In your estimation, who played Anne Elliot best? Amanda Root (left) or Sally Hawkins (right)?
Sunday, May 31
Jane Austen Movie Throwdown
Seen in the Guardian Co.UK, this description of Anne Elliot as one of five most romantic heroines:
Forget lippy Lizzie Bennett and mooning Marianne Dashwood; Persuasion's Anne Elliot is a complex, clever woman with a past who deserves a far more glorious place in the literary hall of fame. In her tentative, subtle and brilliantly funny journey back to the man she loved and lost eight years before, Anne gives us hope that love is not just for pretty teens; that second chances exist; and that ordinary lives really can be transformed by intelligence, independence and decency. Strike a blow for the quiet one in the corner and help crown Anne our romantic queen.
Saturday, May 30
Seen on the Blogosphere: Twitteriffic!
Gentle readers, As we announced in our previous post, Laurel Ann and I have been twittering away. As we explore ways to conduct tweetversations with our readers and each other we'd like to direct you to a few twitteriffic sites:Irreverent and funny, Under the Mad Hat posted Pride and Twitterverse. Some of the tweets go beyond the bounds of propriety but they are tweetlarious and follow the plot, well, sort of. This is as witty a treatment, or should I say tweetment, of P&P that I've read.
Laurie Viera Rigler is tweeterizing Persuasion. Read her ongoing tweet takes on the Elliots here.
Joseph Woodard embarked on a quest to read Jane Austen this year. His blog, Reading Jane Austen, discusses her novels and his thoughts about them, and his tweetnouncements remind his followers when he's published a new post. Very clever.
Another source for twitter tweetments and tweetnouncements is Austen.com
Friday, May 29
Jane Austen Tweeting
Vic and Laurel Ann are now Tweeting about Jane Austen on their respective blogs Jane Austen's World and Austenprose! Yes, it is official. They have moved one step further toward Austengeekdom, all in the name of technological progress and their favorite author. Now you can have all Austen, all the time, at all hours and from anywhere!Come and Tweet about Jane at Twitter. Just ask yourself what are you doing, or better yet what would Jane Austen do, and there you have it. We want your comments, suggestions and opinions. Show the world what a Janeite you are! Soon Jane Austen Today will be Tweeting too. It's addictive.
Vic Tweets as janeaustenworld
Laurel Ann's Tweets as Austenprose
Thursday, May 28
Mr. Darcy Tries to Pick Up a Lady
The cast of The Chaser's War on Everything, a satirical Australian t.v. show will mock, anything, even our Mr. Darcy. This time they ask that eternal question: Do women want a man like Mr. Darcy? In polls women say they do but in real life the result of are just a bit different (and hysterically funny.) Is there nothing sacred left in this life?
Posted by Laurel Ann and Vic
Posted by Laurel Ann and Vic
Wednesday, May 27
Seen on the Blogosphere: Sports and Recreation for Regency Ladies
A collection at the University of Delaware offers descriptions of these two books:Healthful Sports for Young Ladies. London: Printed for R. Ackermann by W. Clowes, 1822. The author, Mlle St. Sernin, was a French governess. The illustrations are by Jean Demosthene Dugourc (1749-1825). Other illustrations include tossing a ball and riding on a see saw. The digitized version of this book can be found at this link at The Library of Congress.

A Course of Calisthenics for Young Ladies… Hartford: H. and F. J. Huntington, 1831. Written as a series of letters to a friend, the book stresses the importance of physical exercise for young women. Students can be injured during their education by the uncomfortable chairs, excessive amounts of homework, and the fashion of tightly-laced clothing. A series of very gentle games and exercises are suggested to alleviate these problems.
Monday, May 25
A New Mr. Darcy???
AustenBlog reports that State of Romance, a contemporary Pride and Prejudice inspired RomCom will be on the fall line up on NBC. Can Janeites reclassify it as a PrideCom??? La! Here is a description.
When Emily and Mike get seated together on a commuter flight, sparks do not fly. As a matter of fact, they dislike each other from the very start and discover that they have nothing in common except for their love of wine. But Emily and Mike can't control fate. They continue to meet, thanks in large part to their best friends' budding romance, and they continue to get under each other's skin. Over time, their dislike for each other slowly turns to curiosity and from curiosity to actual interest. Can polar opposites really attract? We're about to find out.
Soooo, the big question on my mind is … who will be Mike/Mr. Darcy???

Steve Howie! My first reaction to this casting … is he the spawn of Alfalfa from Our Gang? Inquiring Janeites want to know!

Cheers, Laurel Ann, Austenprose
Soooo, the big question on my mind is … who will be Mike/Mr. Darcy???

Steve Howie! My first reaction to this casting … is he the spawn of Alfalfa from Our Gang? Inquiring Janeites want to know!

Cheers, Laurel Ann, Austenprose
Jane Austen's True Love Found?
In the book, Jane Austen; An Unrequited Love, Jane Austen's true love was a clergyman named Dr Samuel Blackall. He and Jane met in 1798 when he was a guest of the Lefroys and the relationship supposedly created a rift between Jane and her sister Cassandra.According to Dr Andrew Norman, Dr Blackall's letters to friends disclose his wish to pursue a courtship with the young author, but his uncertainty was treated as a snub by Austen.
"There seems no likelihood of his coming into Hampshire this Christmas, and it is therefore most probably that our indifference will soon be mutual, unless his regard, which appeared to spring from knowing nothing of me at first, is best supported by never seeing me," she wrote to her sister Cassandra. - Telegraph.co.ukTrue or fantasy? Read the article in the Telegraph. co. UK. The author of the book Jane Austen: An Unrequited Love, published by The History Press, is Dr. Andrew Norman, who worked as a family doctor in the UK until 1983. Since then, Dr. Norman has used his diagnostic skills in a different way and become a writer.
