Wednesday, 14 December 2011

DECONSTRUCTING JANE BY EMILY C.A. SNYDER - GUESTPOST AND GIVEAWAY

Welcome back on My Jane Austen Book Club to Emily C. A. Snyder . Emily has been inventing stories since she was old enough to babble, and writing them down since she was old enough to dictate. A prolific writer, Snyder is the author of "Nachtsturm Castle" available from Girlebooks.com, as well as the author of The Twelve Kingdoms series from Arx Publishing, LLC (arxpub.com) which includes "Niamh and the Hermit" and "Charming the Moon." In addition to novels, Snyder enjoys writing plays, such as "Wallace's Will" available from from Playscripts, Inc. (playscripts.com).

Snyder holds an MA in Theatre Education from Emerson College, Boston, MA and a BA in Literature and Drama from Franciscan University of Steubenville, OH.
When not writing, Emily can most often be seen teaching or directing Shakespeare. And when not doing that, chances are she's driving aimlessly in her car, singing at the top of her lungs. For more information, please visit her website http://www.christianfantasy.net/emilycasnyder or  http://www.youtube.com/gaudete
Read Emily's brilliant piece, comment and enter the giveaway of one of her Austen-inspired books. The details of the giveaway are at the end of the post.


When reading Austen’s novels in quick succession (or watching a marathon of movie adaptations), one thing becomes immediately clear: “It would be ridiculously easy to write an Austenesque novel. Right? Well, possibly. After all, a casual deconstruction of her works reveals that she drew heavily upon archetypes, such as:

The Heroine
This is our protagonist—or, in the case of Sense and Sensibility, protagonists plural—who will, in the course of the novel meet the hero, lose or push away the hero, and find the hero again.  She will also comment on the oblique restrictions placed on women in an oblique style, will struggle with her family relations, will be foiled or embroiled by a foil, and finally break free to a happily ever after.  She will be, if not spunky, than certainly possessed of deep reserves of strength.

The Hero
The fellow whom our Heroine will ultimately marry, he may come in one of two varieties: someone whom the Heroine meets later in life during the course of the book (Mr Darcy, Mr Tilney, Col Brandon and Mr Ferrars) or someone whom the Heroine either grew up with (Mr Knightley and Edmund Bertram) or has been intimate with previously (Captain Wentworth).  He must be a man of upstanding and outstanding virtues, perfectly willing to jump into battle the dangers of society.  Wit is a plus, but not a necessity.


The Foils
Every plot requires some obstacles and the Foils—male and female—provide just that.  The job of any Foil is twofold: if possible, to separate the Hero from the Heroine, and to provide a counter example, an anti-doppelgänger, a distorted reflection of the Hero or Heroine.  They are everything the Hero or Heroine isn’t or shouldn’t be.

Male Foils
Often do all within their power to secure the amorous attention of the Heroine.  Almost exactly half never prove any more than comic relief (Mr Collins, John Thorpe, Mr Elton) while the other half give the Heros an actual run for their money.  Although the Heroine is initially attracted to these rascally Foils (Wickham, Mr Elliot), the audience occasionally roots for the Foil to win over the Hero (Willoughby, Henry Crawford).  Silly Foils can be easily dismissed, and are usually no more venial than your next door neighbour.  However, rascally foils typically hide some deep dark sexual secret (preying on fifteen year old girls, or eloping with married women, for example!).

Female Foils
Are never as dastardly as their counterparts—with the possible exception of Mary Crawford, who nearly succeeds on both befriending the Heroine and winning the Hero.  Some female Foils take the time to betray the Heroine by both befriending her and then pursuing the Hero (Mary Crawford, Lucy Steele).  Some merely pursue the Hero (Caroline Bingley, Louisa Musgrove), and others befriend the Heroine and collect collateral hearts (Isabella Thorpe).  One might argue that in Emma, the Heroine is her own foil, with Jane Fairfax and Harriet Smith the disgraced Cinderellas!

Clergymen



Austen’s own familial and intimately familiar links to the clergy reveal themselves in her wide-ranging depictions of her characters of the cloth.

Heroic Clergy
Henry Tilney, Edward Ferrars, and Edmund Bertram are all clergymen—although Henry is the only one who has already taken orders before the start of the book.  Of the three, Henry almost never speaks about his profession, but proves himself to be as witty and charming as if he were a foil…which he isn’t!  Edward Ferrars has chosen the cloth almost as a last resort: to him, the church is a benign and acceptable occupation.  For Edmund Bertram, however, we see that passionate burning to do good which leads him to withstand the temptation of Mary Crawford and fulfil his vocation.

