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Showing posts with label Meryton Press. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Meryton Press. Show all posts

05 August 2018

Blog Tour & Giveaway ~ What's Past Is Prologue by Anna Galvia


What's Past Is Prologue
Author: Ann Galvia
Tour Dates: August 1 – August 13, 2018


Elizabeth Darcy has her eye on the future.

Before her marriage, she saw herself making the best possible choice. Her husband saved her family from ruin. All he asked in return was her hand. Secure in his good opinion, Elizabeth married him. Only with hindsight and his cryptic warnings that passion is not immutable does Elizabeth question her decision. Her solution? Give him a son as soon as possible. Once his lust for her has been slaked, this service she has rendered him will ensure her value.

The newlyweds are summoned to Rosings Park almost the moment they are married. Though the estate can boast of beautiful grounds, Elizabeth and Darcy arrive to find devastation. A flood has swept away Lady Catherine’s last hopes of hiding debt and years of mismanagement. She expects Darcy to shoulder the recovery efforts.

The effort to save Rosings strains the already tense relationship between Elizabeth and her husband. To make matters worse, her presence is met with disdain and disinterest from the family. As the days in the besieged estate drag on, Elizabeth slowly untangles the histories and secrets of her new relations.

Like Elizabeth’s marriage, the crisis at Rosings is the culmination of past events. Disaster need not be the result of only bad choices; good principles have led them astray as well. As for Elizabeth, she barely knows her husband, and loving him might be impossible. Yet, she is determined to save all that she can—her marriage and the estate—and somehow, create the future she longs for.


Author Interview

Hi and welcome Ann to my little corner of the web and taking part in this little interview with me.

Inquiring minds are dying to know, which book inspired you to begin writing?

Today? “Pride and Prejudice.”

In general? Chronologically, my memories of writing come before my memories of favorite books. It’s just a thing I’ve always done.

How did you discover Jane Austen?

When I was in college, I met a girl who read “Pride and Prejudice” her senior year of high school. She embarked on a campaign to relentlessly badger me into reading it. At the time, I was studying cultural anthropology and dismissed her on the basis of ~I’m not interested in romance novels. I only like social commentary.~ (Obviously, I did not know the first thing about Jane Austen, and she who did was, shall we say, undeterred. And also, the devaluation of female-oriented genres is a whole other issue to unpack that we won’t get to today.) This went on for….a while. Had you asked me at the time, I would have told you she had been bugging me since she was 12, despite the fact that we did not know each other then and she hadn’t read it until high school. I would not have even been kidding. It honestly felt like it had been going on forever.

And then came the Lizzie Bennet Diaries. If you are not familiar with LBD, it is a YouTube show that ran in 2012-13. Consisting of 100 regular episodes of roughly 5 minutes a piece, 10 Q&A episodes and 3 epilogue episodes that came out a year later, it’s a modern adaptation of P&P that casts Lizzie Bennet as a graduate student studying mass communications. As part of her thesis project, she creates a video diary that she mostly uses to rag on her family, wax poetic about Jane and Bing Lee and rant about this Darcy dude that she hates. My friend now had a new way to bombard me with “Pride and Prejudice” and started linking me to episodes. After the third or fourth time she sent me episode 60--the first proposal, known as Darcy Day to LBD fans since it’s the first time Darcy appears on screen--I finally relented and watched the whole series.

Needless to say, I was a fan. I immediately ran out to get the original book and have never looked back.


And my friend was just like, Yes, I knew you would like it. That is why I kept telling you to read it!

What led you to creating the storyline for “What's Past is Prologue”?

Not long after my first read through of P&P,  I was teaching a nonfiction reading unit to my fifth graders. (As an anthropologist, I wanted to teach people about the world. Figured the best way to do that was be a teacher.) It was during the primary documents portion of the unit that I first learned of the Year Without a Summer. My mind immediately jumped to Year Without a Summer P&P fanfic. Specifically, a married Darcy and Elizabeth journey to Rosings Park to help Lady Catherine sort out the impact the weather is having on her estate. As the years passed, the storyline got incrementally tweaked over and over again. Eventually, the Year Without a Summer wasn’t even part of it anymore!

This story’s setting is Rosings Park, home of Catherine de Bourgh. What led you to make this decision and what challenges did you face writing this story in this setting?

The center of the concept was always the relationship between Elizabeth Darcy and Lady Catherine. There was never a moment where it didn’t take place at Rosings Park. Two major challenges shaped the direction of the story:
It began as a Year Without a Summer story. That meant Darcy and Elizabeth had been married for a few years. For Lady Catherine and the Darcys to still be in conflict was silly. Jane Austen didn’t let us know how long Lady Catherine and Darcy stayed mad at each other, but we do know Elizabeth cajoled him into letting go of his resentment and the family came back together. I felt like the degree of conflict between Lady Catherine and the Darcys did not suit the amount of time that had passed. So, the timeline got moved earlier. No longer was it a Year Without a Summer story. The Darcys were newlyweds.
The second challenge was just how hard it was to work Darcy himself into the plot. In my earliest drafts, Darcy and Elizabeth were happily married and they had nothing to talk about. Their relationship did not drive the story. In fact, it was essentially absent. I spent a lot of mental energy trying to find ways to shoehorn Darcy in to Elizabeth’s day to day life without much success.

