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Tuesday, March 17

New Georgette Heyer Novels in the Queue

The Queen of Regency Georgette Heyer is set to reign in 2009. Sourcebooks is releasing Georgette's regency novels and mysteries in the following order:

January: Frederica - Frederica is full of surprises! (Read Vic's review here)

When Frederica brings her younger siblings to London determined to secure a brilliant marriage for her beautiful sister, she seeks out their distant cousin the Marquis of Alverstoke. Frederica makes such a strong impression that to his own amazement, the Marquis agrees to help launch them all into society.With his enterprising - and altogether entertaining - country cousins getting into one scrape after another right on his doorstep, before he knows it the Marquis finds himself dangerously embroiled...

February: A Convenient Marriage - before she knew it, the bride found herself in deep trouble.

When the Earl of Rule proposes marriage to her sister Lizzie, Horatia offers herself instead. Her sister is already in love with someone else, and Horatia is willing to sacrifice herself for her family's happiness. Everyone knows she's no beauty, but she'll do her best to keep out of the Earl's way and make him a good wife. And then the Earl's archenemy, Sir Robert, sets out to ruin her reputation...Unbeknownst to Horatia, the Earl is enchanted by her. There's simply no way he's going to let her get into trouble…

Behold, Here’s Poison
(mystery): Meet the Matthews - before the next one dies...

It's no ordinary morning at the Poplars - the master is found dead in his bed, and it seems his high blood pressure was not the cause. When an autopsy reveals a sinister poison, it's up to the quietly resourceful Inspector Hannasyde to catch the murderer in time to spare the next victim. But every single member of the quarrelsome Matthews family has a motive and none, of course, has an alibi.

March: The Talisman Ring

When spirited Eustacie stumbles into a band of smugglers, she is delighted to be having an adventure at last. Their leader, young heir Ludovic Lavenham, is in hiding, falsely accused of murder. Pursued by the law, Eustacie and Ludovic find refuge at an unassuming country inn.

The resourceful Miss Sarah Thane and the clear-thinking Sir Tristram Shield gamely endeavor to prevent Ludovic's arrest and Eustacie's ruin as the four conspire to recover the missing talisman ring that will clear Ludovic's name.

Unfinished Clue (mystery): A houseful of people he loathes is not Sir Arthur's worst problem…

It should have been a lovely English country-house weekend. But the unfortunate guest-list is enough to exasperate a saint, and the host, Sir Arthur Billington-Smith, is an abusive wretch hated by everyone from his disinherited son to his wife's stoic would-be lover. When Sir Arthur is found stabbed to death, no one is particularly grieved—and no one has an alibi. The unhappy guests fi nd themselves under the scrutiny of Scotland Yard's cool-headed Inspector Harding, who has solved tough cases before—but this time, the talented young inspector discovers much more than he's bargained for.

April: The Nonesuch

"On the shelf" at 28, Ancilla Trent considers her opportunity for romance and adventure to be behind her. She strives to be a calming influence on her tempestuous charge, but Tiffany Wield's bad behavior culminates in an impetuous flight to London without a chaperone. It falls to Ancilla and Sir Waldo Hawkridge, one of the wealthiest bachelors in London , to join forces and stop Tiffany's flight before she does irreparable damage to her reputation. Together, they of course discover that neither is too old for love.

Why Shoot a Butler ? (mystery): When local barrister Frank Amberley takes a wrong turn on his way to visit his aunt and uncle and accidentally discovers a murder, he impulsively protects the young woman he meets at the crime scene. In the course of ferreting out the killer, his disdain for the bumbling police adds comic relief, and he displays true brilliance at solving the crime. Heyer's first big success in the mystery category, originally published in 1933 and not available in the US market in at least five years.


May: My Lord John (Historical) - Georgette Heyer's final novel, set in her own favorite time period.

