
Every Friday Book Beginnings on Friday is hosted by Gillion at Rose City Reader where you can share the first sentence (or so) of the book you are reading. You can also share from a book you want to highlight just because it caught your fancy.
I’m featuring Patronage by Maria Edgeworth. This is one of my TBRs and I meant to include it in my Top Ten Tuesday post this week. Maria Edgeworth (1768 – 1849) was a contemporary of Jane Austen, publishing novels at the same time – Patronage was published just 5 months before Mansfield Park in 1814.
From the back cover:
Patronage was one of the most eagerly anticipated novels of Jane Austen’s day. It sold out within hours of publication.… an adventurous soap opera about the trials and fortunes of two neighbouring families in Regency England, both of which had sons and daughters setting out in the world. … a bright and mischievous critique of the way young men gained careers and young women gained husbands.
It begins:
‘How the wind is rising!’ said Rosamond. ‘God help the poor people at sea tonight!’

Also every Friday there is The Friday 56, hosted by Freda at Freda’s Voice, but she is taking a break and Anne at My Head is Full of Books has taken on hosting duties in her absence. You grab a book and turn to page 56 (or 56% of an eBook), find one or more interesting sentences (no spoilers), and post them.
‘I hope, with all my heart, I hope,’ continued Rosamond, that Buckhurst will have some sense and steadfastness to refuse, but I heard his father supporting that foolish Colonel Hauton’s persuasions and urging his poor son to go with those people to Cheltenham.
Description from the publisher:
Meet the Percys and Falconers, neighbouring families, each with three sons and two daughters to launch into Regency society. The hardworking, independently minded and dutiful Percys are happy to work their way up in the world but are undermined by their scheming rivals who use Patronage to grab at instant fame and fortune. With their sons eased into lucrative but ill-suited diplomatic and clerical jobs, and their daughters bankrupting themselves to scale the heights of fashion, the Falconers are heading for a tumble; while the moral steadiness and strong family ties of the Percys allow them to attain both the heights of their chosen professions and a glittering match.
This sounds interesting, Margaret, and it’s not an author I’ve read before. I hope you’re enjoying it.
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I haven’t read anything by her either. I haven’t started reading it yet – real life is getting in the way!
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Was this really a book sought by people during Jane Austen’s time? I’ve never heard of it before. Looking it up right now. Thanks for visiting.
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Yes, I’m wondering if she really is as good as Jane Austen!
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Somehow I’ve never heard of Patronage before. It seems like a good book. Thanks for mentioning it!
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I’ve never come across her before either until I saw this book.
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Using the line ‘Jane Austen’s Bestselling Rival’ on the cover seems like cheating! The story sounds interesting, though and still relevant.
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It’s a bold statement. I don’t know what evidence there is to support it, if any, though. It looks like a marketing ploy to me. This was a free copy from the publisher …
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The Jane Austen tag sounds like a marketing ploy to me, too!
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