And then I put them in conflict with each other. And that’s when the story blossomed. Suddenly, they had a dynamic. There were stakes. In addition to the strife, they have all these moments of playfulness, of honestly, of passion, of serious conversations about the situation at Rosings Park that easily could have been in the original HEA scenario but simply weren’t.

With this change, Darcy became the engine for Elizabeth’s journey. She begins the story without a clear view of what a successful  marriage ought to be. She’s the product of an unhappy union. Her lack of dowry and the price of rescuing Lydia have made her a financial burden on her husband. How long is that burden going to seem worthwhile to him? Once the story stopped being about Lady Catherine and started being about Elizabeth dealing with the baggage she didn’t know she had, and growing up and growing towards Darcy as her partner, the story opened up.
What's the strangest thing you've ever had to research online for your book?

I feel like most of the things I research are pretty mundane, though sometimes the results are unexpected. For “What’s Past is Prologue,” I read agricultural surveys of Hertfordshire, Kent and Derbyshire. I wanted to know what was grown in these counties, when it was planted, when it was harvested and what was done with the harvest.

The people of Hertfordshire were very opinionated about the best way to grow wheat. The man carrying out the survey seemed initially caught off guard by how passionate the people were about the Right Way to Grow Wheat, but he played into it and began asking every farm he interviewed about their Wheat Opinions. It’s sort of a funny undercurrent throughout the entire thing. Derbyshire, on the other hand, had a reputation for being terrible for growing wheat. Some people believed wheat couldn’t grow in Derbyshire at all! It could, it just wasn’t their big money maker. But when you look at their methods, they were also doing the exact opposite of what the Opinionated Hertfordshire Wheat Farmers would tell you to do, so...

What do your plans for future projects include?

Celestial cats.

What writing advice do you have for other aspiring authors?

I think the best thing you can do is to just do it and keep on doing it. Writing is a skill that you have to build through practice.

Speed Round:

Tea or coffee?
Coffee for everyday, tea when I have the time to sit down and enjoy it.

Morning Person or Night Owl?
Night owl by nature, morning person when required.

Cats or Dogs?
Cats. Entirely too many cats.

Movies or TV?
I have not seen a single film in 2018 thus far, so I guess TV is winning by default.

What ​came first, ​the chicken or​ the​ ​egg?
The chicken, alphabetically, ordinally, and sexually.

Thank you Ann for being here today. I loved getting to know more about you and What's Past Is Prologue and I look forward to seeing what you'll bring us next.

Image may contain: 1 person, smiling, text

About The Author

Ann started writing sometime before she knew how letters functioned. Her first books were drawings of circus poodles heavily annotated with scribbles meant to tell a story. Upon learning how letters were combined to represent words, she started doing that instead. This has proven to be much more successful.

Sometime after that, she decided she wanted to study Anthropology and sometime after that, she decided she liked cats more than dogs. And sometime after that, she decided to become an educator and teach a new generation of kids how to combine letters to represent words, and use those words express ideas.

And sometime after that, she realized all she really wanted to do was write, which probably should have been evident from the beginning.


Image may contain: plant, flower, text and nature

Giveaway

Readers may enter the drawing by tweeting once a day and daily commenting on a blog post or a review that has a giveaway attached for the tour. Entrants must provide the name of the blog where they commented. If an entrant does not do so, that entry will be disqualified.

One winner will be selected per contest. Each winner will be randomly selected by Rafflecopter and the giveaway is international.


Blog Tour Schedule

August 1 / Savvy Verse & Wit / Guest Post & Giveaway
August 2 / Of Pens & Pages / Book Review & Giveaway
August 3 / Babblings of a Bookworm / Book Review & Giveaway
August 4 / Just Jane 1813 / Book Excerpt & Giveaway
August 5 / Liz’s Reading Life / Author Interview & Giveaway
August 6 / From Pemberley to Milton / Book Review & Giveaway
August 7 / More Agreeably Engaged / Guest Post & Giveaway
August 8 / Austenesque Reviews / Book Excerpt & Giveaway
August 9 / Diary of an Eccentric / Book Review & Giveaway
August 10 / My Vices and Weaknesses / Book Review & Giveaway
August 11 / Margie’s Must Reads / Book Review & Giveaway
August 12 / My Love for Jane Austen / Book Excerpt & Giveaway
August 13 / So Little Time… / Guest Post & Giveaway

22 October 2016

Blog Tour & Giveaway ~ Letter From Ramsgate by Suzan Lauder


Letter from Ramsgate
by Suzan Lauder


Blurb

Sir, I am not known to you. I fear you may have concerns regarding some intelligence that recently came to me from your sister...

