Wednesday, 8 June 2011

MRS DARCY'S DILEMMA BY DIANA BIRCHALL - DOUBLE GIVEAWAY WINNERS


Thanks to Diana Birchall for being my guest in the "Talking Jane Austen with..." event and to all of you who commented and entered the giveaway.
Here'are the names of the winners of the two autographed copies of Diana's Mrs Darcy's Dilemma:

US & CANADA  - Cyn209
THE REST OF THE WORLD - Patricia Pérez Miguel

I'll wait for you back tomorrow with a new "Talking Jane Austen with ..." session and with new posts and giveaways in the next days!

This giveaway was part of the Jane in June II event hosted by Misty a Book Rat

Tuesday, 7 June 2011

THE PERFECT HERO by VICTORIA CONNELLY - REVIEW AND GIVEAWAY

GIVEAWAY 

There's an international giveaway linked to this post granted by HarperCollins. Read my review of Victoria Connelly's second novel in the Austen Addicts Trilogy, The Perfect Hero. Leave your comment saying who your perfect hero is from fiction or real life, don't forget to add your e-mail address, and you'll have the chance to win a copy of this romantic and amusing Austenesque read. The giveaway ends on June 14th when the name of the winner will be announced. 
P.S. Many readers have been experiencing troubles logging in and trying to comment on blogger blogs. If you can't comment, send an e-mail message to learnonline.mgs@gmail.com saying you want to be entered in this  giveaway contest.  


Review and giveaway are part of the 
JANE IN JUNE II event hosted at Book Rat by Misty.
MY REVIEW 
“Maybe Jane Austen’s fans are destined to be disappointed by love because nothing could ever live up to the happy endings created in fiction”. 
This is what Adam Craig, one of the main characters in Victoria Connelly’s latest novel, thinks. The same can be said of the perfect hero: who might live up to Mr Darcy’s charm or Captain Wentworth’s passionate loyalty? Maybe... your favourite actor? Someone you admire and dream about? Imagine that  he, a real dream-come-true, arrives where you have just opened a B&B and is one of your first guests with the director and a bunch of colleagues.  Imagine also that he starts flirting with you disguised as Captain Wentworth since the cast you host  is shooting Persuasion. Add to these facts that this dream man is the most handsome you’ve ever laid eyes on, with his blond hair and blue eyes. Wouldn’t you think the perfect hero has landed into your real life? I’m sure that, like Kay Ashton,  you would.
Let’s cool our enthusiasm and give this story some order.
Die-hard romantic  Kay Ashton uses her inheritance to open a B&B in the seaside town of Lyme Regis in Dorset and is dumbstruck when the cast and crew of a new production of Persuasion descend, needing a place to stay. Kay can’t believe her luck – especially when she realises that heart-throb actor Oli Wade Owen will be sleeping under her very own roof!
Meanwhile, co-star Gemma Reilly is worried that her acting isn’t up to scratch, despite landing a plum role. She finds a sympathetic ear in shy producer, Adam Craig, who is baffled by the film world as she is. Kay thinks the two, Gemma and Adam, are meant for each other and can’t resist to try herself at matchmaking like Austen’s  Miss Woodhouse.
Then when Oli turns his trademark charm on Kay, it seems that she has found her real-life hero. But do heroes really exist?  Or do they only exist in movies and books?

Kay is a lovely heroine who reminds partly Emma,  in her funny attempts at matchmaking,  as well as Marianne,  in her romantic, passionate, naive vision of love. Oli Wade Owen in Wentworth’s uniform has the aspect of Rupert Penry Jones (on the left) and  the impertinence of  George Wickham.
Gemma Reilly  recalls Anne Elliot in her initial little self-confidence overcome little by little in her journey through the book.  
Adam Craig ... well, Adam -  not to give away too much -  is ...  my favourite character together with his hilarious grandmother, Nana Craig. She is funny, colourful and terribly nosy.  She has hated actors since she was left by her husband,  in search for fame in the movies,  for a  beautiful actress.  She has brought Adam up and their relationship is definitely unique.
Could I not like a romance set in Lyme Regis, with a glamorous cast shooting Persuasion involved, written with  a light touch and witty prose, featuring  gorgeous heroes and beautiful sensitive heroines? There’s too much of what I like best  not to recommend it to all of you, Janeites like me,  or fond of romances in general. 

If you liked, A Weekend with Mr Darcy, you can't miss this!

Monday, 6 June 2011

HAPPY JUNE FROM MARILYN BRANT: TREATS AND GIVEAWAY!

Hi Friends and readers of My Jane Austen Book Club !

