The Silence of Herondale was Joan Aiken’s first thriller, published in 1964, and set the style, if not the form, for another dozen or so adult novels which were to follow, alternating with her now better known children’s books. Initially published by Gollancz in their famous Yellow Jacket editions, the books were covered in […]
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Joan Aiken’s passion for history often led her to wonder ‘what if’ things had turned out differently. What if, for instance, Jane Austen’s early novel, originally entitled ‘Susan’ and sold to a publisher in 1803, and which then languished unpublished until she furiously bought it back for £10 thirteen years later, had in fact appeared, even maybe without the knowledge of its author, and had been in the pocket of a young nobleman who ran away to join the Peninsular wars in Spain at the beginning of the 19th century.
The young man falls in love, and marries an aristocratic Spanish girl who dies having his baby, and he watches over the boy, disguised as a groom until his own death, when he leaves a letter, and his treasured book to the boy, Felix Brooke, with a message telling him to seek out his long lost family in the city of Bath, England where the action of Austen’s novel takes place. For Joan Aiken imagines that this is in fact Jane Austen’s early novel, ‘Northanger Abbey’ which was written in the full enthusiasm and confidence of youth, and is a delightful parody of all the Gothic romances so popular at the time. It is also a description of an innocent abroad, a heroine with a head full of fantasy from reading too many novels, who finds herself alone in a dangerous world struggling to make sense of the behaviour of unscrupulous villains or apparently solicitous friends with nothing but the world of fiction to guide her. This is much the same world that the Spanish orphan, young Felix Brooke encounters, but in a truly wild and Gothic landscape with terrifying brigands and murderers, mountain tribesmen looking for a human sacrifice, pirates who specialise in the kidnap of children, with only the assistance of Austen’s novel to sustain and comfort him.
In Joan Aiken’s Go Saddle the Sea Felix is recounting his story:
“The book, Susan, was an odd tale about a young lady and her quest for a husband; to tell truth, I wondered what my father had seen in it, that he had even carried it with him into battle; I found it rather dull, but since it had been my father’s I kept it carefully (his bloodstains were on the cover).”
Later in his adventures, having escaped various perils by the skin of his teeth and the use of his not inconsiderable wits, Felix has time to look into the book again, and reconsiders:
“I had opened it at the place where Miss Susan, going to stay with her great friends in their abbey-residence, is terrified at night by a fearful storm and the discovery of a paper,hid in a closet in her bedroom, which she takes to be the confession of some wicked deed of blood – only to find, next day, that the mysterious paper is naught but a washing bill! For the first time, this struck me as very comical; yet, reading it through again, I could see that the writer had represented the poor young lady’s terrors very skilfully; just such a nightmarish terror had I felt myself among those unchancy people in that heathen village – and yet for all I knew, my fears were equally foolish and unfounded! I began to see that this was not such a simple tale as I had hitherto supposed, but must be attended to carefully; and I gave my father credit for better judgement than I had at first…wondering what kind of man my father had been..and hoping that some person in England would be able to tell me more about him.”
In an article for the Jane Austen Society, Joan Aiken describes with relish the content of Mrs. Radcliffe’s bestseller, The Mysteries of Udolpho, which Austen had gleefully satirised:
“If we take a look at the works of Mrs. Radcliffe, we can easily see what tempted the youthful Jane Austen to poke fun at them…[they were] enormous historical canvases splashed over with forests and beetling fortresses and dark crags in the Appennines. Mrs. Radcliffe went in for immense casts of characters on a positively Shakespearian scale (she was in fact much influenced by Shakespeare for whom she had great admiration); she had stabbings and shootings, suicides and assassinations; interspersed, for comic relief, by long scenes with garrulous Shakespearian-type servants; she had immensely complicated family relationships, long-lost relatives in every possible connection, suggestions of incest, mysterious resemblances, and, besides all this, a large number of startling, apparently supernatural occurrences..”
From this we can see that these writers had an equally powerful influence on Joan Aiken’s own work, and by setting her novel, Go Saddle the Sea in just such a rip roaring Gothic world of her own in 19th century Spain, and with a nod at Austen’s own parody, she could have the best of all worlds!
Go Saddle the Sea is the first of the three ‘Felix’ Novels just about to come out in gorgeous new editions in the UK
For more details about all three books visit the Joan Aiken page at Random House
or visit the Felix pages at The Wonderful World of Joan Aiken
*****
Filed under: Book Review, Joan Aiken & Jane Austen, News Tagged: Felix Trilogy, Go Saddle the Sea, Jane Austen, Joan Aiken new books coming out, Joan Aiken Page Facebook, Northanger Abbey, Random House

Liz — i left a comment, i think, but to repeat —
you have wonderful observations on what turned your mother on!
xoxo
Hilary
“embroiled in a series of events not of their own making”: very Hitchcockian, but this makes it much easier for us (her happy readers) to get caught up in the stories.
Those yellow jackets — I even think I’ve got a couple of those on my shelves– very nostalgic, but I don’t suppose those Orion reprints will feature these!
A wonderful evocation of what makes us fans of Joan, Lizza, thanks! What a shame, as Lizzie points out in her recent post, that there’s no obvious sign of her connections with Rye. Anything in Petworth?
Just found this Hilary, so nice to know you are following, and lovely that you recognise her!
Yes that’s the joy of Gothics perhaps? Just enjoyed your Rye post – Joan’s second novel ‘The Fortune Hunters’ is also set there, and makes it very gothic indeed! And you have reminded me to look out the other Rye novel, ‘The Haunting of Lamb House’ – the joy of Joan indeed, always another to re-discover!
In fact Joan made use of many of her own houses, and set a historical trilogy in and around her house, The Hermitage in Petworth – The Smile of the Stranger, The Weeping Ash and The Girl from Paris http://www.joanaiken.com/pages/period_novels.html – plus there’s a very spooky YA ‘Return to Harken House’ which describes a summer re-visiting Rye, and that lonely haunted house, just before the outbreak of WW11 when her father had forgotten she was expected…
You shouldn’t have asked! I can keep you busy with a TBR list to die for…
And lovely Sussex tribute ‘The Cuckoo Tree’ as Dido is returning to Joan’s Petworth roots!
OK, so now I have a quest: any book by JA on Lamb House is a must read. I can see that your mother’s collected works will keep me occupied for decades to come.
Not a trace…except in her writing of course, see below!
Yes, loved ‘The Cuckoo Tree’! Am I right in thinking that the grand house (forgotten the name at the moment) opposite Dog Kennel Cottages is based on Petworth House? Google Earth and Google maps suggest there is no mansion on that scale there…
Tegleaze, she probably upgraded the farm into a Manor! Quite a few of those around that part of Sussex…