Wednesday, 13 October 2010

THE PHANTOM OF PEMBERLEY - GIVEAWAY WINNERS


Hello, everybody! This is a crazy week for me but I didn't want to disappoint the many commenters waiting to discover if  they were the lucky winners of this week's giveaway. Regina Jeffers has kindly granted you, readers of My Jane Austen Book Club 2 signed copies of her The Phantom of Pemberley. Have you read her interview and left your comment? Here we go then!

Winner n. 1 TERIE

Winner n. 2 LUTHIEN84

Congratulations to both of  you! Enjoy your new Austenesque reading. 
Many thanks to Regina Jeffers for her interesting contribute, her generosity and for actively taking part in the discussion which followed her interview! 

Saturday, 9 October 2010

MR DARCY'S LITTLE SISTER by C. ALLYN PIERSON -A REVIEW

In this witty sequel to Pride and Prejudice, Mr Darcy's Little Sister, Georgiana Darcy takes centre stage. Her excessive timidity complicates her life; her self-confidence, mined by her misadventure with Mr Wickham, hasn't healed yet. She grows up in pursuit of true love and happiness but doesn't dare open her heart , neither to her beloved sister-in-law, Elizabeth Bennet, who now lives with her and Darcy. She wants to find a love that is every bit as true as Elizabeth and Darcy's.  Georgiana is quite disappointed by the fact that everybody around her goes on seeing and treating her as a little girl, especially her guardian and cousin, Colonel Fitzwilliam. She's 17 and is going to debut in society.
 However, the key moment in her personal story is her kidnapping by a rejected suitor. During her captivity, she discovers that love is closer than she thinks,  that she has the strength and skills to face life. Once she's free and back home she only has to convince the man she loves that she is no longer a fearful child but a passionate woman.

The Darcys
Apart from Georgiana's growin-up and formation, what I liked in this novel was the analysis of how high society reacted to Darcy's marriage to Elizabeth. The social ostracism Ms Pierson describes and which the lovely couple bravely face is something I had never thought about. 
Elizabeth as Mrs Darcy gives wry and insightful advice to Georgiana revealing herself less impulsive and more mature. Darcy is an amiable character, a loving brother and husband. I'd have loved to have him more under the spotlight in this story.

Lord Byron

 Lord Byron as a character was a pleasant surprise.
Elizabeth: " He is a talented poet, but he would be very uncomfortable to be around much. Those glimlet eyes of hisare quite disconcerting. I was rather surprised at how smallhe is - I somehow expected a reputed roué such as him to have a more impressive figure".  (p. 96)
G.G. Byron, sixth Baron Byron, was one of the major poets of the Romantic period, which included the years of the Regency. In spite of his slight stature and a limp, he was notorious for his dissolute lifestyle and numerous affairs. After their breakup, Lady Caroline Lamb defined him as "mad, bad dangerous to know".

C. Allyn Pierson picks up the story in Pride and Prejudice as the  two elder Bennet sisters , Jane and Elizabeth, prepare for their marriages to Bingley and Darcy but the plot develops through letters, diary pages and 3rd-person narration around Georgiana's fighting to find her place in the world. 
Ms Pierson has a deft understanding of Austen literary style, Regency history and social customs and has already sold more than 1,500 copies of the 1st version of this novel titled "And This is Our Life".
C. Allyn Pierson is the nom-de-plume of a physician who has combinedher many years of interest in the works of Jane  Austen and Regency englandinto his delightfulsequel published by Sourcebooks Landmark, the leading publisher of Austen-related literature.


Read my interview with C. Allyn Pierson ( Part I & Part II)

This is one of my tasks for The Jane Austen is My Homegirl Reading Challenge


Thursday, 7 October 2010

TALKING JANE AUSTEN WITH REGINA JEFFERS + DOUBLE GIVEAWAY


Writing passionately comes easily to Regina Jeffers. A master teacher, for thirty-nine years, she passionately taught thousands of students English in the public schools of West Virginia, Ohio, and North Carolina. Yet, “teacher” does not define her as a person. Ask any of her students or her family, and they will tell you Regina is passionate about so many things: her son, children in need, truth, responsibility, the value of a good education, words, music, dance, the theatre, pro football, classic movies, the BBC, track and field, books, books, and more books. Holding multiple degrees, Jeffers often serves as a Language Arts or Media Literacy consultant to surrounding school districts and has served on several state and national educational commissions. 

Could I miss a Talking Jane Austen session with such  an extraordinary Janeite? Being a teacher myself and loving many of the things she loves, I invited Regina Jeffers and she accepted!!!
Read our chat below and two of you will have the chance to win her latest release. 

YES!!! DOUBLE GIVEAWAY OF
THE PHANTOM OF PEMBERLEY. 

The Phantom of Pemberley was awarded 3rd place in Romantic Suspense in the 5th Annual Dixie Kane Memorial Contest, sponsored by the Southern Louisiana Romance Writers of America.
 Don't miss the chance! Leave your comment and your e-mail address. The giveaway is open internationally. Winners will be announced next Wednesday October 13th.

I’m always so glad when I find a great fan of Jane Austen and her works. Then, if she happens to be a teacher of English, as well as a period drama lover, I become very curious about her. We share so much that I have to discover more than this first evident affinity between us. So, my first question is linked to my job, which is also your former one. Have you taught Jane Austen and what do you think young people can learn from her?

