Saturday, 18 February 2012

THE JOURNEY BY JAN HAHN - GIVEAWAY WINNERS


Quick posting to thank Jan Hahn for being my guest and wish her good luck with her new Pride and Prejudice variation and, of course, to announce the names of the two winners of The Journey:


1  autographed paperback copy of The Journey limited to US and Canada goes to Heather M


1 e-book copy of The Journey open to all countries has been won by Lady Disdain


Congratulations to both & enjoy your new read!




Friday, 17 February 2012

JANE AUSTEN IS ... HAPPINESS!

Isn't it true that we read and re-read Jane Austen because her novels and her wit can make us happy? It is undeniable truth. The subject of Jane Austen and happiness is even analized in academic paper, sometimes boasting and pedantic but nonetheless interesting. 

This is what I've been reading about this afternoon.  I'm not working on any lecture about Austen in this period, I'm teaching other authors from other literary periods. It was just out of curiosity.

The first paper I found is by Robert Miles, Chair of the Department of English at the University of Victoria, Canada. His lecture/paper available online, Jane Austen, Happiness and Moral Luck aims at arguing that Austen’s capacity to make her readers happy is a key datum in understanding Austen’s place in modernity. Traditionally Jane Austen has been thought of as an Augustan writer. For recent critics, to revise Austen as ‘Romantic’ has generally meant rescuing her from the Janeites with their insistence upon the novels as ‘hetero-normative’ fairytales of domestic bliss. In this lecture Robert Miles sides with the Janeites, instead,  and Charles Taylor’s recent, revisionary account of secularization, in Secular Age,   provides the critical framework for his reading of Austen.
It was Jane Austen who first represented the specifically modern personality and the culture in which it had its being. Never before had the moral life been shown as she shows it to be, never before had it been conceived to be so complex and difficult and exhausting. Hegel speaks of the “secularization of spirituality” as a prime characteristic of the modern epoch, and Jane Austen is the first to tell us what this involves. (from Lionel Trilling’s Sincerity and Authenticity ,Oxford University Press  1973,  p. 308 )

Among Robert Miles's academic publication, Jane Austen: Writers and their Work (Northcote House Publishers, 2003)


By assessing what was original in Jane Austen's fictional technique in the context of the history of the novel, Robert Miles takes a fresh look at how Austen came to be constructed as a model of Englishness. For many readers Jane Austen is the quintessential English author. Jane Austen sets out to explore the history of this identification with Englishness in the context of a tradition of criticism that has frequently tried to achieve the reverse: to establish her difference, and distance, from 'us'. Rather than simply showing how Austen differs from the heritage, Jane Austen argues that many of the reasons for her construction as an English cultural icon are to found in the works formal qualities, and often in her most innovative techniques.

Another interesting contribution to the discussion about Austen and the theme of happiness comes from Claire Eileen Tarlson , Seattle University , Washington. Her article is Jane Austen, Persuasion, and the Pursuit of Happiness ( Lethbridge Undergraduate Research Journal. 2006. Volume 1 Number 1).


Abstract. This paper argues that there is a Romantic shift in the feminist and individualistic ideology of Jane Austen's work as her career progresses, and Austen begins to admire different cognitive qualities in her heroines. At the end of Pride and Prejudice, Elizabeth's confessed love for Darcy is a carefully reasoned one - Darcy has righted the wrongs cited in Elizabeth's original refusal and Elizabeth can justify her own acceptance of him by objective standards. Anne Elliot of Persuasion, by contrast, accepts Wentworth ultimately not on the basis of anything he has done differently, but merely by the realization of her own original emotions and motives as valid. Throughout the novel, Anne develops as this individual on her own, and by the time she finally marries Wentworth at the end of the novel, the marriage is not needed to complete her because she has already made her emotional transformation independent of the marriage proposal. The contextual frameworks for both of Jane Austen's novels Pride and Prejudice and Persuasion are so similar that they demand side-by-side comparison, but the heroines of these novels show a very different approach to characterizing the admirable woman. The evocation of Elizabeth by means of Anne's character serves to elucidate and cement this shift in Austen's tone and feminist worldview. 

