

Firefighters Memorial in Kings Park in Perth
Firefighters Memorial in Kings Park in Perth

In the heart of Perth lies Kings Park, an area of mostly bush land even larger than Central Park in New York, sitting on a bluff above the winding Swan River.

View of Swan River, Perth and the Darling Range from Kings Park
View of Swan River, Perth and the Darling Range from Kings Park

The Firefighters Memorial in Kings Park was created in 2014. It is a relatively plain affair in which a huge flame-shaped stone stands against a background of the very kind of bush that can turn into a raging blaze sweeping across thousands of hectares.

The Memorial Grove

 The first firefighter to die during service in Perth was North Perth Station volunteer Mr Frederick Maller. He was crushed by a falling wall in 1908.

Since then, 93 others have perished fighting house and bushfires. Their names are on the plaques that sweep behind the memorial over which stands a statue of two exhausted firefighters.

The Memorial Grove stands against bush land
The Memorial Grove stands against bush land

Here is some of the article written in the West Australian newspaper on 30th of January 1908 about Mr Maller’s death:

Shocking Accident at a North Perth Fire.

‘A fire at which Frederick Thomas Maller, the captain of the North Perth Fire Brigade, received fatal injuries occurred in the early hours of yesterday morning at Mr Geo Redmond’s grocery shop … The alarm was given shortly after 2am and the North Perth Brigade under Captain Maller were on the scene a few minutes later.
By this time the fire had gained a good hold of the building and was burning fiercely. Captain Maller recognized that prompt action was necessary and finding that there was a good pressure of water he took charge of one of the hoses and rushed up to the front of the building which consisted of one storey and was built of brick. Constable Strapp of North Perth who was only a few yards away had noticed that there were no girders in the building, and he shouted to Captain Maller and other members of the brigade who he thought were venturing to close to move away. He had just uttered this warning when a horrible accident occurred.
The parapet wall of the building collapsed and thundering down to the pavement the debris overwhelming Captain Maller while Constable Strapp and some of the firemen had narrow escapes. Maller made an attempt to rise but a further fall of bricks together with portions of the verandah occurred and he was almost buried. Constable Strapp and the members of the brigade quickly extracted the unfortunate man and found that he was seriously injured and unconscious. First aid was rendered on the scene, but it was recognised at this time that there was little chance of his recovery. His chest was crushed, his legs broken and there were several ugly wounds about his head. He was removed in the Perth Fire Brigade ambulance to the Perth Public Hospital where he succumbed almost three hours after having sustained his injuries.’

 

Slumber along with Mawson: Dreamy Days and Random Naps

‘Mawson Bear awakes and ponders on the art of creative napping. Scotland The Brave imagines doing great deeds. Professors Caddy and Bree hold the highest hopes for their visionary inventions. Samantha sees wondrous things all round her. The Seekers journey all the way to the edge of the world, being sure to return, of course, by bedtime.

On Amazon UK you can get the soft cover for only ONE THIRD the usual price! Plonk a paw on this link thingy here!

And you can watch a Caravan all about it on Woo Hoo (Whispered conference with friends). Ummm, no it seems that it is a ‘Trailer’ not a caravan and its on You Tube. Here it is:

Flop down and relax awhile with Mawson and his drowsy friends. Refresh the soul in the tranquility of simple joys and innocent dreams.

Dreamy Days and Random Naps celebrates taking time out for yourself, slowing down, enjoying the moment, allowing your daydreams to surface, and of course slipping into a nap for a while, or for even longer. It will delight all who enjoy daydreaming and napping. Could this be you?

I enjoyed Dreamy Days and Random Naps for its ability to show the young and old that it is good to use your imagination. This was another delightful read from Mawson Bear.’ Jolenes Book Corner.

The images in the Mawson Bear books are so charming and endearing you can’t help but smile at them.’ Review by Adele on GoodReads

Where to find Dreamy Days and Random Naps:


Our publisher is Odyssey Books. Or roll off the cushions and flop over to Bookshop Org (supporting local bookshops),  Amazon everywhere,  Barnes and Noble,  Dymocks,  Booktopia, Walmart, AbeBooks, at Loot (South Africa), Mighty Ape (New Zealand), Google Books, at Booklubben and more. 

Mawson Bears books for cheering up frazzled grownups. Kids like them too!

You can also see all about Mawson on Amazon Page. (This writer-bear is all over the book world.) And be sure to plonk a paw down on the ‘FOLLOW‘ buttons on this page.

Your host, Mark, is Mawson Bear’s Guardian, photographer, editor, blundering typist, chocolates fetcher and cushions re-arranger. Baffled Bear Books ABN: 4787910

What Do Your Bears Want To Get You for Christmas? More Books, of course

Mawson’s Guardian Says: Fortunately, we happen to know about books that are entirely suitable for your bears. They are suitable too for everyone you know who loves them. Oh yes, our Mawson the Writer-bear’s little books are just the thing to get your paws on

As everyone knows, bears read books. They’re not just sitting idly on your bookshelves -they are reading. But when they aren’t looking you can take out the books and read them yourself!

What Mawson's books look like on Odyssey Books Website
What Mawson’s books look like on Odyssey Books Website

Plonk Down Your Paw: Just click on this blue stuff right here to find them. Collect them all for your bears, for your plushie loving friends, or … Just for yourself. Carry them about and dip into on dreary days.

Our publisher is Odyssey Books. Look also at Bookshop Org (supporting local bookshops), at Amazon everywhere, at Barnes and Noble, at Dymocks, at Booktopia, at Walmart, at AbeBooks, Mighty Ape (New Zealand), Google Books, at Booklubben and more. 