...a simple letter shatters illusions and turns the world upside down!

On holiday in Ramsgate, Elizabeth Bennet befriends shy, romantic Georgiana Darcy, who shares an adoring description of an ideal elder brother. When Georgiana discloses a secret infatuation with her brother’s “close friend” Mr. Wickham, Elizabeth’s altered perception of both men affects her actions and alliances.

The secret within an anonymous letter from Ramsgate ties Mr. Darcy and Elizabeth together but also separates them. A second missive unlocks the disguise, but Mr. Darcy realizes his true passions too late to assist Elizabeth in her darkest hour. Will the shocking disclosure of a forgotten letter transform his understanding of her heart and lead them to embrace their future?

Letter from Ramsgate is a Pride and Prejudice variation suitable for most audiences (youth and up).

Amazon


Liz, because I’m so grateful to be here on Liz’s Reading Life, I have what I refer to as the “Hunsford set-down” of my latest novel, Letter from Ramsgate

In this scene, a summer party is taking place at Pemberley, and Mr. Darcy’s name has been linked to one of the visiting ladies. Three other ladies, all relatives, take him aside to chastise him for multiple reasons. Two of the characters are familiar: Georgiana Darcy and Anne de Bourgh. The third is a new minor character in Letter from Ramsgate: Lady Courtland, wife of the older brother of Colonel Fitzwilliam. Prior to her marriage to the heir to the Earl of Matlock, Darcy had a mild interest in the former Miss Laura Falconer, and still considers her a friend and ally. The artwork of three ladies is by C. Haichwood from 1893. I like to think of them from left to right as Georgiana, Anne, and Laura.

~~~

Lady Courtland’s arms were crossed; Darcy had never seen her so stern. “Lady Catherine came to Pemberley under the impression that she had to eliminate a competitor for Anne’s claim to your hand, so to speak. The conflict could have been atrocious.”

“I understand. Perhaps I should consider explaining my intentions regarding Anne to Lady Catherine,” he said.

“Yes,” said Anne, “and I would be grateful for your support since I spent the trip here, as well as the previous weeks, trying to convince her of my distaste for you as a husband.”

The corners of his mouth lifted at this.

“It is not humorous!” she cried. “Perhaps it was entertainment for us to laugh at her for her wishes, and it was easier than correcting her, but it is no longer appropriate. We are disappointing an old woman, and she is not of a mind to accept it without causing discomfort for us all.”

Anne’s rebuke wiped the smile from his face. “My apologies. You have the right of it. But to enter into an inevitable argument with her was always—”

Lady Courtland cut off the protest. “The problem is, Darcy, unless it is of convenience to you, you do not bother to respect anyone’s sensibilities but your own, and it is time for you to stop.”

What?!

Anne nodded, and he met the accusation with protest. “That is not true! I pride myself in my ability to consider the needs of many people: Georgiana, the tenants, even Lady Catherine. I take prodigious good care of them.”

“No!” Georgiana protested. “You control them.”

“It is my duty to make decisions. I shall not apologize for that.”

“In your conceit about your judgement being best for all, you are selfish and overbearing. Worse than that, you jump to conclusions and close your mind to other points of view. You live by inflexible principles that are unforgiving, and use them as perverse justification for decisions that can cause others trouble. If they dare to object to your decree, you determine that, since your decision is unarguable, they are at fault, and you dismiss their concerns.” Georgiana used dramatic sarcasm to finish. “Fitzwilliam Darcy is the sole person in the world allowed to have an opinion.”

He contemplated each accusation with confusion. Conceit? Selfish and overbearing? What were these three trying to say? Why the concerted effort to reprimand him? Especially Georgiana! She had never been insolent before!

After a moment, he replied, “I do not agree.”

“Of course, you do not. That is precisely the problem.”

“You will understand better when you are older.”

“But will you ever learn to understand? Or listen to others before judging?”

“For now, I make the decisions regarding your welfare. Though I do not understand why you complain. Did I say something to disappoint you?”

“Perhaps every action you have made towards Miss Elizabeth Bennet from the time you returned from Kent until I insisted you go to London would suffice as examples?”

Heat overspread his complexion.

~~~

Thank you Suzan for being here and sharing this intriguing excerpt with us today.


About The Author

A love for Jane Austen’s novels and Regency and Austenesque romance novels inspired Suzan Lauder to write her own variations, which led her to a passion for Regency era history and costuming, as well as social media book marketing. She cherishes the many friends she’s made as a result of these interests.

Suzan is a member of JASNA, VIRA, RWA (PAN and Beau Monde chapters), and is a registered professional engineer. She enjoys independent travel, design, Pilates, yoga, cycling, sustainability, upcycling, architecture, beta editing, and blogging. Most of the time, a Vancouver Island penthouse loft condominium with a view of the Salish Sea is home. For a few months each winter, Mr. Suze and their two rescue cats accompany her to their tiny Spanish colonial casita in Centro Historico of an industrial city in Mexico.