Sunday, May 24
Jane Austen Movie Throwdown
A new Emma is being filmed this spring, so we thought we'd ask you to vote whether the casting directors got the male actor right for the lead role as Mr. Knightley. You may leave a comment if your vote is for someone else. Click here and Click here to view two sets of images of the new production on The Republic of Pemberley.Emma 2009 Lead MaleActor
Mr. Knightley: Jonny Lee MillerThis is Jonny's third role in a Jane Austen film adaptation. Back in 1983, he played Charles Price in the BBC adaptation of Mansfield Park and, as a reader reminded me, as Edmund in 1999's Mansfield Park. You might recall first seeing him in Trainspotting and Hackers, where he acted alongside Angelina Jolie, who became his wife. Jonnie comes from a long line of actors. His great-great grandfather was
Saturday, May 23
The Immortal Jane Austen, or Beam Me Up, Scottie, Our Popular Culture Has Gone Haywire
In 2010, The Immortal Jane Austen, the first installment of a series of books, will be published. Written by author Janet Mullany, this humorous book is "about Jane Austen in Regency England who joins the vampire resistance in Bath when England is invaded by French forces." The new immortal Jane is not to be confused with The Immortal Jane Austen by esteemed Jane Austen scholar, Maggie Lane, which is already in print and available in stores. In her serious endeavor, Maggie Lane discusses Jane's six immortal novels in terms of her life and imagination.Which brings me to this point: An agent, whose blog I ran across, thinks that this cliched opening statement of The Rules of Gentility by Janet Mullany, author of the forthcoming Immortal Jane, is brilliant, despite the fact that a variation of this sentence has been written a gazillion times before:
If an agent, on whom publishers depend to separate the wheat from the chaff, thinks that this opening statement is noteworthy (while not mentioning that Pride and Prejudice is its inspiration), what does this say about the state of the publishing business? As for how the Mullany version of The Immortal Jane Austen will be critically received - stay tuned and see.
Friday, May 22
My Top Ten Jane Austen Inspired Summer Reading Bargains under $6.00!
Here’s your chance to stock up on Austen inspired summer reading for a pittance, from my list of top ten sequels for less than $6.00 each. Enjoy!
Confessions of a Jane Austen Addict (2007), by Laurie Viera Rigler
It’s time to reread this perky, quirky novel in preparation for Rigler’s parallel novel, Rude Awakening of a Jane Austen Addict due out this June. (Publishers description) After nursing a broken engagement with Jane Austen novels and Absolut, Courtney Stone wakes up to find herself not in her Los Angeles bedroom or even in her own body, but inside the bedchamber of a woman in Regency England. Who but an Austen addict like herself could concoct such a fantasy? Not only is Courtney stuck inside another woman’s life, she is forced to pretend she actually is that woman; and despite knowing nothing about her, she manages to fool even the most astute observer. For her borrowed body knows how to speak without slaying the King’s English, dance without maiming her partner, and embroider as if possessed by actual domestic skill. But not even Courtney’s level of Austen mania has prepared her for the chamber pots and filthy coaching inns of nineteenth-century England, let alone the realities of being a single woman who must fend off suffocating chaperones, condom-less seducers, and marriages of convenience. Enter the enigmatic Mr. Edgeworth, a suitor who may turn out not to be a familiar species of philanderer after all. ISBN: 9781615586943, $14.00 list price, $3.99 bargain price!
Austenland (2007), by Shannon Hale
If you happened to catch the BBC/PBS TV reality series Regency House Party, where modern day singletons are thrown together to live in the Regency era Manor house for weeks in hope of finding romance, then you will be one step ahead of Jane Hayes the heroine of this clever novel which gives readers the opportunity to take the ultimate Austen fantasy vacation at Austenland. Be prepared for a Mr. Darcy like gentleman to come with the package. YUM! (Publishers description) Jane is a young New York woman who can never seem to find the right man — perhaps because of her secret obsession with Mr. Darcy, as played by Colin Firth in the BBC adaptation of Pride and Prejudice. When a wealthy relative bequeaths her a trip to an English resort catering to Austen-obsessed women, Jane’s fantasies of meeting the perfect Regency-era gentleman suddenly become realer than she ever could have imagined. Is this total immersion in a fake Austenland enough to make Jane kick the Austen obsession for good, or could all her dreams actually culminate in a Mr. Darcy of her own? ISBN: 9780641992674, $19.95 list price, $4.98 bargain price!
Mr. Darcy’s Daughters (2003), by Elizabeth Aston
Few can refute Elizabeth Aston’s position as nonpareil in the Austen sequel publishing industry with six Pride and Prejudice sequels in six years under her bonnet! There is a good reason for her success. She writes engaging, creative stories that are respectful of Jane Austen’s original tone and characters, taking the reader into a new generation ready to experience courtship and life challenges in Regency England. Mr. Darcy’s Daughters was Aston’s first effort and it aims to please Janeites! (Publisher’s description) Picking up twenty years after Pride and Prejudice left off, Mr. Darcy's Daughters begins in the year 1818. Elizabeth and Darcy have gone to Constantinople, giving us an opportunity to get to know their five daughters, who have left the sheltered surroundings of Pemberley for a few months in London. While the eldest, Letitia, frets and the youngest, Alethea, practices her music, twins Georgina and Belle flirt and frolic their way through parties and balls and Camilla -- levelheaded and independent -- discovers what joys and sorrows the city has to offer an intelligent young woman. Readers will delight in the return of such beloved Austen creations as Elizabeth's old nemesis Caroline Bingley (now Lady Warren), the ever-reliable Gardiners and wayward Aunt Lydia. Charming, beautifully written and full of societal intrigue and romantic high jinks, Mr. Darcy's Daughters is a tale that would please Austen herself. ISBN: 9780641916779, $14.95 list price, $4.98 bargain price!