Absurd Clergy
While Mr Collins and Mr Elton are the most well-known of Austen’s absurd clergy—and are foils to boot!—there is another humorous clergyman who populates the edges of Austen’s novels.  Doctor Grant from Mansfield Park, who has the dubious honour of claiming the Crawfords as cousins-in-law, is a man whose main concern is not whether the people in his parish will roast in hell, but whether his goose is properly cooked.

Benign Clergy
No Austen novel would be complete without at least one churchman, such as Charles Hayter, a humble clergyman engaged to Henrietta Musgrove in Persuasion, or the little-seen father of Catherine Morland (and nine other children), Mr Morland in Northanger Abbey, or the even littler seen brother of Captain Wentworth.  Regardless, when you’re writing your own Austen novel, you’d better have a clergyman or two!

Military Men



Much like the clergy, military men come in a variety of flavours.  But whereas the worst a clergyman ever behaves in Austen’s novels is to be a picky eater or a social climbing fool, the military tends to come off much disappointed in Austen’s world.

Romantic Military
To count, Colonel Brandon from Sense and Sensiblity is the only army man to actually get the girl—and that, almost by default.  Colonel Fitzwilliam in Pride and Prejudice makes a valiant effort to win Lizzy Bennet, but can never compare to the paragon that is Mr Darcy.  Captain Wentworth from Persuasion does the royal navy proud by winning Anne Elliot prior to the book’s opening, losing her, going a little bonkers, and then getting her again.

Dastardly Military
Unfortunately, the army takes quite a beating in this respect.  Wicked Wickham from Pride and Prejudice is part of the militia.  Over in Northanger Abbey, our heroine is thrust out of the titular house by General Tilney, while his son, Captain Frederick Tilney, destroys the heroine’s brother’s hopes of a happy marriage.  A little more peripherally, the Crawford siblings from Mansfield Park cast a bad name on the navy in the form of their uncle and guardian, General Crawford, who has flaunts his lover in London society…and whose bad behaviour apparently influenced his wards considerably!

Friendly Military
True to their name, members of the military can always be counted on for a friendly shoulder.  Captain Denny and the whole militia are always happy to dance with a Bennet girl or help Wickham run off with them—they’re here to help!  Fanny’s brother, Midshipman William Price, is a sympathetic ear in Mansfield Park.  Likewise, Admiral Croft from Persuasion is just as happy to help the Eliott family retrench as he is to help those two crazy protagonists get back together again.  Captain Harville welcomes Wentworth and his entire entourage into his home in Persuasion, even though he has suffered a severe leg injury.  Wentworth and Harville’s mutual friend, Captain James Benwick, is good enough to marry the female foil, Louisa Musgrove—and bring the romantic successes for the Austen navy up to two.  In Persuasion, which is just crawling with military, even the rotten Mr Elliot has a friend in Colonel Wallis, whose wife is friendly with Nurse Rooke, who is friendly with Anne Elliot’s dear friend, who tells Anne all the rotten things about the rotten Mr Elliot.  You can count on a peripheral military man!

Lords & Ladies
While more prestigious members of the peerage are not unknown in Austen’s world (remember that Colonel Fitzwilliam is the second son of an Earl!), it’s much more common to meet a baronet or two or three, and their attendant ladies.

Patriarchal Peers
If your Austen novel includes an aristocrat as a father figure, he will likely be something like a tyrant.  For example, various cinematic adaptations have shown Sir Thomas Bertram in Mansfield Park to be merely strict to overbearingly dictatorial.  In Persuasion, Sir Walter Elliot’s vanity is the root of his family’s disgrace and need to retrench.  Sir John Middleton in Sense and Sensibility proves to be only delightfully meddlesome—but that’s probably because he is only a cousin.

Neighbourhood Noblesse Oblige
If there’s a lord or lady hanging about an Austen novel who is not directly related to the heroine, we can be assured that he will do all within his power to help our heroes to their romantic end—whether intentionally or not!  Sir William Lucas and Lady Catherine de Bourgh from Pride and Prejudice both do their parts: the first by needling on Mr Darcy to dance, the second by daring the heroine not to love that same gentleman.  In Persuasion, Lady Russell gave us the excuse for the entire book by originally counselling against the marriage of Anne Elliot to Captain Wentworth, while Lady Dalrymple separates Anne’s oppressive family from her long enough for our heroine to see Wentworth clearly.  Even the Honourable John Yates and the never-seen Lady Stornoway from Mansfield Park do their jobs: the first helping to orchestrate the disastrous affair of the theatrical which helps our heroes get their moral heads on straight, and the latter sealing the deal by helping Henry Crawford and Mrs Rushworth in their dangerous liason.  Lady Middleton from Sense and Sensiblity, of course, is the quintessential aid, bringing the Dashwood girls to London so they can pursue their escaped romances.

