Publisher's Synopsis
Felony is the story of the literary treachery that took place at no. 43 via Romana, Florence, where Claire Clairmont, once lover of Lord Byron and mother of his daughter Allegra, lived until her death in 1879. It is also the story of Henry James's brilliant novella The Aspern Papers, which is based on that household and the nefarious doings of the lodger there, Edward Augustus Silsbee, thief and Shelleyite. In Emma Tennant's novel, Claire Clairmont is nearly eighty years old. Looked after by her niece Paula and paid an exorbitant rent by Silsbee - who becomes Paula's lover to further his aim of acquiring the Shelley papers and letters at her aunt's death - Claire dotes on her great-niece Georgina. It is Georgina who narrates this story from the perspective of a thirteen-year-old girl, in turn baffled and entranced by the gallery of rogues and blackmailers who batten on her great-aunt. Who will extort the most from poor Claire, be it money, undiscovered poems by Shelley or simply anecdotes about Byron? Henry James will set The Aspern Papers in Venice, not Florence, while Claire and her niece are transformed into the American Misses Bordereau.;James's narrator will 'lead on' the niece but there will be no love affair. With the setting and chief protagonists of the real story behind The Aspern Papers disguised, James cannot conceal his growing unease at the knowledge of the existence of letters he has written to the woman who loves him more than any other, Constance Fenimore Woolson, writer of novels and romances. Will the price of reclaiming their correspondence be marriage - will his portrait of dim Miss Tina, the niece rejected by the pilfering narrator, be seen to have been stolen from Constance herself? Felony is about the misdemeanours inherent in writing - theft, false memory, plagiarism and greed for celebrity - and it demonstrates too the embarrassment and shame suffered by those who steal from and exploit others in their quest - but who go on and do it all the same.