The similarities juxtaposed with a discernible shift in the qualities of the heroine strongly suggest that Anne Elliot is a reworking of Elizabeth Bennet, and that the purpose of Persuasion is to reinvent Pride and Prejudice in a way shows Austen's reconsideration of the value and motives of marriage and gives even more intellectual and emotional credit to Persuasion's heroine. There exists a carefully crafted language of allusion in Austen's works, and especially between these two bookends of her career, which seem to serve almost as a privatized discourse for Austen's own benefit. In this way, Austen is showing her own shift into Romanticism, valuing the emotional over the reasonable, and how this shift should play out into the lives of women. Elizabeth is representative of women being capable and worthy to reason in the world of men, whereas Anne's individualism gives women something even more important in Austen's assertion of the validity and worth of female emotions.


If you are interested in reading these papers,  you can find them in pdf format online:


Thursday, 16 February 2012

HENRY TILNEY'S DIARY BY AMANDA GRANGE - MY REVIEW


A lovely page-turner, a charming re-telling of  Northanger Abbey focusing on Henry Tilney and on his personal vision of the events  we loved reading  in Jane Austen’s  amusing tale of Catherine Morland’s adventures.
In Amanda Grange’s Herny Tilney’s Diary we meet a very young hero - almost 16 at the beginning - writing about his careless holidays back home from school, his older brother Frederick’s bravado, his special bond with his sister  Eleanor, his mother’s frail health, his father’s strong temper  and authoritative grasp on his own family.  On the whole,  a happy picture, especially because Henry is a very sensitive, humorous, witty boy who loves dearly his family and life  itself. He is destined  to become a clergyman and is  in search for his heroine. What is the characteristic he can’t renounce? She must love Gothic tales as much as he does.
During a trip to Bath,  Henry meets  Catherine Morland, who not only loves reading Gothic novels but even believes them true accounts of possible realities. She is also innocent, honest, sincere, lovely and cute so Henry starts believing he may have found his heroine, even if she is not in possession of a great fortune.

What does he love in her? In his diary he writes: 

 “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”

General Tilney, Henry’s father, is instead in search for wealthy partners for all his children. His stubborness makes life hard for Eleanor,  for example, since she is supposed to marry a marquis or a viscount but is in love with humble Mr Morris. So why is the General eager to make penniless Miss Morland the perfect match for his younger son, Henry? That’s really unexpected  -  if not unbelievable - to Eleanor and Henry , who both like Catherine very much and are really  hopeful their father is going mild in his old age. They are terribly wrong, unfortunately.

If you love the irony and wit in  Northanger Abbey you will obviously  enjoy this amusing re-telling from a different perspective. Henry is such a brilliant hero and through his diary  we can know about the young Tilneys’  early lives and the events that shaped them and, moreover,   we can follow his innermost thoughts and feelings at meeting his “in-training” heroine. 
As a tender, thoughtful knight  he will  rescue Catherine,  like the sensitive, brave hero of the Gothic tales he loves . But not from a devilish villain , he saves her   from her imagination, inexperience and naivety which might have  led her to an uncertain  future or to a very negative epilogue (something similar to that of Isabella Thorpe?)

Ms Grange's diaries are indeed a great way to discover more about our beloved Austen heroes. Before Henry Tilney's Diary  she wrote and publish Mr Darcy's , Mr Knightley's, Colonel Brandon's, Edmund Bertram's and Whickham's diaries which make an unmissable series on a well-provided  shelf of Austenesque reads.



Read my interview with Amanda Grange about Henry Tilney's Diary

Read Amanda Grange's guest post about Colonel Brandon's Diary 

Wednesday, 15 February 2012

P.O. DIXON'S MR DARCY NOVELS - GIVEAWAY WINNERS ANNOUNCEMENT


Did you like P. O. Dixon guest post "Falling in Love Again?" It was a lovely one, wasn't it? If you've missed it, have a look HERE and enjoy!

For those who instead read it and even commented it, here I am to reveal the name of the winners picked up with random.org

Angela Renee wins the paperback for US residents  while Carmen wins the e-book version of "Still a Young Man" for readers from the rest of the world.

Congratulations to the winners and my grateful thanks to PO Dixon for visiting here at My Jane Austen Book Club.





