Thursday, 13 January 2011

TALKING JANE AUSTEN WITH MARILYN BRANT - INTERVIEW & GIVEAWAY

Marilyn Brant  is the award-winning women's fiction author of ACCORDING TO JANE (2009), FRIDAY MORNINGS AT NINE (2010) and her upcoming novel, A SUMMER IN EUROPE (November 29, 2011), all from Kensington Books.
As a former teacher, library staff member, freelance magazine writer and national book reviewer, Marilyn has spent much of her life lost in literature. She's been told -- and not always with the intent to flatter -- that she's "insatiably curious" and "a travel addict." She admits to combining these two passions by taking classes in foreign countries whenever possible and, consequently, she's been able to learn lots of fascinating things in Australia, in England, in Italy and in universities across the United States.
She studied the works of Austen at Oxford University and is an active member of the Jane Austen Society of North America. Her debut novel featuring "Jane" won the Romance Writers of America's prestigious Golden Heart® Award.
Marilyn has travelled to 45 states and over 30 countries (so far -- she's not done yet!), but she now lives in the Chicago suburbs with her family. When she isn't rereading Jane's books or enjoying the latest releases by her writer friends, she's working on her next novel, eating chocolate indiscriminately and hiding from the laundry.

  GIVEAWAY!!!


Marilyn Brant has kindly offered to give away a free copy of According to Jane. The giveaway is open WORLDWIDE and ends on 19th January when the name of the winner will be announced. Leave your comment - answer Mailyn's question about adaptations or ask her one -  add your e-mail address to enter the contest. Good luck!

MG:       According to Jane is your Austen-related novel set in today’s American reality . What inspired you to write this story?

Marilyn: Maria, thanks so much for having me on My Jane Austen Book Club today. I'm delighted to be here and love talking about all things Jane!! As for my debut novel, it's the story of a woman who has the ghost of Jane Austen in her head giving her dating advice. I was first inspired to write According to Jane because of my great admiration for Austen's insight into human nature combined with my less-than-steller high school and college dating experiences (LOL). Austen understood the tangles of courtship, the pressures of family, the pull of attraction to someone who might not be of your social circle, etc. I'd wished on many occasions as a young adult that I would have had the guidance of Austen's wisdom as I tried to navigate the dating waters, especially in my later teens and early twenties. Her understanding of how men and women behaved struck me as both timeless and universal, and since I didn't have a big sister to badger with questions, I found myself wondering, "If Jane were to give me advice, what would she say?"


MG       In this novel you deal with young people and let the protagonist, Ellie,  be guided  by   Jane Austen in her choices. Do you really think Jane  Austen can have great appeal on our teenagers? (As a teacher of English literature to teenagers I find the task of introducing Austen’s work to them not easy at all)

Marilyn: You do have a difficult task! My husband taught high-school English lit as well as world history, and it's really tricky to make teens see how authors from the past are relevant to their lives. I believe that's why it can be helpful to modernize some Austen novels and, if necessary, introduce teens to those first. The centuries may pass and customs, social mores and acceptable behaviors may change, but human nature really doesn't. I found Austen's genius was in depicting with perfect clarity the character of a range of people just by showing their manners, letting us hear their dialogue and see them interacting with others on the page. Many of my classmates found Austen boring when I was a teen, but I don't think they were able to fully comprehend how similar our situations were to those Austen's characters experienced. At its essence, how different is a high-school prom from a Regency ball, really? To me, they're incredibly similar exercises in social posturing. In regards to people, I've found that someone who makes a habit of behaving dishonorably toward women, like Wickham or Willoughby, doesn't only exist in the past or in fiction. Men like that are alive and well in today's world, too -- teenage girls should be aware of this! -- as are gossipy, meanspirited women like Caroline Bingley and her sister. So, I think Austen provides ample lessons in why we should all pay more attention to human behavior and learn from the mistakes of her characters. That said, just because my heroine Ellie was fortunate enough to be the recipient of Jane's insight and perception, that doesn't mean Ellie was always mature enough to follow that wise advice!