Happy June! I've got some very exciting news to share: Amazon chose According to Jane to be one of their specially priced eBooks for their Kindle Sunshine Deals sale! From now through June 15th only, the Kindle version of the book is being sold at Amazon for just $2.99. So, if you don't have a copy yet and would like a digital one, you can get it here.


But that's not the only good news!!

As a summertime treat for my wonderful readers, I've been working for several months to polish and prepare for eBook release a lighthearted romantic comedy. It's now available on Kindle for $2.99 as well. 
The novel is called On Any Given Sundae, and it's the story of a shy dessert cookbook writer and the talkative ex-football star she once had a crush on as a teen. The unlikely pair find themselves left in charge of a small-town ice cream parlor for the summer, but can two people -- who may have grown up practically next door to each other but who have next to nothing in common -- create the perfect recipe for love? Maybe with a little help from their friends and a few sweet toppings... (This story will soon be available through B&N and other distributors, too.) You can read an excerpt on Smashwords and buy the book on that site, or you can get a $2.99 copy on Kindle here.

By the way, you DO NOT need to have a Kindle to get digital books. There is a FREE application (called Kindle for PC) that you can download to your desktop, so you can get low-priced and/or free eBooks and read them on your home computer. Barnes & Noble has a similar application available (Nook for PC/Mac), and both have additional apps so the books can be downloaded to many other kinds of devices, too, like cell phones.

Hope you will enjoy these two stories and that your June, July and August will be filled with fun beach reads!! 
And still coming up this year...

...is my next women's fiction story: A Summer in Europe!!!


This new novel has gotten some really lovely advanced praise already, and I truly cannot wait to get to share it with all of you when it's released on November 29th!


“How I wish I were on this European tour with Marilyn Brant's winsome, wonderful characters. I loved every minute of this delightful novel, from the breathtaking sights to the deliciously described food to the thrilling new experiences.” ~Melissa Senate, bestselling author of The Love Goddess’ Cooking School and See Jane Date

A Summer in Europe is Brant's best book yet. A thinking woman's love story, it swept me away to breathtaking places with a cast of endearing characters I won't soon forget. Bravissima!” ~Susan McBride, author of Little Black Dress and The Cougar Club

You can read the back-cover blurb for the novel on my Books page and find pre-order information on Amazon, Borders and B&N.

"It's not where you go. It's what you take back with you."
~A Summer in Europe

Visit My Website
Finally, a giveaway...

In honor of one of my favorite activities -- visiting book clubs** -- I'm giving away an autographed Doubleday Book Club edition of Friday Mornings at Nine (in hardcover) to one person who can answer the following question: What is the name of the fictional Wisconsin hometown of my hero and heroine in On Any Given Sundae? (HINT: You'll find the answer on the Amazon or Smashwords book description of the story. :) Anyone who emails me (marilynbrant@gmail.com) with the correct response between now and 5pm Central Time on June 15, 2011 will be entered in the random drawing. I'll email the winner to let him/her know, and I'll announce his/her name on my Blog on June 16th. Good luck!

**Read what this creative book club did on my last visit!!

Many thanks to all of you for your enthusiasm for my stories. Being an author has always required a tremendous amount of time, energy and work, but you've made me so grateful to have chosen this path. My heartfelt thanks and best wishes to each one of you!


~Marilyn

Sunday, 5 June 2011

WATCHING AISHA (2010) - EMMA, KNIGHTLEY & BOLLYWOOD



Clearly inspired to Austen's Emma, Aisha has all the typical features of a Bollywood romance blockbuster: very good looking actors, easy pop melodies, dances, colourful costumes, beautiful natural settings, fairy-tale atmospheres. If you liked Bride and Prejudice or Bend it like Beckham, you may like this Austenesque parody too. Because this is the impression I got: it sounds more like a parody than a modern day version  of a classic in a different cultural environment .

Since I'm really curious of anything Austen-related and I didn't mind other products of the same kind, I wished to see this film too. "What harm can be done?", I thought, " it'll be a good pastime to see events and characters I know and love from the point of view of a director, scriptwriter, actor". It may be interesting. It was rather  interesting actually. But not that amusing or original. It was beautiful to watch, beautiful was almost anything my sight perceived but nothing more. Ok. Better to stop. You may decide to watch it and even like it, so I don't want to spoil much. 

THE PLOT (from Wikipedia)

Aisha (Sonam Kapoor) is a girl with a simple problem - she has to take others problems into her own hands; and match-making amongst her friends in particular. She is constantly criticized by her friend/neighbor Arjun (Abhay Deol) who advises her to stop meddling with others lives. She is unperturbed and carries on. She tries to make a match between her small town friend Shefali (Amrita Puri) and Randhir (Cyrus Sahukar). 
While at a party Aisha realizes her jealous over Arjun. After the party Arjun and Dhruv get a drink and talk about Aisha, Dhruv tries to act like he is in love with Aisha and insults Arjun. Arjun punch Dhruv and hurts him. She fails in her attempts and in the due course, she tries to match up Shefali with Dhruv (Arunoday Singh) until one day she realizes that love does not come by force. 

