Category: Mr. Darcy's Obsession
Reviews!
For those of you who are eagerly awaiting the October 1 release of Mr. Darcy's Obsession, I have a couple of early reviews of Mr. Darcy's Obsession to share! First, from Booklist:
Mr. Darcy's Obsession.
Reynolds, Abigail (Author)
Oct 2010. 368 p. Sourcebooks/Landmark, paperback, $14.99. (9781402240928).
In her sixth Pride and Prejudice variation, Reynolds imagines what obstacles might have stood in the way of Elizabeth Bennet and Fitzwilliam Darcy's love had Elizabeth's father died, driving the Bennet family out of their estate at Longbourn. Elizabeth's older sister Jane is forced to marry a much older shopkeeper, and Elizabeth moves in with her uncle and aunt Gardiner. Despite Elizabeth's diminished circumstances, Darcy tracks her down, but when he finally gets around to proposing, she misinterprets his awkward bid for her hand as a request to become his mistress. As soon as that miscommunication is cleared up, Elizabeth's younger sister Lydia shows up, pregnant and abandoned by a feckless military officer. Lydia's situation necessitates Elizabeth return to her family, leaving Elizabeth to wonder if this latest disgrace will deter Darcy's determination to marry her. Austen purists won't seek out Reynolds' takeoffs, but readers who can't get enough of Darcy and Elizabeth will find that Reynolds does an admirable job of capturing the feel of the period in this entertaining diversion.
- Kristine Huntley
And second, from Susan Mason-Milks:
Mr. Darcy’s Obsession is Abigail Reynolds first new book in what seems like way too long. Her other Pride and Prejudice alternate stories are excellent and this one’s no exception. After the wait, I was definitely not disappointed.
In Obsession, Darcy never has a chance to propose to Elizabeth and leaves Rosings with an aching heart. Nearly a year later he learns that Mr. Bennet has died leaving the family in dire financial straits. Circumstances have forced Jane to marry a local shopkeeper, and Elizabeth is living in London as nanny for her aunt and uncle’s children. Now her situation is even more beneath Darcy’s than before.
Although he knows he should stay away, Darcy can’t help himself. At first he tells himself he’ll just check on her, but when the opportunity presents itself, he “accidentally” runs into her in the park. Although Elizabeth begins to see another side to Darcy, many misunderstandings ensue which threaten to separate them forever. In spite of the many opportunities Darcy has to walk away, he looks into those fine eyes and he’s lost again.
What I love most about Abigail Reynolds is the way she brings Darcy and Elizabeth to life. After reading one of her books I feel as if I’ve just stepped back into the world they inhabit and we’ve had a good chat. The dialogue between them is a delight to read. Elizabeth continues to be witty and down to earth while Darcy is becoming more human as he learns to put the needs of his heart ahead of the approval of parts of his family and society. Ms. Reynolds has also added some interesting, lively new characters to the mix as well as breathing life into some who are mentioned in P&P but never developed. They seem so real that they fit right in.
Clearly, this author has great affection for her characters. In fact, I’d say she’s somewhat obsessed with Darcy and Elizabeth – and I’m glad of it. I’ll be anxiously awaiting my next opportunity for a visit to Pemberley, and in the meantime, I’ll have to satisfy myself with rereading some of Ms. Reynolds’ earlier books.
Susan Mason-Milks
(A fan of P&P fan fiction)
Only 12 days left!
It's been a busy summer!
So much is going on that I don't even know where to start! To Conquer Mr. Darcy (formerly titled Impulse & Initiative) was released on August 2, but I still haven't gotten around to doing a giveaway of it here because I've been busy working on an exciting new project which will be launched September 6. It's something that Sharon Lathan and I dreamed up at the Romance Writers of America National Convention, an occasion which deserves a blog post of its own. It's a group blog of authors of traditionally published Austen-related fiction, and we've been astonished with the enthusiastic response we've been getting from other writers. We'd optimistically hoped we could get 8 or so writers involved, but we're up to almost 20 with new ones signing on every day, and even more offering to do guest posts from time to time. I'll be doing a massive book giveaway there in September, including all my books from out-of-print to my latest release, and there will be tons of other giveaways as well. Be sure to stop by in September!