P.O. Dixon 's Facebook Page 


 Twitter @podixon
  

Monday, 13 February 2012

MEET HOLLY CHRISTINA FROM NEW ZEALAND AND SING JANE AUSTEN WITH HER


My guest today is very young, very beautiful and very talented.  She loves Jane Austen, of course,  and that's the main reason for being here to meet you. Holly Christina is a promising singer/songwriter I discovered by chance thanks to her Youtube video, "Jane Austen" . We live on the opposite sides of the  planet but we found out we had common ground. Meet Holly Christina and  welcome her on My Jane Austen Book Club!

Hello Holly Christina! Welcome to My Jane Austen Book Club. Can you first of all, please tell us what you do?
Hello Maria – well I’m a singer/songwriter from Auckland, New Zealand.  I also teach guitar with my business ‘GatSong’, and coach tennis.     

You are very young. When did you start writing songs?
I started playing guitar and writing songs when I was 12.  I really enjoy writing lyrics, inventing unique guitar chords, and creating music, and I’ve been doing it for 7 years now.   

Gosh, you are only 19, Holly! Congratulations on being so young and so talented! And when did the idea of a “Jane Austen” pop song come to you?
It’s an interesting story actually.  I started writing a fun song called “Fairytale Girl” when I was 15, and one of the lines in the first verse was: “maybe it is Jane Austen’s books that get my head into a whirl that Mr. Darcy will come knocking at my door”.  I loved the chords I used in the song, and that line always stood out to me, but the rest of the lyrics didn’t quite fit with the concept.  So in July 2011, when I was still 18, I sat down with my guitar and re-wrote the song using the title “Jane Austen”.  I incorporated some symbolism and references to her books, characters and era – and hopefully Austen fans all around the world will relate to the ideas and humour in the song.  It’s incredible how Austen’s books have stood the test the time, and are still loved by so many. 

What is the message you want to convey to contemporary audience in your Jane Austen song?
I hope that people enjoy the song’s journey from the 2000s back to the 1800s, and think about how many things have changed since the “simple olden days”.  I have also met quite a few young people that still haven’t heard of Jane Austen, so hopefully this song will enlighten more of them about this classic author, and get them reading her amazing books!     

When did you first read one of her novels? And what about Austen film adaptations? Have you got any favourite ones?
My Mum introduced me to Jane Austen books when I was 10.  I remember firstly reading ‘Pride and Prejudice’, and I loved it!  Over the years, my Mum and I have built up a pretty good DVD collection of the film adaptations, and we have watched them many times.  My favourite ones are ‘Emma’ (1996 version with Gwyneth Paltrow), ‘Sense and Sensibility’ (1995 version with Kate Winslet) and of course the 1995 BBC TV mini-series ‘Pride and Prejudice’ – it’s a real masterpiece!  
     
 What is it that you appreciate the most in Jane Austen’s world?
The proper language they used, and the courteous manner in which everyone addressed each other. 
     
What things would you miss the most from the modern days if you went back in time to live in her age?
I guess I would probably miss some things like the telephone, the microwave and my iPod!   




Have you got a favourite Austen hero? And heroine? Why do you like them?
My favourite Austen leading lady is Elinor Dashwood.  She is a very sensible, thoughtful young woman – and I like her reserved disposition.  I can’t decide on my favourite hero though – I like Mr. Darcy, Mr. Knightley and Edward Ferrars.  All those characters have great qualities! 

What have you learnt from Jane Austen?
Her books have taught me many different real life lessons.  An example is about how we should be careful about what we say – as shown when Mr. Knightley gives Emma a stern talking to after she meanly insults Miss Bates.  I also value the wisdom of Jane Austen’s quotes like “my good opinion, once lost, is lost forever” from ‘Pride and Prejudice’.   

Do you think her novels can still appeal to young people nowadays?
Yes – there’s drama, romance and fantastic plots, and it’s quite remarkable how many of her storylines and characters can remind you of a situation or person from your life!    



Boys/young men usually snob her novels as girlish stuff.  Don’t you think they could learn so much from those heroes instead?
Yes, the gentlemen in Austen’s novels are great role models for boys these days.  It’s a shame how many boys just dismiss Jane Austen as a “girly book” or “chick flick”, when really her writing and characters could offer them so much more.  My brother (who is 17) has watched some of the Jane Austen DVDs, and he doesn’t mind them, so maybe introducing the film adaptations to boys is a good place to start!     