I taught Jane Austen’s Persuasion or Pride and Prejudice at least once each semester for the past seven years. Before that I was in a middle school classroom for fifteen years. I spent forty years in the public schools of three different states.
Obviously, Austen’s novels serve as a transition between the 18th and19th centuries and between neoclassicism and romanticism and should be taught for that reason. In a modern classroom, we must emphasize the fact that England during Austen’s time had not embraced the Industrial Revolution. No railroads, few newspapers, no mass communications. What about the Napoleonic War? It had existed for twenty years, and the news of its progression was slow to permeate the country homes in which the populace lived. Quite simply, Austen wrote of what she knew. Austen’s novels reflect her rural and Anglican upbringing. Daniel Cottam in his “The Civilized Imagination: A Study of Ann Radcliffe, Jane Austen, and Sir Walter Scott” says that Austen subordinates the idea of marriage’s significance between individuals – rather emphasizing its significance between families. However, to convince a student in 2010 to read Austen is not easy. Like her, he has no experience – no knowledge – of Austen’s time. As she could not conceive modern ways, our youth lack a “speaking knowledge” of Austen’s time, so that is where I always began my lessons. Students must recognize the “connective tissues” between  their current lifestyles and the past. It is not simply a nostalgic look at a “quieter time.” Students must comprehend their relations to the past and to a rapidly changing present.
I always taught my students the nuances of courtship, the lack of women’s rights, the business of marriage, a gentleman’s responsibilities, the social strata, an emphasis on morality, the significance of letter writing, the importance of dancing, the definition of an “accomplished” woman, primogeniture, etc., before we read the novels. We examined the characters’ inner lives through chosen passages, but, more importantly, we look at themes. For example, look at the repetition of “first impressions” as a theme in Pride and Prejudice. Where do we, as readers, first see Elizabeth? What is our first impression of our heroine? Of Darcy? Of Wickham? Do these first impressions hold true or are they somehow inconsistent? It is Austen’s intrinsic structure, which holds the story together.

Great, Regina! Thanks a lot! What precious suggestions! Now the most difficult task . I’ve asked this same question to other Janeites. Are there any tricks to convince boys to read Jane Austen’s novels? Not such an easy task to me with my male students.
I preferred a practical way to include what the students had learned by correlating that knowledge with modern cross-marketing tie-ins. I provide examples of the industry, which has developed around the social phenomenon known as Jane Austen: film/TV adaptations of Austen’s novels, house remodeling to capture a Regency style, action figures, “sequels” or “variation” novels, tourism to Austen-related places, music by which to read Jane Austen, sound tracks, Websites, tea houses, etc. Then in small groups the students develop their own creative tie-ins. Young men need to move beyond the concept that Jane Austen is a spinster who wrote simple love stories. Trying to come up with a “sales” plan forces them to see what has made Austen unique in the literary world.

Why do you think mash-ups of JA’s world and others have been so successful: JA and vampires, monsters or murder mysteries have started a new popular trend. What is you opinion on this matter?
When I first became aware of the term “mashup,” I automatically thought of the music industry with its remixes and creative imaginings of oldies and the classics. By definition, a “mashup” is creating a new entity from two or more unrelated sources. Although some believe this subgenre has hit its peak, mashups still garner a mysterious chunk of the market. That fact probably lies in the reality that a reader of paranormal would find mixing a Jane Austen classic with vampires intriguing. Many authors are finding a new market, whether they write science fiction, fantasy, paranormal, mystery, or humor. Recently, we have seen mixes of William Shakespeare, Mark Twain, Leo Tolstoy, and Louisa May Alcott. It is not just Jane Austen. There is a crossover appeal, very much like the steampunk genre. Think about Hemingway or Flaubert or F. Scott Fitzgerald; there are endless possibilities because the past is always in the process of being reinvented.
Is Jane Austen spinning in her grave because of all the sequels, variations, and mashups? Maybe, because I write the genre, I do not believe so. Austen wrote in an era when women could not openly express their imaginations without censure. We must not forget that Austen loved stories of all kinds, as well as a bit of gossip and scandal (so noted in her letters), and she possessed a “twisted” sense of humor. In the movie Becoming Jane, Anne Hathaway refers to it as “ironical.”
Vampire stories welcome anachronism. They are striking examples of the juxtaposition of past and present. Vampire stories of old were sources of terror, but contemporary vampirism is seen as desire. They are female-centered narratives, containing a powerful love that transcends the limits place upon it. In a world after the World Trade Center disaster, we are less likely to make heroes out of those who hide their thoughts and feelings; so recent vampires must become infinitely more human. I mean, let’s face it, unless one is a vampire, there are no longer impediments to marriage. Today, Las Vegas is our Gretna Greene. Vampires who are sympathetic to humans, but whose goal is a relationship and respect are all the rage. As the majority of the readers of vampire literature are women, some believe it is a post-feminist way of taking on power: Women standing up and demanding respect. There is an allure of the forbidden, and the virtue of the individual prevails as a major theme. Now, look back at each of the underlined phrases. Are they not part of Austen’s Pride and Prejudice?
Jane Austen’s works lend themselves easily to a “cozy” mystery because a cozy’s setting is generally a country house or a small town, and the characters simply wish to return to their former peaceful lives. A domestic crime is normally the basis of the story, and a clever amateur “detective” usually solves it. It was Colonel Mustard in the library with the candlestick! A cozy focuses on the mental aspects of solving the crime. It is a well-developed puzzle with all the pieces fitting together at the end.
So, why is Austen so easy to adapt to these subgenres? I would say because her works allow modern authors to insert their ideas into Austen’s point of view. Jane Austen was a forward-looking writer, who wrote thematic masterpieces. Although she writes intriguing characters, Austen’s strength lies in how the theme permeates every word. And is it fair to parody Austen? We must remember that the Lady wrote her own parody of Ann Radcliffe’s The Mysteries of Udolpho
I love period drama and it seems you are going to post regularly about Austen adaptations on www.Austenauthors.com Any favorite ones among the Austen adaptations? What about period drama in general?
Period dramas allow the viewer to explore what we were, what we are, and what we what to be. They are life stories. Jane Austen’s works are readily adapted to the screen because the subject matter/themes are universal: marriage and social pressure. Austen proves ordinary life is interesting.

