What We Are Reading Today: ‘What Matters in Jane Austen?’

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Updated 13 July 2025

What We Are Reading Today: ‘What Matters in Jane Austen?’

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  • In this work he poses 20 questions such as: “Why is the weather important?” “How much money is enough?” “Why is Darcy so rude?” and “What do the characters call each other?”

Author: John Mullan

To mark 250 years since the birth of one of the most famous women authors in English literature, John Mullan’s “What Matters in Jane Austen? Twenty Crucial Puzzles Solved” has been reissued.

First published in 2012, the book is a kind of literary scavenger hunt, with Mullan as guide — witty, knowing and visibly delighted by the patterns and puzzles he uncovers.

We go on the journey with him, uncovering the meanings embedded in the seemingly minor, but not minute, details of Austen’s fiction.

The Lord Northcliffe professor of modern English literature at University College London, Mullan is a leading authority on Austen. He has edited “Sense and Sensibility” and “Emma” for Oxford World’s Classics and has published widely on 18th- and 19th-century literature.

In this work he poses 20 questions such as: “Why is the weather important?” “How much money is enough?” “Why is Darcy so rude?” and “What do the characters call each other?”

That last question forms one of the book’s most interesting chapters for me. It’s about the seemingly stealthy and subtle ways in which the characters address others by a name and the power of not saying their name at all.

In Austen’s world, names are never casual. A shift from a formal title to a first name can signal a change in status, desire or familiarity. A name can be a quiet form of rebellion or a coded expression of closeness or longing. It matters whether someone is “Miss Bennet” or “Elizabeth,” whether a man dares to use her given name directly and whether that liberty is permitted or returned.

Again and again, Mullan shows us how much Austen could signal with the smallest of choices. What seems like a passing detail is likely loaded with meaning.

This new edition, with a fresh preface, is a fitting tribute to Austen’s longevity. Rather than framing her novels as relics to admire, Mullan treats them as living texts full of sly codes and sharp decisions.

It offers fans of Austen’s work something they crave: evidence. A deep dive into the text itself.

By the end, the title becomes clear, not just because Mullan asked the right questions but because, through his close reading and sharp observations, we begin to get answers.

To Austen, who died in 1817, everything mattered: names, clothes, weather, silence. And more than two centuries later, her world — precise, constrained, emotionally charged — still has plenty to show and tell.


What We Are Reading Today: ‘Horses’ by Ludovic Orlando

What We Are Reading Today: ‘Horses’ by Ludovic Orlando
Updated 28 September 2025

What We Are Reading Today: ‘Horses’ by Ludovic Orlando

What We Are Reading Today: ‘Horses’ by Ludovic Orlando

Ludovic Orlando garnered world acclaim for helping to rewrite the genomic history of horse domestication. 

“Horses” takes you behind the scenes of this ambitious genealogical investigation, revealing how he and an international team of scientists discovered the elusive origins of modern horses.

Along the way, he shows how the domestication of the horse changed the trajectory of civilization—with benefits and unforeseen consequences for the animals themselves.


What We Are Reading Today: Yuan by Nancy Shatzman Steinhardt

What We Are Reading Today: Yuan by Nancy Shatzman Steinhardt
Updated 27 September 2025

What We Are Reading Today: Yuan by Nancy Shatzman Steinhardt

What We Are Reading Today: Yuan by Nancy Shatzman Steinhardt

The Yuan dynasty endured for a century, leaving behind an architectural legacy without equal, from palaces, temples, and pagodas to pavilions, tombs, and stages.

With a history enlivened by the likes of Khubilai Khan and Marco Polo, this spectacular empire spanned the breadth of China and far, far beyond, but its rulers were Mongols.

Yuan presents the first comprehensive study in English of the architecture of China under Mongol rule.


What We Are Reading Today: ‘The Details’

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Updated 27 September 2025

What We Are Reading Today: ‘The Details’

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  • This novel, written from the perspective of the same woman, is structured in four vignettes, each dedicated to a different person who meant a great deal to the narrator

Author: Ia Genberg

While departing Sweden this summer, I purchased Ia Genberg’s “The Details” at the airport, rushing to my gate and promptly forgetting about it — but it was fitting. I rediscovered it in my travel bag this autumn on a different, shorter flight, the perfect type of book for floating through clouds and toggling between cities, countries, or memories.

First published in Swedish as “Detaljerna” in 2022, it won the prestigious August Prize and was shortlisted for the 2024 International Booker Prize, with the English translation by Kira Josefsson praised for preserving the novel’s crisp, luminous prose.

Josefsson is known for bringing contemporary Swedish literature to English-speaking readers with clarity and nuance.

Genberg, born in Stockholm in 1967, is a journalist by profession and knows how to tersely capture both facts and feelings accurately and concisely. “The Details” is her fourth novel, following earlier works, all well received.

This novel, written from the perspective of the same woman, is structured in four vignettes, each dedicated to a different person who meant a great deal to the narrator. These chapters are seemingly separate yet somehow are also intertwined, forming a mosaic of memory and intimacy.

Johanna, who was once such a close figure who later becomes a famous television host and a complete stranger; Niki, a roommate with a peculiar past who vanishes into thin air; Alejandro, whose presence is intense yet fleeting; and Birgitte, her mother. All four resurface in vivid flashes that explore how relationships shape identity, linger, and sometimes fade.

While reading, I felt as though I simultaneously knew these people and did not know them at all. It made me wonder who I would write about — or who might write about me — if such a format were to be replicated.

The structure mirrors the workings of recollection, with characters appearing in gestures, shared objects and sudden absences — gradually forming a tapestry of intimacy and longing. It is a melancholic book.

Genberg’s prose is restrained yet lyrical, attentive to the smallest details that define connection. The novel’s power lies less in plot than in atmosphere, evoking a pre-digital world where people could disappear entirely. I wonder if she should have dedicated a chapter to her own name.

The novel lingers long after the final page. You can finish it by the time your luggage arrives at the next destination.

 


What We Are Reading Today: ‘The Little Book of Weather’

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Updated 26 September 2025

What We Are Reading Today: ‘The Little Book of Weather’

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  • “The Little Book of Weather” is an accessible and enjoyable mini-reference about the world’s weather, with examples drawn from across the globe

Author: ADAM SCAIFE

Packed with surprising facts, this delightful and gorgeously designed book will beguile anyone who is curious about weather.

Expertly written and beautifully illustrated throughout with color photographs and original color artwork, “The Little Book of Weather” is an accessible and enjoyable mini-reference about the world’s weather, with examples drawn from across the globe.

It fits an astonishing amount of information in a small package, covering a wide range of topics—from weather forecasting and extreme events to the future of weather with climate change.

 


What We Are Reading Today: The Sleepless Ape by David R. Samson

What We Are Reading Today: The Sleepless Ape by David R. Samson
Updated 25 September 2025

What We Are Reading Today: The Sleepless Ape by David R. Samson

What We Are Reading Today: The Sleepless Ape by David R. Samson

Despite sleep’s critical role in maintaining health and cognitive function, humans sleep less than any other primate. “The Sleepless Ape” reveals the reasons for this evolutionary paradox, showing how our unique sleep patterns evolved when our ancestors left the safety of the forest for more dangerous ground, which led them to form more secure, social sleeping arrangements. As a result, early humans developed shorter, deeper, and more flexible sleep patterns that provided survival advantages and freed more time for crucial activities such as toolmaking, social interaction, and migration.