MG:   When did your encounter with Jane Austen take place? At school as it happens to Ellie in According to Jane? Was it love at first sight?

Marilyn: I first read Austen's Pride and Prejudice when I was a fourteen-year-old high-school freshman as part of a reading assignment in my English class. And, yes, it was absolutely love at first sight! Jane became my favorite author practically overnight, and my love of her work hasn't wavered in almost 30 years. After reading that first story, I devoured her other books and the biographies about her and, while I was doing my graduate work, I was lucky enough to get to study Austen's novels formally in a summer seminar at Oxford. It was a short but memorable course made extra enjoyable because I got to share the experience with my husband (who'd read and loved Austen before we'd ever met -- good man :).


MG       What do you find most fascinating in Austen’s style and world?

Marilyn: Austen was way ahead of her time in so many ways. She didn't preach as a narrator -- she truly let the characters' words and actions speak for themselves. She understood the power of "show, don't tell" long before fiction instructors advocated it as a writing method. Her sense of humor couldn't be more delightfully ironic, in my opinion, and the social situations she puts on display are perfect examples of humans behaving very well...and very poorly. She nailed the social dynamics between people and managed to bring the Regency to life for me because I could recognize friends and family members in her portrayals. (I knew a modern-day Mr. Collins! Same obnoxious pandering to people he felt were "important." I knew a Lucy Steele or two, as well, a dear, always-forgiving Jane Bennet, and a very sensible Elinor Dashwood-type.)

MG      Is there anything you do not like?

Marilyn: Short answer: no!


MG     What is your favourite among her novels? Would you write a sequel or spin-off story based on it?

Marilyn: My favorite will always be Pride and Prejudice, but Persuasion comes in second. As for writing a sequel or spin-off, there were elements of both of these books in According to Jane -- although, of course, my version took place in contemporary times in the U.S.A., rather than 200 years ago in England. I don't see myself writing a novel set in the Regency anytime soon -- much as I love reading historical fiction. I've been asked by some readers if I'd ever consider writing a follow-up story to my debut novel that might involve Austen's ghost as a character yet again, and that I might do... However, I'd need the right situation for Ellie to struggle with and I haven't been able to figure out what that would be yet.


MG:       Thinking of Jane Austen’s successful matches ( i.e. Darcy and Lizzie, Knightley and Emma) and failed matches (i.e. Marianne and Willoughby, Emma and Frank Churchill ), is there anything that you would have changed?  I mean, would you change the fate of any of her characters?

Marylin: Well, I wouldn't dare touch Darcy and Lizzie as a match -- nor would I want to!! Or Anne and Captain Wentworth. I'm not sure I ever fully understood the attraction between Fanny and Edmund but, if he brings her joy, I wouldn't want to be the one to pull them apart, LOL. As for the failed matches, while I felt Marianne's agony at Willoughby's betrayal, I learned so much from reading about it as a teen that I'm afraid I can't spare her the pain. She came to some much-needed and hard-earned wisdom as a result, and I'm too grateful to her for having gone through it (instead of me) to wish the experience away. And Emma needed the social missteps caused by her flirtation with Frank Churchill in order to grow up, appreciate Knightley and treat people better in general. So, no, no...I wouldn't change any of their fates.

MG     I’m fond of Austen adaptations for the screen. What about you? Have you got any favourite one/s?