With her signature wit, drama and impeccable historical accuracy, Georgette Heyer tells the story of a medieval royal family on the rise. Set in the last days of the reign of Richard II, just before Henry V succeeded him to the throne, the eponymous hero is Henry's brother, John, Duke of Bedford. Heyer brings the medieval world to life, creating a panoramic view of a royal family's intricacies, intrigues and sibling rivalries, along with the everyday lives of the servants, clerics, and vassals in their charge.

Cousin Kate: Enjoy one of only two Heyer Gothic Regency romances.

Kate, in dire circumstances, is surprised to receive an invitation to live with a distant aunt. Her aunt, uncle, and cousin welcome her to their estate, buy her new clothes, and provide all the amenities a Young lady of quality should have. Slowly, however, as strange events unfold, Kate begins to realize that her aunt's apparent benevolence hides an ulterior motive. To assure succession of the title, her aunt intends Kate to marry her cousin Torquil, until his increasingly bizarre behavior culminates in violence and tragedy. A compelling tale exploring mental illness in the Regency period.

June: The Corinthian - Sparkling wit with a Shakespearean twist.

Walking home at dawn, quite drunk, Sir Richard Wyndham encounters heiress Penelope Creed climbing out her window. She is running away from a dreaded marriage to her fish-lipped cousin, while Sir Richard himself is contemplating a loveless marriage with a woman his friends have compared to a cold poultice. Sir Richard can't allow her to careen about the countryside unchaperoned, even in the guise of a boy, so he pretends to be her tutor and takes her on a fine adventure. When their stagecoach overturns, they find themselves embroiled with thieves, at the center of a murder investigation, and finally, in love.

JULY: THE GRAND SOPHY!! (More on this most splendid of Georgette's novels later.)

Sunday, March 15

Jane Austen Character Throwdown: Favorite Carriage

Last week readers overwhelmingly thought that Miss Dashwood was the superior mistress of a home. I won't quibble, and indeed I was rooting for Elinor, although Emma's responsibilities in overseeing a great house should not be discounted. This week I ask you to think about the sort of vehicle you would have preferred to ride in the early 19th century. Are you a fan of a small sports car that can seat only two or do you prefer to transport a larger group of people in a stylish convertible? This week we ask you to decide on your
Favorite Carriage

Curricle
Mr. Darcy owned one of these sporty vehicles, as did Mr. Willoughby, Henry Tilney, Mr. Rushworth, and in real life the Prince Regent as shown in the illustration at left. Pulled by a pair of matched horses in size and weight, these speedy but unstable two-wheeled carriages were all the rage with rich young regency gentlemen. Seating only two passengers, curricles were open to the elements, although a folding hood could be pulled forward to protect the occupants. Large wheels made the carriages unstable. They were prone to frequent and serious accidents, turning over when an unskilled driver took a corner too fast. Likened to today's sports cars, curricles looked fashionably dashing and were considered the epitome of style. Willoughby drove Marianne all around the countryside in his sporty carriage and Catherine Morland found the curricle to be the "prettiest equipage in the world." At the inn in Lyme in Persuasion, Charles Musgrove instantly jumped up to compare his curricle to the gentleman's carriage that was being led around the stable yard. His wife Mary exclaimed in vexation when she realized the curricle was William Elliot's: " I hardly looked at him, I was looking at the horses; but I think he had something of the Elliot countenance, I wonder the arms did not strike me! Oh! the great-coat was hanging over the panel, and hid the arms, so it did; otherwise, I am sure, I should have observed them, and the livery too."

Barouche
Henry Crawford, Mr. and Mrs. Palmer, and Lady Dalrymple owned the more stately barouche, a larger luxurious family carriage that seated six people. Four people faced each other inside the carriage and two sat on the box in front. A hood could be pulled down partially to protect the two people who sat forward, but generally a barouche remained an open carriage and was the regency equivalent of today's sedan convertible. Used only during warm weather and pulled by two to four showy horses, this carriage was considered a luxury vehicle by the standards of the day. In Mansfield Park, Henry Crawford drove his barouche to Sotherton, Mr. Rushworth's home, with Aunt Norris, Fanny Price, Mary Crawford and Maria Bertram inside. Maria could not contain her jealousy during the journey knowing her sister Julia was sitting next to Henry on the box, a seat she coveted. "There is no hardship, I suppose, nothing unpleasant," said Edmund, "in going on the barouche box." "Unpleasant," cried Maria, "oh, dear. I believe it would be generally thought the favorite seat. There can be no comparison as to one's view of the country." In Emma, Mrs. Elton's friends, the Sucklings, owned the ultimate version of this carriage. Called the barouche-landau, their vehicle sported two hoods that covered the entire passenger area.

