Showing posts with label Jane Austen. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jane Austen. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 7, 2013

Review: THE MYSTERIOUS DEATH OF MISS JANE AUSTEN by Lindsay Ashford

Hidden passions. Greed. Deceit. Murder? Enter the possible dark side of Jane Austen’s life in Lindsay Ashford’s page-turner, The Mysterious Death of Miss Jane Austen.

Miss Anne Sharpe, governess to Fanny, daughter of Jane Austen’s brother, Edward, narrates a chilling story of appearances and how deceptive they can be. Henry Austen visits his brother Edward’s family much too often, and mostly when Edward is away. Edward’s wife, Elizabeth, spends a great deal of time with Henry. Is there something here in addition to brotherly affection?

Miss Sharpe discovers more and more of these curious incidents, and all involving Henry. Henry visits his brother, James, and James’s wife, Maria, too. Henry and Maria? And then people die under similar suspicious circumstances. First, Elizabeth, then James, and finally, sadly, Jane herself. Is Maria involved? Perhaps this is all circumstantial evidence. Maybe, or maybe not.

Weaving imagination into the known facts of Jane Austen’s life and tragically early death, Ms. Ashford spins an enthralling, dark tale of lust, deception and possible multiple murder seething beneath the surface of a seemingly proper, tranquil Regency family. Meticulously researched, the book delves deep into Jane’s life, finding connections no one else has. The result is a masterful story of the ease with which perception can be manipulated, and by the end of the book, you wonder if the author’s shocking tale can possibly be correct.

For a startling version of Jane Austen’s world that you’ve never encountered before, try The Mysterious Death of Miss Jane Austen.

Thank you all,
Linda
ARC provided by Sourcebooks

Tuesday, February 15, 2011

Review: DARCY AND FITZWILLIAM: A TALE OF A GENTLEMAN AND AN OFFICER by Karen V. Wasylowski


Laugh until your sides ache and then laugh some more with Karen V. Wasylowski's delicious Darcy and Fitzwilliam: A Tale of a Gentleman and an Officer. This absorbing, fast-moving romp of a book catalogs the often hilarious ups and downs in the enduring affectionate friendship of those brothers-in-spirit, cousins Fitzwilliam Darcy and Colonel Richard Fitzwilliam.

Darcy and Elizabeth have married, but nothing comes between the lifelong regard of Darcy and Fitzwilliam. Each always there to help the other, they weather life's catastrophes together with male camaraderie, competition and not a little joking.

As Caroline Bingley attempts yet again to come between Darcy and the now-pregnant Elizabeth, Fitzwilliam lends a hand in removing the threat of the viperish lady, assisted by none other than the formidable Lady Catherine de Bourgh herself.

And when Fitzwilliam finally meets his match in the American widow, Amanda, Darcy, along with Lady Catherine again, aids in securing the lady's son from the boy's guardian, who seeks to separate the child from his mother. And everyone closes ranks to help Elizabeth through the difficulties of childbirth.

I read this entire 481 page book in one day, laughing all the way. Ms. Wasylowski has a good ear for realistic male banter, most of it uproariously funny. The best two lines in the whole novel occur when Darcy and Fitzwilliam reminisce about their youth and the hilariously disgusting things young boys do to each other. I still laugh when I think of those lines.

A truly wonderful and original take on Pride and Prejudice. I can't wait for Ms. Wasylowski's next book.

Thank you all,
Linda
ARC supplied by Sourcebooks

Sunday, January 23, 2011

Review: MR. DARCY'S SECRET by Jane Odiwe


The bloom is off the rose in the Jane Austen sequel cum mystery Mr. Darcy's Secret by Jane Odiwe.

Mysterious passionate love letters from the past, supposedly written to Darcy, interrupt Elizabeth's newly wedded bliss. Even worse, there is a child who closely resembles Darcy. Is the boy Darcy's son?

Although Elizabeth can't change the past, the present is equally disturbing. Darcy reverts to type as he arranges Georgiana's loveless marriage to a "suitable" older gentleman. That Georgiana loves another, the landscape gardener, Tom, who also loves her, means nothing.

Full of the manners and mores so dear to Regency readers, Mr. Darcy's Secret is another fine addition to the Jane Austen universe. The worthy, if penniless, Tom must fight for Georgiana against the prevailing sentiment of marriage as a merger of fortunes and influence. In her turn, Georgiana must overcome her dutiful submission to her brother's wrong-headed ideas about marriage, ones he himself ignored.

