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Jane and the Waterloo Map (2016): Sleuthing in Regency England, Jane Austen-Style

Jane and the Waterloo MapBook Review: Jane and the Waterloo Map (2016) by Stephanie Barron

What if Jane Austen had turned her keen eye for observation to solving murders? That is the essential premise of Stephanie Barron’s Jane Austen Mystery series, of which Jane and the Waterloo Map is the latest installment, number 13. It’s cozy crime in Regency England with none other than one of the most beloved female writers of all time as the heroine. It’s good stuff.

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It’s 1815 and There’s a Death in a Royal Library

It’s November 1815. Jane is in London, staying with her brother Henry, nursing him back to health from a long illness, and copyediting Emma. She receives a summons to Charlton House, His Royal Highness the Prince Regent’s London abode. While touring the house’s library, she stumbles upon a dying man, a heralded hero from the Battle of Waterloo, Colonel MacFarland. Soothing the man in the violent throes of an apparent apoplectic fit, she hears his final words: “Waterloo map.”

Thus begins the mystery of Colonel MacFarland’s death. Is this murder? What is the Waterloo map? Where is it? What does it depict? Who has it? Why is it so valuable? Yes, many questions are raised by the curious Jane, who has a keen eye, a substantial intellect and a subtle forthrightness – which is to say she possesses a forthrightness that does not offend but that allows her to contravene societal conventions with aplomb on occasion. This is rather endearing.

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With lives at stake, including her own, Jane is thrust into the world of war – the Napoleonic War – and its aftermath, into secret cyphers and delicate watercolours. She is aided in her sleuthing by her brother, Henry, and her niece, Fanny, as well as an estimable acquaintance, if not more, Mr. Raphael West, who is the cause of more than a few blushes on our heroine’s visage. The two have met in a previous volume in the series and they think rather highly of one another, that is obvious. Although this budding love affair is already bittersweet before it even really starts, because it’s 1815 and Jane mentions, again and again, her upcoming fortieth birthday, and we, dear readers, know that she never makes 42. Yes, it’s the 200th anniversary of her death this year.

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Well Researched, Metanarrative Fun

Despite that sobering note, the book is a fun read. It’s well researched; there are footnotes throughout to explain this and that. I’m no nerdy Janeite. I mean, I love Austen, but I don’t know all the ins and outs of her existence and her writings and such. But Stephanie Barron is such a nerd and has taken actual events from Jane Austen’s life and woven murder mysteries into them. Historiographic meta fiction is perhaps what the academics might call it, where historical facts and letters and newspaper clippings and actual historical people and places and events get intertwined with fictive imaginings and narratives within narratives. It’s good fun.

This is my first introduction to the series, and even though it’s the latest and there are allusions to earlier cases and people, the book can still be read as a standalone piece. And I, for one, will now be working my way backward through the series.

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Adaptation Recommendation

This could be a really fun series, but also a prickly one, since so very many have opinions, strong opinions, regarding Miss Jane Austen, her life and her depiction. Any adaptation for the screen would require a substantial budget, great costumes, fine scripts and an even finer actress to play the beloved writer.

Content Note: There is nothing to come after. Well, there are some dead bodies and suspense, but nothing graphic. It is all very cozy.

Have you read the book? What are your thoughts?

OVERALL RATING

Four and a half corset rating

“You had me at hello.”

ROMANCE RATING

three heart rating

“Happiness in marriage is entirely a

matter of chance.”

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By on July 17th, 2017

About Jessica Jørgensen

A lover of words, stories and storytellers since her youth and just plain curious by nature, Jessica embarked on a very long academic journey that took her across a continent (from Canada's west coast to its east) and even to the other side of the globe, where she currently lives an expat existence in Denmark. She now trails many fancy initials behind her name, if she ever cares to use them, and continues to be ever so curious. She's a folklorist, a mother, a wife, a middle child, a small town girl, a beekeeper, an occasional quilter, a jam-maker. She curates museum exhibits, gets involved in many cultural projects for this and that, collects oral histories when she can find the time and continues to love stories in all their many and varied forms. The local librarians all know her by name.

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4 thoughts on “Jane and the Waterloo Map (2016): Sleuthing in Regency England, Jane Austen-Style”

    • After reading the latest for this review, I found the first and just finished reading it, and now I must find them all!

      • Jessica, oh please…Message me after you read Book 7, Ghosts of Netley. I can’t wait to hear all your impressions.

        • Ooh, now I’m intrigued, Christina…Need to track down the books and get reading! I’ll be sure to send you a little note when I reach number 7 (-: As it is, I really enjoyed the subtle likenesses to many of Austen’s characters that I saw in Book One — lots of fictional glimpses as to what may have inspired some of her stories…Yes, I really enjoyed it and am very much looking forward to the other adventures…Love it when I’ve found something good (-:

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