Letter from Ramsgate is Lauder’s second published novel and comes on the heels of her successful upcycled costuming blog series, the Thrift Shop Regency Costume Experiment. Her latest venture is blogging about her learning experiences while editing Letter from Ramsgate. Suzan’s first novel, Alias Thomas Bennet, is an Austen-inspired Regency romance with a mystery twist. She also contributed a short modern romance, Delivery Boy, to the holiday anthology Then Comes Winter. All Lauder’s published fiction is based on Pride and Prejudice and is available from Meryton Press.

Website | Goodreads | Facebook | Twitter | Amazon | Pinterest


Giveaway


Terms and Conditions

Readers may enter the drawing by tweeting once a day and daily commenting on a blog post that has a giveaway attached for the tour. (Review posts are not part of the giveaways). Entrants must provide the name of the blog where they commented (which will be verified). If an entrant does not do so, that entry will be disqualified. 

Tweet and comment once daily to earn extra entries. 

A winner may win Only 1 (One) copy of Letter from Ramsgate by Suzan Lauder. Each winner will be randomly selected by Rafflecopter and paperback or ebook format will randomly be selected for each winner as well. 

**Note: Paperback copies are Only available for continental US winners! Ebook copies are available for All winners, including international winners! If more international winners are randomly chosen than the 4 allotted ebooks, then that will decrease the number of paperbacks. 8 books will be given away to 8 different winners.**


Blog Tour Schedule

10/17
My Jane Austen Book Club

10/18
Margie’s Must Reads

10/19
Just Jane 1813

10/20
From Pemberley to Milton

10/21
Babblings of a Bookworm

10/22
Liz’s Reading Life

10/23
From Pemberley to Milton

10/24
Tomorrow is Another Day

10/25
So little time…

10/26
Austenesque Reviews

10/27
Half Agony, Half Hope

10/28
Diary of an Eccentric

10/29
A Covent Garden Gilflurt’s Guide to Life

10/30
More Agreeably Engaged


20 August 2016

Blog Tour & Review ~ Second Impressions by Amy George



Second Impressions
by Amy George


Once, Fitzwilliam Darcy and Elizabeth Bennet were foes, then tenuous friends. After Elizabeth discovers Darcy is engaged to another woman, she flees to Boston to seek solace with her cousin, the brash and worldly Emeline Poston.

When she returns to England after years spent abroad, Elizabeth must face the man who shattered her heart, and she is shocked to find the proud man she once knew drastically altered. Does she have the courage to seek out the man with whom she fell in love—whatever the cost?

Fitzwilliam Darcy has spent his days regretting what might have been and his nights being tormented by the decisions he has made. His life in tatters, he can barely face the once-respectable man in his mirror or the baby girl in Pemberley’s nursery. Now that Elizabeth has returned, will he atone for his mistakes and win her heart for good?

This alternate path reimagining of Jane Austen’s Pride & Prejudice is recommended for adult readers.



Review

Second Impressions is sweet, sensual Pride and Prejudice variation.

Darcy's been through some tough times and Lizzy is just the person that can help him through it. We also get to see Jane, Charles, Mr. Bennet, and Kitty again, as well as meet a few new cast of characters.

The book jumps from several point of views, giving you several storylines to follow, but the reader is able to keep up since they all flow together. I really loved how much Jane and Kitty have grown into their own person over the years; they've become strong individuals.

I was a little taken aback by Emeline's personality and sometimes brash behavior. I understand why she is the way she is, but she's got a big heart and cares about those she loves.

I enjoyed this book; it's fun, witty, sensual, and full of love. My heart ached for Darcy's pain, fell head over heels for Grace, admired Jane's new hobby, and adore Lizzy's compassion. This book has some twists and turns that may surprise you.



About The Author

Amy George is a middle-aged woman who hates her "old lady/grown-up" car and refuses to listen to its radio at a reasonable volume, especially when the Beastie Boys or the Violent Femmes are playing. She lives in a town in the middle of the country where the county fair is one of the biggest social events of the season and everything is fried. Her household consists of a dog, a cat, a man, a hermit, and stubborn soap scum.

She has been writing since she was a child and was a frequent contributor to the Hyacinth Gardens, a popular but defunct JAFF site.



Second Impressions Blog Tour Schedule

8/15: Review at Margie’s Must Reads
8/16: Excerpt & Giveaway at Romance Novel Giveaway
8/17: Guest Post & Giveaway at My Jane Austen Book Club
8/18: Guest Post & Giveaway at Skipping Midnight
8/19: Review at Tomorrow is Another Day
8/20: Review at Liz’s Reading Life
8/22: Excerpt & Giveaway at More Agreeably Engaged
8/23: Review at Half Agony, Half Hope
8/23: Excerpt & Giveaway at So Little Time…
8/24: Review at My Kids Led Me Back to Pride and Prejudice
8/25: Guest Post & Giveaway at From Pemberley to Milton
8/26: Review at Diary of an Eccentric
8/27: Review at Just Jane 1813
8/28: Author Interview & Giveaway at Babblings of a Bookworm


01 June 2016

Blog Tour & Giveaway ~ The Elizabeth Papers by Jenetta James



Everyone please welcome Jenetta to my little corner of the web!