Exploits and Adventures of Alethea Darcy (2005), by Elizabeth Aston
In this second sequel to a sequel! Aston continues the story of one of Mr. Darcy’s daughters Alethea, whose free spirit and musical talents take her on adventure that any young lady of Jane Austen’s era might have read about in a novel but never dreamed it could happen to her! (Publisher’s description) The Exploits & Adventures of Miss Alethea Darcy takes readers back into the imagined family of Elizabeth Bennet and Mr. Darcy. Their musical daughter Alethea makes a disastrous marriage to a man whose charming manners conceal an unpleasant nature. Flinging caution to the winds, she flees her marital home, masquerading as a gentleman, and accompanied only by her redoubtable maid, Figgins, she sets off for Venice to take refuge with her sister Camilla. But events -- always dramatic and sometimes dangerous -- conspire to thwart her plans. Before she can meet up with Camilla, chance and her love of music lead her into the world of Italian opera, while her encounter with the aloof and difficult Titus Manningtree, in Italy to pursue a lost Titian painting, is to change her life -- although fate has several more tricks to play before she can find happiness. With wit, aplomb, and delectable style, Elizabeth Aston once again re-creates the world of Jane Austen, populating her novel with captivating characters firmly rooted in Austen's traditions but distinctly her own, resulting in another delightful comedy of manners, morals, and marriage. ISBN: 9780641713613, $14.00 list price, $4.98 bargain price!
The Second Mrs. Darcy (2007), by Elizabeth Aston
Did the title cause your heart to skip a beat in apprehension that the first Mrs. Darcy (Elizabeth Bennet) has died? Rest assured, the second Mrs. Darcy is not the wife of Fitzwilliam Darcy, but the widow of his cousin Christopher. Phew! (Publisher description) In the next adventure of the Darcy family from the author of Mr. Darcy's Daughters — is the story of a reluctant heiress who has been left a widow by Darcy's cousin Christopher. It is a truth universally acknowledged that a single woman in possession of a good fortune must be in want of a husband. So say the friends and family of impoverished widow Octavia Darcy when she unexpectedly inherits a fortune, but she has a different view and looks forward to a new life of independence. Escaping from the efforts of her half brothers and sisters to marry her off, Octavia goes to Yorkshire to find out more about the family she never knew, and while she is there she meets and crosses swords with landowner and politician Sholto Rutherford. When she returns to London to share a house with the dashing Lady Susan, Octavia, now secure in her new life, becomes caught up in the romantic problems of her niece. Then, the shadow of George Warren, the old nemesis of the Darcy family, falls over her, and she is threatened with the loss of both inheritance and reputation. ISBN: 9780641934735, $14.00 list price, $4.98 bargain price!
The Darcy Connection (2008), by Elizabeth Aston
Follow the story of the two daughters of Charlotte and Rev Mr. Collins, now elevated to Bishop! If that made you laugh, imagine what Mr. Darcy thinks of his wife’s odious cousin’s promotion! Luckily, his two daughters Charlotte a reputed beauty and Eliza who takes after her godmother Eliza Darcy are far more like their mother and aunt than their father! Like all of the books in the series, the Darcy’s are off stage with few communications, but their influence and Austen’s tone is strongly felt. (Publishers description) In The Darcy Connection, Mr. Collins of Pride and Prejudice is now the Bishop of Ripon, living with his wife, Charlotte, and their two daughters, who have reached marriageable age. The elder, another Charlotte, is extraordinarily beautiful, and her parents hope her looks and connections will ensure a brilliant marriage. Her sister, Eliza, while not as handsome, possesses a lively intelligence that, in Mr. Collins's opinion, is too like her godmother, Mrs. Darcy. In London, Charlotte's beauty wins her many admirers, despite her small fortune. But Eliza's wit and attempts to interfere in what she considers an unsuitable marriage for her sister infuriate her family and Charlotte's suitor -- until Eliza herself meets her match. New and old fans alike will relish this witty, romantic, thoroughly entertaining novel from a highly talented author. ISBN: 9780641986345, $14.00 list price, $4.98 bargain price!
The Dashwood Sister’s Secrets of Love (2006), by Rosie Rushton
In this contemporary retelling of Jane Austen’s novel Sense and Sensibility, author Rushton cleverly adapts the story of two sisters with diverse personalities – one passionate and one reserved – who face the challenges of sudden poverty and diminished social status in totally different ways, all in the hope of finding love and happiness. This Yong Adult novel may lack Austen’s subtle wit and pathos, but did you really expect it? (Publishers description) The Walker sisters have always lived a privileged life in their beloved Holly House in Sussex. Even though their father, Max Walker, has left the family to live with his new macrobiotic-food-obsessed trophy wife, Pandora, he has always doted on his girls. But then one day, reality crashes down around them when Max has a heart attack and passes away, uncovering the truth that he was knee deep in debt. The Walkers discover that their home is actually in Pandora's name and she decides she wants it back. So the family has to uproot their lives and move to the seaside town of Norfolk in an old cottage. What happens then? ISBN: 9780641942938, $8.99 list price, $3.98 bargain price!