Add in some friends and family members (preferably with strange quirks and occasional bouts of hysteria) for the Hero and the Heroine and their friends and their families, all of whom either keep the lovers apart or drive them together (aunts and uncles are great for this), and you’ve got yourself a Jane Austen novel!

Easy, right?  Easy!  Write.


GIVEAWAY 

Part I of this collection of Austenesque short stories offers us a glimpse into various behind-the-scenes interactions from Austen's original works. "A Most Persuasive Correspondence" is the epistolary correspondence between the two splendidly-matched villains from Persuasion, Mrs. Clay and Mr. Elliot. In Part II,  Snyder runs with her imagination taking on various "what-ifs" to hilarious results. What if all the villains (or heroines, or heroes, or baronets...) from Austen's novels were thrown together on a Dark and Stormy Night? The final story, "Pride and Paraliterature" is a satiric take on the phenomenon of monster mash-ups, concluding that nothing proves so dangerous to Mr. Darcy as that original adversary, Miss Bingley. Read an excerpt 


Leave your comment and don't forget to add your  e-mail address to enter the giveaway contest of an e-copy of Letters of Love & Deception. The giveaway is open internationally and ends on  22nd December when the winner is announced.

Monday, 12 December 2011

LITTLE JANE - GUESTPOST BY PAT SWEET

Pat Sweet is  a retired theatrical costumer living in tiny cottage in Southern California with a very lovable husband and very silly dog. After 25 years of making costumes, she couldn't stand the thought of sewing another stitch, so she looked around for something else to make. Luckily, her love of books and miniatures turned into a very enjoyable business. This is a lovely piece she wrote to introduce herself and her work to the readers of My Jane Austen Book Club. I'd be glad if you could join me and welcome her among us,  in our online Austen Club. 
I make miniature books – that is, I invent the content, illustrate it with Photoshop, print the pages on a photo inkjet printer, collate and divide them into signatures, sew the signatures together and glue the spine, then encase the book block in its binding. And then sell them.  
Every now and then I get a request for something unusual. I love commissions, because they're pre-sold, and somebody else has taken the trouble to come up with the idea. Because I love what I do, I usually go overboard with them, and do far more work than the fee I ask requires.
Last week I got an email from a gentleman who wanted a miniature version of Shakespeare's Sonnets, with a twist. He had made a Jane Austen doll and wanted a book for her; he had chosen the Sonnets because she was fond of them. I'm sometimes not quite sure of how deeply a customer wished to go into these things, so I gave him the alternative of a small book with “Shakespeare's Sonnets” on the outside, which would certainly be cheaper that printing out all 154 sonnets, but he surprised me. He wrote back that he was an Austen scholar who had just finished editing the books for a major publisher, that he taught 19th century literature, and that he had made a trunk doll – molded the head and face, applied the hair, and made her a small wardrobe. He sent me a picture, and I was captivated. Jane's face was lovely, with a wonderfully wry expression, and the two gowns, the hat and the spencer were beautifully made.
 This was serious stuff. He found a binding that had been done during Jane's lifetime, and I used it to print out a paper binding for the miniature. He also asked if we could use the title page of the original edition of the Sonnets as the frontispiece of Jane's copy. I had the idea of putting Jane Austen's signature on the flyleaf of the book, and so “Jane Austen's Copy of Shakespeare's Sonnets” was born.
 I wrote a small piece about it on my own Bo Press Blog to wild acclaim, especially by Prue Batten of Mesmered, who has been my partner-in-crime in several interesting endeavors . She suggested other Jane Austen fans would be interested in it, especially now as Jane's birthday was so close.
I've also made several little traveling libraries filled with (blank) copies of Austen's novels, for miniaturists and dollhouses.

I'm so glad I could contribute a little something to Jane Austen's birthday celebration, even if it is something especially small!

Sunday, 11 December 2011

HENRY TILNEY'S DIARY BY AMANDA GRANGE - GIVEAWAY WINNER


Here's the name of the lucky winner of Amanda Grange's "Henry Tilney's Diary" picked up through random.org  among the commenters to her interview  (HERE) .

Congratulations to ... marilyn!!!

Thanks to Amanda Grange for being my guest and to Penguin USA for providing the copy for this giveaway.

