Here I am with a new awesome book recommendation, an Austen-inspired murder mystery novel perfect for you, in which a summer house party turns into a thrilling whodunit when Jane Austen's Mr. Wickham—one of literature’s most notorious villains—meets a sudden and suspicious end. Scroll down and enjoy discovering more about Claudia Gray's The Murder of Mr Wickham! MG
BOOK DESCRIPTION
ADVANCE PRAISE
“Had Jane Austen sat down to write a country house murder mystery,
this is exactly the book she would have written. Devotees of Austen’s timeless
novels will get the greatest possible pleasure from this wonderful book.
Immense fun and beautifully observed. Delicious!” —Alexander
McCall Smith
“What a splendid conceit! . . . Gray provides plenty of backstory and
enough depth to her characters that even those who mix up their Pride
and Prejudice with their Sense and Sensibility will
delight in the Agatha Christie–style mystery. . . . There’s so much fun to
be had in this reimagined Austen world—and the mystery is so strong—that one
can only hope, dear reader, that more books will follow.” —Ilene
Cooper, Booklist (starred review)
(from The Murder of Mr. Wickham, by Claudia Gray)
Chapter
Two
Three
times now, Fitzwilliam Darcy had believed himself permanently rid of the odious
presence of George Wickham. Three times, he’d been wrong. The division eight
months ago had seemed as though it had to be final, but no. Fate could be
pernicious.
“Ah,”
Wickham said, strolling forward. “I see my timing is inopportune. In the city,
you see, the fashion is for later dinners.”
Knightley
stood, pale and drawn. He looked as though he loathed Wickham as much as Darcy
did. “You would not have been invited at any hour.”
Wickham’s
smile widened. Somehow, in the heart of a confrontation, the man managed to
seem even more at ease. “If I waited for an invitation to receive that which is
mine in right of law—yes, Mr. Knightley, I imagine my wait would be very long.”
Knightley’s
lips pressed together. Emma’s face had flushed with ill-repressed anger. Nor
were they the only persons agitated at the table: Wentworth’s expression was
dark, and his wife had tensed, as though she expected to have to fly from her
chair to hold him back. Worst of all was dear Elizabeth, frozen like ice in her
seat; her fingers were wrapped tightly around the hilt of her dinner knife.
Jonathan’s distrust of his uncle clearly warred with his concern for his
mother.
As for the
Brandons, the Bertrams, and the young Miss Tilney: they each appeared deeply
confused by the sudden, severe
deviation from common civility. Therefore, none of them had ever met George
Wickham before. Darcy envied them the privilege.
A loud clap of thunder rumbled
through the air, the house, the ground itself. In the next instant, raindrops
began to pelt the windows and ground, striking the windowpanes until they
rattled.
Darcy could’ve cursed aloud. To
judge by the hoofbeats he’d heard outside earlier, Wickham had arrived on
horseback rather than by carriage, and not even the most odious company would
be thrown out in such weather. Particularly in such hilly country as this
corner of Surrey—to attempt to ride in a severe thunderstorm risked the health
and nerves of one’s horse, and even one’s life.
Wickham raised an eyebrow, as aware
as anyone of the etiquette that imprisoned his hosts. “It seems I shall be
staying for a while.”
“I fear we
cannot accommodate you at the table, Mr. Wickham.” Mrs. Knightley pushed her
chair back as abruptly as an ill-mannered child. Jonathan would’ve been scolded
for less, as a boy. She said, “Allow me to get you settled, and the servants
will bring something up to you for dinner.” With that she strode out of the
room. After a moment, Wickham inclined his head to the table—an ironical half
bow—then followed her.
Had she done the right thing? The
normal rules could not apply to such a situation as this. Jonathan would’ve
resolved to ask his parents later had they not appeared so stricken. No, he
would be left to interpret this for himself.
A silence followed, empty of words
and yet suffocatingly heavy. Finally, Knightley cleared his throat. “My dear
guests, I must beg your pardon. The gentleman who has arrived is . . .
no friend to this household. Yet there are matters between us that must be
resolved.”
“He seemed insolent in the extreme,”
said Mrs. Brandon, astonishingly forthright. “What a disagreeable person.”
In any other circumstances,
Jonathan might’ve found such a pronouncement rude; tonight, people seemed freed
to speak their thoughts—and to the whole table, at that. Understandable,
perhaps, but in his opinion it set a dangerous precedent.
“George Wickham is indeed disagreeable,”
Knightley agreed, “however skilled he is at pretending otherwise.”
Brandon spoke for the first time at
dinner. “Did you say—Mr. George Wickham?”
Knightley nodded. “A former army
officer, who now fancies himself an arranger of investments. Bah! Investments
that work to his own gain and everyone else’s loss.”
“Certainly to ours,” Wentworth
said, his voice hollow.
Jonathan saw Mrs. Wentworth wince.
But she rallied swiftly, turning to
Darcy and asking very civilly, “How are you acquainted with Mr. Wickham, sir?”
“We grew up together in Derbyshire,”
Darcy said. Brandon’s fork clattered against the dinner plate. Jonathan
wondered—How could anyone continue eating at such a time? “He was the
son of my late father’s steward. As adults, our ways parted for many years.”
To his surprise, it was Mother who
spoke next. “Then Mr. Wickham married my sister Lydia.”
And Lydia and George Wickham had
had a daughter.
For a moment, Jonathan remembered
Susannah so vividly that she might’ve been sitting at his side, giggling as she
so often did, dark curls framing her round, smiling face. To him, she had been
more sister than cousin. To his parents, Susannah had been more daughter than
niece. He knew himself and his brothers to be dearly loved, but he knew also
that for many years his mother and father had longed for a little girl that
never came.
Then, eight years ago, Susannah had
been born—the belated first and only child of his aunt and uncle. Neither Aunt
Lydia nor Uncle George had possessed much interest in the daily tedium of
child-rearing; as soon as Susannah had left her wet nurse, she had been packed
off to Pemberley for lengthy visits. Indeed, Susannah had spent far more of her
short life in his home than she ever had with her parents. This suited
everyone: Mother and Father, who doted on the child; Jonathan and his brothers,
who were old enough to find her odd little ways amusing rather than irritating;
Aunt Lydia and Uncle George, who showed no evidence of ever missing their daughter;
and Susannah herself, who wept piteously before each of her journeys home and
always ran back into Pemberley as fast as her small legs would bear her.
She would never run through the
doors again.
Excerpt courtesy of Vintage Books, A Division of Penguin Random House LLC, New York. Copyright © 2022 by Claudia Gray. All rights reserved
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ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Claudia Gray is the pseudonym of Amy
Vincent. She is the writer of multiple young adult novels, including the
Evernight series, the Firebird trilogy, and the Constellation trilogy. In
addition, she’s written several Star Wars novels, such
as Lost Stars and Bloodline. She makes her home in
New Orleans with her husband Paul and assorted small dogs.
WEBSITE |TWITTER | FACEBOOK | INSTAGRAM | BOOKBUB |GOODREADS
6 comments:
I enjoyed the mystery
Thanks for sharing, Maria. It was fun to have many of Austen's main characters together at a house party. I hope the author continues the story of Jonathan & Juliet.
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