Rosh ~catching up slowly~'s Reviews > Jane Austen's Bookshelf: A Rare Book Collector's Quest to Find the Women Writers Who Shaped a Legend
Jane Austen's Bookshelf: A Rare Book Collector's Quest to Find the Women Writers Who Shaped a Legend
by
by
In a Nutshell: An amazing and comprehensive compilation of outstanding authors who might have been a part of Jane Austen’s Bookshelf. Contains these authors’ biographies as well as other bookish and historical tidbits. This isn't a treat just for Jane Austen fans but for every book lover and feminist.
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Jane Austen is often considered the best woman writer of her era, and sometimes, even referred to as the first successful woman writer. Is this claim true? Was she really a pathbreaking novelist who forged the way for others after her? Did no other woman writer have a successful writing career before Austen? Is Austen the only worthy female writer from the Georgian/Regency era?
As you might have guessed, the answer to these questions is a resounding ‘No!’ However, do we have enough knowhow to elaborate on the answers? Do we casual readers know even one woman novelist from Austen’s era? As a huge Austen fan, I admit I did know one woman writer from Austen’s time: Frances Burney, of whom Austen was a huge fan. But I was aware of Burney’s name only because I knew that the title of Austen’s ‘Pride and Prejudice’, my favourite book, came from a phrase used in one of Burney’s novels.
Every Austen fan knows that she loved books and made multiple references to books, plays and novelists in all of her writings, including her letters to her sister Cassandra. (I loved learning that Austen used an appreciation of her favourite writers’ books as a litmus test for whether someone had good taste. I do the same but I use Austen's novels as my litmus test. 😄) Most of the references she makes are for works by women writers. Then why are these ladies’ names unknown today? When did they fade into obscurity? Can we find their books easily today?
Attempting to answer these questions and more is author Rebecca Romney, a book collector who, other than co-running a thriving rare books business, is also a Janeite. A few years ago, she began a personal project titled “Jane Austen’s Bookshelf”, in which her aim was to have a bookshelf containing the physical books that Austen’s bookshelf might have held or that are related to the authors that Austen read. This result of this lofty aim was a period of discovery and astonishment and even frustration.
Austen wasn't a lone genius. The Georgian era had many women writers experimenting with plots and characters and writing structures, and even making a successful career from writing. Yet each of these women came from different familial circumstances, each wrote in a different genre (and not necessarily in the same style as Austen’s), and some even created their own niche across fields, such as by being poets or playwrights who ALSO wrote novels. Some of them wanted to write, some of them stumbled into writing, some of them were compelled to write. But no matter what their background and circumstances, all these successful woman authors have been erased from the literary canon simply because their works weren’t deemed worthy enough by male peers.
Time to return to them the literary status they earned!
The book begins with a chapter on Austen and how/why her writing is the author’s favourite. It then moves on to eight women writers in subsequent chapters, with each chapter profiling a one woman writer. (I am deliberately not naming any of these writers here except for Frances Burney; I want you to discover the rest through this book.) We get an extensive and accurate biography of these women and the circumstances of their writing career. All of these are writers that Austen read (or almost certainly read) but not necessarily loved.
One of the authors included in this book is an oddity, considering how both Austen and Romney weren’t her fans. But I do understand why she was included; like it or not, her books, despite their flawed content, were a humongous success back in the day.
The chapters don’t just stop at a biographical account. We also get details of the Romney's experience reading their works, of finding (or attempting to find) rare copies of their books, drawing a connection between their words and Austen's, and investigating whether their works can be considered similar to and at par with Austen’s. There are additional insights about books and rare books and book collecting, and also about historical literary practices, publishing policies, gender discrimination, discriminative patriarchal laws, and social strictures.
Romney writes like a true book aficionado, flitting across bookish topics without pausing for breath. As a fellow bibliophile, albeit with a much lower level of expertise, I was both awestruck by her knowledge and thrilled to see shared opinions on many topics. There's even one chunky paragraph of her complaining about barcode stickers on modern-day books and the difficulty of removing them without damaging the book. All of us can empathise with that frustration!
However, this passionate approach towards the topic also means that the readability of the book gets a bit affected. She jumps across points and at times, repeats points she already mentioned before. The content gets too detail-intensive sometimes, especially when it comes to book-collecting. The pacing is overall quite slow, but it is further cumbersome because of the lengthy chapters. Also, like a true researcher, she provides an annotated reference for every claim and quote. (After a point, I just skipped these on my Kindle.) Though this book contains relatively light academic content, it still feels tedious after a point because of the generous fact-dumping. (I did love the trivia. It just became too much to keep track of.)