Old Friends and New Fancies: An Imaginary Sequel to the Novels of Jane Austen (2007), by Sybil Brinton
It all began in 1914, when the first Jane Austen sequel was published! A must-have for every Jane Austen enthusiast, this is your chance to snap up this classic novel at an incredible price and read an amusing and witty sequel that includes characters from all of Jane Austen’s novels. (Publishers description) Originally published in 1914, this charming and original sequel to the novels of Jane Austen intertwines the lives of the most beloved characters from all six Austen novels with new characters of the author's devising. Inventive matchmaking leads numerous pairs of lovers through the inevitable (and entertaining) difficulties they must encounter before they are united in the end. Old Friends and New Fancies is a gratifying read for any Jane Austen enthusiast. ISBN: 9780641999710, $14.95 list price, $5.98 bargain price!
More Letters from Pemberley (2007), by Jane Dawkins
Jane Austen’s friendship with her sister Cassandra was the most important relationship in her life, and her fictional sisters are as devoted and dependent on each other’s happiness as she and Cassie. Dawkins continued the story of Jane Austen’s famous fictional sisters Elizabeth and Jane Bennet from Pride and Prejudice in her first novel in the series Letters from Pemberley. Now in More Letters from Pemberley, a sequel to a sequel, we are privileged to read letters from Elizabeth to Jane during the next five years of her marriage to Fitzwilliam Darcy and as Mistress of Pemberley. If you enjoyed the charming first novel in the series, then this engaging read is sure to please. (Publishers description) More Letters from Pemberley continues the story of Elizabeth (Bennet) Darcy’s married life, picking up in 1814 and following this most popular of Jane Austen characters for another six years to the twilight of the Regency period in 1819. Writing to her beloved sister Jane, the irrepressible Lizzie describes life as mistress of Pemberley and her relationship with the dashing Fizwilliam Darcy. Highlights include a Darcy family Christmas, the inevitable conflicts that might arise even in such an illustrious family and the happiness of the birth of an heir. Again incorporating Jane Austen’s own words and characters from her other works (who appear here with different names, either associated with Austen’s life, borrowed from another of her novels or a word-play on their original name), Jane Dawkins has created another satisfying and entertaining tale. ISBN: 9780641999703, $13.95 list price, $5.98 bargain price!
Don’t ask me to choose my favorite!
“Her way was clear, though not quite smooth. She spoke then, on being so entreated. What did she say? Just what she ought, of course. A lady always does.” Narrator on Emma Woodhouse, Chapter 49
Happy reading!
Cheers, Laurel Ann, Austenprose
Confessions of a Jane Austen Addict (2007), by Laurie Viera Rigler
It’s time to reread this perky, quirky novel in preparation for Rigler’s parallel novel, Rude Awakening of a Jane Austen Addict due out this June. (Publishers description) After nursing a broken engagement with Jane Austen novels and Absolut, Courtney Stone wakes up to find herself not in her Los Angeles bedroom or even in her own body, but inside the bedchamber of a woman in Regency England. Who but an Austen addict like herself could concoct such a fantasy? Not only is Courtney stuck inside another woman’s life, she is forced to pretend she actually is that woman; and despite knowing nothing about her, she manages to fool even the most astute observer. For her borrowed body knows how to speak without slaying the King’s English, dance without maiming her partner, and embroider as if possessed by actual domestic skill. But not even Courtney’s level of Austen mania has prepared her for the chamber pots and filthy coaching inns of nineteenth-century England, let alone the realities of being a single woman who must fend off suffocating chaperones, condom-less seducers, and marriages of convenience. Enter the enigmatic Mr. Edgeworth, a suitor who may turn out not to be a familiar species of philanderer after all. ISBN: 9781615586943, $14.00 list price, $3.99 bargain price!Austenland (2007), by Shannon Hale
If you happened to catch the BBC/PBS TV reality series Regency House Party, where modern day singletons are thrown together to live in the Regency era Manor house for weeks in hope of finding romance, then you will be one step ahead of Jane Hayes the heroine of this clever novel which gives readers the opportunity to take the ultimate Austen fantasy vacation at Austenland. Be prepared for a Mr. Darcy like gentleman to come with the package. YUM! (Publishers description) Jane is a young New York woman who can never seem to find the right man — perhaps because of her secret obsession with Mr. Darcy, as played by Colin Firth in the BBC adaptation of Pride and Prejudice. When a wealthy relative bequeaths her a trip to an English resort catering to Austen-obsessed women, Jane’s fantasies of meeting the perfect Regency-era gentleman suddenly become realer than she ever could have imagined. Is this total immersion in a fake Austenland enough to make Jane kick the Austen obsession for good, or could all her dreams actually culminate in a Mr. Darcy of her own? ISBN: 9780641992674, $19.95 list price, $4.98 bargain price!Mr. Darcy’s Daughters (2003), by Elizabeth Aston
Few can refute Elizabeth Aston’s position as nonpareil in the Austen sequel publishing industry with six Pride and Prejudice sequels in six years under her bonnet! There is a good reason for her success. She writes engaging, creative stories that are respectful of Jane Austen’s original tone and characters, taking the reader into a new generation ready to experience courtship and life challenges in Regency England. Mr. Darcy’s Daughters was Aston’s first effort and it aims to please Janeites! (Publisher’s description) Picking up twenty years after Pride and Prejudice left off, Mr. Darcy's Daughters begins in the year 1818. Elizabeth and Darcy have gone to Constantinople, giving us an opportunity to get to know their five daughters, who have left the sheltered surroundings of Pemberley for a few months in London. While the eldest, Letitia, frets and the youngest, Alethea, practices her music, twins Georgina and Belle flirt and frolic their way through parties and balls and Camilla -- levelheaded and independent -- discovers what joys and sorrows the city has to offer an intelligent young woman. Readers will delight in the return of such beloved Austen creations as Elizabeth's old nemesis Caroline Bingley (now Lady Warren), the ever-reliable Gardiners and wayward Aunt Lydia. Charming, beautifully written and full of societal intrigue and romantic high jinks, Mr. Darcy's Daughters is a tale that would please Austen herself. ISBN: 9780641916779, $14.95 list price, $4.98 bargain price!Exploits and Adventures of Alethea Darcy (2005), by Elizabeth Aston