Friday, 9 December 2011

TALKING MR DARCY, JANE AUSTEN & REALITY TV WITH … KAREN DOORNEBOS + SUPER GIVEAWAY

After reading and reviewing her "Definitely not Mr Darcy" (HERE) , I couldn't resist asking Karen Doornebos to be my guest and answering some questions about her brilliant, successful  novel. Read all through our chat, answer Karen's final questions, add your e-mail address and enter the giveaway of 3 copies of Definitely not Mr Darcy as well as "Coffee? Tea? Or Mr Darcy"? drink coasters to each winner offered by the author herself! This super giveaway contest is open worldwide and ends on December 17th when the winner is announced.


First of all welcome on My Jane Austen Book Club and congratulations on your brilliant Austen-based novel, I loved reading it. Though, I must be honest, I hate reality shows . But yours show in the book is unique. So charming that  I would love to see it! A  Jane Austen – inspired show on TV.  But tell me, did the idea for your book come from  liking or disliking  reality TV?

Thank you, Maria, for having me here. I’m a big fan of your sites and your newspaper! I don’t like reality TV, either, in fact, just like Chloe, I don’t have cable—and I have a teenager and a tween. The idea for the book came simply because I didn’t want my main character to travel back in time, and a reality show was a great way to have the past conflict with the present!

Has anybody asked you to write a show  like the one in your book  or collaborate at writing one after  you published” Definitely not Mr Darcy”?
Actually, a film company considered optioning the rights for the book, but they ultimately passed. The thing is, I had my manuscript at a writer’s conference and someone said, “Regency reality show? It’s been done!” Of course, I was shocked, but the woman gave me the name of the show, “The Regency House Party.” It was produced by England’s Channel 4 in 2004. You can imagine how devastated I was, with a finished draft in hand, but I decided to watch the show—I had to! It was entertaining, but nothing like my book. I did incorporate some historical detail from the show into my book, looking at it as research. So, in short, the show has been done!

And would you ever take part in a show like the one you describe as a contestant?
Yes, I would—I couldn’t pass up the opportunity. I’m not sure how well I would deal without a shower and plumbing, though. That would be worth filming, I’m sure.



Who inspired your Chloe, the sparkling  funny heroine in your story?  
Chloe is a pastiche of myself, people I know, and a dash of naivite tossed in.

Does she resemble any Austen heroine? 
She might be a cross between Elizabeth Bennet and Catherine Morland!

As for your Mr Darcy, Mr Wrightman,  he is the hero in your book and  the “prize” in the reality you telll about. You actually have two heroes in your story, the two Wrightman brothers. Without giving away much, can you describe briefly the two gorgeous men Chloe meets at Bridesbridge?
Both men are attractive in very distintive ways. One is tall, dark and handsome. The other is lankier, blonde, and witty. Oh, and George, the producer is handsome as well, in his blue jeans, auburn hair and sunglasses. Can’t have too many good looking men around, can we?

What is your ideal Mr Darcy like? What must  a “Definitely Mr Darcy” be   like? 
He must have integrity. He must be honest. Most of all, what makes Austen’s Mr. Darcy so appealing is that he changes for Elizabeth Bennet. I’m not sure how many men would do that in real life. That is Mr. Darcy’s ultimate appeal, and why he has endured for centuries.

In your book there are many references to the clothing, the food, the habits, the pastimes, the code of behaviour of the Regency. What are the sources you used in your research ?
Wow—I did so much research! I started by reading Jane Austen’s letters, and then spent waaaay too much time in libraries and doing research on the internet. There is a three-volume Jane Austen Encyclopedia out there and now we have the annotated Pride and Prejudice and Sense and Sensibility. But I would Google things like “Regency era breakfast” and then cross-check facts with other sources.

You and Jane Austen . What is your history as an Austenite? 
Pride and Prejudice was required reading in my sophomore year of high school. The rest is history! I fell in love with Mr. Darcy right then and there, setting me up for years of dating issues!

Now, are you working on any new project?  
Yes, I’m working on another Austen-inspired and a book that has nothing to do with Jane Austen (imagine!).

Before ending our pleasant chat, have you got a question to ask our readers? They  are going to enter a  giveaway contest to win your book answering it. 
Yes, I’m wondering: How would you describe your perfect 19th century hero?

That’s all for now, Karen. I wish you and “Definitely not Mr Darcy” great success. Thanks for being my guest and answering my questions.
Much obliged to you for having me, Maria!


Now it's your turn dear readers! Answer Karen's question, leave your e-mail address and good luck! 3 books and 3 "Coffee? Tea? Or Mr Darcy"? drink coasters for 3 different winners!

LATEST GIVEAWAYS - WINNERS OF FITZWILLIAM EBENEZER DARCY AND HIS GOOD OPINION


The giveaway of a signed copy of Barbara Tiller Cole's "Fitzwilliam Ebenezer Darcy" was linked to her guestpost "Elizabeth Darcy and Barbara Tiller Cole's Shopping Adventure" (HERE)The winner picked up through random.org is 

JAKKI L.