Among the Austen offerings, I have spent more time analyzing the modern adaptations. In fact, on October 20, I shall be discussing “The Making of Darcy” in the 1995 BBC series on the AustenAuthors website. I taught media literacy for many years, and I love to look at the less obvious in the filming. In teaching Pride and Prejudice, I used both the 1995 Colin Firth/Jennifer Ehle version, as well as the 2005 Matthew Macfadyen/Keira Knightley adaptation. For Persuasion, I have used both the 1995 and 2007 films. Realizing each director has his own agenda, I refused to compare and contrast the films, but instead taught my students to look at how the story is told visually. For example, in the 2005 Pride and Prejudice film, we join Elizabeth in a bit of voyeurism. We are always “looking in” on the family – through windows and partially closed doors and through the camera’s lens.


For period drama, in general, the recent films The Young Victoria, Mrs. Pettigrew Lives for a Day, and Brideshead Revisited spring to mind. Others I watch regularly include Atonement, Vanity Fair, Von Ryan’s Express, Enchanted April, The Golden Bowl, Amazing Grace, The Ideal Husband, The House of Mirth, Jane Eyre, The Duchess, and Little Dorrit. The list could go on forever.

Oh! I love all of them! I've got a huge DVD collection, you know. But we have to stick to our main concern here at  Talking Jane Austen. When did you discover Jane's world ? Has your approach to her work changed in time?
I first met Jane Austen when I was twelve. My mother, a voracious reader, encouraged me to read the classics, and Pride and Prejudice was my first Austen novel. In it, I discovered a balm for all that beset a too tall, too skinny, and too smart pre-teen. I found Mr. Darcy, who set aside his flawed impressions of Elizabeth Bennet to know true love, a heady idea for a hormonally-challenged girl with a “Cinderella” complex. Needles to say, I was hooked for life. For years, I have studied Jane Austen in meticulous detail for my own enjoyment and in order to teach my students. Jane has been my most faithful companion for as long as I can remember. Her works taught me the value of courtesy and of manners and of intelligence, with an ironic take on society that is delivered in a supportive sisterly voice.

When did you start writing? How did it come about?
My journey as an author has been of short duration. In 2007, a student in my Advanced Placement English Language and Composition class challenged me. He said, “If you know all this, why do you not do it yourself?” For the next three months, I frantically wrote Pride and Prejudice from Mr. Darcy’s point of view. With the help of a friend, I self-published Darcy’s Passions. I held no expectations for it beyond it being a “gift” to my class, a way of saying I met your challenge, now you must meet mine. I even had one of the students draw the cover. However, it rose quickly on the Amazon sales list, and Ulysses Press contacted me about publishing the book. The rest is history. I recently released my ninth book, The Phantom of Pemberley.
What books do you usually read? What is there on your nightstand at the moment?
I am a very eclectic reader. On my nightstand, one might find books such as Ken Follet’s Pillars of the Earth, Tom Stoppard’s The Coast of Utopia, Matthew Pearl’s The Dante Club, Jim Fergus’s One Thousand White Women, Thornton Wilder’s The Bridge of San Luis Rey, and many, many historical romances.
As for  Mr. Darcy in your latest work, fill in the blank: In the “The Phantom of Pemberley,” Darcy is………
Darcy is complicated. He still remains the powerful charismatic Master of Pemberley, but with Elizabeth, he has achieved contentment in his life.
And what about your Elizabeth?
Elizabeth is relatable, with her own quirks and flaws. She fulfills the archetypal role, while establishing her independence.
Are you more Elizabeth or more Anne Elliot?
Whenever I take one of those popular quizzes on the various Jane Austen websites, I am always Elizabeth Bennet. I suspect it is because of my biting wit, a streak of independence, and an above average intelligence, and we have already established my love of reading.
However, my life is more like Anne Elliot. I have yet to find my “Mr. Darcy,” although for some time I thought a former love might be my “Captain Wentworth.” But it was not the right time. “All the privilege I claim for my own sex . . . is that of loving longest, when existence or when hope is gone.” (Vol. 2, Chapter 11, Persuasion)