Marilyn: I *love* the various adaptations, and I watch them all with almost no favoritism. Honestly, I can enjoy Laurence Olivier playing Darcy nearly as well as seeing Matthew or Colin in the role. I just bought the BBC set of 6 DVDs, and that one features David Rintoul playing the part. He was the first Darcy I saw on film, so it was fun to see that adaptation again. I did particularly enjoy Gwenyth Paltrow as Emma, and Amanda Root as Anne in Persuasion, but I've enjoyed a number of movie versions of Mansfield Park and Northanger Abbey. The Emma Thompson/Hugh Grant/Kate Winslet adaptation of Sense and Sensibility is also a favorite. I also really enjoyed the film version of "The Jane Austen Book Club" and the hilarious series "Lost in Austen." And, oh, "Bride and Prejudice" and "Clueless" are such fun, too! There are so many great ones, aren't there? I'd love to know which films the Austen fans reading this blog enjoy most... What are your faves??

MG       Your latest novels are not Austen-related, but has Austen influenced you in writing them anyhow?

Marilyn: My second novel is called Friday Mornings at Nine, and that's the story of three 40-something suburban moms who meet each week for coffee and conversation. They think they know each other but, one day, one of the women admits she's been getting secret emails from her college ex-boyfriend. This was the guy she thought she was going to marry 18 years ago...but he left her suddenly and she never got the emotional resolution on the relationship that she needed. On the rebound, she married someone else but, now, being in contact again with the man who'd broken her heart, she begins to wonder if she made the right choice. And the fact that she is questioning her marriage also leads the other two women to examine their lives and the marital choices they made. (Much drama and soul-searching ensues!) It was a more complicated story to write than my debut novel, and more serious in tone, but Austen references make a few brief appearances in the book, and the things I loved best about Jane's writing style (especially letting dialogue and action reveal character) are elements I try to emulate in all of my stories. The book I have coming out at the end of this year -- A Summer in Europe -- has a touch more of Austen and a great deal of E.M. Forster, though, since it's a very modernized play on A Room with a View.

MG:   What are you working on at the moment?
Marilyn: I'm just finishing up revisions on my third novel, A Summer in Europe, which will be released by Kensington on November 29, 2011. As I mentioned, it's kind of like a modern A Room with a View in that the heroine's perspective on the world -- and on love -- is changed by her experiences abroad. My main character is given a five-week vacation to Europe as a surprise 30th birthday gift from her eccentric aunt. The only catch is that the trip is part of a senior-citizen bus tour comprised of members of her aunt's Sudoku and Mah-Jongg club. (I had fun writing this!) Of course, she meets lots of unusual people, sees many awe-inspiring European sites, eat TONS of gelato (!!) and finds herself caught up in an unexpected romance. It's a story I'm very proud of and I'm really looking forward to sharing with readers this fall. 

MG: Thanks a lot for taking the time to answer my questions, Marilyn, and for accepting to be my guest on My Jane Austen Book Club.

Marilyn: It was a pleasure to visit, Maria! Thanks so much for inviting me.  Wishing everyone a very Happy 2011!!

You can follow Marilyn Brant at her

Wednesday, 12 January 2011

THE PERFECT BRIDE FOR MR DARCY - GIVEAWAY WINNER

Here I am for the official announcemet of the name of the winner of Mary Simonsen's book, The Perfect Bride for Mr Darcy. Have you read my interview with the author last week? If you've missed it,  just click here. Many thanks to Mary Simonsen for her kindness and to Sourcebooks for granting a free copy to one lucky commenter from the USA or Canada.
Random.org has helped me draw the name.

CONGRATULATIONS, ANN MARIE!!!
YOU ARE THE LUCKY WINNER!

Monday, 10 January 2011

CHARLOTTE COLLINS by JENNIFER BECTON - MY REVIEW


“…Without thinking highly either of men or matrimony, marriage had always been her object; it was the only provision for well-educated young women of small fortune,and however uncertain of giving happiness, must be their pleasantest
preservative from want. This preservative she had now obtained; and at the age of twenty-seven, without having ever been handsome, she felt all the good luck of it”  (Jane Austen, Pride and Prejudice,  chapter 22)