What’s next for Holly Christina?
At this stage, I’m just working on promoting my new singles “Image” and “Jane Austen” - the official music videos are on YouTube.  I had so much fun making the quirky “Jane Austen” music video, and I really just took artistic license with the costume and locations.  I would like to release a couple of new singles and music videos throughout the year, and perhaps bring out a new album in late 2012/early 2013.        
    
Good luck! We wish you all the best, and may all your dreams come true, and make you very happy.
Thanks so much for your support My Jane Austen Book Club! 

Thanks a lot for taking the time to answer my questions, Holly. And now, it's time to watch your "Jane Austen" Video! 





Jane Austen by Holly Christina  is available on iTunes 

Visit Holly Christina's Youtube Page and Facebook Page

Saturday, 11 February 2012

AUTHOR GUESTPOST & GIVEAWAY - JAN HAHN, THE JOURNEY


I've read so many positive reviews of her books that I'm very happy  Jan Hahn is here on My Jane Austen Book Club as my guest to tell you about her latest release, The Journey. There's a giveaway linked to this post. Read through it. You'll find all the details at the end.

Jan Hahn is fascinated by all things Austen, the 19th Century, and true love.  Having spent many years in the world of business, she is now content to leave it behind and concentrate on her true interestwriting about Austen’s characters finding true love in the 19th Century.  She is blessed with a large, loving family who tolerates and supports her obsession.  Although she is a native Texan, Jan doesn’t live on a ranch, can’t ride a horse, and doesn’t own a pair of cowboy boots.  She will admit to being cursed with a definite Texas drawl.

Jan’s first novel, An Arranged Marriage, recently won the award for Best Indie book of 2011 from Austinprose.  Her second book, The Journey, has just been released.  Both books are available at Amazon   and Barnes & Noble online.



Thank you, Maria, for inviting me to post on your lovely site about my new book, The Journey.  Of all Jane Austen’s writings, Pride and Prejudice is my favorite, and I never grow tired of discussing Elizabeth and Darcy with fellow devotees.

I have always admired those who are able to write sequels to Pride and Prejudice.  I’ve sketched out several such storylines, but for some reason, I’m unable to create a plot that goes anywhere.  Instead, variations of the original story take over my imagination.  There are many places in Austen’s narrative where the characters may take an alternate path, and it becomes an entirely new account.  All of these paths, of course, lead to the ultimate question for Darcy and Elizabeth:  Will they or won’t they end up together?  And for me, that is my delight.  It’s all about the chase.

A popular place for writers to vary the story is in Kent around the time Darcy makes his first dreadful proposal to Elizabeth.  It seems to be a natural jumping off spot.  I used it in my first book, An Arranged Marriage.  Mr. Bennet died immediately thereafter, plunging Elizabeth and her family into poverty, thus creating the need for a marriage of convenience. 

The Journey begins earlier in Austen’s story, not long after the Netherfield ball.  After refusing Mr. Collins’s proposal and to escape her mother’s disappointment, Elizabeth sets out on a trip to visit the Gardiners in London.  Unfortunately, she is forced to suffer the trials of traveling not only with Bingley’s sisters but Darcy himself.   Thus far, Elizabeth knows nothing of Darcy other than his arrogant behavior and Wickham’s lies.  Naturally, her opinion of him is quite poor.  Suddenly, the carriage is abruptly stopped, and a menacing cry rings out. “Stand and deliver!”

By the early 1800s, the scourge of highwaymen had abated in England somewhat, but remnants of the blight still existed.  In The Journey, we meet Nate Morgan—the blonde, handsome, leader of the gang that holds up the carriage.  As if robbery isn’t bad enough, things grow worse when Morgan decides to seize Elizabeth for his amusement.  Darcy offers himself as hostage in her place, but when his proposal fails to secure Elizabeth’s release, he makes a shocking declarationElizabeth is his wife!

Abducted for ransom by the highwaymen and taken to a remote cabin in the woods, Elizabeth and Darcy are forced to act as husband and wife and rely upon each other for their survival.  At a time when a woman’s future could be ruined by the slightest hint of scandal, Elizabeth’s reputation will depend not only upon the actions of Darcy but Morgan as well.  The fateful journey embarked upon that day changes the lives of all three characters forever.