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Young lovers at the ballet: art imitating life in The Elizabeth Papers

Did you ever go somewhere, or do something, and think: that needs to go in a book one day?

On a summer evening in 2004 I went to the ballet for the first time. It was a performance of Tchaikovsky’s Onegin (that is “on-yea-gin” - I didn’t know how to pronounce it at the time either) at Covent Garden in London and it completely blew my mind. What is more, I wasn’t the only one. To my right sat my boyfriend (who enjoyed it, but didn’t show any overwhelming emotion) and on my left was a little girl, who burst into tears at the conclusion of the second act, and was pretty much inconsolable for the whole of the interval. It is a seriously tragic tale with plenty of unrequited love floating about, so you can’t blame her. Truth is, I was a bit shaky myself.

I am a person who never hoards anything; but I still have the programme to this day. I was astonished by the power and passion of the dancing, and the whole thing stayed with me.

So much so, that when I found myself, ten years later, writing The Elizabeth Papers, I had my modern day characters revisit it.

The idea of The Elizabeth Papers is that it is a romance in two parts - one part Regency and one part Modern. The Regency protagonists need no introduction. They are Fitzwilliam and Elizabeth Darcy. The modern protagonists, who are called Charlie and Evie, are brought together through a quirk of history, unknown to both of them and it leads them on a quest. That quest is to find out the truth behind the marriage of Fitzwilliam and Elizabeth. It is a story within a story, a romance within a romance, with a foot in two time periods.

At a point in the modern narrative, I needed Charlie and Evie to go somewhere together, get closer to each other, and then be blown apart by the discovering by one of a fact about the other. There is, at this point, a rising sense of sexual tension, and an awful lot of unanswered questions. I like a bit of drama, so decided to do it in public and what could be more emotionally charged than having them go to see Onegin, just as I had a decade before? I hope that it works as a scene and would love to hear what people think of it.

I’d love to hear of your stories. Have you been somewhere unusual or had an experience which stayed with you and might be novel-worthy? Let the comments begin! Thank you to Liz for hosting me and The Elizabeth Papers on her excellent blog.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Thank you for stopping by Jenetta and sharing your exciting new book with us!
About The Elizabeth Papers

“It is settled between us already, that we are to be the happiest couple in the world.” —Jane Austen, Pride & Prejudice

Charlie Haywood is a London-based private investigator who has made his own fortune—on his own terms. Charming, cynical, and promiscuous, he never expected to be attracted to Evie Pemberton, an emerging and independent-minded artist living with the aftermath of tragedy. But when he is hired to investigate her claims to a one hundred and fifty year old trust belonging to the eminent Darcy family, he is captivated.

Together they become entwined in a tale of love, loss, and mystery tracing back to the grand estate of Pemberley, home to Evie’s nineteenth century ancestors, Fitzwilliam and Elizabeth Darcy.

How could Evie know that in 1817 Elizabeth Darcy began a secret journal? What started as an account of a blissful life came to reflect a growing unease. Was the Darcy marriage perfect or was there betrayal and deception at its heart?

Can Evie and Charlie unearth the truth in the letters of Fitzwilliam Darcy or within the walls of present-day Pemberley? What are the elusive Elizabeth papers and why did Elizabeth herself want them destroyed?

About The Author

Jenetta James is the nom de plume of a lawyer, writer, mother and taker-on of too much. She grew up in Cambridge and read history at Oxford University where she was a scholar and president of the Oxford University History Society. After graduating, she took to the law and now practises full time as a barrister. Over the years she has lived in France, Hungary and Trinidad as well as her native England. Jenetta currently lives in London with her husband and children where she enjoys reading, laughing and playing with Lego. Suddenly Mrs. Darcy is her first novel.

Giveaway

Check Out All The Stop On This Sensational Tour

5/30: Guest Post & Giveaway at My Jane Austen Book Club
5/31: Excerpt & Giveaway at Romance Novel Giveaways
6/1: Review at Tomorrow is Another Day
6/1: Guest Post & Giveaway at Liz’s Reading Life
6/2: Review at From Pemberley to Milton
6/3: Guest Post at Moonlight Reader
6/4: Review at Babblings of a Bookworm
6/5: Review at Just Jane 1813
6/6: Guest Post & Giveaway at Austenesque Reviews
6/7: Excerpt & Giveaway at So Little Time…
6/8: Character Interview at More Agreeably Engaged
6/9: Author Interview at Savvy Verse & Wit
6/10: Review at Diary of an Eccentric
6/10: Excerpt & Giveaway at Skipping Midnight
6/12: Review at Margie’s Must Reads
6/13: Excerpt & Giveaway at Best Sellers and Best Stellars

14 May 2016

Blog Tour & Giveaway ~ Side by Side, Apart by Ann Galvia


Side by Side, Apart
By Ann Galvia


Blurb

“You see what a strange circumstance it is,” she said, feeling some fleeting relief. “You know our acquaintance has not been easy.”