She loses her friend Pinky (Ira Dubey) due to her actions who in the end falls in love with Randhir (Cyrus Sahukar). Shefali finds her love in Saurabh (an old friend). Aisha decides to go to Mumbai with Shefali and Dhruv. Shefali thinks that Arjun loves her and Aisha and Shefali have a fight. Shefali tells Aisha of how she had been treating her. She realizes that she had been selfish and arrogant all along, and has mistreated her friends. Finally, she goes back to her best friend (Pinky) and apologizes for her actions. She realizes that she was in love with Arjun; but finds it difficult to express...
Aisha - Emma


She's incredibly beautiful and incredibly spoilt. Even more conceited than Miss Woodhouse herself. It is clear everything she does, she does to be admired. She wants to influence everybody's life and gets furious when something doesn't go the way she expected or someone stresses or notices her misbehaviour. She continuously quarrels with Anjur, her friend/neighbour, she has known all her life long ... 

Anjur - Mr Knightley


Anjur has his sensitivity and his "far-sightedness", but he is no Mr Knightley. He lacks his depth and his wisdom. He is more like a childhood friend, Aisha has always taken for granted, than an older, sensible, affectionate family friend. He has saved her from embarassing situations and still tries to protect her but... he shows off and boasts, which is not very "knightley".


Randhir is a funny character (Mr Elton?) and Shefali a sweet Harriet Smith,  Pinky an extravagant loyal girl friend, and Druhv a dashing Frank Churchill. But the original are so much better!
The problem with Aisha is the screenplay. It never gets deep enough to evoke any emotions in the audience. The film clearly misses the spark and ends up as an average product. However, not an easy task to live up toJane Austen's genius and wit.
It is a fun movie, even though, like Clueless, it's not going to go down as one of my favorites. Give me Emma 1996 the film, ITV Emma and, especially BBC Emma 2009, please!

Saturday, 4 June 2011

THE TRUTH ABOUT MR DARCY BY SUSAN ADRIANI - GIVEAWAY WINNERS


Thanks to Susan Adriani for being my kind guest again , this time with an interesting post about Mr Darcy and the writing of her novel and actively interacting with all commenters. Here are the names of the winners of the two signed copies of Susan's, The Truth about Mr Darcy.

1. US & Canada  :  Cait
2. The rest of the world:  Kirsten

Congratulations to the winners and to all the others... I'm sure you'll be luckier next time. Have you already entered the other giveaways running on these days? Have a look HERE



Thursday, 2 June 2011

TALKING JANE AUSTEN WITH ... DIANA BIRCHALL & DOUBLE GIVEAWAY

Diana Birchall is the author of two Jane Austen-related novels, Mrs. Darcy's Dilemma and Mrs. Elton in America, both published by Sourcebooks, and also a scholarly biography of her grandmother, who was the first Asian American novelist (Onoto Watanna, University of Illinois Press).  Diana grew up in New York City but has lived in California for many years, and works as a story analyst at Warner Bros Studios, reading novels to see if they would make movies.  She has written several Jane Austen-related plays, and The Courtship of Mrs. Elton has had performances in ten cities.  Diana has lectured widely on Jane Austen, films, and her grandmother's career, at universities all over the country and in England.  She makes her home in Santa Monica with her husband, son, and three raffish cats. 


Welcome to My Jane Austen Book Club and thanks for accepting my invitation, Diana. My first question is about Jane Austen and the modern world. Why is such an odd match so successful? I’m thinking of modernizations , Austen –dedicated sites and blogs, Austen –Twitter Projects , nowadays film versions…

I think that the crazier, colder, more chaotic our modern world gets, the more we need the voice of sanity, humor, and reason.  That's Jane Austen. And increasingly more people seem to have more need to escape into what is perceived as a more gracious and controllable past, an ordered and civil world.  Of course, the world probably wasn't really any more controlled and civil in the 18th century than it is today, and the stress must have been equally severe - a struggle to survive for most people, and without medicine as we know it, or even such imperfect social safety networks as we have today.  A harsh world where marriage was woman's best "preservative from want," and woman's place was second to man's.  Yet Jane Austen makes her world infinitely attractive...and so it must have been, when she was in it.


For what you know of her personality, what would Jane Austen most appreciate in our world and what couldn’t she bear?