Nancy Kelley was my guest,  instead,  to present her new Darcy novel, "His Good Opinion", in a "Talking Jane Austen with ..." session  (HERE).
Among the several  readers who commented that post and entered the giveaway contest of a copy, just one lucky winner: 
Becky C.

Congratulations to both winners!  And many thanks to Barbara Tiller Cole and Nancy Kelley for being my kind guests.

Wednesday, 7 December 2011

JANE AUSTEN'S BIRTHDAY SOIREE - YOU ARE ALL INVITED!!!

It'll be Jane Austen's Birthday soon, it'll be next Friday December 16th. Are you ready to celebrate with My Jane Austen Book Club?

Katherine Cox at November's Autumn and I have joined forces and invited authors and bloggers to a great Soiree in order to celebrate dear Jane's Birthday all together in friendliness and joy.

There will be thirty-one blogs/sites participating in the event and each of them  will run a different giveaway contest. Each blogger will post a "gift" for Jane Austen on that day. You will have the chance to hop from blog to blog and enter as many giveaways as you can.


We'll wait for you all on 16th. Spread the word. The more, the merrier!






LIST OF PARTICIPANTS IN THE JANE AUSTEN’S BIRTHDAY SOIREE


o    Alyssa Goodnight
o    Austenprose, Laurel Ann Nattress
o    Brant Flakes, Marilyn Brant
o    Choc Lit Authors’ Corner, Juliet Archer
o    The Fiction vs. Reality Smackdown, Karen Doornebos
o    First Draft, Cindy Jones
o    The Heroine’s Bookshelf, Erin Blakemore
o    Jane Austen Brazil, Adriana Zardini
o    The Jane Austen Film ClubJenny Allworthy
o    Jane Austen SequelsJane Odiwe
o    Jane Started It! Laura Hile, Susan Kaye, Pamela Aidan, and Barbara Cornthwaite
o    Mesmered’s Blog, Prue Batten
o    O! Beauty Unattempted, Emily Snyder
o    One Literature Nut, Becky Rhodehouse
o    Pemberley Variations, Abigail Reynolds
o    Reading, Writing, Working, Playing, Jane Greensmith
o    Regency Sketches, Farida Mestek
o    SemiTrue Stories, C. Allyn Pierson
o    Stiletto Storytime, Courtney Webb
o    Urban Girl Takes Vermont, Vera Nazarian
o    vvb32 reads, Velvet

I haven't  revealed the great prizes each blog will be giving away on the Austen's Birthday Soiree but you'll discover it soon. Take notes, menawhile. You are all invited. December 16, 2011: The Jane Austen's Birthday Soiree!


The graphics of the event was realized by Katherin Cox.

Monday, 5 December 2011

MISS DARCY FALLS IN LOVE BY SHARON LATHAN - GIVEAWAY WINNER


Time to reveal the name of the winner of Miss Darcy Falls in Love by Sharon Lathan. By the way, have you read her brilliant guestblog? She decided to ask herself the questions nobody had never asked her: Sharon Lathan interviews Sharon Lathan. 
It's a great post, isn't it? And it is linked to a great giveaway contest. The winner will get a copy of "Miss Darcy Falls in Love" from Sourcebooks as well as  a signed bookplate and bookmark from Sharon herself.

Random.org tool has picked up the following commenter

Ruby Chun

Congratulations to her and many thanks both to Sourcebooks publishers and Sharon Lathan for the guestpost & giveaway.

AMANDA GRANGE: MY HENRY TILNEY - INTERVIEW & GIVEAWAY


Let's welcome Amanda Grange back to My Jane Austen Book Club!   She was  my guest not long ago to present the paperback version of her Colonel Brandon's Diary (HERE).
She has had sixteen novels published including six Jane Austen retellings, which look at events from the heroes' points of view. Her latest release is "Henry Tilney's Diary".
Read Amanda's answer to my questions about lovely Henry Tilney, the hero of Northanger Abbey, and try to win the free copy provided by her publisher, Penguin  USA. Leave your comments to enter the giveaway and do not forget to add your e-mail address. This giveaway contest is limited to US and Canada readers and ends on December 11th when the name of the winner is announced.
You can find out more by visiting her website at http://www.amandagrange.com You can also follow her on Twitter @hromanceuk and find her on Facebook.




-First of all Amanda, thanks for being my guest on My Jane Austen Book Club and for accepting to answer my questions.
Thanks for inviting me!