This is how we knew  Charlotte Lucas, Elizabeth Bennet’s best friend from Jane Austen’s words in Pride and Prejudice. I think very few of us who read, studied or watched P&P would have bet a coin on Charlotte Collins as the heroine of a novel,  even less as the protagonist of an amusing, romantic novel.  Jennifer Becton succeeded in all this: she made Charlotte Collins her heroine and wrote a very delightful spin-off story. Witty, charming and grounded in period detail. And this is only her debut novel.
Just few examples of Jennifer Becton's witty tone:  
"My independence was hard won, Charlotte said, recalling the tediousness of her daily interactions with her husband that had resulted in her current situation. How many ponderous sermonshad she been subjected to? How many simpering compliments had she endured? And worse, how many fireplace mantels had she heard him describe in painful detail?" ( Charlotte Collins, p. 10)
"Now, looking around the Cards' house, she felt not a twingeof jealousy. Maria, however, ran her hand along the cool marble trim andgazed longingly aroundher. Poor girl. It really was unfortunate that  she had no feelings for Mr Card, for he admired her, and she admired his home" (Charlotte Collins, pag. 54)

Maybe,  Charlotte Collins  has been in training as a heroine meanwhile, since the story opens on the day of Mr Collins’s funeral, that is seven years  after we left Mr and Mrs Collins newly married. Seven years of continual embarrassment at her husband’s simpering and fawning manners have now turned  her into an independent and sufficiently confident widow but, above all, into  a wiser and more aware woman , who now understands  the importance of making the right choices in life. She must now work feverishly to secure her income and home and she must even undertake the task to act as her younger sister’s chaperone, hoping to prevent Maria from also entering an unhappy union. Soon Charlotte and Maria are thrust into a world of country dances, dinner parties and marriageable gentlemen and and we are caught, through them, into a whirlpool of very amusing,  very embarrassing, very exciting, very unpleasant,  very disappointing , very romantic experiences   . 

In Pride and Prejudice Charlotte advised: “If a woman conceals her affection with the same skill from the object of it, she may lose the opportunity of fixing him; and it will then be but poor consolation to believe the world equally in the dark […] In nine cases out of ten, a woman had better shew more affection than she feels.”

Now she has changed and tries to restrain Maria’s impulsive behaviour, especially, towards the gentleman she favours, Mr Westfield . Actually, Charlotte is torn between her wish to see her sister follow her heart and her own good sensed and principled mind. She herself has to beware of  gentlemen, two very different wooers, Mr Edgington and Mr Basford. The first one, Lady Catherine’s nephew, represents the old world and the good manners Charlotte so much appreciates, while the other one comes from the new world and his ways are rather unusual. Charlotte is a mature lady now,  but her experience of the world is not enough to help her in the choices she must make.
 This time again first impressions may be very deceitful. This time again love will find its way.


Visit Jennifer Becton's site 


This is one of my tasks in the Jane Austen is My Homegirl Reading Challenge.
The Challenge is hosted at The Book Buff Blog.
This is my 6th book ... for now.
If you want to discover which my previous ones were, click on the tag Jane Austen is My Homegirl Reading Challenge below.

Saturday, 8 January 2011

AN INTERVIEW WITH LILY BERRY


 Are you wondering if Lily Berry is a new writer you've missed? Don't worry, you haven't missed anything. In fact Lily is a character, the heroine of a new Austen-inspired novel. She's the protagonist of Cindy Jones 's debut novel, My Jane Austen Summer, due to release on 29th March 2011. I've had the pleasure to get to talk to her and here is the resulting interview.  Please join me in welcoming Lily Berry. 
 