It's impossible to imagine, as her particular kind of genius could not exist in our world.  It was nurtured on leisurely, private reading; a congenial circle of family and friends receptive to her sparkling brand of entertainment; and a value and attention to the weight and beauty of words and their worth that is lost today.  The sensory stimulation and stress overload of the modern world would quickly kill her if she wasn't dead already.


What is it in her world that most fascinates contemporary readers?

A return to lost values and beauties. Romance and humor and sparkling wordplay fascinates us about her, and we want to be in a world where such people exist. And then we feel nostalgic longing for the sheer physical beauty of England in the 18th century when only 8 million people lived there instead of 60 million and there wasn't a building that wouldn't have seemed beautiful to our eyes.  The sensory overload which I just mentioned, makes us yearn for that world.


And what about you, instead? What is it that you like best in her work and world?

Her sanity, her wisdom, her balance, her immense verbal talent, and her humor.  I also admire the quality she wrote about in Persuasion, as having belonged to Mrs. Smith:  "Here was that elasticity of mind, that disposition to be comforted, that power of turning readily from evil to good, and of finding employment which carried her out of herself, which was from nature alone. It was the choicest gift of Heaven."  I think that Jane Austen possessed that choicest gift of Heaven herself, and that is why we find solace as well as entertainment in being admitted to the company of her mind and nature.


When and how did you discover/meet Jane Austen first?

I think I read all her books through for the first time when I was about twenty.  In the forty years since I have read them literally thousands of times and know them by heart.



And how did it come that you decided to write a sequel to P&P and a spin-off from Emma?


Illustration by Juliet McMaster from In Defense of Mrs Elton
My Mrs. Darcy's Dilemma, written in 1994, was one of the first - I thought at the time it was the first - P&P sequels in the first sequel wave since the 1940s when Pemberley Shades was written.  I had won a contest in Persuasions sometime in the 1980s, trying to imitate a character's "voice," and I did Miss Bates.  Having read Austen so much, studied every sentence, turn of phrase and couching of jokes, I found I had some facility for imitation, and thought, "Hm, why not make a whole book of this, as tribute?"  So I did.  My agent was excited and talked of a bidding war, but at the same time Presumption and Pemberley were coming out, and the publishing world said, "There's not enough interest for THREE Jane Austen sequels!"  Sounds funny now, doesn't it?  So I had to wait for actual publication.  Meanwhile I wrote a scholarly biography of my grandmother, who was the first Asian American novelist (Onoto Watanna, University of Illinois Press, 2001), and I was so excited about getting published that I dashed off chapters of a serial story In Defense of Mrs. Elton on the Janeites list.  I believe it was the first serial fan fiction story ever done online.  The story was published by the Jane Austen Society as a conference gift for their 1999 meeting, and later I expanded it and wrote more Mrs. Elton stories, which form my book, Mrs. Elton in America, published by Sourcebooks, like Mrs. Darcy's Dilemma.




Why Mrs Elton? 


Oh, I love Mrs. Elton, the character you love to hate.  I identified with her because she seemed like a pushy New York lady to me, brassy and officious and a kind of Regency Bella Abzug.  It interested me that the first time I read Emma, I didn't see that there was anything wrong with Mrs. Elton's manners; she behaved like everybody I knew.  So I studied her with fascination to see what was wrong with me having grown up in New York and not Regency England.  I learned the lesson well, and then made a second discovery:  Mrs. Elton, in fact, does nothing worse than Emma does herself.  It is the way Jane Austen cleverly and craftily editorially presents and frames the two characters, that makes us feel about them as we do.  She calls Mrs. Elton all sorts of harsh names, while she treats Emma tenderly.  Through studying Mrs. Elton, that one character, I learned a world of things about Jane Austen's methods - it was learning about her world in microcosm.


Is there any other minor character you’d like to write about?

Plenty!  Mrs. Norris, Lucy Steele, General Tilney...Not the good characters, you see!  I'm interested in Jane Austen's demons.


Are you working /planning to work on any new Austenesque project?

Yes, halfway through a Northanger Abbey novel.


As to Austen heroes, have you got a favourite one? Why?

Mr. Darcy and Henry Tilney.  Reasons are obvious, surely?


Which is Austen best-written character in your opinion?

Each and every one of them.  But I think she was inspired to her greatest heights of humor by Mr. Collins and Lady Catherine de Bourgh.


What is “Jane Austen’s Cat”?
 My story that is being published in the forthcoming Random House anthology, Jane Austen Made Me Do It.  I'm very excited that it will be coming out in October!

Thanks Diana, it's been really pleasant and interesting to chat with you about Jane Austen and your books. Hope you'll be back on My Jane Austen Book Club once your Northanger Abbey -inspired novel is finished.