pollcode.com free polls
Jane Austen Character Throwdown: Favorite Carriage
Curricle Barouche
Posted by Vic, Jane Austen's World

Saturday, March 14

Vote for your favorite Pride and Prejudice Bachelor

Which of the single man of good or fair fortune in Pride and Prejudice would you like to spend the rest of your days and nights with?

Is it the handsome rogue George Wickham, the dependable but toady Rev. Mr. Collins, the kind natured and overly obliging Mr. Charles Bingley, the charming red coated but poor Colonel Fitzwilliam, the rich noble mien of Mr. Darcy, or the whole _shire Militia that you take turns with?

Virgina Claire has given us a great roundup of their attributes and faults in her Bachelors of Pride and Prejudice. Have you say and vote for your favorite today.

Cheers, Laurel Ann, Austenprose

Friday, March 13

Gwynneth Paltrow the Perfect Emma?

Jane Austen wrote about Emma, the only JA heroine to have a book titled after her name,"I am going to take a heroine whom no-one but myself will much like." According to last Sunday's Jane Austen Character Throwdown poll, readers seems to confirm that notion. Miss Woodhouse, although her responsibilities far outweigh those of Miss Dashwood, overseeing a large house, servants, parties, dinners, get-togethers, and charity for the poor, is behind in the poll by a margin of 3:1. Is this because we lack sympathy towards a rich girl who enjoys all the advantages of wealth and who indulges herself by interfering in the lives of others? One can never feel quite chummy, can one, with someone who sets herself up to be better.

Gwynneth Paltrow played Emma with elegance and assurance. The actress's background, that of wealth, privilige and ease, reflects Miss Woodhouse's, so in playing the role she didn't have to reach far inside herself to find her inner Emma. Recently, as a mother of two unfortunately named children, Gwynneth decided to share her knowledge of the fine life on her website, which is named, of all things, Goop.

The Chicago Sun Times' Paige Wiser provides four reasons why this website is accidentally fun to read. I have used Ms. Wiser's categories to make my own observations.

1) It is economically inappropriate. In an age when people are seeing their investments slide to zero and worry about keeping their house or job, Ms. Paltrow recommends that every smart woman's closet should feature a $2,000 cashmere trench coat. (Image at right).

2) The Zen writing. And the zen feel of the site itself. It looks classy and spare and elegant, like Gwynneth herself, but the writing is accidentally funny. I say accidentally because Gwynneth doesn't seem to realize that 99.9% of the world simply cannot follow her precepts. She writes about her father taking her to Paris as a child: "On the plane back to London he asked me if I knew why we had gone, just he and I, to Paris for the weekend. I said no, but I felt so lucky for the trip. He said, “I wanted you to see Paris for the first time with a man who would always love you, no matter what.” From that time on, Paris was and continues to be very special to me. I lived there for five months in 1994 and I have made many trips back. These are the places in Paris I stay and eat and toast my dad." Now my question to those who live across the pond from Europe is, how many times have you returned to Paris to toast anything? How many of you went for the first time as a child?"

3) The tone is smug. I rest my case with the above example. In addition, there's something very empty about the site. Aside from the copious amount of white space, there's not much meat to chomp on.

4) It's painfully obvious. Looking at her site and reading her advice, I can substitute Gwynneth for Paris Hilton or any other privileged heiress. Instead of picking her own movie choices, Gwynneth asked a few director friends to do the honors, directors like Steven Spielberg and Wes Anderson. Lucky Gwynneth.