Your latest book is out and it is “Henry Tilney’s Diary”. Before focusing on Mr Tilney, could you tell us what you especially highlighted in your series of Austen heroes’ personal diaries?
I wanted to highlight the heroes’ journeys, showing their early lives and the events that shaped them, before following their innermost thoughts and feelings as they meet and finally marry their heroines.

-Now, to our Mr Tilney. What are the peculiarities of this Austen  hero?
He’s Austen’s wittiest, most humorous hero, in fact he’s unique in the Austen canon because he is so light-hearted. I love him!

-Have you discovered what it is that he especially likes in Catherine Morland?
I think he likes her honesty and her naiveté.  The key to his attraction, for me, is expressed in this passage from Henry Tilney’s Diary, which takes place in Bath:  “Miss Morland was not jaded by her surroundings, nor did she pretend to be. It was entertaining to see how much she enjoyed the bustle, the rooms, the  people and the dancing, instead of affecting boredom, like the other young ladies, saying that there was not one 
interesting person to be met with in the whole of Bath. Instead, she was charmed, and through her eyes I 
found that some of the charm of Bath was restored for me.”

-I’ve always thought that Catherine and Henry were a bit  mismatched. He’s smart, brilliant, witty. Catherine has none of those qualities. I’ve even tried to imagine their married life after many years but I could only figure out something like Mr and Mrs Bennet’s menage. Do you think Mr Tilney will help Catherine to improve in their married life?
I think it’s an attraction of opposites. I don’t think they’ll end up like Mr and Mrs Bennet (I hope not!) because I don’t think Catherine’s as silly as Mrs Bennet, I think she’s just young and inexperienced. I think Henry will continue to tease her and I think she will blossom in his affectionate humour. But I think there is also a solid base for their marriage as Henry is a clergyman and Catherine is a clergyman’s daughter, so their life experiences are compatible.

-Henry  is so different from his father and his elder brother. How do you imagine his childhood in that family and at Northanger Abbey?
As you say, Henry is very unlike his father and brother, and so it seemed likely to me that he must take after his mother. We don’t see her at all in Northanger Abbey, because she is already dead by the start of it, but I wanted to make her a real character in Henry’s diary and so I started the book when he is sixteen and his mother is still alive.
I worked backwards from some of the things we know about her,  and about Henry, to create some scenes of them together. A scene I particularly like uses two of the facts from Northanger Abbey: that Henry’s mother suffered from poor health, and that Henry knows a lot about muslin. One day, Henry’s mother wants to go shopping, but as she is not well, Henry goes with her, to lend her his arm. He tries to help her with buying muslin, but as a typical young man, picks the wrong type. So she shows him all the different types and explains their relative merits and demerits to him. The scene shows the close relationship between the two, and it also explains how Henry knows so much about muslin.

-He is one of Jane Austen’s clergy men  but he is no Mr Collins or Mr Elton. What is his attitude towards his profession in your Diary? Does he reflect on/refer to  his choice more than in Northanger Abbey?
Henry’s profession is chosen for him because there is a family living which will be his when he is an adult. As a boy I have him just accepting this as the way things are. But there is a telling scene in his diary when his mother is very ill. Henry realises he can do nothing more for her and so he prays for her. I wanted to show some connection to his profession, and a fitness for the church, but without overplaying it, because Austen never shows very much of the church in her novels, even though a lot of her characters are clergymen. Henry thinks more about his profession as he grows up and when listening to other clergymen preaching, he decides that his sermons will be very different:
 “I see no reason why sermons should not be entertaining as well as instructive, and I feel it will be my duty to make sure that my parishioners remain awake whilst I am speaking, instead of falling asleep.”
His thoughts about the church are generally witty and light-hearted and he can see the absurdities of his life, for example he knows that his services are so well attended because he is an eligible bachelor.

- I think he immediately recognizes the Thorpes as bad company for Catherine.  Does he confide his fears to his diary?
Yes, he can see them for what they are and he is very glad to be taking Catherine away from them when he takes her to Northanger Abbey.

- His relationship with Eleanor, his sister, is a very special one.  Do you think  it was inspired to Jane Austen special relationship with her favourite brother?
That’s an interesting idea, I hadn’t thought of that. Very possibly. I loved expanding on the relationship, which is one of the happiest sibling relationships in Austen. At the start of his diary, Eleanor is very young and the two of them love reading Gothic novels together.  As they grow, they maintain their close relationship and Henry helps Eleanor with her romance, when their father forbids it. There is a lot about Eleanor’s suitor in Henry Tilney’s Diary, and about the ways in which Henry helps the two of them to overcome the obstacles to their affections.

- Without giving away too much, is  there anything we don’t know about Henry Tilney that we can find out thanks to his diary?
We learn a lot about his childhood and his relationships with his family as he grows up.  We also find out a lot more about his feelings for Catherine, and how he comes to realise she is his ideal heroine.