Jane Austen’s fame has grown so much since her death and being part of a huge community of Janeites on line, I was wondering, do you haven any idea of the reasons for such a growing, long-lasting popularity?
Austen writes romance with biting humor, and let’s face it: Readers admire a well-written love story because it speaks to our potential and validates our existence. With delving insights, Austen expertly creates plot-driven fiction, which branches out like a broccoli stem; and although she writes truly memorable characters, Austen’s stories are built around a central truism, and as readers, we honor such universal truths.
Which one of your books do you imagine perfect for a screen version? Why? Any ideas for the casting?
This is the most difficult question for me. I minored in theatre in college and have trained students in theatre and dance. When I write, the manuscript plays in my head like a film. I stop and rewind a scene, not going, as it should, making edits before I ever put pen to paper. Therefore, I have always felt each of the books could be easily adapted to a screenplay.
Captain Wentworth’s Persuasion and Darcy’s Temptation contain several action scenes, which could be translated to the screen. Vampire Darcy’s Desire contains a wonderful fight scene at the book’s end, and I have numerous fans, who would encourage me to choose this one. They are praying for a sequel. The Phantom of Pemberley would be more challenging for the filmmaker to not betray the secret until the ending.
In reality, Darcy’s Temptation is my favorite because I took Austen’s original concept and gave it a “good shaking.” Darcy loses his memory through a freak accident, and because Elizabeth is his wife, he must learn to love her again. Georgiana also claims love in this one, but her adventure is set against the backdrop of the Abolitionist movement. The novel was a finalist for The Booksellers’ Best Award.
For casting of the male roles of Darcy, Colonel Fitzwilliam, Chadwick Harrison, and Clayton Ashford, I would settle for Matthew Goode, Hugh Dancy, Henry Cavill, Alex O’Loughlin, Eddie Redmayne, Jonathan Rhys Meyers, or James McAvoy. I am not a greedy person. Any of these will do quite well.
For the main female roles of Elizabeth, Kitty, and Georgiana, I might suggest Hayley Atwell, Reese Witherspoon, Amy Adams, Emily Blunt, and Amanda Seyfried.
So far and so often, the final task for your fellow writers has been to convince our readers to read their latest publication. Do you mind doing the same for your  The Phantom at Pemberley, you’ve got to use less than 50 words?
Happily married, the Darcys never expect tragedy, but a snowstorm strands a strange guest mix at Pemberley. When accidents and deaths plague the manor, everyone suspects a Shadow Man, a mysterious phantom. With a house full of possible culprits, the Darcys must unravel the murderer’s identity before it’s too late.
Did you change the fate of any P & P character in your book?
The Phantom of Pemberley changes Anne de Bourgh’s fate. I had addressed her previously in Darcy’s Temptation, but I despised the character rather than feeling sympathy for her. After all, Anne is well on the shelf by Regency standards. She has spent her life believing Lady Catherine’s mandate that Anne is to marry Darcy, but when Darcy marries Elizabeth instead, where does that leave Anne? She has never had a suitor, never experienced a Season, and has never had a friend. Anne has lived her life under her mother’s censure. I decided Anne would attempt a break from Lady Catherine and would “look for love in all the wrong places.” For the first time since Lady Catherine’s scalding condemnation of Darcy’s marriage, Anne’s impetuous decision brings Lady Catherine and her daughter to Pemberley, where true love waits in the most unsuspecting form. 
How different is the beloved couple from the original Austen characters?
As far as Darcy and Elizabeth are concerned in The Phantom of Pemberley, they are more committed to each other than ever before. They have built a trusting and complementary relationship. But, they have been married a year, and I allowed them some sexual desire. I do not write torrid love scenes, but an heir for Pemberley would be expected, and I am of a romantic nature and would think Darcy would share Elizabeth’s bed rather than to sleep in the master’s bedroom. My love scenes are more like the ones we saw in older films, where the door closes and the viewer knows what comes next. However, a so-called “Purist” might criticize the rendering, although I see nothing untoward about a man and a woman expressing their love for each other.
What is there next? After The Phantom of Pemberley, I mean.

In the spring of 2011, Ulysses Press will release my first Regency romance entitled The Scandal of Lady Eleanor. It is designed to be the first in a 5-part series about a covert group known as the Realm. Books 2 and 3 in the series are finished and are awaiting editing. I am honored that Ulysses is taking a chance on me. It is the first time they have ventured into the romance genre.
We have also discussed another Austen mystery. My readers would like a sequel to Captain Wentworth’s Persuasion and to Vampire Darcy’s Desire. Both were left open for a continuation of the story line. I am also hoping for a collection of novellas, which continue the stories of some of the minor characters in my novels. “His Irish Eve” resolves the story of Adam Lawrence from The Phantom of Pemberley, and “His American Heartsong” tells of Lawrence Lowery from the Realm series. A third novella will address a female character, and the collection will be entitled His and Hers.


Thank you, Regina, for taking the time to answer my questions! Good luck with your The Phantom of Pemberley !

Wednesday, 6 October 2010

ABIGAIL REYNOLDS'S MR DARCY'S OBSESSION - GIVEAWAY WINNER


Just a quick post to inform you about the result of the draw ( I used http://www.random.org/) of the name of a lucky winner for Abigail Reynolds's MR DARCY'S OBSESSION. I must thank Abigail Reynolds for her kindness, of course, but many thanks go also to Sourcebooks, her publishers,  for granting us this free copy of her lovely novel.
Now, my congratulations to ...
Inspired Kathy

who is the winner this time!!! For all the others there will be new giveaways soon starting from tomorrow. Regina Jeffers will be my guest on "Talking Jane Austen with ..." and commenters will have the chance to win 2 signed copies of her latest austenesque mystery novel : The Phantom of Pemberley. Stay tuned. 

Tuesday, 5 October 2010

LOST IN AUSTEN - A RE-WATCHING FOR MY EVERYTHING AUSTEN CHALLENGE II

I had seen it just once, in 2008, and I had liked it so much I imagined I'd see it many times more. But I didn't. So,  when I was choosing my tasks for the Everything Austen II,  I added  " re-watching Lost in Austen!" , also because I had never written about it.
This 4-part series was a deligthful experiment carried out  by ITV which proposed I humorous outlook on Jane Austen's Pride & Prejudice, a nonsensical but so respectful parody ! I don't know if you can agree with me,  but I've never been so amused at watching or reading something Austen-based. I found comedy in Lost in Austen brilliant, especially in its new portrayals of our beloved characters: for instance,  I found  LIA Mr and Mrs Bennets, Bingley and  Mr Collins   amusing, funny,  hilarious. For the first time I could sympathize with George Wickham and even Lady De Bourgh wasn't so terrible.
It is not something for Austen purists, but I appreciated the intelligent parodic tone and the brilliant nonsensical farce.
Darcy and the Bingleys in Lost in Austen
Amanda dances with Darcys
Elizabeth Bennet,  from whose point of view we learn most of the story in Pride and  Prejudice, is almost absent in this series: she swaps life with Amanda Price, a tenacious fan of P&P, an unsatisfied bank clerk coping with an unromantic boyfriend, whose clumsy attempts to fit Austen's good manners are at the basis of this story. Amanda wants to go back at first, while Elizabeth is totally lost in ... modernity and doesn't wish to be back at Longbourn at all!
Amanda ends up exactly in the book she so much loves, that beautiful story whose pages she has read infinite times. Only, once she's there the story starts being marred by her presence ... Bingley seems to be more interested in her than in Jane. Then things start to crash and roll down in a disastrous way! With her presence there, Amanda risks ruining the beautiful story so many readers have appreciated through the centuries and she herself considered her favourite escape from the disappointements of life. Apart from Charles Bingley being attracted to her, Mr Collins wants to marry her too and Mr Darcy seems not so much interested in meeting the woman of his life, Elizabeth Bennet. Wickham reveals himself a noble soul and even a victim, Lydia has her unfortunate elopment in this story too...  everything turned  out  so delightfully absurd that I actually didn't realize  I had been watching my DVDs  just in one nearly-4-hour-long session!

