Reviews

Daily Herald ( Utah) – Sunday March 7, 2010
“Recommended for all those who yearn for the chance to waltz at an English country house party in an a-line frock of diaphanous cloth.”

Publishers Weekly – August 10, 2009
Inspired by Jane Austen’s novella Lady Susan, this biting social comedy from mother-daughter duo Rubino (the veteran author) and Rubino-Bradway (the first-timer) is a delightful, worthy homage to Austen. In 19th-century England, Lady Susan Vernon is left nearly penniless after her honorable, wealthy husband dies and his unscrupulous little brother, Charles, bilks Susan and her daughter, Frederica, of their share of his fortune. Forced to rely upon the kindness of friends, the two spend several months bouncing from home to home. Subjected to the two-faced machinations of her social circle (particularly from Charles’s wife, Catherine), Susan cleverly (and believably) turns several of her enemies against each other, using their own words. As in Austen’s novels, securing a generous dowry and a “good” marriage (that is, one with money and status) is the all-important goal of every woman, but Susan is a dynamic character more than capable of delivering a shocking surprise. (Oct.)