Elizabeth Bennet—stubborn, quick to judge but slow to revise her opinions, and entirely prejudiced against the man who had just proposed marriage at Hunsford—awakens to learn she has been in an accident. Bedridden in an unfamiliar house, she learns eleven years have passed since the last moment she can remember.

She finds herself a married woman, the mother of four, and pregnant yet again. Her children are strangers, and most mystifying of all, Fitzwilliam Darcy is her husband! How could she have married a man she loathes?

Confined to the house by her injury, Mr. Darcy’s company is inescapable. But is just being side by side enough to overcome their differences? What happens when Darcy, improved in manners and happily married to Mrs. Elizabeth Darcy, is faced with an obstinate, bewildered Miss Elizabeth Bennet?
Excerpt

From: Chapter Two
Darcy introduces Elizabeth to the older children

Immediately upon securing Elizabeth’s agreement, Darcy turned to the

maid. “Have Miss Weston bring the girls.” The maid curtsied and disappeared to deliver the message.

Elizabeth ran her hands over the protrusion of her belly. Eleven years they had been married. She could not imagine such a thing. How many children could she have been delivered of in eleven years? Multiple girls, clearly. It was to be hoped that she had not inherited her mother’s unfortunate inability to bear sons.

Unable to endure waiting in silence, Elizabeth asked, “How many children have we?”

“You have birthed three…” He was clearly of a mind to say more when Miss Darcy was announced.

Slight and frail with red-rimmed eyes, Miss Darcy wasted no time at all in climbing upon Elizabeth’s bed and nestling against her mother’s side. Elizabeth’s arms wound around the child of their own accord.

The girl’s voice was thick and shaking as she repeated, “Mama, Mama,” over and over again. Fearing Miss Darcy might begin to sob but unable to offer any true condolence, Elizabeth held her and cooed.

Quite unmoved by his daughter’s display, Darcy asked, “Where is Julia?”

He had said ‘girls,’ Elizabeth remembered. Two daughters and a son, then, with another babe on the way.

Miss Darcy raised her head from her mother’s shoulder, took a deep breath, and said with a carefully moderated tone, “She did not wish to come in.” Elizabeth surmised Darcy’s children to be well versed with his ill temper. Her arms tightened around the girl she held. She deserved a better mother—one who would not forget her, one who would not subject her to her father’s moods and general dislike of humanity. She certainly deserved a better father.

Mr. Darcy frowned. “What nonsense is that?”

“She said Fitzwilliam and Thomas should see Mama first.”

“Did she object to your visiting your mother?”

“No, sir.”

“Where is she now?”

“I do not know. She walked with us from the schoolroom.”

Muttering something under his breath, Darcy rose and stalked out of the room.

Elizabeth’s lips curled involuntarily into a smile. Mr. Darcy should have known that marrying her would reward him with troublesome daughters. Neither Mr. nor Miss Darcy had treated their exchange as though it were unusual. Elizabeth suspected Miss Julia gave her parents grief quite regularly.

Darcy returned with a fair-haired girl in his arms. Any resemblance between the two girls was fleeting. Miss Darcy had a dark complexion while Miss Julia was blonde and pale. Miss Darcy was almost unnaturally thin; Miss Julia was stout.

Darcy set her down and, in a tone that brooked no argument, said, “Apologise to your aunt.”

“I am sorry, Aunt Darcy,” Julia said dutifully. 
About The Author

Ann started writing sometime before she knew how letters functioned. Her first books were drawings of circus poodles heavily annotated with scribbles meant to tell a story. Upon learning how letters were combined to represent words, she started doing that instead. This has proven to be much more successful.  

Sometime after that, she decided she wanted to study Anthropology and sometime after that, she decided she liked cats more than dogs. And sometime after that, she decided to become an educator and teach a new generation of kids how to combine letters to represent words, and use those words to express ideas.

And sometime after that, she realized all she really wanted to do was write, which probably should have been evident from the beginning. 