Will Amanda get her Darcy in the end?
Wickham, Darcy, Bingley

The Bennet Sisters: Jane Mary, Kitty, Lydia (from left to right)
Elliot Cowan's Mr Darcy is awkwardly stiff and proud but he is attractive at the same time. He has something sweet in his towering loneliness. What does he lack?  Nothing.  Mr Cowan did a good job: he was believably annoying, rude, conceited, and tall dark and handsome. Look at him in his wet white shirt. Can he stand the comparison with Firth's Mr Darcy, though this performance was meant to be a  parody of the pond scene in P&P 1995 ?
Wet-shirted Cowan/ Darcy in cold November icy water



This is my 5th task for My Everything Austen Challenge II . Minus 1 to completion!

Monday, 4 October 2010

AUSTEN AT UNIVERSITY

Have you ever dreamt of going to University to study your favourite author/s? I used to and , actually, I even did it. I studied English and Spanish Languages & Literatures at Rome University and got my degree .I studied many of the authors I love! But it was long ago, now. Those were wonderful  years! Later  I dreamt of going on studying in England, maybe in a prestigious university like Oxford or Cambridge but... never tried, actually. Life led me along different paths and here I am reading and teaching and blogging without many regrets.
But attending a course in one of the most prestigious British University is not impossible, now. Neither to all of us living in distant countries. Internet is our saviour, the saviour of our dreams.

I've just found this interesting online course about Jane Austen offered by the Departmnet of Continuing Education of Oxford University.

Overview

Many readers enjoy Austen’s novels but cannot define the qualities that make them so special and enduring. This course will help you to analyse Austen’s style and techniques, and give you a greater knowledge of the novels’ context, which will enhance your understanding and enjoyment of reading them.

Description

Jane Austen’s six major novels have hardly been out of print for two hundred years. Many readers enjoy them but cannot always define the qualities that make Sense and Sensibility, Northanger Abbey, Pride and Prejudice, Mansfield Park, Emma, and Persuasion so enduring and so rewarding for reading and rereading. This course helps students to learn to analyse Austen’s characteristic style and techniques and thus gain an enhanced appreciation of her art. It also looks at the historical and literary contexts of the novels, allowing students to gain a greater understanding of their themes and sub-texts. The course is suitable for those new to Austen’s writing as well as for the devoted Janeite. Though the topics covered range across all six major novels, and those who have read all six will be able to use that knowledge, each week’s required reading includes key sections of one novel.

Programme details

 

Unit 1: Who was Jane Austen? Biography and biographies; Family history; Letters.  

Unit 2: Jane Austen’s language and style: The narrative voice; Dialogue; Perspective; Inner and outer; How to analyse an Austen novel.

Unit 3: Sense and Sensibility: Background: Elinor and Marianne; the epistolary novel; The literature of Sensibility; Romanticism; Siblings in Austen’s work.

Unit 4: Northanger Abbey; Background: the Gothic novel and Gothic novel readers; Ann Radcliffe; Pastiche and parody.

Unit 5: Pride and Prejudice: Background: marriage and property in Austen’s time; soldiers and militia men; The ‘courtship ordeal novel’; Fashion in Austen’s time.

Unit 6: Mansfield Park: Background: The Georgian, the Augustan and the Regency; Imperialism, and Mansfield Park; Mothers and home-makers.

Unit 7: Emma: Background: dancing games and puzzles in Austen’s writing; Governesses; Irony; Parents in Austen’s novels.

Unit 8: Persuasion: Background: Bath and Lyme; the Navy in Austen’s time; Persuasion and persuasiveness; The cancelled section of Persuasion.

Unit 9: Happy ever after?: Austen’s novels: anti-romance?; Love, weddings, and marriage; Austen’s endings; Further reading on Austen.
 

Recommended reading

 

 

To participate in the course you will need to have regular access to the Internet and you will need to buy the following books (all by Jane Austen):

Sense and Sensibility,
Northanger Abbey and Other Works
Pride and Prejudice
Mansfield Park
Emma
Persuasion

Students will be required to read the introductions to, and extracts from, all six novels. You will be encouraged to read as much as is practical of all of the novels.
 
The course will start in January 2011
Programme Fee
 
Home/EU Fee: £180.00
Non-EU Fee: £285.00

Thursday, 30 September 2010

TALKING JANE AUSTEN WITH ABIGAIL REYNOLDS & GIVEAWAY


Mr Darcy's Obsession is her latest book just coming out in October for Sourcebooks. Abigail Reynolds  is a lifelong Jane Austen enthusiast and a physician.  In addition to writing, she has a part-time private practice and  enjoys spending time with her family.  Originally from upstate New York, she studied Russian, theater, and marine biology before deciding to attend medical school.   She began writing From Lambton to Longbourn in 2001 to spend more time with her favorite characters from Pride & Prejudice.  Encouragement from fellow Austen fans convinced her to continue asking ‘What if…?’, which led to five other Pemberley Variations and her modern novel, The Man Who Loved Pride & Prejudice.  She is currently at work on another Pemberley Variation and sequels to The Man Who Loved Pride & Prejudice.  She is a lifetime member of JASNA and lives in Wisconsin with her husband, two teenaged children, and a menagerie of pets.  
 

Read my interview with Abigail and you'll have the chance to receive a copy of Mr Darcy's Obsession directly from Sourcebooks. The giveaway is open to US and Canada readers only. The winner will be announced next Wednesday October 6th. Don't forget to add your e-mail address!

