The story of Jane Austen's links with the idyllic village of Adlestrop & Stoneleigh Abbey the ancestral homes of the two branches of the Leigh family has not yet been fully told. Jane's mother Cassandra was a Leigh a dynasty that boasted an Elizabethan Lord Mayor ducal marriage alliances a peerage granted by Charles I Oxford luminaries as well as the spectre of lunacy & threats of bankruptcy. Jane Austen visited her Leigh cousins at Adlestrop several times & kept in constant touch with events there by letter. In Gloucestershire she first heard of Sir Humphry Repton who was employed by the Leighs & saw at first-hand how the eighteenth-century craze for improvements totally changed the village landscape. On one dramatic occasion she accompanied her cousin the Reverend Thomas Leigh to Stoneleigh Abbey which he had inherited
- a legacy endlessly disputed & longed for by other family members
- including Jane herself. Jane Austen & Adlestrop opens up a fresh window on the author's life & experience. It examines the probabilities that Adlestrop Park the Parsonage House & Stoneleigh Abbey inspired not only fictional places such as Thornton Lacey & Sotherton in Mansfield Park but also how the Leighs' colourful lives & inheritance problems influenced many of the plot lines in Jane Austen's books. Jane Austen & Adlestrop is also a portrayal of an archetypal English village's journey from the eighteenth century looking at how it experienced radical changes during Jane Austen's lifetime & how it is now over two hundred years later.