MG: Hi Lily! Welcome on My Jane Austen Book Club.
Lily Berry:   Thank you, it is my pleasure to be here with you today.
MG:  What is it like to be the protagonist in a debut novel?
Lily:  To tell you the truth—scary.  Being a protagonist is hard work and there were plenty of times I just wanted to chuck it all and be a secondary character and just elope with the bad guy or provide comic relief, for instance.  But as the protagonist, everything depends on how well I connect with readers. 
MG:  Is connecting with readers difficult?
Lily:  We’ll find out.  Cindy and I worked together to create my voice which is strong yet vulnerable.  I’m naïve, yet eager to learn.  In other words, I’m easy to love.  So far, Cindy’s agent, editor, and mother all love me.
MG:  Speaking of love, is My Jane Austen Summer a love story?
Lily:  (sighing)  Yes, but not what you’d expect.  I don’t want to spoil it by offering details.  And Cindy obviously has an agenda—like any writer.  Part of my job is to make sure that Cindy’s points are made clearly.
MG:  What is Cindy’s agenda?
Lily:  (chuckles).  She’d like to bring Jane Austen back to life.  She believes the relationship contemporary women have with Jane Austen is a good thing—Jane has so much to teach us about human nature even 200 years after her death.    
MG:  What is it like working for a debut author?    
Lily:  I have to admit there were some difficult times.  Like when Cindy got ruthless with revisions.  She cut the middle section of the book twice.  Each time, we had to say goodbye to characters and scenes we loved.  Cutting 150 pages of a book is like you losing an arm or a leg.
MG:  You have some big shoes to fill as an Austen-inspired protagonist.
Lily:  I’m aware of that, and I have the greatest respect for the many Austen protagonists as well as the Austen-inspired protagonists who’ve protagonized before me.  They tell their stories again and again, each time a reader opens their book:  Lizzy Bennet, Bridget Jones, and the entire Jane Austen Book Club, for example. 
MG:  Your release date isn’t until March 29 so you have some time to kill.  What are your plans?
Lily:  I’m so ready to start connecting with readers, I can’t tell you.  Until then, I love doing interviews and I’m available—just ask me questions—I’ll answer.  Other than that, some of the characters from My Jane Austen Summer were thinking about working as extras in one of the Stieg Larsson books, taking some time to chill in Sweden before things get crazy.
MG:  Lily Berry, thanks for joining us today and best of luck with My Jane Austen Summer.
Lily:  I’ve enjoyed being here and I look forward to seeing you “on the inside”.
MG: I can't wait to see you "on the inside" too!

Cindy  Jones was born in Ohio and grew up in small mid-western towns, reading for escape. She  dreamed of living in a novel and wrote her first book in fifth grade.  After a business career, husband, and the birth of four sons, she  wrote My Jane Austen Summer: A Season in Mansfield Park, winner of the Writer’s League of Texas Manuscript Contest.  She has a BA from Mary Washington College, an MBA from the University of Houston, studied creative writing in the SMU CAPE program, and belongs to the The Squaw Valley Community of Writers.  She lives with her family in Dallas where she has discovered that, through writing, it is entirely possible to live in a novel for a good part of each day.

MY JANE AUSTEN SUMMER
William Morrow/Harper Collins
Release: March 29, 2011





You can find Cindy Jones also at www.austenauthors.com

Thursday, 6 January 2011

MARY SIMONSEN, JANE AUSTEN AND THE PERFECT BRIDE FOR MR DARCY - INTERVIEW & GIVEAWAY


Mary Simonsen is the author of three novels with Austen tie-ins, Searching for Pemberley, The Perfect Bride for Mr. Darcy, and Anne Elliot, a New Beginning. She is also the author of a modern novel, The Second Date, Love Italian-American Style. She's my guest today to talk Jane Austen with me and to grant you the chance to win a copy of her new release, The Perfect Bride for Mr Darcy. Leave a comment and your e-mail address so that I can contact you, in the case you are the  winner. Enjoy my interview with Mary Simonsen and good luck! 

The giveaway is open only to readers in the US and Canada.



Mary: Thank you, Maria Grazia , for inviting me to spend the day with your readers.

MG: You are most welcome , Mary! Please, could you briefly tell us about your first encounter with Jane Austen?
Mary: I met Jane Austen as a senior in high school way back in 1969. Pride and Prejudice was assigned reading, and I loved the book so much that I went on an Austen marathon and read her other five books one after the other.