Giveaway

Blog Tour Schedule

5/2: Guest Post & Giveaway at My Jane Austen Book Club

5/3: Review at Half Agony, Half Hope

5/4: Excerpt & Giveaway at Romance Novel Giveaways

5/5: Author Interview & Giveaway at Skipping Midnight

5/6: Review at Just Jane 1813

5/8: Guest Post & Giveaway at My Kids Led Me Back to Pride and Prejudice

5/9: Review at Diary of an Eccentric

5/10: Guest Post & Giveaway at More Agreeably Engaged

5/11: Excerpt & Giveaway at Best Sellers and Best Stellars

5/12: Guest Post & Giveaway at From Pemberley to Milton

5/13: Review at Margie’s Must Reads

5/14: Excerpt & Giveaway at Liz’s Reading Life

5/15: Review at Babblings of a Bookworm

5/16: Excerpt & Giveaway at So Little Time…

26 March 2016

Blog Tour & Giveaway ~ How To Mend A Broken Heart by L.S. Parsons


How to Mend a Broken Heart
By L.S. Parsons


Blurb

Three years after Mr. Darcy’s disastrous marriage proposal to Elizabeth Bennet, they meet again. Due to an unexpected twist of fate, Elizabeth finds herself a guest in the home of the Mr. Darcy’s aunt, the Dowager Lady Matlock. Long believing Elizabeth lost to him, Darcy has recently proposed marriage to an old flame, the widow of his friend. Now newly engaged Darcy encounters Elizabeth again and realizes she still owns his heart.

Although bound by honour to another, Darcy sets out to improve Elizabeth’s opinion of him. Tension mounts between Darcy and Elizabeth in that pursuit, and Darcy’s betrothed begins to see Elizabeth as a threat to her upcoming marriage. How will Darcy and Elizabeth ever reach their happily ever after? 

How to Mend a Broken Heart is a non-canon variation of Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice and is intended for mature readers.

Excerpt

Elizabeth smiled at him with an eyebrow arched and a twinkle in her eye. “Mr. Darcy, I am all astonishment! I was under that impression you disliked the art. While I would be pleased to accept your request, I would not wish to force you to do something contrary to your inclination.” Looking up, she challenged him to defend himself.

Ah! Here is the Elizabeth I love so well, expressing those opinions we both know she does not possess. “Miss Bennet, it is not dancing that disinclines me to the activity but my partner. I am very amenable to dancing with the right partner. I believe I have proven that to you before. I remember us having shared a dance, and I distinctly recall no toes were stepped upon,” he replied, smiling.

“You are correct on that point, but if memory serves, it was the conversation to be had during that particular dance which was in definite need of improvement. Have you improved your conversational skills since then, sir?”

“I would hope so, but you will need to accept my request for a dance to find out the truth.” He loved bantering with Elizabeth. Her good-natured teasing was a sign that he was now in her favour.

“With the incentive of seeing the taciturn Mr. Darcy become verbose, how can I decline?” She smiled sweetly.
Author Bio

L.S. Parsons recently retired from a major computer company where she was employed as an Information Technology Specialist. She lives with her husband of 30 + years in the DFW area of Texas. They have one dog. She has been writing Pride and Prejudice fan fiction for over ten years, mainly as a hobby.

How to Mend a Broken Heart Blog Tour Schedule

3/21: Guest Post & Giveaway at My Jane Austen Book Club
3/22: Excerpt & Giveaway at Romance Novel Giveaways
3/23: Review at Margie’s Must Reads
3/24: Excerpt & Giveaway at Best Sellers and Best Stellars
3/25: Guest Post & Giveaway at Skipping Midnight
3/26: Review at From Milton to Pemberley
3/26: Excerpt & Giveaway at Liz’s Reading Life
3/27: Guest Post & Giveaway at Babblings of A Bookworm
3/28: Excerpt & Giveaway at More Agreeably Engaged
3/29: Review at Half Agony, Half Hope
3/30: Review at Just Jane 1813
3/31: Guest Post & Giveaway at So Little Time…
4/1: Guest Post & Giveaway at Austenesque Reviews
4/1: Review at Tomorrow is Another Day
4/3: Excerpt & Giveaway at Jennifer Vido
4/4: Review at Diary of an Eccentric
Giveaway


14 February 2016

Blog Tour & Giveaway ~ A Little Whimsical In His Civilities By J. Marie Croft



Please welcome J. Marie Croft!

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Thanks, Liz, for allowing me to contribute to your Reading Life.

Like Liz’s banner up there says, “The person, be it gentleman or lady, who has not pleasure in a good novel or film, must be intolerably stupid.”

Okay, so Jane Austen never mentioned film, but her novels have been adapted to screens big and small for over 75 years. Clueless (1995) is a romantic comedy loosely based on Emma. The following year, Gwyneth Paltrow starred in a theatrical film adaptation of the same novel.

Right now, you can probably see Pride and Prejudice and Zombies at your local cinema. Back in 2005, Keira Knightley and Matthew Macfadyen starred in Pride and Prejudice on the big screen. But it was the 1995 BBC six-episode television dramatization of that novel that made a huge impact on my life.

My love of Austen came later than for most other fans of her work, and it came about in a roundabout way. Namely, curiosity about the fuss over Bridget Jones’s Diary (2001) starring Renée Zellweger, Colin Firth, and Hugh Grant. Colin Firth! He’s responsible for sparking my Jane Austen obsession. His Mark Darcy led me to his Mr. Darcy. Which led to Austen’s novels. Which led to Jane Austen fan fiction. Which led to writing what I call ‘Regency romantic comedies’.

