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With Love, The Argentina Family by Mirta Ines Trupp
With Love, The Argentina Family by Mirta Ines Trupp






This is also explored in another Austen variation I’ve enjoyed, What Kitty Did Next.

With Love, The Argentina Family by Mirta Ines Trupp

I love the idea that sweet, warmhearted Kitty matures a bit and marries a clergyman. Like the state of the Bennet’s marriage, this book explores a relationship from the original novel, and these scenes with our favorite odd-couple besties are so lovely. Readers also get to see more of Bingley and Darcy’s friendship. This novel also explores how Mr and Mrs Bennet got to their state of mutual distaste and resentment, too. For example, Rabbi Meyerson explains a prayer from husbands praising their wives, and invites Mr Bennet to remember his love for Mrs Bennet. It’s less like fiction and more like a lesson, but since I love the Bennets and was interested in a new part of Jewish history, it was nice read. Some of this is very expository, with the Meyersons giving the Bennets infodumps on Jewish history and holidays. Socializing with someone new? Her poor nerves! This serves to introduce the Meyersons to the reader, as well as provide an entertaining lesson on British Jewish history. Bennet would start off by making cringy comments and asking nosy questions as she discovered a new culture. Instead, she’s encouraged and supported by her new friends. For example, Mary, the overlooked middle sister in Pride and Prejudice, discovers a tradition where her desire to read books and make her own extracts isn’t mocked.

With Love, The Argentina Family by Mirta Ines Trupp

Here, the Meyersons bring out the best in all the Bennets, and it’s all in believable ways.

With Love, The Argentina Family by Mirta Ines Trupp

One thing I love about Jane Austen retellings and sequels is seeing how the new author sees our beloved Austen characters. After a few gauche comments from Mrs Bennet, the two families soon become friends and even find themselves connected in a wild adventure in service to the crown. The Meyersons of Meryton, by Mirta Ines Trupp, opens right after the end of Pride and Prejudice, when the Bennets make the acquaintance of the Meyerson family through the Gardiners. Or maybe reading genre fiction where some of the characters just happen to be Jewish, like this warm-hearted return to Pride and Prejudice. Of course it’s important to know and to remember our history, but I’m particularly interested in reading more everyday stories about Jewish characters or about new aspects of Jewish history. One of my reading goals this year is to find more Jewish fiction that’s not about the Shoah.








With Love, The Argentina Family by Mirta Ines Trupp