My biggest disappointment is that there are no photos at all in this book. It would have been so great to see author portraits and pictures of some of the rare books Romney so fondly talks about. Also a photo of the final “Jane Austen’s Bookshelf” as it stands today, whether complete or in progress.
Overall though, my complaints are negligible. Honestly, I had picked this book only for my favourite author, Jane Austen. But I completed this work with so much enlightenment. I learnt more not just about Austen and these other women writers, but about books, genres, book collection, publishing, history, politics, law, and sociology.
Definitely recommended. This book will be a treat for academic-minded bibliophiles, especially but not only Austen and classic fiction fans. It’s the perfect book for Women's History Month.
4.25 stars.
My thanks to Simon Element for providing the DRC of “Jane Austen's Bookshelf” via NetGalley. This review is voluntary and contains my honest opinion about the book.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Connect with me through:
My Blog || The StoryGraph || Instagram || Threads || X/Twitter || Facebook ||
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Jane Austen is often considered the best woman writer of her era, and sometimes, even referred to as the first successful woman writer. Is this claim true? Was she really a pathbreaking novelist who forged the way for others after her? Did no other woman writer have a successful writing career before Austen? Is Austen the only worthy female writer from the Georgian/Regency era?
As you might have guessed, the answer to these questions is a resounding ‘No!’ However, do we have enough knowhow to elaborate on the answers? Do we casual readers know even one woman novelist from Austen’s era? As a huge Austen fan, I admit I did know one woman writer from Austen’s time: Frances Burney, of whom Austen was a huge fan. But I was aware of Burney’s name only because I knew that the title of Austen’s ‘Pride and Prejudice’, my favourite book, came from a phrase used in one of Burney’s novels.
Every Austen fan knows that she loved books and made multiple references to books, plays and novelists in all of her writings, including her letters to her sister Cassandra. (I loved learning that Austen used an appreciation of her favourite writers’ books as a litmus test for whether someone had good taste. I do the same but I use Austen's novels as my litmus test. 😄) Most of the references she makes are for works by women writers. Then why are these ladies’ names unknown today? When did they fade into obscurity? Can we find their books easily today?
Attempting to answer these questions and more is author Rebecca Romney, a book collector who, other than co-running a thriving rare books business, is also a Janeite. A few years ago, she began a personal project titled “Jane Austen’s Bookshelf”, in which her aim was to have a bookshelf containing the physical books that Austen’s bookshelf might have held or that are related to the authors that Austen read. This result of this lofty aim was a period of discovery and astonishment and even frustration.
Austen wasn't a lone genius. The Georgian era had many women writers experimenting with plots and characters and writing structures, and even making a successful career from writing. Yet each of these women came from different familial circumstances, each wrote in a different genre (and not necessarily in the same style as Austen’s), and some even created their own niche across fields, such as by being poets or playwrights who ALSO wrote novels. Some of them wanted to write, some of them stumbled into writing, some of them were compelled to write. But no matter what their background and circumstances, all these successful woman authors have been erased from the literary canon simply because their works weren’t deemed worthy enough by male peers.
Time to return to them the literary status they earned!
The book begins with a chapter on Austen and how/why her writing is the author’s favourite. It then moves on to eight women writers in subsequent chapters, with each chapter profiling a one woman writer. (I am deliberately not naming any of these writers here except for Frances Burney; I want you to discover the rest through this book.) We get an extensive and accurate biography of these women and the circumstances of their writing career. All of these are writers that Austen read (or almost certainly read) but not necessarily loved.
One of the authors included in this book is an oddity, considering how both Austen and Romney weren’t her fans. But I do understand why she was included; like it or not, her books, despite their flawed content, were a humongous success back in the day.
The chapters don’t just stop at a biographical account. We also get details of the Romney's experience reading their works, of finding (or attempting to find) rare copies of their books, drawing a connection between their words and Austen's, and investigating whether their works can be considered similar to and at par with Austen’s. There are additional insights about books and rare books and book collecting, and also about historical literary practices, publishing policies, gender discrimination, discriminative patriarchal laws, and social strictures.
Romney writes like a true book aficionado, flitting across bookish topics without pausing for breath. As a fellow bibliophile, albeit with a much lower level of expertise, I was both awestruck by her knowledge and thrilled to see shared opinions on many topics. There's even one chunky paragraph of her complaining about barcode stickers on modern-day books and the difficulty of removing them without damaging the book. All of us can empathise with that frustration!
