‘Persuasion’ by Jane Austen, published by Penguin Classics
Published six months after Austen’s death in 1817, Persuasion was named by her brother Henry. Anne Elliot is an unlikely heroine by the standards of the romantic novels of the time, being 27 and thus – gasp – practically dead by the standards of the Georgian marriage market. At 19, she was persuaded by relatives to end an engagement to a young naval officer, Frederick Wentworth, by dint of the fact he had no prospects. In the present day, her spendthrift family have been persuaded (this time by sensible Anne) to rent out their home and take temporary lodgings in Bath, where Anne encounters Wentworth, now a rich and successful Captain.
She still loves him, but can he forgive her for being persuaded to end their engagement? Several extremely neat plot twists from Austen force them further apart before becoming reunited and the yearning of both characters – older, wiser, and regretful – is utterly compelling. Austen, who experienced her own regretful near-misses in love, brings about a masterful conclusion that wasn’t to be hers. One hopes that she would instead be quietly satisfied at being one of the world’s best-known and best-loved authors two centuries after her death.