In this second sequel to a sequel! Aston continues the story of one of Mr. Darcy’s daughters Alethea, whose free spirit and musical talents take her on adventure that any young lady of Jane Austen’s era might have read about in a novel but never dreamed it could happen to her! (Publisher’s description) The Exploits & Adventures of Miss Alethea Darcy takes readers back into the imagined family of Elizabeth Bennet and Mr. Darcy. Their musical daughter Alethea makes a disastrous marriage to a man whose charming manners conceal an unpleasant nature. Flinging caution to the winds, she flees her marital home, masquerading as a gentleman, and accompanied only by her redoubtable maid, Figgins, she sets off for Venice to take refuge with her sister Camilla. But events -- always dramatic and sometimes dangerous -- conspire to thwart her plans. Before she can meet up with Camilla, chance and her love of music lead her into the world of Italian opera, while her encounter with the aloof and difficult Titus Manningtree, in Italy to pursue a lost Titian painting, is to change her life -- although fate has several more tricks to play before she can find happiness. With wit, aplomb, and delectable style, Elizabeth Aston once again re-creates the world of Jane Austen, populating her novel with captivating characters firmly rooted in Austen's traditions but distinctly her own, resulting in another delightful comedy of manners, morals, and marriage. ISBN: 9780641713613, $14.00 list price, $4.98 bargain price!The Second Mrs. Darcy (2007), by Elizabeth Aston
Did the title cause your heart to skip a beat in apprehension that the first Mrs. Darcy (Elizabeth Bennet) has died? Rest assured, the second Mrs. Darcy is not the wife of Fitzwilliam Darcy, but the widow of his cousin Christopher. Phew! (Publisher description) In the next adventure of the Darcy family from the author of Mr. Darcy's Daughters — is the story of a reluctant heiress who has been left a widow by Darcy's cousin Christopher. It is a truth universally acknowledged that a single woman in possession of a good fortune must be in want of a husband. So say the friends and family of impoverished widow Octavia Darcy when she unexpectedly inherits a fortune, but she has a different view and looks forward to a new life of independence. Escaping from the efforts of her half brothers and sisters to marry her off, Octavia goes to Yorkshire to find out more about the family she never knew, and while she is there she meets and crosses swords with landowner and politician Sholto Rutherford. When she returns to London to share a house with the dashing Lady Susan, Octavia, now secure in her new life, becomes caught up in the romantic problems of her niece. Then, the shadow of George Warren, the old nemesis of the Darcy family, falls over her, and she is threatened with the loss of both inheritance and reputation. ISBN: 9780641934735, $14.00 list price, $4.98 bargain price!The Darcy Connection (2008), by Elizabeth Aston
Follow the story of the two daughters of Charlotte and Rev Mr. Collins, now elevated to Bishop! If that made you laugh, imagine what Mr. Darcy thinks of his wife’s odious cousin’s promotion! Luckily, his two daughters Charlotte a reputed beauty and Eliza who takes after her godmother Eliza Darcy are far more like their mother and aunt than their father! Like all of the books in the series, the Darcy’s are off stage with few communications, but their influence and Austen’s tone is strongly felt. (Publishers description) In The Darcy Connection, Mr. Collins of Pride and Prejudice is now the Bishop of Ripon, living with his wife, Charlotte, and their two daughters, who have reached marriageable age. The elder, another Charlotte, is extraordinarily beautiful, and her parents hope her looks and connections will ensure a brilliant marriage. Her sister, Eliza, while not as handsome, possesses a lively intelligence that, in Mr. Collins's opinion, is too like her godmother, Mrs. Darcy. In London, Charlotte's beauty wins her many admirers, despite her small fortune. But Eliza's wit and attempts to interfere in what she considers an unsuitable marriage for her sister infuriate her family and Charlotte's suitor -- until Eliza herself meets her match. New and old fans alike will relish this witty, romantic, thoroughly entertaining novel from a highly talented author. ISBN: 9780641986345, $14.00 list price, $4.98 bargain price!The Dashwood Sister’s Secrets of Love (2006), by Rosie Rushton
In this contemporary retelling of Jane Austen’s novel Sense and Sensibility, author Rushton cleverly adapts the story of two sisters with diverse personalities – one passionate and one reserved – who face the challenges of sudden poverty and diminished social status in totally different ways, all in the hope of finding love and happiness. This Yong Adult novel may lack Austen’s subtle wit and pathos, but did you really expect it? (Publishers description) The Walker sisters have always lived a privileged life in their beloved Holly House in Sussex. Even though their father, Max Walker, has left the family to live with his new macrobiotic-food-obsessed trophy wife, Pandora, he has always doted on his girls. But then one day, reality crashes down around them when Max has a heart attack and passes away, uncovering the truth that he was knee deep in debt. The Walkers discover that their home is actually in Pandora's name and she decides she wants it back. So the family has to uproot their lives and move to the seaside town of Norfolk in an old cottage. What happens then? ISBN: 9780641942938, $8.99 list price, $3.98 bargain price!Old Friends and New Fancies: An Imaginary Sequel to the Novels of Jane Austen (2007), by Sybil Brinton