And then there is the mystery. Ms. Odiwe keeps you guessing right to the end as to what the sad and shocking Mr. Darcy's Secret really is. The knowledge could either destroy Darcy's and Elizabeth's marriage or make it stronger.

Young love, old sins, characters we love, villains we love to hate, and a mystery threading through the whole--Mr. Darcy's Secret has it all.

Thank you all,
Linda
ARC provided by Sourcebooks

Monday, October 4, 2010

Guest Sharon Lathan: Writing A Long Life


Today I welcome Sharon Lathan, author of In the Arms of Mr. Darcy, the latest installment in her Pride and Prejudice sequels. Here she talks about the family saga, those long, delicious books that carried you through generations of well-loved characters--and that are thin on the ground of late.

Leave a comment with your email for a chance to win one of the two copies of In the Arms of Mr. Darcy which Sourcebooks has generously provided. Sharon will select the winners. Check the comments to see who won, and how to contact me to claim your book. If I cannot contact the winners within a week of their selection, I will award the books to alternates. Note, Sourcebooks can mail to USA and Canada addresses only.

Sharon selected the winners catslady and Jessica. I've sent you both emails. Please respond by October 16 or I will award the books to alternates.

And see the bottom of this post for how to download the ebook of Sharon's Mr. and Mrs. Fitzwilliam Darcy: Two Shall Become One.

Welcome, Sharon!

On one of the Regency historical groups I belong to the question was recently asked, “Is the family saga dead?” The responses were numerous with a definitive decision not reached. All I could think was that I sure hope not!

I firmly believe that readers come in all shapes and sizes, want a variety of reading material, and therefore literature should not be limited or whole genres ever considered “dead.” A friend of mine was recently dished by an “expert” critique and contest judge for extolling the descriptive virtues of Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein. Days later my husband and I chatted with our waitress, a girl about 19, who loves Shakespeare and just finished reading War and Peace – for fun! Certainly one can point to the popularity of Jane Austen as proof that classic novels written in older styles and not following “the rules” remain vital and reading-worthy.

I grew up reading books three inches thick or that were a serial because I love meaty novels and traveling through the years with characters I enjoy. Last I looked the Little House on the Prairie novels, Louisa May Alcott’s Little Women, and Gone With the Wind were still considered classics and must-reads. Those are just a few examples of literature falling under the “family saga” umbrella.

I am not expecting my saga to ever be noted alongside John Jakes’ Kent Family Chronicles or James Michener’s Centennial. Yet perhaps writers like me who embrace saga-style plotlines, themes, and pacing will prove that the family centered story is not dead.

In the three books that began my sequel series to Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice I only covered the first year of Darcy and Lizzy’s married life. But what an eventful year it was! In The Arms of Mr. Darcy picks up the pace a bit, spanning just over one year, from winter 1817 to winter 1819, and remains as eventful. Yet, in true family saga form, we flow gradually over the weeks and months, journeying with the characters as they live life amid this exciting time in history.

For me the greatest fun was watching these characters I love so much change with the experiences tossed at them! I really wanted to turn the spotlight upon some of the secondary characters, while also centering on Lizzy and Darcy. Not so easy!

What can one expect from In The Arms of Mr. Darcy?

Darcy and Lizzy learn how to be parents. Their day-to-day life changes with the addition of a baby, naturally. Everything from a first Christmas, resuming their intimate relationship, dealing with relatives and christening interruptions, and learning to prioritize what is most important is explored. There are adventures at The Peaks and Matlock Bath. Intrigue in Derby and London. And as they set to embark upon a tour of the Continent the question of additional little Darcys is discussed.

They aren’t the only ones whose lives are changing! Charles and Jane Bingley establish roots in the community and prepare for parenthood. Anne de Bourgh and Mary Bennet say, “I Do.” Word of the Wickhams and their dramas will upset a number of people, especially Darcy who reveals more of his past.

New love and romance touches several members of their extended family. Caroline Bingley is torn between two potential mates, but only one has the power to unnerve her and awaken her stony heart. Colonel Fitzwilliam, confirmed bachelor that he is, falls in love with an elusive widow who may or may not return his affections. Or is it another young lady who will wrest his heart away? Kitty Bennet, flighty and flirty as always, falls in love but it is doomed from the start, her entire world turned upside down as a consequence. Georgiana Darcy matures and is the toast of London – much to Darcy’s dismay. Will she find true love amid the music and dancing? Or will her eyes be opened to someone closer to home? Or will her romance have to wait for another novel!