-  You write to give readers an insight of  Austen heroes. Can you reveal who  your best favourite is?
My favourite changes all the time. With every diary, I love the hero I am writing about the best.  Mr Darcy is very compelling; Mr Knightley will make an excellent husband; Captain Wentworth is exciting and full of deep feeling; Edmund Bertram is steadfast and reliable; Colonel Brandon is romantic and loyal, and Henry is witty and entertaining. They are all wonderful in different ways.


What is next to Amanda Grange?
My next book, out in July 2012, is a sequel to Pride and Prejudice, called Pride and Pyramids. I wanted to make it very different to other sequels and so I decided to set it fifteen years after the end of Pride and Prejudice, instead of just afterwards. I wanted to show a happy Lizzy and Darcy, still very much in love, experiencing family life. We meet them first at their London house, where they are staying with their six children. Colonel Fitzwilliam’s younger brother, Edward, turns up and infects them with his enthusiasm for Egyptology, which was hugely popular in Jane Austen’s day. He reawakens Lizzy’s love of travel, and after spending several months at Pemberley, the Darcy family accompany him to Egypt. There is romance – Edward falls in love, but all does not run smoothly;  adventure – the glamour of the pyramids and buried treasure; but most of all the continuing love of Lizzy and Darcy as they raise their bright, lively children. I wrote the book with one of my friends, Jacqueline Webb, who is a published novelist in her own right, and it’s available to pre-order on Amazon.

Thanks,  Amanda for being with us again. It's been a great pleasure to talk about one of my favourite Austen heroes with you. 

Friday, 2 December 2011

TALKING JANE AUSTEN WITH … NANCY KELLEY + GIVEAWAY OF "HIS GOOD OPINION"

Nancy Kelley is a Janeite, an Austenesque author, and a blogger. During the writing of His Good Opinion, a version of Mr. Darcy took up residence in her brain; she fondly refers to him as the Darcy in My Head, or DIMH.
If Nancy could possess any fictional device, it would be a Time-Turner. Then perhaps she could juggle a full-time library job, writing, and blogging; and still find time for sleep and a life. Until then, she lives on high doses of tea, of which DIMH approves.
Complete the chart below chosing your options, comment our Austen-based friendly chat adding your e-mail address and  you'll get the chance to win an e-book version of Nancy Kelley's  novel , His Good Opinion . This giveaway contest is open internationally and ends on December 9th when the winner is announced.


When did you first read  Jane Austen?



I read Pride and Prejudice when I was a freshman or sophomore in high school--about 14 or 15. I loved everything about the book, but especially Elizabeth. Here was a woman who wasn’t afraid to speak her mind! As an outspoken, clever, bookish girl, Lizzy became my literary role model.



The huge spreading  of spin-offs, sequels, mash-ups is due to a desire to preserve and Jane’s messages, atmospheres, techniques and prolong the pleasure or more to the ambition to correct and adapt  what in her work is considered too distant or different?

I suppose each author has a different reason for writing an Austenesque novel. However, I believe their popularity with readers is because we love Jane and want to read more of her. That’s why I read Austenesque novels, and it’s why I decided to write one.

What is the peculiarity which makes Jane Austen’s genius unique?

Jane understood people--she knew how they lived and worked, and how they interacted together. When I read Pride and Prejudice or Northanger Abbey, I find myself chuckling at various passages because I know those people. Who doesn’t know a Mr. Bennet, who is too absorbed in his books (or golf, or television...) to pay attention to his family? And who has not met a Mrs. Allen, who is never at a loss for words, but all without a thought in her mind?


 Why should we still read her novels according to you? What can we learn from them? (a question my students often ask me, why do we have to read the classics?)


In any field, we study the greats so we might one day apply the same principles they used. An artist may study Van Gogh’s brushstrokes and use of color in the same way I pore over Jane Austen’s characterization and dialogue.



Once we begin the study of the classics, we discover why people have loved them for centuries. Those wonderful characters, lifelike situations, and beautiful sentences become just as beloved to us... but we’ll never get know that unless we pick up that first book.

How would you advertise your book in less than 50 words?

His Good Opinion looks at the events of Pride and Prejudice and asks two questions: Why was Darcy so reluctant to give his good opinion to all he met, and how did Elizabeth gain it so easily?


When and how you came to write a Jane Austen sequel?

I was listening to Pride and Prejudice in the summer of 2008 when suddenly, Darcy started adding a running commentary of events in my head. He was particularly mortified by the passage where Elizabeth wonders why he always shows up on her favorite walk in Kent after she had particularly told him she liked it. “I had not realized that was a warning, rather than an invitation.” 