I like to read and write stories of Elizabeth and Darcy that contain a great number of scenes where they interact.  Whether sparring in conversation, quarreling outright, or falling in love, I want them to experience an abundance of togetherness.  If the plot dictates that they spend time apart, I understand the necessity, but I long for their reunion.  When I first considered writing The Journey, I was intrigued by the idea of locking the couple in a room together with no one to talk to but each other.  Of course, I needed a reason for their seclusion, and voilà!a band of highwaymen appeared before me with one handsome rogue in particular who would be attracted to Elizabeth.

Bad boys make an appearance in all of Austen’s books.  From Wickham to Willoughby to Frank Churchill, they often arrive quite charming and amiable.  Their true nature is hidden, and it takes time for all to be revealed. From the beginning of The Journey, Nate Morgan is clearly a bad boy but not without charisma.  His appeal lies in the possibility of redemption, and that’s a seductive temptation for any woman.  Needless to say, I thoroughly enjoyed creating the character.

Who’s your favorite Austen bad boy and why?  Is it Henry Crawford, John Willoughby, George Wickham, Frank Churchill, William Walter Elliot, John Thorpe, or even the fearful General Tilney?  Is there anyone in particular that you’d like to see redeemed?  Writers are always searching for new inspiration.  Perhaps your idea might stimulate a brand new book.

Thank you for the interest you have shown in An Arranged Marriage.  I hope you will enjoy traveling on The Journey with Darcy and Elizabeth.
 Jan Hahn








Visit Jan at Facebook or Meryton Press     

Giveaway Details

1 autographed paperback copy of The Journey limited to US and Canada.  

1 e-book copy of The Journey open to all countries

Leave your comment  and don't forget to add which country you live in  and your e-mail address. This giveaway contest ends on February 18th. 

Friday, 10 February 2012

MR DARCY'S PROPOSAL BY SUSAN MASON-MILKS. GIVEAWAY WINNER


Congratulations to Shannon ,  who wins the paperback copy,  and to Cerena Leigh who will get the kindle edition of Mr Darcy's Proposal .  Many grateful thanks to Susan Mason-Milks for being such a kind and generous guest. Great success to her Mr Darcy's Proposal! 

  Draw carried out via random.org. 





Thursday, 9 February 2012

LOVE JANE AUSTEN & DRINK TEA - GREAT GIVEAWAY FROM BINGLEY'S TEAS


I started this blog, My Jane Austen Book Club,  in January 2010 because one of the ladies working at the public library in my town had so much loved the movie The Jane Austen Book Club that she wanted to repeat the experience that film told about and she involved me as she knew how fond I am of anything Austen. This was meant to be a blog supporting and narrating the experience of reading an Austen novel a month for 6 months. But it has gone on and become an online meeting place for lots of nice Janeits. Thanks to all of you! So this great giveaway from Bingley's Teas is perfect to celebrate the turning two years old of my little blog.
Are you ready to celebrate with me? The wonderful prize you can win is a set including:

1. THE JANE AUSTEN BOOK CLUB DVD (region 1, US version) 
2.  a book box of Emma's Perfect Match, a sweet green tea of dried strawberries, rhubarb and roses.

N.B. This extraordinary giveaway contest is open worldwide but I must remind you that to watch the DVD you must have a player reading region 1 encoded DVDs. 

Now, what you have to do is fill in the Rafflecopter form below choosing your options (up to 6!)  Good luck!





a Rafflecopter giveaway

Wednesday, 8 February 2012

SHANNON HALE, MIDNIGHT IN AUSTENLAND - GIVEWAY WINNER ANNOUNCEMENT


Here we are! I'm ready to make one of you very happy. Those who entered the giveaway to win Shannon Hale's new book, her return to Austenland, Midnight in Austenland can keep their fingers crossed few seconds more. Just the time to read that ... the winner is ...

phastings!!!

Congratulations to the lucky winner and many thanks to  the publishers,  Bloomsbury,  for providing the brand new copy to give away.







Tuesday, 7 February 2012

AUTHOR GUESTPOST & GIVEAWAY - P O DIXON, FALLING IN LOVE AGAIN!