I don't want to jump on the Gwynneth bashing bandwagon merely to bash, but when a lady's response to recent criticism about Goop is a four letter word that starts with "F", which she did in an interview with Elle UK, then, well, I think I'll take a pass on accepting that lady's words of wisdom.

Posted by Vic, Jane Austen's World

Thursday, March 12

Pride and Prejudice and Zombies News & Gossip

For all our loyal readers out there in Austenland, here is an update on P&P&Z.

The official release date for Pride and Prejudice and Zombies is April 1st (even though Amazon and Barnes & Noble had listed as May). Its publisher Quirkbooks has posted an illustration on its website which I have included on the left. Hmmm? It does not look much like the C. E. Brock illustrations that they mentioned they would be in the style of, does it?

Anyway, the good folks at Quirkbooks sent me an advance copy, which finally arrived a few days ago. There is an embargo on my talking about it until April 1st, but today on its Facebook page, readers are commenting that they have purchased their copies today at Borders Books! It appears that crazed Zombies have invaded the printers warehouses and stolen copies and delivered them only to Borders. Well, that is special, and really throws a wrench in the publicity works. I hope it is just a rumor, because this busy blogger has not finished reading it, yet alone ready to review it properly. As a bookseller, I know that publishers can place a strict on sale date to a new title, and if book sellers break that sales date, there is hell to pay. If this is true, then naughty, naughty Borders. If it is just evil rumors generated by over zealous Austen & Zombie addicts, then I just throw my hands up in exasperation. It's still 20 days until its official release already! We shall see what rises or falls to he bottom of the grave.

Cheers, Laurel Ann, Austenprose

The Young Victoria Premieres in the UK

The new major motion picture The Young Victoria premiered to much Royal fanfare in London on March 6th. The lavish production starring British ingénue Emily Blunt as Queen Victoria, that’s Her Royal Majesty Queen Alexandrina Victoria to us commoners, chronicles the early rule of England's longest-reigning queen and her romance with her husband Prince Albert played by Rupert Friend. Even though Victoria was born n 1819, two years after Jane Austen’s death, many unenlightened journalists want to perpetuate the myth that Austen was a Victorian author. She wasn’t. So please make a note of it, because Lady Catherine will sallie forth and get you if you continue to miscatagorize her.

The one thing that this new production of The Young Victoria does have in common with Jane Austen is the plethora of actors who previously stared in Austen adaptations and inspirations. Here’s the run down.

Queen Victoria – Emily Blunt (Prudie Drummond in The Jane Austen Book Club 2007)
King William – Jim Broadbent (Dad Jones in Bridget Jones’ Diary 2001 & Bridget Jones Edge of Reason 2004)
Queen Adelade - Harriet Walter (Fanny Dashwood in Sense and Sensibility 1995)
Sir John Conroy – Mark Strong (George Knightley in Emma 1996)
Prince Albert – Rupert Friend (George Wickham in Pride and Prejudice 2005)
Watson – Morven Christie (Jane Bennet in Lost in Austen 2008)

No word yet on a US release date, but this production has received mixed reviews, and will be highly anticipated by period drama lovers – and journalist who think Jane Austen wrote the original novel that it was based on, or should have! ;-)

The Young Victoria at IMDb
The Young Victoria reviews in The Independent , in TimesOnLine, and The Guardian



Cheers, Laurel Ann, Austenprose

Wednesday, March 11

Little Dorrit is Coming to PBS Masterpiece Classic


Matthew Macfadyen plays the hero, Arthur Clennam. Claire Foy is the perfect Little Dorrit, and Tom Courtenay makes a rare television appearance as William Dorrit, who lords it over others in debtor's prison. This PBS adaptation starts March 29 on PBS and ends April 26, 2009.
If you have not read Charles Dickens' Little Dorrit, and have no time to pick up a book, you can listen to this fascinating tale in audio format. Click here to enter the Naxos Audiobooks website and order the unabridged or abridged versions.

