I am very excited today to have author Lindsay Ashford on my blog to discuss her new novel, The Mysterious Death of Miss Jane Austen. I just finished this wonderful novel last weekend - I will have my review posted next week. Thank-you to Ms. Ashford for stopping by and for writing such a wonderful post about her inspiration for the novel.
Thank you,
Laura, for inviting me to be a guest author on your blog and giving me the
opportunity to explain how a lock of hair belonging to Jane Austen set me on
the trail of a two-hundred-year-old mystery.
I’ve been
writing books for a while now, but until 2007 I was known for what they call in
the publishing industry ‘gritty crime novels’ – stories set in modern cities
with a forensic psychologist as the main character. When my fiancé was offered
a new job in the village where Austen lived it seemed the perfect place in
which to write. We got to live in an old cottage in the grounds of the
Elizabethan manor house that was once home to Jane’s brother, Edward. I was
able to use the historic library as a place to write and I planned to get
started on another contemporary crime novel. But within a few weeks I’d
abandoned the new book. Instead my head was stuck in old volumes of the family
letters. One morning a sentence Jane penned just a few months before she
died jumped out at me. Describing the weeks of illness she had recently
endured, she wrote: ‘I am considerably better now and recovering my looks a
little, which have been bad enough, black and white and every wrong colour…’
The phrase triggered something in my memory. As a writer of
crime fiction I’ve researched forensic techniques, including the detection of
poisons. What Jane had described in her letter sounded very much like the
symptoms of arsenic poisoning, which causes a characteristic dark and light
spotting of the skin when taken in small doses over a long period of time.
No one has
ever been able to offer a satisfactory explanation of why Austen died at the
tragically early age of 41. Addison’s disease, tuberculosis and lymphoma have
all been suggested but none gives the black and white skin discolouration she
described.
I dismissed the poisoning theory as too wild to contemplate
and thought no more about it until a few months later, when the library had a
visitor from New York. She was
an ardent Austen fan and we got chatting. She asked if I had seen the lock of Jane’s
hair – cut off after her death as a keepsake - on display at the cottage down
the road. Then she related the story of the couple who donated it – American
collectors of Austen memorabilia, both now deceased, who had bought it at
auction at Sotheby’s in 1948. ‘And did you know,’ she said, ‘that before they
handed it over to the museum, they had it tested for arsenic?’
I can’t
remember what I said in reply. My mind was racing. Arsenic in Jane’s hair meant
she had ingested the poison in the months before her death. No one else
in the cottage had been affected, so it couldn’t have been the water supply,
the wallpaper or anything else in the house. Was Jane given arsenic as a
medical treatment (common enough at the beginning of the nineteenth century)
and if so, could the dose have been large enough to kill her? Or was there a
more sinister explanation?
Jane died
in 1817 and a few years later a wave of paranoia swept England in the wake of
an epidemic of arsenic poisoning. The tasteless, odourless white powder could
be bought from any grocer’s shop with no questions asked. People were poisoned
by accident if it got mistaken for baking powder and there were also those who
were poisoned slowly and deliberately by relatives or servants who knew the
symptoms could easily be mistaken for those of bowel cancer or gastroenteritis.
I thought
of Jane’s best friend, Anne Sharp, to whom the author wrote one of her last
letters. Anne lived until 1853 would have read about the wave of poisoning
cases in the newspapers. She would also have known about the Marsh Test. Developed
in 1836, it enabled the analysis of human remains for the presence of the white
powder. What would you do, I wondered, if you suspected your best friend had
been poisoned and you were in possession of a lock of her hair? This is how the
novel begins:
‘I have
sent him her hair. When I took it from its hiding place and held it to my face
I caught the faintest trace of her; a ghost scent of lavender and sun-warmed
skin. It carried me back to the horse-drawn hut with its wheels in the sea
where I saw her without cap and bonnet for the first time. She shook out her
curls and twisted round. My buttons,
she said, will you help me? The hut
shuddered with the waves as I fumbled. She would have fallen if I hadn’t held
her. I breathed her in, my face buried in it; her hair.
I suppose
he has had to destroy it to reveal its secret; he can have no idea what it cost
me to part with it. All that remains are the few strands the jeweller took for
the ring upon my finger: a tiny braid, wound into the shape of a tree. When I
touch the glass that holds it I remember how it used to spill over the pillow
in that great sailboat of a bed. If hair can hold secrets this ring must surely
hold mine…
When I
first met Jane her life, like mine, was an indecipherable work in progress. I
had no notion, then, of what she was to become. But in the space of a few weeks
she rubbed away the words other hands had scrawled beneath my name and inked me
in; made me bitter, passionate, elated, frightened…all the things that make a
person jump off the page.
Godmersham
was where I lived in those days, although I never would have called it home,
for I belonged neither above stairs nor below. I was one of that strange tribe
of half-breeds, a governess. To the servants my speech and manners made me a
spy who was not to be trusted. To Edward and Elizabeth Austen I was just
another household expense. My only true companions were my books.
Until Jane
came.
I would see
her each morning, creeping away from the house as if for an assignation. I
would catch sight of her heading for the little Greek temple that sat on a hill
high above the river that snaked through the parkland. She would be there for
an hour or two, rising long before her mother and sister were up and about. I
never saw anyone else take that path at that time, but there were ways through
the woods for those familiar with the estate. As one who missed the solace of
family, it never occurred to me that she might be going there to escape that
grand house and all those within it.’
The
Mysterious Death of Miss Jane Austen is a mystery but at the heart of the novel is the
relationship between Anne Sharp and Jane Austen. It’s about the unbreakable
bond that exists between best friends even when one of them no longer walks
this earth. I hope that if you read it you will be both intrigued and
fascinated by a possibility which has been overlooked until now.
Giveaway
Sourcebooks has graciously offered a giveaway of one copy of The Mysterious Death of Miss Jane Austen by Lindsay Ashford
If you would like to win this book please leave a comment about what most intrigues you about this book or this guestblog.
As part of your comment, you must include an email address. If I can't find a way to contact you I will draw another winner.
For an additional entry, blog about this giveaway or post it on your sidebar. Provide a link to this post in your comment.
I will be using random.org (or a monte carlo simulation in excel) to pick the winners from the comments.
This contest is only open to US and Canadian residents (Sorry!).
No P.O. Boxes.
The deadline for entry is midnight on Friday August 23rd, 2013.
Please make sure to check the last week of August to see if you are a winner. I send emails to the winner, but lately I've been put in their "junk mail" folder instead of their inbox.
Good luck!