His voice stuck with me and became what I now call the Darcy in my Head, or DIMH. Until then, Elizabeth had always been my favorite part of Pride and Prejudice. Now I was finally able to see events from his point of view, and to understand the motivations behind his early pride.

As a writer, I knew I had a story on my hands. I made an extensive outline (capable of scaring pets and small children) and wrote the majority of the first draft that year during National Novel Writing Month.


If I say ... Mr Darcy, what is the first image that comes to your mind?


Classic good looks--tall, dark, and handsome. (It says as much in the text.) A patrician nose; long, lean fingers; dark hair and eyes... 



I’m afraid there’s not a single person I know that I can compare  him to, not even the actors who have portrayed him. Darcy is simply Darcy. 

What is so special in him to make him a hero beyond time?

This may sound strange, but I believe a large part of Darcy’s appeal is his integrity. He is scrupulously honest, to the point of being tactless. “Disguise of every sort is [his] abhorrence.” He also expects that same honesty from others--when Miss Bingley is trying to turn his attention from Elizabeth, he retorts with, “There is undoubtedly a meanness in all the arts...”

That kind of integrity means you never have to wonder where you stand with him. You also never have to wonder if you really know who he is. His honesty means he’ll never cheat you (or cheat on you). He is wonderfully, breath-takingly real.

Is there a minor character in Jane Austen’s work you’d like to write a spin-off story for?



I’m currently working on Colonel Fitzwilliam’s story. He spoke up when I was working on His Good Opinion with his own back story and tale that demanded to be told. 

The other minor character gnawing at the back of my mind is Frank Churchill. Every time I read or watch Emma, I wonder what Jane Fairfax saw in him. There must be something good there.




Let’s go on playing. Thinking of the perfect match among Austen characters. Which is the happiest couple among the ones Jane formed? The least happy couple?



The happiest couple would be Anne and Frederick Wentworth, because they waited the longest for their happy ending. They know what it’s like to want to be together and yet live separately, so they will appreciate each other all the more.



The least happy couple... oh dear. I believe all her main couples were very happy, so let’s go down to the next level with secondary characters. For that award, I would say Mr. and Mrs. Willoughby. She married him knowing he loved another (as much as he is capable), and he never allowed himself to be more than satisfied with his wife.

Thanks a lot, Nancy, for being with us today on My Jane Austen Book Club. Best luck to you, your book and your DIMH! 

About the Book

His Good Opinion. A Mr Darcy Novel
Mr. Darcy Speaks from the Heart: Pride and Prejudice from his Point of View 
Though tired of Society's manipulations, Darcy never thought to be enchanted by a country maiden. Yet on a visit to rural Hertfordshire, Elizabeth Bennet captivates him. Lovely and vivacious, she is everything he is not, and everything he longs to have.
Unfortunately, her connections put her decidedly beneath him, and the improprieties he observes in her family do not win his favor. Putting her firmly out of his mind, Darcy returns to London, but Elizabeth is not so easily forgotten.
 When chance throws them together, Darcy can no longer deny his love, but Elizabeth, put off by his manners, refuses him. To change her mind, he must set aside his proud ways and learn how to please a woman worthy of being pleased. It takes a serious incident for his true character to shine, and for Elizabeth to learn just how valuable is…



Thursday, 1 December 2011

THE HEROINE'S BOOKSHELF BY ERIN BLAKEMORE - GIVEAWAY WINNER

Book description

Jo March, Scarlett O’Hara, Scout Finch—the literary canon is brimming with intelligent, feisty, never-say-die heroines and celebrated female authors. They placed a premium on personality, spirituality, career, sisterhood, and family, not unlike women of today. When they were up against the wall, authors like Jane Austen and Louisa May Alcott fought back—sometimes with words, sometimes with gritty actions.
Witty, informative, and inspiring—full of beloved heroines and the remarkable writers who created them—The Heroine’s Bookshelf explores how the pluck and dignity of literary characters such as Jane Eyre and Lizzy Bennet can encourage modern women, showing them how to tap into their inner strengths and live life with intelligence and grace. From Zora Neale Hurston to Colette, Laura Ingalls Wilder to Charlotte BrontË, Harper Lee to Alice Walker, here are authors whose spirited stories and characters are more inspiring today than ever.



The Heroine's Bookshelf has been released as a paperback by Harper Perennial in the US and on occasion of my friendly chat with author Erin Blakemore last week (Talking Jane Austen with ... Erin Blakemore), you readers of My Jane Austen Book Club were granted a free copy by the publisher.

The lucky winner in this giveaway contest is ... A scattering

Congratulations!!!