P O Dixon writes Pride and Prejudice adaptations with one overriding purpose in mind—falling in love with Darcy and Elizabeth once again. Sometimes provocative, always entertaining, her stories are read, commented on, and thoroughly enjoyed by thousands of readers worldwide. Initially written in 2009 and published in 2010, To Have His Cake (and Eat It Too): Mr. Darcy’s Tale represents her first venture into the Jane Austen fan fiction community. Her current work in progress, Bewitched, Body and Soul: Miss Elizabeth Bennet, will be released in 2012. She resides in North Carolina with her husband and young daughter; neither of whom understands what exactly is all this fuss about Mr. Darcy.
I confess. I fell in love with Mr. Darcy before reading Pride and Prejudice, thanks to Matthew Macfadyen. Once I read Jane Austen’s classic, I began to understand the enigmatic Mr. Darcy. Then I happened upon the world of fan fiction and indeed, my life has never been the same.


Mr. Darcy is my favorite literary hero. Every day, I ask myself, “What would Darcy do?”  “What would Darcy think?” “What would Darcy say?”


I admit it has not always been this way. Mr. Darcy was not my first love. Margaret Mitchell’s Rhett Butler bears that distinction. Yes, my first glimpse of him was in the movie Gone with the Wind. As with Mr. Darcy, my affection grew for Rhett Butler after reading the book.
 I’m sensing a pattern here. While I shall not ascribe many of Mr. Butler’s less admirable traits to Mr. Darcy, nor do I postulate he was capable of performing many of Rhett Butler’s dastardly deeds—dare I mention Miss Belle Watling as a start. Both being gentlemen of their times, who is to say for certain?


In Pride and Prejudice, Mr. Bennet had this to say about Mr. Darcy, “We all know him to be a proud, unpleasant sort of man ...” Elizabeth spoke of his arrogance, his conceit, and his selfish disdain of the feelings of others—the last man in the world whom she could ever be prevailed on to marry.


In another time, another place, these words might describe how Mr. O’Hara and Scarlett saw Rhett Butler. Of course, Elizabeth and Darcy worked through their misunderstandings more swiftly and far less painfully than did Scarlett and Rhett. Miss Jane Austen provided a satisfying happily ever after conclusion to their love story. Still, legions of writers and far more readers keep asking, “What if?”


What if, indeed? This begs the original question. What if my favorite literary heroes have more in common than I dare allow? Am I merely blinded by love? What say you?


 P O Dixon
 GIVEAWAY

1 Paperback copy of either He Taught Me to Hope   or  Still a Young Man  for US readers. Leave your comment adding US , choose the title you prefer and don't forget your e-mail address, please.

1 e-book copy of  either He Taught Me to Hope   or  Still a Young Man  for  readers from the rest of the world. Leave your comment adding "rest of the world"or the country you live in , choose the title you prefer and don't forget your e-mail address, please.

The giveaway ends on February 15 when the names of the winners are announced. Good luck, everyone!

He Taught Me to Hope  

What if Elizabeth is promised to another when she meets Mr. Fitzwilliam Darcy, the one man who captures her heart and imagination like no other? As dire as their chance for “happily ever after” seems, there is a measure of hope by way of a strong and enduring bond between them.

The legend of King Arthur meets the timelessness of Miss Jane Austen’s endearing works in this delightfully entertaining Pride and Prejudice adaptation that takes you back to a magical time of enchantment and romance and lets you fall in love with Darcy and Elizabeth once again.


Still a Young Man  

Widowed after six months of marriage, Elizabeth determines to leave her past behind, to enjoy life to its fullest and on her own terms. Charming, witty, and engaging, she is widely admired by all. However, everything is not as it seems. She harbours a secret.

The beautiful widow captivates a younger Mr. Darcy. He knows her better than she knows herself. He struggles to break through her protective barriers, the most daunting being her tightly held conviction that she will never marry again.

Follow Darcy and Elizabeth on this path of discovery that leads to true and abiding love.








P.O. Dixon 's Facebook Page 


 Twitter @podixon
  


Monday, 6 February 2012

GIVEAWAY WINNER - PRIDE & PRINCESSES BY SUMMER DAY


Congratulations to Danielle, the winner chosen by random.org, for Summer Day's Pride & Princesses. Read about Summer and her Austen-inspired YA romance HEREPRIDE & PRINCESSES  is published at AMAZON Kindle 




Many thanks to Summer Day for being my guest and providing a free e-book for the giveaway contest
 on My Jane Austen Book Club.