MG: Re-reading P&P as an adult, how much has your perspective on the novel changed?
Mary: When I first read P&P, I thought of it strictly as a romance. It was only after I read about Jane Austen that I realized that her intention was to examine the idiosyncracies of a neighborhood of about four and twenty families and the near mayhem caused by adding two single men of fortune into the mix. Because it was not a true romance, learning more about Austen’s intent enriched the novel for me because I could focus on characters other than Lizzy and Darcy.

MG: Since your novels  focus  on Mr Darcy , could you tell us what’s so very special about him to make him a romantic hero beyond time?
Mary: I think Darcy’s appeal is that he is not perfect. Better yet, he is a man capable of alteration. Because of Elizabeth’s rejection of his proposal, he recognizes his defects and makes the conscious decision to change his ways because he wants to be a man worthy of Elizabeth’s love. I had the same effect on my husband, except he didn’t have Darcy’s fortune. J

MG: Is your new novel The Perfect  Bride for Mr Darcy a continuation of Searching for Pemberley, your first novel? Can you tell us about it  with a twitter –sized review?
Mary: The Perfect Bride for Mr. Darcy is a stand alone novel. In brief, after Lizzy refuses Darcy’s hand at Hunsford Lodge, they both think that they will never get together. However, Anne De Bourgh, realizing that D&E are perfect for each other, sets a plan in motion. With Georgiana’s help, they come up with a scheme to bring the couple together again at Pemberley. It’s written with a light touch. No heavy lifting required. That’s about two tweets.

MG: You also re-wrote Persuasion in Anne Elliot, A New Beginning. What is new in this re-take of my favourite Austen novel?
Mary: Anne Elliot is a parody of Persuasion. Because I liked Anne so much, I wanted to empower her. After being declared a spinster by her family, Anne becomes a long-distance runner, and this gives her the confidence to do other things, including employing a Bath street urchin to help her find out what nefarious deeds Mr. Elliot is commiting as well as helping her sisters to reach their full potential. Although a comedy, the love story of Anne and Captain Wentworth is faithful to Austen’s novel.

MG: Captain Wentworth is also the Austen hero I prefer. Have you got a very favourite one, too, Mary?
Mary: My favorite is Captain Wentworth as well. I think I like him better than Darcy because he is a self-made man, i.e., he has a job. Secondly, he stayed true to Anne for eight very long years, and, thirdly, he wrote his famous letter. This is love in its purest form.

MG: Among the libertines or rakes in Austen, have you got one you would redeem and write a novel about?
Mary: I don’t know if Frank Churchill qualifies as a libertine, but he is the only one I think capable of reform. To put it another way, would I want my daughters to date any of these men? No!

MG: Surfing the Net, it seems that the interest in and love for everything Austen is growing and growing. How would you explain her success?
Mary: Austen is successful because her main characters are so well rounded as well as being grounded in reality. I can easily place myself in Lizzy, Elinor, or Anne’s shoes. I can be these characters. I think it helps that Austen wrote during the Regency Era with its gorgeous dresses, and what’s not to like about a man in tight breeches?

MG: Do you think the huge quantity of sequels, spin-offs, mash-ups and movie adaptations have brought more people to read JA’s novels or distracted them from reading the original source?
Mary: I think the adaptations, especially A&E’s 1995 six-hour series, did justice to Austen’s work. After seeing the movie or series, I would hope that people would want to read Austen because she is a master in the use of language and has a great wit. However, if people only know of Austen’s works through film and television that is fine too.