However, this passionate approach towards the topic also means that the readability of the book gets a bit affected. She jumps across points and at times, repeats points she already mentioned before. The content gets too detail-intensive sometimes, especially when it comes to book-collecting. The pacing is overall quite slow, but it is further cumbersome because of the lengthy chapters. Also, like a true researcher, she provides an annotated reference for every claim and quote. (After a point, I just skipped these on my Kindle.) Though this book contains relatively light academic content, it still feels tedious after a point because of the generous fact-dumping. (I did love the trivia. It just became too much to keep track of.)
My biggest disappointment is that there are no photos at all in this book. It would have been so great to see author portraits and pictures of some of the rare books Romney so fondly talks about. Also a photo of the final “Jane Austen’s Bookshelf” as it stands today, whether complete or in progress.
Overall though, my complaints are negligible. Honestly, I had picked this book only for my favourite author, Jane Austen. But I completed this work with so much enlightenment. I learnt more not just about Austen and these other women writers, but about books, genres, book collection, publishing, history, politics, law, and sociology.
Definitely recommended. This book will be a treat for academic-minded bibliophiles, especially but not only Austen and classic fiction fans. It’s the perfect book for Women's History Month.
4.25 stars.
My thanks to Simon Element for providing the DRC of “Jane Austen's Bookshelf” via NetGalley. This review is voluntary and contains my honest opinion about the book.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Connect with me through:
My Blog || The StoryGraph || Instagram || Threads || X/Twitter || Facebook ||
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Reading Progress
December 26, 2024
– Shelved as:
arcs-not-started
December 26, 2024
– Shelved
February 22, 2025
–
Started Reading
March 10, 2025
– Shelved as:
4-25-stars
March 10, 2025
– Shelved as:
netgalley
March 10, 2025
–
Finished Reading
Comments Showing 1-50 of 59 (59 new)
Awww, I want this one! No, I need this one! Such a wonderful review, Rosh! :)))I second Thibault's question :)
Actually, I read two of Frances Burney's novels because I had read somewhere that Jane Austen was a fan. They were interesting. (Not the same thing as Austen, though...)
I still need to get this. (Huge Austen fan.) I am so happy it was a win for your Rosh. Fabulous review. 🤗💕
I am on a waitlist for this from my local library. I am now looking forward to it, because of your amazing review, Rosh. Thank you. ☺️
I can totally relate to the 'barcode sticker frustration'! And I appreciate you being honest about the detail-heavy parts. It sounds like a really passionate and well-researched book, even if it's a bit dense. Thanks for the heads-up, Rosh.
What a lovely review and such a clever, clever concept for a book! I’ve not heard of this before. Thanks for bringing it to my attention. It’s going on my list. Jane Austen would have loved it here!
Hmph, it looks like I lost against your litmus test, Rosh. I really do have to give Austen another try one day.
Glad this one was still a good one for you, Rosh. This is a great way to shape young readers. Fab review!
What a fascinating project that the author embarked on! And I like the idea of the mix of the information about the books/authors, and the process of tracking down physical copies of the books. Great review, Rosh
Thibault wrote: "I have to admit, this is an interesting concept. Just imagine all your favorite authors having a book detailing all the books that helped shape them both as a writer and as a person.It’s cool to ..."
Spot on, Thibault! The moment I saw the concept, I was blown away. (The fact that Jane Austen was involved might have played a small role in my reaction. 😆)
The research in this book is just outstanding! I've no words to praise it. Rarely does a book stun me with so many facts.
Haha, I did include a paragraph about how my TBR was increased after reading this book. But as that would involve naming the authors, I edited it out. But yes, I've added four books to my list - two for sure and two potential options. 😊
Thank you, Yet-to-Read-Austen Thibault. 😜
Alexandra wrote: "Awww, I want this one! No, I need this one! Such a wonderful review, Rosh! :)))I second Thibault's question :)
Actually, I read two of Frances Burney's novels because I had read somewhere that Ja..."
Wow! I'm awestruck that you've already read Burney, Alexandra! 😍 I've had two of her books on my TBR since ages, but haven't yet got around to reading them. As a fellow Austen fan, I'm sure you'll relish the trivia in this book.
(The author of this book confirms your opinion about Burney's works. And suggests alternative options that are more like Austen. 😉)
Thanks so much, dear friend!
Answer to your question written above in the reply to Thibault.
message 22:
by
Rosh ~catching up slowly~
(last edited Mar 11, 2025 12:21PM)
(new)
-
rated it 4 stars
Dee wrote: "excellent review!"Thank you, Dee! I couldn't comment on yours due to the account settings, but yours is a wonderful review.
