Bronte's Mistress
A Novel
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- £9.99
Publisher Description
“[A] meticulously researched debut novel…In a word? Juicy.” —O, The Oprah Magazine
The scandalous historical love affair between Lydia Robinson and Branwell Brontë, brother to novelists Charlotte, Emily, and Anne, gives voice to the woman who allegedly brought down one of literature’s most famous families.
Yorkshire, 1843: Lydia Robinson has tragically lost her precious young daughter and her mother within the same year. She returns to her bleak home, grief-stricken and unmoored. With her teenage daughters rebelling, her testy mother-in-law scrutinizing her every move, and her marriage grown cold, Lydia is restless and yearning for something more.
All of that changes with the arrival of her son’s tutor, Branwell Brontë, brother of her daughters’ governess, Miss Anne Brontë and those other writerly sisters, Charlotte and Emily. Branwell has his own demons to contend with—including living up to the ideals of his intelligent family—but his presence is a breath of fresh air for Lydia. Handsome, passionate, and uninhibited by social conventions, he’s also twenty-five to her forty-three. A love of poetry, music, and theatre bring mistress and tutor together, and Branwell’s colorful tales of his sisters’ imaginative worlds form the backdrop for seduction.
But their new passion comes with consequences. As Branwell’s inner turmoil rises to the surface, his behavior grows erratic, and whispers of their romantic relationship spout from Lydia’s servants’ lips, reaching all three Brontë sisters. Soon, it falls on Mrs. Robinson to save not just her reputation, but her way of life, before those clever girls reveal all her secrets in their novels. Unfortunately, she might be too late.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Austin imagines in her languid debut the affair alleged to have occurred in the 1840s between tutor Branwell Bront , brother of the famous English authors, and Lydia Robinson, the wife of his employer. Lydia, the 43-year-old mistress of Thorp Green Hall in Yorkshire, is grieving the recent deaths of her mother and her youngest daughter, Georgiana, while her husband, Edmund, pays little attention to her. Branwell, 25, an alcoholic with artistic ambitions hired to teach the Robinsons' only son, soon sparks Lydia's lust. Lydia takes risks by showing up at Branwell's lodgings after a fight with her husband, inviting him to take tea and read Shakespeare to her, and allowing him to cut a lock of her hair. As this relationship intensifies, Lydia also manages her three daughters' marriage prospects. After Lydia and Branwell consummate their relationship, Lydia worries whether a fulfilling sex life is worth committing adultery with someone who doesn't share her social station. When her husband becomes seriously ill, she reconsiders the affair. While Austin paints a vivid picture of upper-class life and sprinkles in tantalizing tidbits about the Bront sisters, her characters are not as finely drawn as others in the wide field of Bront apocrypha. Still, this brooding romance will suffice for voracious readers of Victorian fiction.