Monday, March 9

Mr. & Mrs. Fitzwilliam Darcy by Sharon Lathan

Inquiring Readers, According to a review in Publishers Weekly, Mr. & Mrs. Fitzwilliam Darcy by Sharon Lathan is the hottest Austen sequel yet. Available this month at Sourcebooks, the novel begins moments after Elizabeth's and Darcy's wedding. "It's Darcy and Elizabeth's wedding day, and the journey is just beginning as Jane Austen's beloved Pride and Prejudice characters embark on the greatest adventure of all: marriage and a life together filled with surprising passion, tender self-discovery, and the simple joys of every day. As their love story unfolds in this most romantic of Jane Austen sequels, Darcy and Elizabeth reveal to each other how their relationship blossomed. From misunderstanding to perfect understanding and harmony, theirs is a marriage filled with romance, sensuality, and the beauty of a deep, abiding love."

The author of this novel, Sharon Lathan, has graciously stopped by our blog to share her thoughts about her book and discuss why she was compelled to continue Lizzy's and Darcy's story:


There is nothing as wonderful as being in love.

The novels that comprise The Darcy Saga are intentionally focused on the theme of profound and fresh love between Fitzwilliam and Elizabeth Darcy. The tone is romantic. The plot does not center on conflict and trauma, but is a leisurely scrutiny of marital affinity and realistic life in an English estate during the Regency Era. Their love is the binding thread throughout my series.

However, this is not the only reference of my introductory sentence. I also want to discuss my love for Jane Austen.

By some mystery I passed forty years of my life with minimal knowledge of Austen. That ignorance was radically diminished when I walked into a movie theater. Joe Wright’s passionate, beautiful cinematic masterpiece Pride & Prejudice transported my soul and deeply affected me. I was a P&P virgin and my first time was amazing! My ardor was fanned into action by every aspect of the movie from the drama to the actors to the music to the landscape to the costumes to the….well, you get the idea. It was my awakening and the doorway that lead me to Austen. I left the theater and instantly began a search that would change my life.

For months I devoured everything remotely Jane and Regency that I could get my hands on. My infant love grew exponentially with each passing day. I could wax eloquent about my feelings for this classic author and the world she lived in, but I have an imposed word count limit! Since most of you are here at Jane Austen Today because you possess that same devotion, I’ll leave it to your imaginations.

Yet, while I studied the book, sifted through dozens of websites, entered into discussions, and watched other adaptations, I could not shake the images sparked by the movie. I watched it over and over while visions of what-happens-next danced through my mind. I adored learning more of Jane’s world, but I simply could not let go of the urgent hunger for more. Lizzy and Darcy had grown in my consciousness. In what I now comprehend is the gift of a writer, inspiration had struck and the story burning within me had to be written down.

Even after all this time and much reflection I still cannot adequately explain why this story became my provocation into a novelist’s world. Indeed much of it has to do with the movie’s presentation of this timeless love story and I make no apologies to the fact. But the romance, the beautiful relationships, and the captivating characters – those are created by Austen and I have never ignored this. And as a life-long lover of history, the constant research into the era further stirred my zeal.

So I began to write. I wanted to give Lizzy and Fitzwilliam the wonderful life that I think we all would want for them, and what I believe Jane would have desired for them. I wanted to carry on the passionate atmosphere dramatized in the 2005 movie while staying true to Jane’s original. I wanted to present a realistic rendering of life in the early 1800s. I wanted to tell an evolving tale of two people maturing together. I wanted to take the reader on a journey through England and Regency society. I wanted to discover my own voice and style as an artist. And always, more than anything, I wanted to send a positive message of marital happiness in a humorously entertaining way.

Whenever I talk to people about Jane Austen – whether newer inductees like myself or the long term enthusiast – the commonality is love. One may be so devoted as to quote novel passages verbatim. Another may never have picked up the book and only know her stories via cinema. Some vigorously dissect every last nuance in an effort to discover greater depths to the text. Others just want to feel good, have a great laugh, and cheer at the triumph of true love. In all cases Jane Austen’s legacy is in touching lives. Her words have touched mine in a profound way and through my love I hope to continue spreading that joy.