KINDLE TOO: Mawson’s books, It’s A Bright World To Feel Lost In and She Ran Away From Love , are FREE on Kindle Unlimited on most Amazon regions. Or buy the Kindles for only around $US 3. All the books are in soft cover copies that you can keep and turn to whenever you feel a bit too baffled, a bit too ruffled, and just want a cosy world to sink into.

Happy Christmas reading for you and all your bears and friends.

Faiwy Festival!!! (A post by Teddy’s Family)

OH!! Yesterday we went to the faiwy festival!! Thare was so much to see there so the Teddy didnt get as many picshures as I wanted. But we did get some good ones!!! Wook at this big gnome guy we found!!! Hes so big!!! And guess what?? He was able to walk awound!!! We didnt […]

Faiwy Festival!!!

‘Eyes of a Hunting Cat’: Jane Austen’s short novel, Lady Susan

 Lady Susan, a short novel in letter form, remains unknown to many Austen fans even though a movie version, Love and Friendship, was made recently.

The Tedettes Jane Austen Bookclub with their discoveries about Jane Austen
The Tedettes Jane Austen Bookclub with their discoveries about Jane Austen

The novel is packed with exquisitely written barbs and eyebrow-raising cynicisms, the best delivered by Lady Susan herself as she confides her schemes to her ally, Mrs Johnson. Here is Lady Susan speaking of the wickedly expensive schooling of her 16 year old daughter, Frederica.

Not one lover to her list

“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.”

Austen is thought to have written Lady Susan before Northanger Abbey, but exactly when is not known.  The Austen-philes quoted below guess at 1803, 1805 and 1808, which puts Austen in her mid to late twenties. She wrote the first version of Pride and Prejudice, of course, when younger still.

A Lion In The Path

“Lady Susan … (is) a lion in the path of those persons who would call Jane Austen charming, soothing, refreshing etc.  G. H Lewes, when he recommended Charlotte Bronte to “follow the counsel which shines out of Miss Austen’s mild eyes” was unaware of Lady Susan, where Miss Austen’s eyes are those of a hunting cat. … In controlled grimness it looks forward to a masterpiece never written.”

Sylvia Townsend Warner, novelist, wrote the assessment above in a 1951 essay published by The British Council.  (The essay, sadly, is probably no longer available, even if you do have one shilling and sixpence net*).

Before Becky Sharp there was Lady Susan

But David Cecil, author of  A Portrait of Jane Austen , is among many Austen-philes determined to keep Miss Jane’s eyes as mild as possible.

“Lady Susan Vernon is a sort of blue-blooded Becky Sharp, an unscrupulous adventuress, far more sensational in her evil doing than any character in Jane Austen’s later books.”

The Tedettes Jane Austen Book Club knit and read
The Tedettes Jane Austen Bookclub (and Knitters). Their main bother is to find the bonnets.

Cecil thinks of the novel as a youthful experiment, even a mistake.

“It is lively and readable … All the same, Lady Susan is not a success. Jane Austen had no acquaintance with smart society and has to describe it from hearsay: with the result that her picture lacks the intimate reality with with she portrays the country gentry … We may suppose she realised this for she made no effort to have the book published in her lifetime … She was gradually learning her art.”

The Perils of Gout

Mawson’s Guardian thinks that if a reader’s frisson of guilty delight is a desirable part of entertainment then young Austen had thoroughly learnt her art.  Even the brutal lines in Lady Susan  that make Cecil wince are delivered superbly. Here is Lady Susan commiserating with Mrs Johnson about her husband’s gout.

“My dear Alicia, of what 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, and too young to die”.

Mr Johnson (Stephen Fry in the movie) has forbidden Alicia from seeing Lady Susan on pain of her being despatched to his properties in America if she persists, for he believes Lady Susan to be a Bad Influence.  If you’ve never seen Fry play a ruthless role, watch on as he delivers the line, “I hear the Atlantic crossing is very cold this time of year”.

Subtle, Terrifying

The Teddettes Jane Austen Book Club with their editions of Jane Austen novels
The Tedettes with their prized Folio editions of Jane Austen’s work

 Richard Church, in the Foreword to the Folio edition of Austen’s shorter works, is perplexed that Austen even penned such a work as Lady Susan.

“This is a masterpiece, powerful, subtle and terrifying. It is as cruel as Les Liaisons Dangerous by de Lachol. This Lady Susan may well be compared to  ..  Madame de Merteuil for coldness of soul, amoral cruely and icy lust. What was this feature of Jane Austens’s personality? so primitive, unladylike and deadly? Here was no chronicler of the drawing room and the country house tea party.”

 Bright Eyes

“In her person she was very attractive. Her figure was rather tall and slender, her step light and firm, and her whole appearance one of health and animation. In complexion she was a clear brunette with a rich colour, she had full round cheeks  with a mouth and nose rather small but well-formed, bright hazel eyes and brown hair forming natural curls around her face.”

What kind of eyes did Jane Austen really have?   Here is a word-portrait penned by her nephew. (Jane and Cassandra loved the role of Aunts.)

Hmm, so hazel eyes, greenish eyes, and bright. The green of a hunting cat’s eyes, perhaps?

Take your own look at Lady Susan who herself certainly seems to deserve that description. And then enjoy Kate Beckinsale’s excellent portrayal in the inexplicably renamed, but otherwise guiltily-delightful film, Love and Friendship.

Where to find Lady Susan, in various editions: On Amazon and at Booktopia.