First of all, Abigail, thanks for accepting to Talk Jane Austen with me and ... soon to the first question. Mr Darcy. What’s his unique charm? What makes him so fascinating and attracting after centuries?
Many things! For me, it is the depth of his devotion, his loyalty and honor, and above all else, that he falls in love with Elizabeth because of her intelligence and wit in a world where those were not valued in women.

In your The Man Who Loved Pride and Prejudice, you make two distant worlds like science and Jane Austen’s novels meet. The same happens in your real life: you are a doctor, studied marine biology and you write brilliant Jane Austen- inspired fiction. How do such different worlds coexist in your life?
Medicine and writing aren’t actually all that different. As a doctor, I listen to patients and try to understand their stories, what they’re telling me and what they may be leaving out that could be important, what their situation is like at home and how it may affect their health, and so on. Trying to put myself in their heads, if you will, just as I do with my characters. Meantime, writing provides a wonderful escape from the pain and suffering I see at work. Sometimes the worlds overlap. In Mr. Darcy’s Obsession, there ‘s a medical scene which is an in-joke for fellow medical professionals – the doctor is prescribing various barbaric-sounding things, but they’re in fact all treatments we still use today.


Which Austen female character might have been a good doctor if women had been granted the chance to have a profession, according to you?
Elinor Dashwood would have made a good doctor – thoughtful, calm, and willing to sacrifice. I can see her working in an ER .

What’s the appeal of such a distant world as the Regency to you? And how do you explain the great, incredible success the “brand" Jane Austen has achieved in our contemporary high-tech world?
There are two levels to the question about the appeal of the Regency. A lot of it is based on the impression that life was simpler and more moral then, but this is a fallacy perpetrated by the Victorians who were romanticizing the time before the Industrial Revolution. That imaginary Regency period is like a fairy tale. Given the realities of life, especially for women, I’d never want to live in the real Regency. As for Jane Austen, I think it’s the brilliance of her characterizations and again that idea of a simpler, purer life. Also, there are people who are embarrassed to be caught reading romances, but if it’s based on Jane Austen, it must be literature, right? Jane Austen also has a wonderful voice – witty, sometimes cutting, but always with an edge of affection for even the most dislikeable characters.

If you could live inside one of Jane Austen’s novels which one would you choose? What would you miss the most?
Pride & Prejudice or perhaps Persuasion, I think. I’d miss millions of things, but most of all I’d miss the ability to control my own destiny, to have rights of my own.


Is Jane Austen's work just escapism or is it more social analysis and reflection?
We certainly use it as escapism today, but I don’t think that was its appeal at the time. It was in many ways radical in having female characters who thought for themselves and were valued for more than beauty and breeding.

This a difficult question I’ve asked to several of your colleagues. But maybe, you can help me to find a way to introduce Jane Austen to my male students (the majority in my classes) .To be honest they usually despise everything linked to Jane Austen considering it girlish. Is it really so difficult to meet men who love Pride and Prejudice?
I think men could love Jane Austen if they were willing to give it a try. It’s their, ahem, pride and prejudice that gets in the way. You could always suggest that women love men who know Jane Austen!

When did you meet Jane Austen? What did you read first?
I first read Pride & Prejudice when I was in my early teens, and I loved it.

How did you come to write and , especially, why Austen-sequels?
It started with reading Austen fanfiction on line for an escape to a happy and familiar world. Then I ran out of stories to read, so I decided to write one. It had a good response on line, and I was hooked.

I imagine your life to be franticly busy! Have you got any special writing routine?
I write whenever and wherever I can. When I can escape, I go to my favorite coffee shop to write, away from all the distractions at home.

What’s your opinion on the many Jane Austen adaptations? Have you got a favourite one? A least favourite one?
This is where a lot of readers and writers would explain that there’s something wrong with all those sexy/paranormal/mystery/sweet stories. I think it’s all good. The more people who are inspired to write Jane Austen adaptations, the happier I am. As for favorites and least favorites… well, I could get into a lot of trouble answering that one!

If you could write a spin-off story and change the destiny of one of Austen minor characters, making him/her the hero/ine of the day, who would you choose?
As a matter of fact, I’m working on a sequel to Mr. Darcy’s Obsession which will follow the love stories of Georgiana Darcy and her ‘cousin’ Mary, an original character.

Which one of your novels would you like to see adapted for the screen? Any special wish for the casting?
The Man Who Loved Pride & Prejudice. It has beautiful settings and lots of visuals. As for casting, I have no idea!

Try to present your latest novel, Mr Darcy’s Obsession, coming out in October, to our readers in less than 50 words.
After Mr. Bennet’s unexpected death, Elizabeth and her family are impoverished. When Darcy encounters Elizabeth living in London, he can't fight his desire to see and speak with her again...and again and again. Now that she is even more unsuitable, will Darcy conquer his pride to marry her?

Great, Abigail. Thank you! This is all for this nice chat of ours. Good luck with the release of Mr Darcy’s Obsessions !
Thanks for inviting me!

And good luck to our readers who will enter the giveaway! Leave your comments and don’t forget to leave your e-mail address, please. This giveaway is open to US and Canada only.

Follow Abigail Reynolds at her site  

Wednesday, 29 September 2010

5 GIVEAWAYS AND 1 GIVEAWAY WINNER!


1. There's a reason more to follow SEX AND THE AUSTEN GIRL, the lovely online series inspired by the novels CONFESSIONS OF A JANE AUSTEN ADDICT and RUDE AWAKENINGS OF A JANE AUSTEN ADDICT: you can win Laurie Viera Rigler's novels!
  • IT'S EASIER THAN EVER TO ENTER (EACH OF THE FOLLOWING EQUALS ONE CHANCE TO WIN):
  • 1. Comment on the Episode 16 giveaway blog post AND/OR
  • 2. Blog about our giveaway with a link to http://janeaustenaddict.com AND send us the link to your post mailto:giveaways@janeaustenaddict.com with "Episode 16 Giveaway" in the subject line AND/OR
  • 3. Tweet about our giveaway @TheAustenGirl with a link to http://janeaustenaddict.com AND/OR
  • 4. Post about our giveaway on Facebook with a link to http://janeaustenaddict.com AND send us the link to your post to giveaways@janeaustenaddict.com with "Episode 16 Giveaway" in the subject line. 
2.Do you know which lovely Austenesque novel is on my nightstand (and always in my handbag) these days ?