Friday, 3 February 2012

AUTHOR INTERVIEW AND GIVEAWAY - SUSAN MASON-MILKS : I DIDN'T LIKE PRIDE AND PREJUDICE THE FIRST TIME I READ IT ...

Susan Mason-Milks’ eclectic career includes teaching high school English, working as a communication consultant, conducting management and leadership classes, and as a career counselor, helping people decide what they want to do when they grow up. Although writing has been part of her work for years, Mr. Darcy’s Proposal is her first work of fiction. She is currently a member of Austen Authors, a group of authors who all write Austen-related fiction. In addition to writing, her other loves include singing in a women’s a cappella chorus, reading, and yoga. She currently lives in Seattle with her husband and their four very naughty cats.
Read our Austen-related chat and leave your comments to this post. There's an amazing giveaway contest you can enter simply adding your e-mail address. Read the details below, at the end of the post.



Welcome on My JA Book Club, Susan! I’m very happy you’ve joined our on line club and you accepted to talk Jane Austen with me.

This is my first question for you: when and how did you come to write a Pride and Prejudice “what if” story?
In my bio for Mr. Darcy’s Proposal, I confessed to not liking Pride and Prejudice the first time I read it in the eighth grade. I know it’s blasphemy, but it’s true. I’m still not sure why, but I’m very grateful, that like Elizabeth Bennet, I got a second chance. I fell in love with Jane Austen after watching the 1995 movie version of Pride and Prejudice. I immediately rushed out and read all her other booksand then read them again. I just couldn’t get enough of Jane! Some time after that, I discovered fan fiction, and after reading many, many of those stories, decided I wanted to write a story, too.

If I say ... Mr. Darcy, what is the first image that comes to your mind?
Physically, I think of Darcy as played by Colin Firth. In terms of who he is as a person, I feel as if by retelling his story, I’ve come to know him quite well. He is, above all, an honorable man.  Pretty much the classic introvert, he often hides behind a protective façade because he’s terribly shy and uncomfortable around people he doesn’t know. At times he can be quite eloquent, but to him a conversation must be about a topic of mutual interest or have a specific purpose. Conversation for its own sake is a real challenge for him. Remember, Mrs. Reynolds who knows him well said, “Some people call him proud; but I never saw anything of it. To my fancy, it is only because he does not rattle away like other young men.”

Whose point of view did you use to tell the story Mr. Darcy’s Proposal?
The point of view in Mr. Darcy’s Proposal primarily alternates between Darcy and Elizabeth. In many scenes, the story unfolds first from Elizabeth’s perspective, and then shifts to Darcy’s point of view to look at his side of the same interaction. I think it’s a great way to emphasize how they continually misunderstand each other. There are so many times when they look at the same situation and see two completely different things. Inevitably, the misunderstandings continue until they begin to talk to each other rather than just make assumptions. There are moments in the story where you just want to scream, “Talk to each other!”
Several people have commented that when reading this story, they were really frustrated with both Darcy and Elizabeth because they didn’t communicate. My first thought was, “If you think you were frustrated, just imagine how they felt!”


What is so special about Darcy to make him a hero beyond time?
This question made me think quite a bit about what the word “hero” means. In mythology, the hero traditionally must go on “the hero’s journey.” He (or she) leaves the comfort of his home and ventures out to face a challengemaybe slay a dragon or two? After that, he returns home and uses the knowledge he gained to help others. In Darcy’s case, the journey is not out into the worldit’s into himself.
When Elizabeth turns down his proposal and tells him in no uncertain terms what she thinks of him, he’s forced to look at himself through someone else’s eyes. In some ways, he sees himself for the first time. It would be easy for him to continue his life as before, but he can’t ignore the awakening he experiences following her rejection. We know Darcy is basically a really good person. He’s loyal, always taking care of the people he loves, and he has a strong moral sense of right and wrong. Part of his challenge is to modify his outward behavior so people are able to see more of who he really is. Darcy has the opportunity to show how he’s changed when he meets Elizabeth again at Pemberley, and he takes it. Another important part of his journey is to learn empathy and compassion. I think this happens when he helps Lydia in order relieve the pain her elopement has caused Elizabeth.
What I really like about Darcy is that he makes the choice to act differently because he knows it’s the right thing to do. Going back to being his old self is not an option. At the time, he has no idea Elizabeth will ever give him a second chance. Some people would say he changes for her, but I like to think changes because of her, which is quite different.