I invite you to come to my website where I talk at length about my inspiration and my Saga. Read the numerous excerpts, essays, and reviews to see if this happily-ever-after tale is for you. And finally, thank you Jane Austen Today for inviting me to share my love with your readers.

Sharon Lathan's blog: The Darcy Saga
Click here to order the book

Mark Twain Gets Another Dig at Jane Austen

Nearly 99 years after Mark Twain's death, an unpublished short story found in his archives will be published in The Strand mystery magazine. The story, The Undertaker's Tale, will also be included in a new book "Who Is Mark Twain?," a collection of his unpublished short works, which will include 24 stories and essays. As we know, Mr. Twain was no fan of Jane's, and included in this new compilation will be his thoughts about her. Known for his ascerbic wit, he famously said: "Jane Austen? Why I go so far as to say that any library is a good library that does not contain a volume by Jane Austen. Even if it contains no other book."

Although Mr. Twain was fascinated enough with Jane's novels to read them several times, some of his remarks are downright mean spirited. Read his observation to Joseph Twitchell in a letter written in 1898: "I haven't any right to criticise books, and I don't do it except when I hate them. I often want to criticise Jane Austen, but her books madden me so that I can't conceal my frenzy from the reader; and therefore I have to stop every time I begin. Every time I read 'Pride and Prejudice' I want to dig her up and beat her over the skull with her own shin-bone." (Image taken at the Mark Twain house, Connecticut, which is in danger of closing - read the post in Austenprose.)

Let's just say that if you're no fan of Jane's I'm no fan of yours. I can't say I don't like Mr. Twain's writing, but I can state most emphatically: The man's no gentleman.

Posted by Vic, Jane Austen's World

Saturday, March 7

Jane Austen Character Throwdown: Best Mistress of a Home

The Thorpe siblings won the unpopularity contest last week - you did not like them, you really did not like them. This week we ask you to consider the best mistress of a home: Emma Woodhouse and Elinor Dashwood. Both ladies are single, but their responsibilities towards hearth and home show a maturity far beyond their years.
Best Mistress of a Home

Miss Emma Woodhouse, Emma

Emma's mother died when she was very young, and she has been mistress of Hartfield ever since. Despite a father who requires almost constant supervision, Emma oversees the distribution of food and clothing to needy neighbors, and visits them regularly. She also makes sure others are provided for, saying, "I hope I am not often deficient in what is owing to guests." Elegant and rich, Emma knows how to act as the perfect hostess on any occasion.


Miss Elinor Dashwood, Sense and Sensibility

As the sensible daughter, Elinor has taken it upon herself to organise the household during the Dashwood women's much reduced circumstances. Keeping account of household records, she makes sure her mother and sisters stay within the boundaries of their budget. One simply knows that as Edward's wife, she will make the most of their small income even while creating a cozy and welcoming home.

pollcode.com free polls
Jane Austen Character Throwdown: Best Mistress of a Home
Miss Emma Woodhouse Miss Elinor Dashwood

Sexing Up Mr. Darcy: Did Andrew Davies Do Him Justice?


Andrew Davies will probably go down in history as the man who had the epoch-makingly brilliant idea of putting Mr. Darcy into a wet and thus clingily transparent blouse. Laura Carroll

Did the wet shirt Darcy scene in Pride and Prejudice 1995 launch the Jane Austen Renaissance that we are still enjoying after fourteen years? Was it indeed a brilliant idea to put Mr. Darcy in a wet shirt? Do we like our Austen staid and buttoned up, or sexed up and sassy?

In her thoughtful essay Darcy and Davies: Adapting Mr. Darcy from the Novel to the Screen, lit student and Jane Austen enthusiasts Virginia Claire shares her feeling on Davies version of Mr. Darcy vs. Jane Austen’s original and asks some interesting questions about our modern interpretations of this iconic romantic hero an how they are changing the way he is remembered.