All of that in one book! And there is more I didn’t hint at! See why I love family sagas?

If you ask me, I will assure you the saga is not dead. I plan to do everything in my power to make sure it never is.

What do you think? Tell me some of your favorite meaty stories or classic literature or sagas that carry you through the years. Then, after we discuss that, pop over to my website to read more about my offering: The Darcy Saga by Sharon Lathan at www.sharonlathan.net

You can also join me at Austen Authors (www.austenauthors.com) and Casablanca Authors (www.casablancaauthors.blogspot.com).

IN THE ARMS OF MR. DARCY BY SHARON LATHAN—IN STORES OCTOBER 2010
If only everyone could be as happy as they are…

Darcy and Elizabeth are as much in love as ever—even more so as their relationship matures. Their passion inspires everyone around them, and as winter turns to spring, romance blossoms around them.

Confirmed bachelor Richard Fitzwilliam sets his sights on a seemingly unattainable, beautiful widow; Georgiana Darcy learns to flirt outrageously; the very flighty Kitty Bennet develops her first crush, and Caroline Bingley meets her match.

But the path of true love never does run smooth, and Elizabeth and Darcy are kept busy navigating their friends and loved ones through the inevitable separations, misunderstandings, misgivings, and lovers’ quarrels to reach their own happily ever afters…

About the Author
Sharon Lathan is the author of the bestselling Mr. and Mrs. Fitzwilliam Darcy: Two Shall Become One, and Loving Mr. Darcy: Journeys Beyond Pemberley. In addition to her writing, she works as a Registered Nurse in a Neonatal ICU. She resides with her family in Hanford, California in the sunny San Joaquin Valley. Fore more information, please visit www.sharonlathan.net.

Sourcebooks eBook Promotion: Sharon Lathan’s bestselling book, Mr. and Mrs. Fitzwilliam Darcy: Two Shall Become One, (epub: 9781402235184, pdf: 9781402228865) will be available for free download from 10/5 – 10/11. Please visit http://www.sourcebooks.com/special-offers/ebook-deals.html for more information!

Sunday, September 26, 2010

Review: MR. DARCY'S OBSESSION by Abigail Reynolds


Mr. Darcy's Obsession, the latest of Abigail Reynolds's Pride and Prejudice Variations, is a stunning tale of love lost and refound.

Two years have passed since Darcy last saw Elizabeth. Having convinced both himself and a reluctant Bingley of the Bennet sisters' unsuitability for marriage, Darcy encounters Elizabeth in London. Her father's death has cast her family into dire financial straits and Elizabeth labors as an unpaid nanny for her Uncle and Aunt Gardiner's children.

Even as he tries to stay away, Darcy rediscovers how much he enjoys Elizabeth's conversation and wit. Against his better judgment, he asks her to marry him in his trademark bungled proposal. An enraged Elizabeth refuses, and Darcy must convince her to agree.

Already disillusioned with his world of privileged excess that often mistreats the less fortunate, Darcy regrets the grave errors he made in losing Elizabeth--twice. A distraught Bingley, furious that he accepted Darcy's advice to spurn Jane, lashes out at him when he discovers Jane has married to survive.

This novel brings to the forefront what many romances gloss over--the importance of money. Elizabeth's uncle and aunt, hard-pressed to support her, urge her to accept the marriage proposal of her uncle's head clerk. Jane wed a kind shopkeeper old enough to be her father because he helps support her mother and sisters.

Ms. Reynolds paints vivid portraits of real people struggling with harsh economic reality to survive and find happiness. Jane and Bingley's story is especially heartbreaking. That we wonder how all will fare, even as we know the ending, is a testament to Ms. Reynolds's fine storytelling.

Thank you all,
Linda
ARC provided by Sourcebooks

Thursday, September 23, 2010

Interview with Jane Austen Author, C. Allyn Pierson


Today I interview C. Allyn Pierson, author of the Pride and Prejudice sequel, Mr. Darcy's Little Sister. Here I ask her to explain in more detail some of the background of the book's events.

Leave a comment for a chance to win one of the two copies of Mr. Darcy's Little Sister which Sourcebooks has generously provided. C. Allyn will select the winners. Check the comments to see who won, and how to contact me to claim your book. If I cannot contact the winners within a week of their selection, I will award the books to alternates. Note, Sourcebooks can mail to USA and Canada addresses only. Contest runs through September 30.