Yeah! Got it! C. Allyn Pierson's continuation of Pride and Prejudice focused  on Georgiana Darcy 's experiences. The Darcys in Ms Pierson's novel are delightful company. Fancy meeting them? Do you want to read Mr Darcy's Little Sister? You have the chance to win this book reading Meredith's interview with the authoress  at her sparkling site, Austenesque Reviews .


3. A FREE e-book download for four days at Kensington Books!!! If you've got  one of these e-book readers -- Kindle, Apple, Sony, B&N, Kobo or Diesel -- hurry and get your free download of Marilyn Brant's  According to Jane today (9/29) through Saturday (10/2)


4. And now,  my dear Austen friends, the winner of last week's giveaway here on My JA Book Club. Did you read and comment Jane Odiwe's inteview? Did you leave your e-mail address? Then the winner's name might be yours!!! Ready to discover it? Here we go!

PRICILLA, congratulations!!!
You are the lucky winner of Willoughby's Return.


Abigail Reynolds
5. If you want to try again, stay tuned! There will be a new giveaway tomorrow. TALKING JANE AUSTEN WITH ... will be with Abigail Reynolds, authoress of The Pemberley Variations and of  The Man who Loved Pride and Prejudice. Sourcebooks, her publisher, have granted you a copy of her latest book, due to release in October, Mr Darcy's Obsession!
I'll wait for you tomorrow, then. Have a nice time, meanwhile!
Maria Grazia

Thursday, 23 September 2010

TALKING JANE AUSTEN WITH ... JANE ODIWE + GIVEAWAY!!!

I hope you'll enjoy my interview with Jane Odiwe , author of Willoughby's Return and Lydia Bennet's Story. It's just another very interesting chat with an expert and lover of Jane Austen and her world. Leaving your comment and e-mail address, you'll have the chance to receive , directly from kind Jane Odiwe,  an autographed copy of her latest Willoughby's Return. The giveaway in open worldwide! The winner will be announced next Wednesday, 29 September.
Discover more about Jane Odiwe, her novels and illustrations on her Blog Site and on Twitter.



Welcome on My Jane Austen Book Club, Jane. I'm extremely glad you accepted to answer my questions . As you know, I’ve recently read and reviewed (here) your latest publication,  “Willoughby’s Return” . So, let’s start from there, your title hero: John Willoughby. Jane Austen gives him about 50 pages to explains his reasons and regrets to Elinor. Did he convince you?

I think Willoughby is sincere when he explains his reasons and regrets to Elinor, but I have to admit that I am not wholly convinced even if I’ve written a book, which aims to defend him (mostly). I think he truly believes what he is saying, but if we actually look at his behaviour and actions, we may arrive at another conclusion. Firstly, is the fact that until he runs into Sir John Middleton, he has not made any attempt to contact Marianne or Elinor to explain his actions. If he truly loved her, wouldn’t he have made every attempt to justify his behaviour earlier? Every part of his speech to Elinor just exposes the weaknesses of his character. Willoughby is thoroughly honest about his feelings, but I’m not sure it helps his case. Firstly, he is drunk. The fact that he can’t face Elinor without resorting to drinking alcohol shows he is pretty spineless. Then, he admits when he first met Marianne, he was only interested in amusing himself. Marianne flattered his vanity. He was fully prepared to receive love without giving any in return. Money is his motivation for not allowing himself to fall in love. Even if we believe that he loved Marianne when it was too late, he adds that he lives in dread of her marrying. Not because he is concerned for Marianne, and whether she will be happy, but because his thoughts are selfish ones as he considers how hard it will be for him to know that she has married Colonel Brandon. Having said all that, as I said right at the beginning, I do think the main point here is that he truly believes what he is saying, that he regrets his behaviour.

I tend to justify Willoughby, if not forgive him (Greg Wise’s fault?) I know he made mistakes, lots of them. With Eliza...but he was young! With Marianne ... but he had little reasonable choice (Frank Churchill was infinitely luckier than him!) But I’m sure he will always love Marianne and he will learn from his mistakes. His marriage to selfish Sophia Grey is already punishment and the impossibility to have Marianne is hell. Would you ask for more? Don’t you think that’s enough for a charming libertine?
Yes! It’s all Greg Wise’s fault. And, who could fail to fall in love with Willoughby when he first appears in the book or on screen? Of course, money and its necessity is a recurring theme in Jane’s books, and in those days marrying for love was something of a luxury. I do love the fact that Jane Austen included Willoughby’s begging for forgiveness, and Elinor’s forgiveness of him shows compassion in a true human sense. I think Willoughby will suffer in his marriage, but I also think he is the kind of man who will make sure he gets a measure of amusement elsewhere. As you know, in my book, when the opportunity arises, he tries to win Marianne’s heart again.

Brandon and Marianne’s relationship goes through ups and downs. What do you think are the reasons of their complicated ménage?