MG: You’ve got a personal blog,  Austen Inspired Fiction by Mary Simonsen, and you also collaborate with a new fantastic blog,  Austen Authors. What has the web added to your experience as a writer? Is it more an intruder, a distractor, or a helpful marketing system?
Mary: All of the above. I could not have written my novels without the web because I am dependent upon it for research, most especially when I was writing my historical novel, Searching for Pemberley. I would have sold fewer books without the internet’s amazing reach. But it is also a distraction. I will literally be in the middle of a paragraph and click on a news blog to see what’s happening in the country or read quirky things, like a sailboat made out of plastic bottles in Sydney Harbor. I can be like a dog who sees a squirrel go by. I’m off and running.

MG: What is it that JA didn’t write or finish writing and you would have loved reading, instead?
Mary: I would like to read a story about the eight missing years in Captain Wentworth’s life or a prequel to Sense and Sensibility. But I’m pretty content with the body of work that Austen left us.

MG: That's all for today,  Mary. I hope to meet you again here at My Jane Austen Book Club. I wish you and your new book great success in this new year.
Mary: Thanks again.

Now it's your turn! If you live in the US or in Canada, just leave a comment and your e-mail address. You might be the lucky winner of a copy of Mary Simonsen's  brand-new novel. Giveaway ends January 12th.

Monday, 3 January 2011

LATEST ADDITION TO MY AUSTEN SHELF - THE LITTLE BOOK OF JANE AUSTEN


A dear friend has just sent me this little precious gift book. Isn't it cute? The Little Book of Jane Austen written by Emily Wollastone, directly from Bath. It is,  first of all , a beautiful book, lwith a lovely hard cover, full of gorgeous pictures. Then it is a very useful handbook with everything important about and around Jane Austen. It is divided into 6 sections : introduction, Austen country, the novels, films and television, Celebrating Jane Austen, The Jane Austen Society.

Introduction
Plenty of biographical notes and interesting  information about which writers influenced her work, the history of the writing/publication of her works as well as what kind of reverence or criticism she obtained by other writers of the time can be find in this previous chapter.

 Austen Country

Jane Austen's houses in Steventon, Chawton, Bath, and even the house which hosted Jane in Winchester in her final days, are all described here with anecdotes of her life and beautiful pictures.


The Novels
Detailed plots and little criticism of all the major six and a section dedicated to Austen's Juvenilia, short stories and unfinished novels consitute the bulk of this long chapter with the contribution of lots of colourful stills from the latest adaptations.
 

Film & Television
All six of Austen's major novels have been adapted for the cinemaand small screen to varying degrees of success. This brief section is a rapid outlook on all of them.

 Celebrating Jane Austen
This section deals with The Jane Austen's House Museum and the  The Jane Austen Centre in Bath, with information about their history and current activities.   


The Jane Austen Society
There are many  Jane Austen Societies throughout the world: the JASA (Jane Austen Society of Australia), the Jane Austen Society in the UK,  the JASNA (Jane Austen Society of North America),  the JAS of Buenos Ayres and several others. Their intent is to celebrate her life and work. They are all mentioned in this closing section.

This little gift book could be a precious addition to the shelves of a Janeite or the right way to make someone not yet  acquainted with Austen to discover much about her and maybe start to read her work.

To me,  it has been an unexpected, highly appreciated gift.
I'll treasure it. Many thanks, A.

NEW WINNERS FOR THE GREAT "HAPPY BIRTHDAY, JANE" GIVEAWAY


Unfortunately two of the gifts offered for  Jane Austen's Birthday Blog Tour remained unasked. So we had to draw other two names, two new ones. Ready?

Melissa A. wins Jane Greensmith's Intimation of Austen

Ahartsell  wins Janet Mullany's Bespelling Jane Austen

I hope they'll answer my e- mail soon. This great Austenesque reads can't remain without a new reader!

Saturday, 1 January 2011

NEW YEAR, NEW CHALLENGES

Happy New Year, my Janeite friends. May 2011 be full of  emotions and great moments for all of us.
Just to give the new year a good start, here I am with 3 suggestions to make your passion for reading Austen and Austenesque book more stimulating: 3 new Challenges!