C. Allyn selected the winners Danielle Thorne and Susan. Congratulations! I've sent you both emails. If I do not hear from you by October 8, I will select alternates.

1. Mr. Darcy's Little Sister is a sequel to Pride and Prejudice. Why do you think people still love Pride and Prejudice?

Pride and Prejudice is one of the greatest love stories of all time, but I think the characters resonate particularly well with modern readers. I jokingly tell my friends “Of course women love Mr. Darcy—how could you not love a man who will actually admit he is wrong…and then change?!” We have all had the experience of misjudging someone and later finding that we were mistaken, but I think Elizabeth Bennet has a personality which modern women can recognize and relate to, as well, with her wit and humor and her common sense, as well as for her desire to marry for affection, not just for money, which was not the norm among the upper classes during the Regency. The film versions of Pride and Prejudice have also made the story accessible to more people by giving them a visual image of the characters, clothing, and lifestyle of the Regency Era. The 1995 BBC version with Colin Firth and Jennifer Ehle is particularly accurate to both the book and the time period. The other thing that makes Jane Austen accessible to modern readers is the intimacy of her portraits. Pride and Prejudice is not a story on an epic scale, but one which takes place in a small drawing room or in a private ballroom, which is the way people actually live their lives.

2. Georgiana Darcy comes of age in Mr. Darcy's Little Sister. Tell us about the society rituals required of a Regency lady making her debut.

The coming-out in society of a young woman of the peerage or gentry classes was the most important event of her life, determining the future course of her adult life. The London Season was a gigantic marriage mart where the young women tried to meet and capture the fancy of a gentleman of suitable fortune and become engaged to him. Most girls debuted at age 17 or eighteen, but there was not a strict rule on that. An eldest daughter might be debuted a bit early because her younger sisters were usually not admitted to adult society until the elder one or two daughters were engaged. Hence, Lady Catherine de Bourgh’s shock when Elizabeth Bennet told her that all the Bennet girls were “out” at one time. Before their debuts girls were seen but not heard and young men were expected to act as if they did not exist. When they made their “come-out” they began appearing at adult entertainments such as balls and were allowed to dance and talk to the gentlemen at public events.

One of the important rites of passage was to be presented at Court. The court presentation for girls was at what was called a Drawing Room, and she had to be sponsored by an older woman, not her mother, who had been presented and had good standing in society. A sponsor could not present two girls on the same day. The young woman would wear a court gown, predominantly white, which in the Regency Era was a fashion from about 50 years earlier- tight corseted bodice which was off the shoulders, and a skirt over the wide hoops such as are seen in paintings of Marie Antoinette. The gown was required to have a train 3 yards long, and she was required to wear a plume of ostrich feathers in the back of her hair. The girls were lined up to be presented in order from highest to lowest rank. When a young woman’s turn came her sponsor gave the debutante’s card to the lord-in-waiting and the girl was then admitted to the Presence Chamber, as the lord spread her train behind her. The debutante then walked up toward the throne and did a court curtsey (which was a very deep curtsey which brought her knee almost to the floor), rose gracefully, then backed out of the room without tripping over her train, never turning her back on the Queen, or whichever members of the royal family were present.

3. A large part of the story is Georgiana’s abduction. Tell us a little about the history of abduction of heiresses.

Because of the strictures of 19th Century society on the chaperonage of young women to ensure that their reputations were not damaged—she could not even ride in a closed carriage alone with a single man. In addition, under English law all of a woman’s property became her husband’s when they married, so there were a number of ways that unscrupulous men could take advantage of a woman.

If a man could hold a woman in confinement overnight, it would be assumed that she was no longer a virgin and she would be shunned by society. In this circumstance her family might agree to allow the man to marry her, if the girl would agree, or pay him off to get him to keep quiet about the event since her only other option was to live the rest of her life in seclusion. The young woman’s parents would be socially damaged for not protecting their daughter from being abducted and this would also damage the other children in the family. Voluntary elopement was considered disgraceful because an unsanctioned marriage was disapproved of when dowries and inheritances were involved, but even more disgraceful would be eloping and not reappearing married, such as could have happened with Lydia Bennet in Pride and Prejudice. The social consequences were the same whether the young woman was voluntarily eloping or was abducted. In either case, she was “ruined.”