It all began in 1914, when the first Jane Austen sequel was published! A must-have for every Jane Austen enthusiast, this is your chance to snap up this classic novel at an incredible price and read an amusing and witty sequel that includes characters from all of Jane Austen’s novels. (Publishers description) Originally published in 1914, this charming and original sequel to the novels of Jane Austen intertwines the lives of the most beloved characters from all six Austen novels with new characters of the author's devising. Inventive matchmaking leads numerous pairs of lovers through the inevitable (and entertaining) difficulties they must encounter before they are united in the end. Old Friends and New Fancies is a gratifying read for any Jane Austen enthusiast. ISBN: 9780641999710, $14.95 list price, $5.98 bargain price!More Letters from Pemberley (2007), by Jane Dawkins
Jane Austen’s friendship with her sister Cassandra was the most important relationship in her life, and her fictional sisters are as devoted and dependent on each other’s happiness as she and Cassie. Dawkins continued the story of Jane Austen’s famous fictional sisters Elizabeth and Jane Bennet from Pride and Prejudice in her first novel in the series Letters from Pemberley. Now in More Letters from Pemberley, a sequel to a sequel, we are privileged to read letters from Elizabeth to Jane during the next five years of her marriage to Fitzwilliam Darcy and as Mistress of Pemberley. If you enjoyed the charming first novel in the series, then this engaging read is sure to please. (Publishers description) More Letters from Pemberley continues the story of Elizabeth (Bennet) Darcy’s married life, picking up in 1814 and following this most popular of Jane Austen characters for another six years to the twilight of the Regency period in 1819. Writing to her beloved sister Jane, the irrepressible Lizzie describes life as mistress of Pemberley and her relationship with the dashing Fizwilliam Darcy. Highlights include a Darcy family Christmas, the inevitable conflicts that might arise even in such an illustrious family and the happiness of the birth of an heir. Again incorporating Jane Austen’s own words and characters from her other works (who appear here with different names, either associated with Austen’s life, borrowed from another of her novels or a word-play on their original name), Jane Dawkins has created another satisfying and entertaining tale. ISBN: 9780641999703, $13.95 list price, $5.98 bargain price!Don’t ask me to choose my favorite!
“Her way was clear, though not quite smooth. She spoke then, on being so entreated. What did she say? Just what she ought, of course. A lady always does.” Narrator on Emma Woodhouse, Chapter 49
Happy reading!
Cheers, Laurel Ann, Austenprose
Thursday, May 21
Chawton Cottage
This link leads to a map with more images of Chawton, some quite lovely.
Click here to listen to a 9-minute BBC4 podcast of an interview with Sandy Lerner, the American silicon valley millionaire who purchased Chawton House, located near Chawton Cottage and former home of Jane Austen's brother, and created a women's literary centre and library there. Sandy has read Persuasion 70 times!
"Enter Sandy Lerner. It is, of course, a truth universally acknowledged, that a single Californian, in possession of several hundred million dollars, must be in want of a Project. Ms Lerner, in her late 30s, is a farmer's daughter who in 1984 founded, with her husband, a computer company. They sold control of Cisco in 1990 for dollars 170m ( pounds 110m), and further shares in it for many more millions when it went public a year later. Ms Lerner is reclusive, an animal-rights activist, and claims to hold daily conversations with Disraeli. She has spent dollars 115m setting up a charitable foundation. - Chawton is crumbling as Janeites cross swords, the Independent, UKOther links:
- Money's My Little Defining Thing, Telegraph.co.uk - more about the Chawton House Library
- Chawton House Library
- The Female Spectator, Newsletter of the Chawton House Library
- Chawton House Library Visiting Fellowships
Wednesday, May 20
Seen on the Blogosphere: Books Galore
Jane Austen Books.net Fabulous site where you can order all things Jane Austen. Check it out.And Girlebooks offers another Georgette Heyer ebook for free: These Old Shades, which is a quasi sequel to The Black Moth, also a free ebook.
Austen fans offers a cheat sheet on Georgette Heyer. Click here.
Posted Vic, Jane Austen's World
Mr. Darcy's Popularity
Even though the results are skewed, I can only conclude that Mr. Colin Firth is no longer sitting at the top of the Darcy heap, and that he has two viable contenders. Matthew Macfadyen has been challenging him for the top position for four years. That Elliot Cowan has made such a strong showing after his recent performance in a JA spoof speaks to his hunk factor and comedic talents.
As for me, I love all the Mr. Darcys, including Laurence Olivier's turn and David Rintoul's rather stiff performance. All I can say is: Thank you for voting. The final results sit in the original post. - Vic
Tuesday, May 19
Persuasion: Fashion in the Age of Austen
This week the National Gallery of Victoria in Australia will feature a fashion show that I would give my eyeteeth to see - Persuasion: Fashion in the Age of Jane Austen, which will be shown in the Myer Fashion and Textiles Gallery and will run from May 22 to November 8th. Best of all, the show is free to the public. The exhibit will feature over 70 works, largely from the museum collection, and survey the period between1770 and 1830. Prints and drawings, decorative arts and paintings with a focus on English women’s dress from the early 19th century will be shown alongside these fabulous outfits, and key works from other Australian institutions and private collections will also be included. Many of the items in the NGV's holdings were collected in the 1960s and 70s by collectors Anne and Leo Schofield.
Jane Austen's fashionable characters in her novels, like Lucy Steele or Mrs. Allen, were portrayed as being rather silly. "It was not considered proper for anyone to talk endlessly about fashion," said Roger Leong, the NGV's curator of international fashion and textiles. "The characters who do talk at length about clothes are always the most idiotic." Yet Jane wrote about fashionable details in her letters to her family, and as Leong noted, "Austen's witty and perceptive comments about fashion mirrored the complex relationships within English society during her lifetime, especially between different classes and men and women."