Marianne Dashwood marries Colonel Brandon at the end of Sense and Sensibility. He is seventeen years older than she, and consequently, I think their views of the world would be quite different, even if they share much in common such as poetry and music. Differences in their ages and viewpoints could well lead to differences in the way each perceive a set of circumstances. I think Marianne loves the Colonel deeply, especially as she can never do anything by halves, but knowing her heart rules with great passion makes me think this is likely to run over into other matters. Brandon is still responsible for his ward, Eliza, and also for her child whose father, I’m sure you remember, is Mr Willoughby. Taking into account Marianne’s personality, I felt this would cause problems. Knowing that her husband’s ward is not only the daughter of the Colonel’s first love, but also the very image of her would be enough to make Marianne jealous. I don’t think she would be happy visiting Eliza, or seeing Willoughby’s child, so I think she would avoid meeting them both at all costs. When Brandon visits his ward often and is sometimes obliged to stay away, I think Marianne’s sensitive nature will get the better of her. She would hate it. In Willoughby’s Return, I was able to capitalise on this. Marianne is maturing, but although she is not as outspoken, she still feels passionately. I thought her jealousy might lead to destructive behaviour, although ultimately she sees sense before it’s too late. Each of them would see the situation differently. Brandon would be dutiful to his ward and her daughter feeling there is no choice but to make sure he devotes all due attention to them. Having lost his first love, I think he would be extremely sensitive to the needs of Eliza and her daughter, a fact which might be hard for Marianne to cope with. I don’t think it would occur to Brandon to think Marianne might be jealous – he tends to see Marianne through rose-tinted spectacles. Likewise, Marianne doesn’t consider Brandon’s difficult situation. She is a little selfish, and doesn’t want to consider the difficult life that Eliza must lead. Lots of tensions make for lots of ups and downs – a gift for a novelist!

Margaret Dashwood is a vivacious, young woman in your novel starting three years after the end of Sense and Sensibility.Passionate, romantic, impulsive and sensitive. How did it come you decided to make her so similar to Marianne?
Jane Austen wrote in Sense and Sensibility: Margaret, the other sister, was a good-humoured, well-disposed girl; but as she had already imbibed a good deal of Marianne's romance, without having much of her sense; she did not, at thirteen, bid fair to equal her sisters at a more advanced period of life.
I imagined that of the two sisters she would grow up to become even more like Marianne, and I wanted to write an alternative Marianne story, showing that first love might work out.

Is your Henry Lawrence the portrait of what Willoughby might have been, instead?
Not really, because although on the surface it seems he shares some similar traits, in the end he is thoroughly vindicated. The reasons for his behaviour are completely justified. Besides all that, he is even better looking than Willoughby, and I think he is a much nicer person!

“The market of marriage” Jane Austen showed directly or indirectly to dislike has been anyway relevant to her novels and their success. What about marriages in your sequel?
Yes, I think it was important to include this theme in my novel, and I think I allude to it in all my books. It was such an important factor for anyone in Jane Austen’s class. I think Jane felt compelled to write about it because it affected her and her sister Cassandra. They did not have large dowries, so could not be expected to marry well. In my novel, Henry Lawrence’s friend, Mademoiselle de Fontenay is a victim of the marriage market, but I don’t want to say much more for fear of giving too much away.

Jane Austen at her desk by Jane Odiwe
When and why did you make up your mind to start writing Jane Austen sequels?
After I wrote and illustrated ‘Effusions of Fancy’ I wanted to see if I could attempt to write a whole novel. I wanted to write a comic book, which is why I chose Lydia Bennet. For all her outrageous behaviour, I thought she would be funny too.

You also paint and draw cute Austen illustrations. Did drawing come first as a means to express yourself?
I’ve always done both for as long as I can remember. I’ve still got illustrated stories I wrote from when I was about seven years old. I always wanted to be a children’s author and illustrator like Beatrix Potter, but it hasn’t worked out that way. I much prefer writing novels now.

Marianne and Elinor by Jane Odiwe

Darcy & Lizzy by Jane Odiwe
How would you explain JA’s success in our world so different from hers?
I think it’s pure and simple escapism from our twenty-first century world with all its stresses and everyday problems. Of course, the fact that we imagine that the past was simpler is very far from the truth, but I think we have fallen in love with the perception of a life where everyone lived in beautiful Georgian houses, where good manners were highly important, and where extremely handsome men walked around all day in breeches and wet shirts with ladies in gorgeous frocks and bonnets. I’m only joking, but I think those elements certainly add to Austen’s appeal. I would also say that her novels are timeless, and populated with wonderful characters. They are books that can be read time and again; enduring classics that never fail to please.

If you could swap life with one of the Austen heroines, whose life would you choose?
I would choose Anne Elliot’s life if it can start after she marries Captain Wentworth. I think seeing the world with him would be a lot of fun, and also she’d manage to get away from her awful Elliot family.

Great! Anne Elliot is my favourite Austen heroine, too.But let's say something about the future now. Your next sequel will be released in February 2011, Mr Darcy’s Secret. What is there still to discover about Mr Darcy? Why do you think he has become such an iconic character?
When I started writing this book, it occurred to me that Elizabeth really didn’t know very much about Mr Darcy. Apart from knowing that he is wealthy, has Bingley for his friend, and that he lives in London for some of the time, as well as Pemberley, I realised that we know little of his back-story. I created one, and wondered how it might impact upon them all.


I think he’s become an iconic character partly because he is so enigmatic. We don’t know much about him at first apart from the fact that he’s got pots of money and a big house. He’s aloof, and rude, but slowly we warm to him when we see how Darcy and Elizabeth engage with one another seeing who can outwit the other. He’s the ultimate hero when we discover just what he’s done for Lydia, as a way of showing his love and concern for Elizabeth. He comes to recognise his faults and changes as a result. That’s got to be his greatest charm – he’s a character we don’t want to like, yet end up falling in love with him along with Lizzy Bennet.

 How would you present you latest work, Mr Darcy’s Secret, in max. 50 words?
After capturing the heart of the most eligible bachelor in England, Elizabeth Darcy believes her happiness is complete, - until the day she unearths a stash of anonymous, passionate love letters that may be Darcy’s, and she realises just how little she knows about the quiet, stoic man she married.

Thank you so much Jane for taking the time to answer my questions. It’s been a great pleasure to read your novel and to talk Jane Austen with you! And good luck to you all for the giveaway!