Follow Diana Birchall's at her site, blog and at AustenAuthors

Double Giveaway 

Diana Birchall has generously granted you the chance to win two autographed copies of her Mrs Darcy's Dilemma, one for US and Canada readers and one for the rest of the world.  Leave your comments or questions, add your e-mail address, specify which part of the world you live in and ... GOOD LUCK!  
The giveaway ends on June 8th when the names of the winners will be announced. 
This interview and this double giveaway are part of the JANE IN JUNE II event hosted at Book Rat by Misty.


Wednesday, 1 June 2011

THE BALLAD OF GREGOIRE DARCY BY MARSHA ALTMAN - GIVEAWAY WINNER

Marsha Altman has been my latest guest in the "Talking Jane Austen with ... " series of interviews  (you can read our chat HERE)  and The Ballad of Gregoire Darcy is her just published fourth book in a successful series of sequels to Pride and Prejudice. One of last week's guestpost featuring Marsha Altman is going to win a signed copy. Just have a look at the end of this short post!

Synopsis


WHIRLWIND OF PEMBERLEY
The comings and goings on their grand estate present endless challenges for Elizabeth and Darcy. Can they avoid scandal given the recent arrival of Mr. Darcy’s illegitimate brother Grégoire, Mr. Bennet’s advancing years, the younger George Wickham’s coming of age, and Dr. Maddox’s departure from his position with the Prince Regent even as his many secrets threaten to be discovered?

COURTSHIP OF MARY BENNET
After her disastrous trip to the continent resulted in a passionate romance and an unintended child, Mary Bennet finds herself back in England, living with the shameful title of unwed mother. Having given up on ever finding love, Mary is shocked to find herself pursued by a proper gentleman. But are his intentions true, or is Mary being led astray by her heart once again?

TORMENT OF GRÉGOIRE DARCY
Leaving his sheltered, peaceful life at a Benedictine cloister, Grégoire enters a world he never imagined. Thrust into Regency England’s secular society, Grégoire is overwhelmed. How can an inexperienced, single man stay true to himself while finding his place in a culture obsessed with matrimony?

Giveaway Winner
Congratulations to Debbie Brown who will get an autographed copy of this great Austenesque read. And many thanks to Marsha Altman for being my guest on My Jane Austen Book Club. 

JANE LOVES JUNE!

After last year's great successful launch, JANE IN JUNE comes to its second round on Book Rat, Misty's brilliant book blog. This month's blogposts on My Jane Austen Book Club will be part of this Austen-dedicated extravaganza. You'll find new guesposts, interviews, book and film reviews and several giveaways  connected to this Austenesque celebration of the coming of summer!
Isn't the button Misty created for the occasion truly cute? The dreamy elegant Regency lady on the left? 
You're going to see her very often entering the scene of our friendly corner of the blogosphere in the next days and you'll know that the post will be part of Jane in June II.

Among the events and the activities proposed on Misty's Book Rat,  The P&P Read Along. Every Wednesday throughout June, there will be a linky to post your participation to the discussion of the week's segment of  Pride and Prejudice (more detailed info HERE).  
Misty's schedule is up on Jane in June Main Page ready to be filled in and still  open to any enthusiastic contribution you would like to make. Do you want to join us? Meanwhile,  I'll wait for you all  tomorrow with a "Talking Jane Austen with ... " interview + double giveaway! 



Tuesday, 31 May 2011

THE SENSE AND SENSIBILITY BICENTENARY CELEBRATION - MAY GIVEAWAY WINNER


The end of May marks the closing of this giveaway contest linked to our Sense and Sensibility Bicentenary Celebration. The May issue has been an interesting contribution by Jane Odiwe, Willoughby A Rogue on Trial.  Among those who commented the post to enter the giveaway the winner of Jane Odiwe's Willoughby's Return  is ...

snitchbitch!

Congratulations to the new winner! To all the others I remind there are still two giveaways running on at My Jane Austen Book Club. Just have a look at the right sidebar.

I'll wait for all of you in the next days. June will be a very special month!

Saturday, 28 May 2011

THE TRUTH ABOUT MR DARCY - GUESTBLOG BY SUSAN ADRIANI

Susan Adriani has been a fan of Jane Austen and her beloved characters for as long as she can remember. Originally from New England, she attended a small art college close to her home, where she majored in illustration. In 2007, after contemplating the unexplored possibilities in one of Miss Austen’s most celebrated novels, Pride and Prejudice, she began to write her first novel-length story, The Truth About Mr. Darcy (formerly Affinity and Affection). With encouragement from fellow Austen enthusiasts she continued, and is currently at work on her second book. She lives in Connecticut with her husband, young daughter, and a very impertinent cat. She concludes her blog tour to present her  The Truth About Mr. Darcy, now available in bookstores, here on My Jane Austen Book club. Join me and welcome her. She's ready to answer all your questions! Furthermore, don't miss the double chance to win this new book.  (See giveaway details at the end of this post)

MY TRUTH ABOUT MR DARCY 

The BBC version of Jane Austen's Pride and Prejudice (directed by Andrew Davies) was the first glimpse I had of Jane Austen's world, and I quickly fell in love with everything about it. The next day I couldn't get to my local bookstore fast enough. I eagerly bought the book, devoured every word, and loved the story and characters even more.