Fashion changed dramatically during Jane Austen's lifetime. In 1775, the year of her birth, women wore constricting dresses with corsetry, hoops, or panniers. When Jane was in her 20's, the neoclassical influence had taken over. Women's clothes were high-waisted, streamlined, relatively unembellished, and made with soft muslin or diaphanous cottons. Towards the end of Jane's life in 1817, dresses were once more decorated with tucks, ruffles, and lace. Waists came down, the hour-glass silhouette returned, and stiffer fabrics and silk satins came into vogue again. "The variations of the waistline, upwards from the natural waist and then back again, were a distinctive characteristic of the time, one of the most dynamic periods in fashion," Leong said. The curator also observed that our knowledge of fashion during Jane's era comes largely from period films. He particularly admires "the costumes designed by Jenny Beavan and John Bright in Ang Lee's film Sense and Sensibility, which cited fashions from the 1790s, when Austen was writing the novel, rather than 1811, when it became her first published book."*
While empire dresses were popular for only a short period, they seem less cumbersome and restrictive to our modern eyes than the constricting fashions of the Georgian and Victorian eras. For modern fans, a costume worn by Colin Firth in 1995's Pride and Prejudice will be on display. (Rumor has it that it is a white shirt.)Images:
1. Muslin dress, 1815-16
2. Detail of Pelisse, 1816, silk satin
3. Open robe, 1770
4. Carriage dress, 1830, silk
5. Round gown, 1802
Posted by Vic, Jane Austen's World
Sunday, May 17
Jane Austen Movie Throwdown
Inquiring Reader,The Jane Austen Character Throwdown will take on a more peripheral role as we explore Jane Austen movie and television adaptations. Lately, our character questions have been heading in that direction. Last week's character throwdown showed Mr. Knightley winning over Mr. Wickham by a margin of 2:1. It is interesting to note that the voting trend settles early on in the week and doesn't change. We'll see if this pattern remains the same for the movie throwdowns.
Three years ago we asked this question about Mr. Darcy and the votes went viral, putting our blog on the Austen map. It doesn't hurt to start our movie throwdown with the same question again, since our readership has evolved and changed. Drum Roll please: which Mr. Darcy do you prefer? We now have so many actors to choose from that, for the sake of brevity, we shall limit the choice to the last three Darcys.
Favorite Mr. Darcy
Elliot Cowan, Lost in Austen, 2008Our latest Mr. Darcy, Elliot played the role of straight man in Lost in Austen. His surprisingly effective turn as Mr. Darcy helped to make this t.v. adaptation a huge success the world over, and I doubt he belongs to the League of Obscure British Actors any longer. He has signed on to play Captain Hatch in Heaven and Earth along with Pierce Brosnan and Natascha McEllhone. We can't wait.
Matthew Macfadyen, Pride and Prejudice, 2005Who can forget his rain scene proposal to Lizzy? Though it was placed in the wrong setting and the day was cold and rainy, he managed to smolder and sizzle. Matthew's career is hot as well. He recently appeared in Little Dorrit, and will appear in the BBC production of Enid Blyton and as the Sherrif of Nottingham in Robin Hood. Oh, how delicious.
Colin Firth, Pride and Prejudice, 1995With Colin you can take your pick. He's played Darcy in Pride and Prejudice and the Bridget Jones's Diary franchise, oozing British wit and charm. His career has not slowed down since playing Darcy and we will have six opportunities to see him in future productions: A Single Man, Main Street, A Christmas Carol, Dorian Gray, The Meat Trade, and David Copperfield. Be still my beating heart.
DEAR VISITORS: What an exciting three days it has been. We've changed the poll to allow only one vote per visit.
Friday, May 15
Regency Costume Print: Art or Insult?
Thumbing through a Ballard Designs brochure, I happened upon a vaguely familiar image of a handsome young man in a striking cravat, slim trousers and boots. The catalogue description lists the image as a “Regency Costume Print: in ink wash based on an original by Jacques Louis David, Napoleon’s official court painter, depicting the artist’s brother-in-law in Regency era riding attire.” *scratches head* Something is not quite right about that description.The British Regency period in the United Kingdom is the era between 1811 and 1820 and closely associated to Jane Austen as she published all of her novels during this time. The description at Wikipedia states: “when King George III was deemed unfit to rule and his son, later George IV, was instated to be his proxy as Prince Regent.” Art, architecture, decorative arts, furniture and fashion from this era in the UK is considered Regency style. The original painting as seen below on the right is by a French painter Jacques Louis David (1748-1825) and is a portrait of his brother-in-law Pierre Seriziat painted in 1795 in France. David was a fervent supporter of the French Revolution with many political connections which eventually worked into being the court painter of Napoleon Bonaparte who was at war with the British Empire and definitely their arch enemy. During Napoleon’s reign, a new design movement emerged in the early 19th-century known as the Empire Style. A painting created by a French artist during this period would be called Empire, NOT Regency! I am quite sure that the artist Monsieur David is spinning in his grave to have his work classified under the British Regency movement!!!
Regardless of the faux pas, the new print is quite lovely and available for purchase online at Ballard Designs. Personally, I prefer the original which can be ordered as a Giclee print from All Posters.com. Here is a lovely description of the original portrait by Warren Roberts from his book Jacques-Louis David, Revolutionary Artist.