Another possibility for a man who wanted a young woman’s fortune was a forced marriage. The marriage laws of England made it virtually impossible to do this because, unless they had an expensive “special license,” the couple was required to have the banns read in their parish church three Sundays in a row before the ceremony took place and be married by a minister of the Church of England. However, the laws of Scotland were very different, even though both countries were united under the same ruler. In Scotland the couple merely had to stand up together and acknowledge that they were married—they did not even need a minister. For this reason, a man could take an unwilling bride to Gretna Green, the nearest Scottish town to the main trunk road from London, and marry her, often by the accommodating local blacksmith. The term “over the anvil” was a slang expression for this type of marriage. Once the couple was married the girl’s family could have the marriage annulled if she was underage, but, again, her reputation would be ruined and she would be “damaged goods” and no other man would want to marry her. Thus the family often decided to let the marriage stand, no matter how unsavory the groom was. A limiting factor for this type of marriage was that it was about a three day trip by coach to the border, making it quite expensive.

I took advantage of these circumstances in Mr. Darcy’s Little Sister. An important part of her abduction, one which added confusion for her relatives, was that Georgiana’s companion was also abducted; giving her a chaperone for the entire time she was gone. This circumstance eventually helped them untangle the plot, since a highwayman or other robber would not care about her reputation, but a manipulative man who wished for Georgiana to be able to rejoin society with him as her husband would care.

4. Col. Fitzwilliam plays a major part in Georgiana’s story. Why did you pick him?

I always found the colonel an interesting character in Pride and Prejudice. We really don’t know much about him except that he is very gentlemanly and easy to talk to, and that he is the younger son of an earl, and so did not have much money. He makes it clear that he finds Elizabeth very attractive, but that he must marry a woman of good fortune since he could not support a wife in any elegant style on his pay as an officer. He is both perfectly amiable and quite pragmatic about matrimony, as many people were at the time. I was always intrigued by the question of why the colonel was Georgiana’s guardian with Darcy, rather than his elder brother, who would be the future head of the Fitzwilliam family when he inherited the estate —it seemed that the colonel’s brother would be a natural choice as Georgiana’s guardian. I wanted to explore what the colonel’s character really was and why his brother was not her other guardian.

5. Mr. Darcy's Little Sister has the familiar Pride and Prejudice characters doing unexpected things. Without giving too much away, tell us about both Col. Fitzwilliam’s new occupation and Mr. Darcy’s role.

As part of my interest in the colonel, I decided that there was much more depth to his personality than had been revealed in Pride and Prejudice. I put him into the Horse Guards, which is one of the most desirable of the cavalry units, and which also had an important role in protecting the royal family. This gave the colonel access to the highest levels of the government and allowed him to have contact with both the Prince Regent and his ministers.

I felt that once Elizabeth married Darcy that her perspectives would change because she would be exposed to a much wider society than that of Hertfordshire. She would have contact with some of those in the peerage and be more aware of issues of national importance, and she would learn that her husband, although he would not pander to the dissipated elements of Society, would be well known among the haute ton. It would not be surprising if Darcy’s reserved personality and upright morals would give him a reputation for trustworthiness with the Prince Regent.

6. What do you have coming up next?

I have at least a couple more P&P sequels I would like to write, exploring the Darcys’ marriage beyond the first year, and also telling the story of Anne de Bourgh. I would also like to write a modern suspense series which I have outlined. The main problem is finding the time! One of the advantages of living in the Midwest is that the winters are so cold and snowy that you don’t want to go out- a great situation for a writer!


MR. DARCY’S LITTLE SISTER BY C. ALLYN PIERSON—IN STORES SEPTEMBER 2010

Pride and Prejudice continues...
Georgiana Darcy grows up and goes in pursuit of happiness and true love, much to her big brother's consternation

A whole new side of Mr. Darcy...

He's the best big brother, generous to a fault. Protective, never teases. But over his dead body is any rogue or fortune hunter going to get near his little sister! (Unfortunately, any gentleman who wants to court Georgiana is going to have the same problem...)

So how's a girl ever going to meet the gentleman of her dreams?

About the Author
C. Allyn Pierson is the nom-de-plume of a physician, who has combined her many years of interest in the works of Jane Austen and the history of Regency England into this sequel to Pride and Prejudice. She lives with her family and three dogs in Fort Dodge, Iowa. http://www.callynpierson.com/