What's not to love? Elizabeth Bennet is full of spunk, wit, and intelligent—if not a bit pre-judgmental  at times, but that's one more reason why we adore her: her humanity. And Mr. Darcy doesn't seem to mind. He is without a doubt the epitome of tall, dark, and handsome—if not a bit taciturn and stand-offish as well. My mother always believed that there was something to be said about the quiet ones; a certain air of mystery about them, and the master of Pemberley certainly doesn't disappoint.

And neither does Mr. Bingley…well, not until after the Netherfield ball, that is. Up until that point in the story he is the perfect suitor, all smiles and joviality as he courts Jane Bennet in full view of the entire village. When he leaves for London, his sisters and Darcy in tow, we honestly believe he has every intention of asking Jane to marry him, or that he'll at least return and continue to court her. It always annoyed me that the kind and considerate Mr. Bingley could be so easily swayed by his friend, and especially his calculating sisters. He clearly loved Jane, yet was so easily persuaded to believe that her feelings were not in any way equal to his own. But the course is set; the story will follow the same path every time, with the same outcome. What is a dissatisfied reader to do? Why, change it, of course!

When I began writing Jane Austen-inspired fiction, I had a long list of events and details I thought would be fun to alter. That list is still pretty long—after all, how can an author possibly pack everything she has a curiosity about into one book? Ideally, she can't—well, at least I couldn't! But, in The Truth About Mr. Darcy (previously self-published as Affinity and Affection), I did manage to experiment with quite a few scenarios that were floating around in my head, and managed to create a very different outcome for Jane Austen's most beloved characters. (It was a lot of fun!)

One of the details I changed was Mr. Bingley's retreat to London. In my story, not only does he not make the trip, but he puts his foot down regarding Darcy's sour opinion of Jane Bennet and her relations. When his friend tries to sway him from his course, Bingely not only stands up to him, but gives him a few things to think about regarding his feelings for Elizabeth as well.

I'd like to share with you an excerpt from my book, which takes place on the night that Darcy has first declared himself to Elizabeth. The scene is between Darcy, Bingley, and Mr. Hurst (who I also had a lot of fun with). I like this scene because it gives a little glimpse of the dynamic of the men of Netherfield Park. There are no ladies present, and they are at ease to be themselves. I hope you'll enjoy reading it as much as I've enjoyed being here today!

Excerpt, The Truth About Mr. Darcy (previously self-published as Affinity and Affection)


“Hurst, come in and have a drink,” Darcy said with uncharacteristic cheerfulness. “I was just thrashing Bingley at billiards.”

Grateful for an opportunity to lay aside his cue, Bingley poured a healthy glass of port for his brother-in-law and refilled his and Darcy's own.
As Mr. Hurst accepted his drink, he fixed Bingley with a level look that belied his inebriated state, and said, “By God, Bingley, that sister of yours will be your ruin.” Then he raised his glass in Darcy’s direction. “And she won’t do you any favors either, I might add.” He took several satisfying gulps of the contents as Darcy stared at him with a furrowed brow.
“Come, Hurst,” said Bingley with his usual good humor, “I grant you that Caroline may be difficult, but I hardly think it will lead me to ruin. And as for Darcy”—he laughed—“well, I doubt there is any woman in all of England who is prepared to do more for him!”
Darcy shrugged his shoulders, simultaneously rolling his eyes with distaste.
“Bloody right about that one! If I were you, Darcy, I’d think twice before paying court to Elizabeth Bennet again in Caroline’s company. Damned jealous of that one, she is, and rightly so. Come now, man, you must know Caroline has been determined to get you since the day she laid her eyes on Pemberley, and she is pretty blasted angry right about now.” Mr. Hurst took another drink and laughed. “What the devil ever possessed you to stare at Elizabeth Bennet like that all night in decent company? Caroline would have sold herself to the devil for half a glance, never mind what went on between the two of you tonight. Now she wants to drag us all the way to Town just to be rid of her. She may as well remove us all to the Continent for all the good that would do her.”
Bingley sighed and shook his head in exasperation. “Yes, that does sound like our Caroline.”
Mr. Hurst noticed Darcy’s frown. “Now do not go and take offense, Darcy. Though he only manages to gawk at her like a lovesick puppy, I suspect my sister-in-law has similar plans to dispose of Bingley’s Miss Bennet as well.”
Bingley sputtered and choked on his port.
“If you have any thoughts of proposing, Bingley, I would get to it, if I were you. There is no telling what Caroline is capable of when she sets her mind to it.” He threw back the rest of his drink and bid them both a good night.
 