According to Wikipedia, romantic comedies are: … films with light-hearted, humorous plot lines, centered on romantic ideals such as that true love is able to surmount most obstacles. In a typical romantic comedy the two lovers tend to be young, likable, and apparently meant for each other, yet they are kept apart by some complicating circumstance (e.g., class differences, parental interference, a previous girlfriend or boyfriend) until, surmounting all obstacles, they are finally wed. A wedding-bells, fairy-tale-style happy ending is practically mandatory.

My light-hearted novella, A Little Whimsical in His Civilities, takes place one moonlit night in 1812 and is told from the gentleman’s point of view. Attempts to dance and talk with his ladylove are foiled by others. Then, when he does get her alone, he has trouble expressing himself. It all turns out well, though.

Humour, complications, and a happily-ever-after ... yep, ‘Regency Rom Com’. That’s my story, and I’m sticking to it. But, just like Jane Austen’s novels, my stories have no steamy sex scenes. Sorry to disappoint. Characters may be allowed to steal a kiss, though, which is further than Austen dared.

I prefer the old-fashioned kind of romantic comedy – such as those starring Rock Hudson and Doris Day or Katherine Hepburn and Spencer Tracy or, much later, Meg Ryan and Tom Hanks.

In honour of Valentine’s Day, and in no particular order (except the first film, which is my all-time favourite in the genre), I’ve listed my top five rom coms. Colin Firth is in three of them. Coincidence? I think not. The other two have the late Audrey Hepburn in common.



J. Marie Croft’s Top 5 Romantic Comedies

Love Actually (2003)



The Importance of Being Earnest (2002)




Algernon (Rupert Everett): “I really don't see what is so romantic about proposing. One may be accepted - one usually is, I believe - and then the excitement is ended. The very essence of romance is uncertainty.”

 Bridget Jones’s Diary (2001)




Sabrina (1954)




Linus Larrabee (Humphrey Bogart): How do you say in French my sister has a yellow pencil?
Sabrina Fairchild (Audrey Hepburn): Ma soeur a un crayon jaune.
Linus: How do you say my brother has a lovely girl?
Sabrina: Mon frère a une gentille petite amie.
Linus: And how do you say I wish I were my brother?
  
Roman Holiday (1953)




Princess Ann (Audrey Hepburn): “At midnight, I'll turn into a pumpkin and drive away in my glass slipper.”
Joe Bradley (Gregory Peck): “And that will be the end of the fairy tale.”


So, what are your favourite rom coms?


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A huge thanks to J. Marie Croft for visiting with us today! Those are some fabulous movies, indeed. Personally, I would have to add You've Got Mail and Breakfast At Tiffany's to the list.

Congrats on your new release. I look forward to reading A Little Whimsical In His Civilities


A Little Whimsical in His Civilities
by J. Marie Croft

Blurb

Told entirely from Fitzwilliam Darcy’s point of view, J. Marie Croft’s humorous novella, A Little Whimsical in His Civilities, spans one moonlit, autumnal night upon the gentleman’s return to Hertfordshire in pursuit of Elizabeth Bennet.

“We take the turning which places us on Meryton’s main road, and—oh, gad! There it is—the base-court building which passes for an assembly hall in this godforsaken place. For me, the venue shall be either a heaven or a hell tonight. My palms grow clammy, my gut churns, and I regret that second helping of onion-laden vegetable pie forced on me before we left.”

Accompany Darcy as he, intent on reversing the disastrous first impression he made there, braves another Meryton assembly and seeks to win his heart’s desire.

Purchase A Little Whimsical in His Civilities


Author Bio

J. Marie Croft is a self-proclaimed word nerd and adherent of Jane Austen’s quote “Let other pens dwell on guilt and misery”. Her light-hearted novel, Love at First Slight (Meryton Press, 2013), her humorous short story, Spyglasses and Sunburns, in the Sun-Kissed: Effusions of Summer anthology (Meryton Press, 2015), and her novella, A Little Whimsical in His Civilities (Meryton Press, 2016) bear witness to Joanne’s fondness for Pride and Prejudice, wordplay, and laughter.

Links

Blog Tour Schedule

2/8: Excerpt & Giveaway at My Jane Austen Book Club
2/9: Guest Post & Giveaway at Moonlight Reader
2/10: Review at Tomorrow is Another Day
2/11: Guest Post & Giveaway at So Little Time…
2/12: Excerpt at My Love for Jane Austen
2/13: Excerpt & Giveaway at More Agreeably Engaged
2/14: Guest Post & Giveaway at Liz’s Reading Life
2/15: Guest Post & Giveaway at From Pemberley to Milton
2/16: Review at Just Jane 1813
2/17: Review at Half Agony, Half Hope
2/18: Review at Margie’s Must Reads
2/19: Excerpt & Giveaway at Best Sellers and Best Stellars
2/20:  Guest Post & Giveaway at Skipping Midnight
2/21: Guest Post & Giveaway at Babblings of a Bookworm
2/22: Guest Post & Giveaway at My Kids Led Me Back to Pride and Prejudice