What aspect in Mr. Darcy’s personality do you especially highlight in your own version of Pride and Prejudice?
I like to think Darcy has a sense of humor that’s almost equal to Elizabeth’s. It’s always been there, but she helps bring it out. He always appears perfectly in control, but actually he’s a man of very deep feelings. It’s not that he feels too little, but that he almost feels too much. I like to think being around Elizabeth helps him to relax and loosen up a bit. As this happens, his sense of humor comes out even more.

Is there any other Austen hero/heroine you would like to write a sequel/spin-off for?
My second favorite Austen novel is Persuasion. I’ve read several retellings from Captain Wentworth’s point of view and one or two modern adaptations that were well done, but I think there’s still a lot more to explore with those characters.

Do you think the wide-spread interest in Austen fan fiction is due to a desire to preserve Jane’s messages, atmospheres, techniques and prolong the pleasure, or more the result of some writer’s ambition to correct and adapt what in her work is considered too distant or different?
I think it’s the former. It seems to me modern authors who write sequels, variations, etc., are trying to recapture the magic they feel when reading Austen’s work. Since there’s only a limited amount of Jane – just six completed novels – once you’ve read those, there’s simply no more and that’s very hard to accept. It seems we just can’t get enough of her characters. Jane is truly unique, and can’t be replaced. The way I see it, writing using Austen’s characters is a form of tribute to her. I enjoy writing these stories because I get to spend more time with the characters I’ve come to love.

Do you think that all these adaptations, both novels and screen adaptations, could alter, mislead or even distort the interpretation of Austen’s work?
I think some fans have only seen the movies but never read Austen’s books. While some of the movie adaptations are wonderful, nothing is as good as the real thing. I’m afraid over time some people will forget the movies are not the original source and miss out on the rich experience of reading Austen’s words. A few times, I’ve run across people who are shocked to find certain events portrayed in the movies never occurred in the books. I admit I’ve even had to double-check myself to make sure a scene or quote is in the book, not just the movie script!
Someone who hasn’t read the original books might think Austen was just a romance writer, but she’s so much more. Over and over she touches on social and personal issues that both comment on the times she lived in, and transfer to our own lives.

Why do we still read JA’s novels in your opinion? What can we learn from them?
I think we read Austen because even though customs and manners have changed, basic human nature has not. Who doesn’t know people who are like Wickham or Mr. Collins, or some members of Elizabeth’s family?

Was Jane Austen more a romantic girl or a matter-of-fact woman?
To me, Austen was a wonderful blend of both. If you read her stories at one level, they’re lovely romances. At another level, you find astute commentary on social issues, such as class distinctions, marriage, and women’s rights.



Let’s look specifically at marriage. Even though most of her stories end with a wedding, Austen’s work is filled with evidence of the effects of unfortunate choices in marriage. Mr. Bennet may have married Mrs. Bennet because he loved her at one time, but he no longer respects her. She’s something of an embarrassment to him, and he basically ignores her. Early in Pride and Prejudice when Charlotte and Elizabeth are discussing marriage, Charlotte says that just because you think you know the person beforehand, it doesn’t ensure a happy ending. “Happiness in marriage is entirely a matter of chance” according to Charlotte. Basically, Elizabeth laughs and says to her friend, “You know it is not sound, and that you would never act in this way yourself,” but we all know, that in fact, Charlotte does marry simply for the security of a comfortable home. It’s a sad commentary that Charlotte believes it’s her only choice. On the other hand, Darcy and Elizabeth decide they will be the happiest couple in the world, and we’d like to believe it just might be true.

How would you advertise your book, Mr. Darcy’s Proposal, in less than 50 words?
Here’s what I think Elizabeth Bennet would say to sum up Mr. Darcy’s Proposal, “I had always hoped to find a man I could respect and love and have the privilege of marrying him. I just never imagined the marriage would come before the love.”





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