Other views

Cheers, Laurel Ann, Austenprose

Thursday, March 5

Pride and Prejudice Zombiefied: A Poll

We all know what's coming this April Fool's Day: Pride and Prejudice and Zombies by Jane Austen and Seth Grahame-Smith. You've read the hype. You've probably already formed an opinion. Now here's your turn to tell us - will you bite? Are you officially beyond stoked, as Entertainment Weekly wrote? Or do you think the idea of Jane as a zombie is so absurd that this satiric book will fall flat and be mocked for all ages?

Studios are betting that you'll part with your coins in droves. They're already bidding for the rights, and the book has yet to hit the stands!
Pride and Prejudice and Zombies
I'd give half my brain to be among the first to read it.
I'd rather eat my own brain than read it.
Left brain. Right brain. Meh!
pollcode.com free polls

March 5th is World Book Day

The Jane Austen Centre is celebrating this day by offering special prices until March 11th on selected books. Our friends across the pond will be especially delighted to discover Amanda Grange books on sale, as well as the Complete Set of Collector's Edition Novels. Click here to see the full complement of novels.

To learn more about World Book Day 2009, which is an annual celebration of books and reading in the UK and Ireland, click here.

Wednesday, March 4

Regency Bling - Trinkets to Transport You To Jane Austen's Era

Over at The Blue Pearl Girl, she has a thing for jewelry (don't we all) and features beautifully stunning antique Regency era bling from The Three Graces, an antique jeweler who specializes in fine antique european trinkets. I almost fainted when I saw these eye popping French en repoussé aquamarine Georgian earrings circa 1819. Some of my other favorites include the Georgian table cut diamond & pearl earrings and the Georgian garnet & gold repoussé earrings. Wish I was rich enough to afford these lovelies! Enjoy!

Cheers, Laurel Ann, Austenprose

Tuesday, March 3

Winner Announced in the Mr. Darcy's Dream Giveway!

Congratulations to Ana T. who is the lucky winner in our giveaway of a copy of Mr. Darcy's Dream, the new Elizabeth Aston Pride and Prejudice continuation.

Ana, we have recently e-mailed you and would appreciate a response by March 9th to claim your prize. We hope that you enjoy the book.

You can read more about the book in our preview post here and Laurel Ann's review here.

Regards, Vic (Ms. Place) & Laurel Ann

Sunday, March 1

Jane Austen Character Throwdown

By a margin of 2:1 you preferred Rev. George Austen's library over Mr. Bennet's in the last throwdown. This week you are asked to consider two sets of siblings: The Thorpes and the Crawfords. Our question is:
Which Pair of Sibling Do You Like the Least?

Isabella and John Thorpe, Northanger Abbey

John Thorpe is arrogant and boastful, and it is significant that Jane has him speak in vulgar cant. Wrongly assessing Catherine Morland's fortune, he attempts to woo her and lies to her in an attempt to keep her from her walking assignation with Eleanor and Henry Tilney. John's sister, Isabella, is as manipulative and self-serving as her brother. With no wealth or connections to speak of, she latches onto Catherine Morland, forming a hasty and too intimate a friendship. She goes after James Morland, mistakenly thinking he has a fortune. When she learns how little money he will have, she quickly abandons him for Captain Frederick Tilney, who casts her aside after a short flirtation.


Mary and Henry Crawford, Mansfield Park

The Crawfords siblings are rich, sophisticated and town bred. Mary, whose marriage portion is £20,000, amazingly sets her cap on Edmund Bertram, though she abhors his plans to become a clergyman. A bored Henry goes after Maria for sport and fun, even though she is an engaged woman. When Maria marries Mr. Rushworth during Henry's absence, he turns his attention to Fanny Price. Fanny sees through his oily and facile facade and resists his advances. Had Mary not tried to justify Maria's affair with her brother, Fanny might well have succumbed to Henry's persistent advances. Thankfully, she did not.

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Jane Austen Character Throwdown
The Thorpes The Crawfords