Thank you so much for stopping in and taking the time to visit with me today. I'd like to extend my sincerest thanks to Maria Grazia for graciously having me as her guest once again. I always have a wonderful time here, so thank you for making the last stop on my tour so lovely!
Susan Adriani 

DOUBLE GIVEAWAY  
Susan Adriani is ready to answer your questions or comments here. She has generously granted you readers of My Jane Austen Book Club TWO COPIES of her The Truth About Mr Darcy, one for US and Canada readers and one for the rest of the world. Please, specify which area you live in in your comments and don't forget your e-mail! This giveaway ends next Saturday, June 4th.

Thursday, 26 May 2011

TALKING JANE AUSTEN WITH ... MARSHA ALTMAN & GIVEAWAY OF THE BALLAD OF GREGOIRE DARCY


 Marsha Altman  born in New Jersey. She has lived in Jerusalem, Israel and currently resides in New York City. She has a B.A. in History from Brown University and a MFA in Creative Writing from The City College of New York. She has just released her new novel, a new sequel of Pride and Prejudice,The Ballad of Gregoire Darcy


GIVEAWAY
Comment and leave your e-mail address and, if you live in the US or Canada , you'll get a chance to win this new novel. Giveaway ends on Wednesday, June 1st.


So, Marsha, after The Darcys and the Bingleys, Mr Darcy’s Great Escape and The Plight of the Darcy Brothers, your fourth sequel of Pride and Prejudice, The Ballad of Gregoire Darcy, has just been released. I am astonished  by the great deal and variety of sequels this masterpiece has inspired. What were your personal, special reasons for wanting to give Jane Austen’s tale  a saga-like series of sequels?
I came into this very hesitantly, just starting out with the short story “A Bit of Advice” which became the first half of The Darcys and the Bingleys. I posted it on Fanfiction.net and it got good reviews, so I decided to keep going until I ran out of ideas, and it took me 10 books to run out of ideas. In actuality, I burned out pretty hard in the middle of the 10th, but I had the ending so I just had to keep going.

Can you tell us briefly who Gregoire,  the hero of your new book,  is in the Darcy family and what kind of adventures have you got him involved in ?
I’m very interested in doing stories about the Other, people who were not part of Regency high society – not just because of social class, but because of religion or nationality or something to that affect. There’s a lot of them in my books, and because Darcy is a bit of a homebody (he takes less journeys than everyone else unless he’s rescuing someone) I have to throw them in his face to get a reaction.
Grégoire (it’s spoiled on the back of the book) is Darcy’s half-brother, the result of an affair between Darcy’s father and his mother’s lady-maid, and was born a few months after Georgiana. His existence was a secret until The Plight of the Darcy Brothers. Not only is he French and a bastard but he’s also a monk, so there’s a huge gulf in the worldviews of the two brothers. Spirituality is very rarely addressed in Austen – both of the religious characters in Pride and Prejudice (Mr. Collins and Mary Bennet) are negative, though that doesn’t stand as a statement for how Austen felt about religion as a whole, just how people use it to define themselves.  I gave Darcy a kind of standard Anglican aristocracy understanding of religion, meaning he believes in trying to be humble, acting in an upstanding manner, doing works of charity, and trying not to fall asleep during the pastor’s sermon on Sundays – which obviously works for him and is not a bad way to be. Grégoire, obviously, has given the whole of his life to religion, and wants nothing more than to pray and do menial chores inside monastery walls and not be part of secular society at all.
Grégoire is also interesting because he stands at the end of monastic culture  in its medieval remnants. Two of his monasteries – in France and then Austria – have already been dissolved by the French Revolution and Napoleon’s policies, and his monastery in Spain is one of those that survived the dissolutions in Spain during the rule of Napoleon’s brother. Even in Catholic countries like France and Ireland his way of life is either on its way out or gone; it’s obvious he has to find another way to live, which is very hard on him, and the way he gets through it is with the help of his larger family but especially his brother Darcy and his sister Georgiana.
I want to say these ideas of deciding how to include spirituality in your life are universal, and they are really are – I’m an Orthodox Jew writing about a Benedictine monk and his Protestant brother in 19th-century England. It’s not about being preachy or having a message, but about people decigin for themselves how they want to live their lives.