“The painting … shows his brother-in-law seated on a vine-covered rock, near some plants. Behind Pierre Seriziat is the sky, the fullness of which is unique among David’s portraits. The setting is outdoors, very unusual for a David portrait, and Seriziat is shown as a leisured country gentleman. The Pierre Seriziat of David’s portrait is refined, impeccable, fastidious, and fashionable in his buttoned vest, cravat, riding jacket, buckskin breeches, fine leather boots, top hat and kid gloves. His expression suggests ease of manner, as do his crossed legs and the gloves that dangle from one hand and the riding crop casually held in the other. Everything about the portrait underlines the good breeding – the exquisite social qualities – of David’s brother-in-law. Everything, that is, except for the cockade on his hat.” (white cockades are a symbol of Royal loyalist)The country gentleman in the portrait is quite a dandy, and reminiscent of Brit Beau Brummell, so it is easy to see how the association to the Regency era was made. Never-the-less, history is important and Jane Austen would be appalled. You never know who you are insulting if you do not do your research!
Cheers, Laurel Ann, Austenprose
Crafty Artists at Etsy Inspired by Jane Austen
Oh how I admire crafty people, and am duly amazed what Jane Austen inspired items are available online at Etsy. Among the incredible artists creating jewelry, handbags, dolls, and paintings etc, etc, is one that I especially admire, Brigida Swanson of Seattle, Washington. Her online shop Yardia features a clever use of Austen quotes from her novels and letters on handmade cards with images of Regency era gowns. One of my favorite quotes by Emma Woodhouse is used with a beautiful pen and ink drawing of a frock on a notecard ready to highlight a special gift or note to your friends or family. Check out all of the Austen related items on Etsy here, and enjoy!Cheers, Laurel Ann, Austenprose
Thursday, May 14
The Talisman Ring by Georgette Heyer, A Review
Gentle Readers,My fellow Janeite on the James colleague, Hillary, read The Talisman Ring and reviewed it for you in this post. This 1936 novel was one of Georgette Heyer's earlier efforts. The light-hearted romp - full of comedic twists and double entendres - was set in Sussex, where the author lived at the time.
The Talisman Ring is one of Georgette Heyer's earliest novels, and as a genre bender, it holds a unique place in her work. Not merely a romance, the book is also a mystery and a detective novel, with a soupçon of action and adventure thrown in (including a wild ride through the English woods, an encounter with a band of smugglers, and a little old-fashioned breaking and entering). Moreover, instead of one pair of lovers, Heyer provides us with two. In the first chapter, the practical Sir Tristram Shield dutifully promises his dying uncle that he will marry and provide for his cousin Eustacie, a young noblewoman raised in France and not at all grateful for a rescue from the guillotine if it means being condemned to the quiet country environs of Lavenham Court. Soon Sir Tristram is acting as executor of the estate, since the rightful heir, hot-headed Ludovic Lavensham, has fled the country under suspicion of murder. When Eustacie runs away from home and encounters Ludovic, Sir Tristram's vow to his uncle is placed in imminent danger. Conveniently, the intrepid Miss Sarah Thane – a lady traveler lodging at the local inn along with her comically obtuse brother (a jolly good fellow who happens to be a justice of the peace) – sets her cap for Sir Tristram. Add to the mix the absurdly foppish Beau Lavenham, a rival for the inheritance of Lavenham Court and the attention of the ladies, and thus begins the search for the talisman ring, a token that might prove Ludovic's innocence . . . and another's guilt.
This reader's overall impression of the book is one of frivolity: quite a bit of fun with very little substance. While Eustacie's girlish romanticism is to be expected, the supposedly older and wiser Sarah Thane turns out to be just as silly, perfectly willing to masquerade as a dull-witted antiques enthusiast in order to help search for secret hideaways in the wainscoting of a suspect's home library. Even the most intriguing historical details, such as the introduction of the Bow Street Runners, forerunners of modern detectives, are handled with a comic touch, as the two Runners find their investigations foiled by Eustacie and Sarah's enthusiastic amateur efforts. One can imagine that Heyer took great delight in researching the excesses of men's period attire, which manifest themselves in combinations as bizarre as primrose pantaloons and a lilac-striped coat, topped off by a fur-lined cloak and sugarloaf hat. Ultimately, one can well sympathize with the beleaguered Sir Tristram and the bewildered Sir Hugh Thane, who remarks peevishly that "This is the queerist inn I've ever stayed at in my life."
Amidst all of these humorous flourishes, the reader may be willing to forego more plausible storylines or fully rounded characters. The Talisman Ring is not a great novel, but rather a light-hearted romp that promises smiles to the pleasure reader.
Posted by Vic, Jane Austen's World
Wednesday, May 13
Another Emma
Emma is receiving an embarrassment of attention these days. Her name has shot up to #1 in the U.S. for girls, a U.K. movie based on Jane Austen's novel, and starring Romola Garay, is being filmed as I write, rumors are that preliminary discussions for Clueless 2 are underway, and now Sonam Kapoor has been hired to play Emma in the Bollywood version. The pretty Indian actress will play Desi Emma in Ayesha, which will be based on Jane Austen's novel. Bride and Prejudice, a Bollywood version of Pride and Prejudice was a charming movie. One wonders if this new film will enjoy equal popularity.Stay tuned for the latest news as the crowded Emma train keeps chugging along. For the best site about Emma, click on Emma Adaptations by Kali. Everything you ever wanted to know about our heroine sits there.
Tuesday, May 12
Tweeting Pride and Prejudice
Pride and Prejudice
janeausten: Woman meets man called Darcy who seems horrible. He turns out to be nice really. They get together.
Can you sum up Jane's other novels with equal brevity and wit?
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