1.  HISTORICAL FICTION CHALLENGE 2011 AT HISTORICAL TAPESTRY

To participate, you only have to follow the rules:
  • everyone can participate, even those who don't have a blog (you can add your book title and thoughts in the comment section if you wish)
  • any kind of historical fiction is accepted (Austenesque reads set in the Regency, HF fantasy, HF young adult,...)
  • you can overlap this challenge with others kind of challenges
  • During the following 12 months you can choose one of the different reading levels:
  1. Severe Bookaholism: 20 books
  2. Undoubtedly Obsessed: 15 books
  3. Struggling the Addiction: 10 books
  4. Daring & Curious: 5 books
  5. Out of My Comfort Zone: 2 books


The challenge will run from 1 January 2011 to 31 December 2011.


2. BEING A JANE AUSTEN MYSTERY CHALLENGE AT AUSTENPROSE
 If you have not discovered one of Jane Austen wonderful mysteries, this is a great chance to join the challenge along with other Janeites, historical fiction and mystery lovers.
Time-line: The Being a Jane Austen Mystery Challenge runs January 1, through December 31, 2011.
Levels of participation: Neophyte: 1 – 4 novels, Disciple 5 – 8 novels, Aficionada 9 – 11 novels.
Enrollment: Sign up’s are open until July 01, 2011. First, select your level of participation.  Second, copy the Being a Jane Austen Mystery Reading Challenge graphic and include it in your blog post detailing the mysteries that you will read in 2011. Third, leave a comment linking back to your blog post in the comments of this announcement post. If you do not have a blog you can still participate. Just leave your commitment to the challenge in the comments below.
Check Back Monthly: The Being a Jane Austen Mystery Challenge 2011 officially begins on Wednesday, January 12, 2010 with my review of the first mystery in the series, Jane and the Unpleasantness at Scargrave Manor. Check back on the 2nd Wednesday of each month for my next review in the challenge.
Your Participation: Once the challenge starts you will see a tab included at the top of Austenprose called Reading Challenges. Click on the tab and select Being a Jane Austen Mystery Reading Challenge 2011. Leave a comment including the mystery that you finished and a link to your blog review. If you do not have a blog, just leave a comment about which book you finished with a brief reaction or remark. It’s that easy.
And there are prizes too! Read more HERE


3. THE SENSE AND SENSIBILITY BICENTENARY CHALLENGE AT AUSTENPROSE

Sense and Sensibility was published in 1811 and 2011 is a celebratory year for Jane Austen and her legion of fans. This great event proposed by Laurel Ann at  www.austenprose.com opens the celebrations!


Time-line: The Sense and Sensibility Bicentenary Challenge 2011 runs January 1, through December 31, 2011.
Levels of participation: Neophyte: 1 – 4 selections, Disciple: 5 – 8 selections, Aficionada: 9 – 12 selections.
Enrollment: Sign up’s are open until March 1, 2011. First, select your level of participation.  Second, copy the Sense and Sensibility Bicentenary Challenge 2011 graphic and include it in your blog post detailing the novels or movies that you commit to reading and watching in 2011. Third, leave a comment linking back to your blog post in the comments of this announcement post. If you do not have a blog you can still participate. Just leave your commitment to the challenge in the comments below.
Check Back Monthly: The Sense and Sensibility Bicentenary Challenge 2011 officially begins on Wednesday, January 26, 2010 with my review of the novel The Three Weismanns of Westport. Check back on the 4th Wednesday of each month for my next review in the challenge.
Your Participation: Once the challenge starts you will see a tab included at the top of Austenprose called Reading Challenges. Click on the tab and select the Sense and Sensibility Bicentenary Challenge 2011. Leave a comment including the name of the book or movie read or viewed and a link to your blog review. If you do not have a blog, just leave a comment about your selection that you finished with a brief reaction or remark. 
 Lots of interesting prizes for this challenge too! 

Choose your challenge and enjoy reading Austen and Austen-based fiction. Happy 2011 to you all!