I've also been writing like mad. The next Pemberley Variation is almost finished, despite major efforts by Darcy, Elizabeth, and Georgiana to sidetrack the plot, not to mention the completely unplanned for steamy scene. Advice: don't trust Jane and Georgiana if they offer to chaperone Lizzy and Darcy. Epic fail! Well, it's true that I still don't have the ending down, but it's almost there. All that sidetracked me from the story I've been expanding at 50 Miles, but that's next on the agenda.
Also on the books for the next couple of months are a totally revamped web site and (crossing fingers) the eventual release of the oft-delayed Morning Light, sequel to The Man Who Loved Pride & Prejudice. Meantime, the never-before-published Mr. Darcy's Obsession is available for pre-order and is already garnering some great reviews, including one from Booklist that will be released next week (they were kind enough to give me a sneak peak).
Oh, yes, and I've been on the road all summer. I started out on July 1, managed 12 whole days at home in August, and am now off again until early September. Fortunately, there's been lots of inspiration along the way between writers' conferences and time in Woods Hole, and it's been fun.
By the way, comments on this blog now have a slight publication delay, not because I want anyone to hesitate to comment but because there's been a major problem with spam comments (part of the inspiration for the website revamp). But I do love your comments, and none of them are being censored unless they selling something.
Best,
Abigail
World-building in Austen's world
So, my New Year's resolution was to be more regular about my blog posts. You now know how good I am at keeping New Year's resolutions! Anyway....
I attended a writing workshop this morning on world-building, courtesy of the local chapter of the Romance Writers of America. I wasn’t sure how much would be applicable for me, since the worlds I write aren’t my invention: Regency England, which I try to keep historically accurate, and modern-day Woods Hole, which actually exists. But even with the most reality-based settings, writers still have to pick out which important facts about the setting and the society to highlight, which becomes world-building of a sort. It made me realize that I use different worlds even in my Pemberley Variations, which take place in the same years, same locations, and even the same characters.
In Impulse & Initiative, Regency England is a fairly light-hearted place. There aren’t any poor people except a few servants who are quite contented with their lot, nobody gets seriously ill, and I blithely ignore the harsher realities of Regency life. It’s the Victorian view of the pre-industrial Regency as an age of perfect innocence. Well, there’s innocence and then there’s innocence, as it were, but most of us have inherited that quite fallacious view that the Regency was a perfected version of the Victorian hyper-moral universe, when actually it was quite decadent and far from innocent. Mr. Darcy’s Obsession, which comes out this fall, is the story of what happens when Darcy, who believes he lives in the easy world of Impulse & Initiative, discovers he actually lives in a superficial society that builds its pleasures on the back of other people’s pain, where good birth is conidered of vastly more importance than good morals, and that he’s going to have to make some choices about whether to continue to pretend that everything is fine or to pay the price of publicly disagreeing with the status quo. Being Darcy, he of course makes the right decision, with some assistance from Elizabeth. But it’s a completely different world. The joys are different and the conflicts are different.
I’ve always thought of my Pemberley Variations as each highlighting different personality aspects of the characters created by Jane Austen. Impulse & Initiative Elizabeth is the traditional modern view of an arch and witty Elizabeth, whereas the Elizabeth in Mr. Fitzwilliam Darcy: The Last Man in the World is the Elizabeth who knows how to bite her tongue when the situation requires and has occasional periods of depression – all of which is described by Austen in Pride & Prejudice. It just depends on which parts you pay attention to. But perhaps it’s more accurate to say that my worlds have changed as I’ve learned more about life in Regency England, the things Austen assumed her readers would know but which modern readers for the most part miss. Austen could refer in passing to Elizabeth’s periods of depression because that was a common and expected state for women then, so there was no need to dwell on it. The readers would fill in those blanks themselves. But we, as modern victims of the Victorian rewriting of Regency society, end up missing the significance of those brief references.
But none of this means that the world I built in Impulse & Initiative is in any way superior or inferior to the world of Mr. Darcy’s Obsession, because it’s all fiction. That’s sometimes a little hard to remember, especially when I get hung up in historical detail, but it’s more important for fiction to be convincing than absolutely accurate. Mr. Darcy’s Obsession takes place in a more historically accurate world, but I’ve still made it a happier place than it probably was, and it makes Darcy shine like a beacon of hope. The darker world shows the characters in brighter relief.
09/19/10 01:05:06 pm,