Berengaria (semi-hiatus) wrote: "I can just see you loving this! So glad you found a good JA book to enjoy. 😃"Yes indeed! I had a huge grin on my face for the Austen chapter. 😁 The rest of the content was not so savoury as some of these writers had too many struggles thanks to the men of the era. 😑
Jaidee wrote: "I wont read this book but enjoyed your passionate review for sure !"Thanks much, Jaidee!
Shelley's Book Nook wrote: "I still need to get this. (Huge Austen fan.) I am so happy it was a win for your Rosh. Fabulous review. 🤗💕"Thanks so much, Shelley! 💙 I knew that you are an Austen fan, so you must surely try this one! 😍
Karen wrote: "I am on a waitlist for this from my local library. I am now looking forward to it, because of your amazing review, Rosh. Thank you. ☺️"Ooh, I'm so excited to hear that, Karen! I can't wait to hear your thoughts on this! Hope you too love it. 😊
Tina wrote: "Sounds amazing especially for Jane Austen fans. Excellent review Rosh 🤩"Very true! Thanks, Tina! 💖
Taufiq wrote: "I can totally relate to the 'barcode sticker frustration'! And I appreciate you being honest about the detail-heavy parts. It sounds like a really passionate and well-researched book, even if it's ..."Haha, I think most of us bibliophiles would trusted to that frustration, Taufiq! 😄 It's a great book but expectedly data-heavy for those of us who aren't used to academic reading. Worth the time, though. Thank you!
Erin wrote: "What a lovely review and such a clever, clever concept for a book! I’ve not heard of this before. Thanks for bringing it to my attention. It’s going on my list. Jane Austen would have loved it here!"Thanks so much! I too loved the concept the moment I read the title. I hope you love it as much as I did!
Jsiva wrote: "Hmph, it looks like I lost against your litmus test, Rosh. I really do have to give Austen another try one day."😂 Don't worry, Jsiva! I'm not stringent about it. 😉
Canadian Jen wrote: "Glad this one was still a good one for you, Rosh. This is a great way to shape young readers. Fab review!"Thanks, Jen! I doubt this will work for young readers. It's quite technical. And a certain familiarity with Austen or with classic novels helps. Thanks, Sharon! Me too - what a marvelous idea!
Sharon wrote: "Outstanding review, Rosh! I really like the Jane Austen bookshelf concept."Thanks, Sharon! Me too! It was an amazing idea.
Ian wrote: "What a fascinating project that the author embarked on! And I like the idea of the mix of the information about the books/authors, and the process of tracking down physical copies of the books. Gre..."Thanks, Ian. I absolutely agree - the idea and the endeavour was amazing. One really needs a passion for rare books to be able to do so regularly and successfully. Not an easy or instant market at all.
Thank you, Rosh, for bringing this book to my attention. I'm going to pick it up, I'm so interested in Jane and her work.
Rosh wrote: "Haha, I did include a paragraph about how my TBR was increased after reading this book. But as that would involve naming the authors, I edited it out. But yes, I've added four books to my list - two for sure and two potential options."I hope they will all be five star reads for you :)
MarilynW wrote: "Thank you, Rosh, for bringing this book to my attention. I'm going to pick it up, I'm so interested in Jane and her work."Most welcome, Marilyn. I hope you love it too. If you like Jane Austen's works, then this is sure to be an interesting read.
Thibault wrote: "I hope they will all be five star reads for you :)"Haha, too high hopes! I'll be happy if they are all 3.5+ stars for me. :D
Baba wrote: "What a superb and highly informative review Rosh, thank you!"Thank you so much for your kind comment, Baba! :)
I missed this one! Sounds like a well-researched and planned book though this one desperately needs images. At least a little grainy B&W photo of the said authors. Adding this to my TBR. Marvelous review, Rosh. :D
Srivalli wrote: "I missed this one! Sounds like a well-researched and planned book though this one desperately needs images. At least a little grainy B&W photo of the said authors. Adding this to my TBR. Marvelous ..."Aye, a grainy photo also would have been welcome! I did Google the author's pics, and there are quite a few portraits available for most of them, including the two partial portraits we see on the cover. I hope the final book has photos, though there seems to be no provision for the same as per the ARC ToC. :/
Thank you, Sri! :D

















It’s cool to read that even before her, female authors already managed to shine. Glad to read that this was done right, as it seems like a well-researched and insightful read. Also good point about how the addition of photos could potentially elevate the book as a whole. Good review, Jane Austen Fan Rosh :)
And I hope you won’t mind me asking, but I’m a bit curious: did you discover any books in here that you would like to read?