What is more engaging and entertaining  between to make Jane Austen's characters live on in your stories or creating new ones who can have their own space and act shoulder to shoulder with the already known ones?
Can I say both? It really only works with both. Half of the fun is the reaction betweens people who are different – which was the driving plotline between Pride and Prejudice, two people who were great for each other but disagreed on many things, so much so that it drove them apart initially. If people come to care about the new characters nearly as much or as much as the Pride and Prejudice characters, I feel as if I’ve done my job as a storyteller, which is to make the characters engaging enough to care about.

If you could get lost in one of Jane Austen's novels, which one would you choose? Why? Whose place would you like to take?
Uh ... none of them. I have this thing for flushing toilets and medicine that actually works. It’s a deal-breaker.

Would you write a sequel for any other of Jane Austen’s novels?
Short answer: No. Long answer: Not really.

Which is the minor character or the evil character in JA novel with whom you would like to write a spin-off?
I started this story off thinking maybe it would spin into a plotline just about Bingley, but really, Bingley needs to play off Darcy or Jane. He needs a companion – he’s briefly on a trip in this novel, but he has his cousin-in-law Brian Maddox along with him. And I decided to give Caroline Bingley some time and married her off to Dr. Maddox, but I would focus on Dr. Maddox rather than her, because he’s a doctor and you can do more with him. There’s a problem in the book’s society that you really can’t do much with women aside from marry them off unless you do something really radical that gets them kicked out of society. In later books I do some weird stuff with Georgiana Bingley, Bingley and Jane’s daughter, who skirts convention as much as she possibly can, but she’s my character, and I don’t think Austen would write about a character like her.

As for the many adaptations of Jane Austen’s novels we’ve seen so far, is there one you especially love? Why?
I can’t answer that question fairly because I know too many of the authors online or personally. I will give a shout-out to Linda Berdoll. Mr. Darcy Takes a Wife was the first published story I read, and I read it about 10 times. And I thought Ann Herendeen’s Pride/Prejudice: A Novel of Mr. Darcy, Elizabeth Bennet, and Their Forbidden Lovers took the book in a different direction and deserves some serious respect for that.


With all the movies / series based on  Jane Austen’s work don’t we risk many readers  1. Neglect  to go back to the originals and to read them  2.  Get a wrong  opinion of Jane Austen’s aim  influenced by the usually romanticized  interpretation of her stories?
No. I mean, no one’s shoving the spin-off books down people’s throats. The original is always there, being assigned in class, being produced in yet another edition with pictures or large print or scholar’s notes. The original is powerful enough that I feel it’s un-taintable; you can read 10 or 20 spin-offs, but if you go back to the original, you’re going to get the original, which is a great classic of world literature. Some people try to imitate Austen’s style, which is no more less respectful than what I do, but I never try to do that, because I know I just can’t. I use the setting and the characters but I don’t try to write like her. I know I’m going to fail.

When and how did you become an  Austenite?
I read Pride and Prejudice in 12th grade, and saw the miniseries a couple times, but when the 2005 movie came out, it found me at the right time in my life to be receptive to it and it somehow took over my writing life. So I went back and read the book, and re-watched the miniseries, and read a lot of fan fiction, and started doing research on Austen in general. 2005. I should give that year. It’s a good year to give.

What is Jane’s  most important life lesson to you?
If you’re going to fall hopelessly in love with a guy, it helps if he’s really rich. I know that’s a very cynical reading of Pride and Prejudice, but there’s some truth to it. Colonel Fitzwilliam is a nice enough guy but passes on Elizabeth because he doesn’t have a good salary and she has almost no dowry. Behind the romance there are all of these financial considerations; in that sense it’s very grounded.

What is so fascinating in her world to so many new admirers  living in the 21st century?
The story is a timeless romance. It always had admirers, but it went through waves of admiration based on how well and widely it was published. Things go through periods of being popular, not just in the celebrity sense but also in the literary sense, as things go in and out of fashion, and right now Austen is very fashionable as a writer.

What are you working on at present?
I’m writing some short stories that coincide with the events of The Ballad of Grégoire Darcy that I’m hoping to release as a free (if short) e-Book to give something to my readers. I also have to start editing book 5 to submit for publication. I’m also editing a sci-fi book that I’m considering self-publishing online, and I’m waiting to see if a business book proposal for the Chinese-language market sells or not. If it does, then I’ll be writing a book on Jewish business ethics in the Talmud for Chinese publishers. So wish me luck on all that.

Of course, good luck on all your future plans and projects, Marsha. Thanks for taking the time to answer all my questions. 
Now it's your turn,  readers of My Jane Austen Book Club. Ready for the giveaway? Marsha and I would love to hear from you!