Explain the way that fay weldon appeals to her reader's logic and emotions in "letters to alice on first reading jane austen. " your answer should be at least one hundred words.



Answer :

The majority of the book reads more like an article than a novel because "Alice" is a made-up character and the author, Fay Weldon, signed her letters to this fictitious niece as "your aunt Fay." Does this sound horrifying? If you happened to read it at the wrong time, it probably is.

I received this book as a gift, tuck it away, and then picked it up one day since I was in the appropriate frame of mind, like many others who adored it. and POW! I devoured this quick read in one afternoon because I was so intrigued   It's difficult to envision someone appreciating this book who hasn't read Jane Austen or doesn't appreciate her work; it clearly helps to like Jane Austen.

The majority of the "plot" consists of Aunt Fay "explaining" Jane Austen's times and life to her niece, an eighteen-year-old with punkette-style hair who has to read Austen for school and isn't looking forward to it The plotline is cleverer than it appears, and the conclusion has a nice twist. Fay discourages her niece from writing a book before she has any experience with life while delivering some lofty and, to some readers, self-indulgent passages about the essence of Great Literature.

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