Monthly Archives: April 2023

P & P & LOL – Guest Post, Excerpt & Giveaway with Kirstin Odegaard

Good Afternoon everyone, 

I’m happy to say that Kirstin Odegaard is visiting From Pemberley to Milton for the first time with an excerpt and a guest post that describes and explains the idea behind her recently released P & P & LOL: a Novella Retelling of Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice…Through Texts!

You can tell by the tittle alone that this book is super fun and innovative, but just wait until you read the excerpt! If there is an Austenesque book that is outside of the box, this is the one, and I personally love the idea! What about you? Did you ever think to read P&P through texts? Which character do you think will shine? I think Mrs. Bennet will be a blast!

Thank you so much for visiting Kirstin, it is a true pleasure to have you here 😊


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Thank you, Rita, for hosting me today.  I’m excited to talk about my newest release: P & P & LOL: a Novella Retelling of Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice…Through Texts!

The idea for an all-texting novella first came about when I read a short text exchange between Darcy and Bingley.  It was only three sentences, but I was hooked!  Afterwards, my first thought was, I want to do that.

So I did, but only as a short blog post.  I had a lot of fun with it, and people were so encouraging in the comments that I did it again.  And again!

And then I thought, hey, I could keep this going…

I told a friend the idea, and she said, “Can you keep that going?”

Hm.  On the inside, I was thinking, “You know, I’m not really sure.  It does sound hard.  Just text messages?  For a whole book?  And a book like that should be bursting with fun and humor.  Can I…burst?”

But out loud, I said, “YES, I CAN.”

So then, you know, I had to.  

Part of the challenge was finding each character’s texting voice.  How would Darcy text?  With complete sentences, impeccable grammar, no emojis, and no punctuation left unpunctuated.  

What about Mrs Bennet i think her thoughts would all run together like this my poor nerves oh doesnt anyone feel how i suffer but thats just how it is you know the people who suffer quietly are always the ones who are forgotten 

OR WHAT ABOUT KITTY AND LYDIA???  I THINK THEY WOULD WANT TO ANNOUNCE THEMSELVES!!!  DONT YOU???

I HAD A LOT OF FUN

Oh, sorry.  I was stuck in Kitty mode.  I had a lot of fun exploring all the ways Austen’s characters could come to life through texts, and I hope you have just as much fun reading it—and scrolling through Lizzy and Darcy’s adventures (and misadventures) on the screen of a cell phone.  

The excerpt below is a glimpse into Darcy’s attempts to woo Lizzy…and Bingley’s advice for his friend.  Enjoy!


NEW excerpt

Tuesday, November 22

5:56 pm

Darcy: I’m going to ask her out again.

Charlie: No, man. Too soon. Def too soon.

Darcy: I think she likes me now. Or, at least, she doesn’t hate me. 

When I text her, there’s not that underlying hostility and annoyance that I thought was flirting.

Which I’m now thinking was actually hostility and annoyance.

Women are so confusing.

Charlie: OK, I’m going to stop you there. Because “she doesn’t hate me” does not mean “oh, pretty rich boy, I want you so badly.”

Darcy: We talked about this.  That is NOT my new nickname.

Charlie: Because you’re not pretty and rich?

Darcy: Because I’m not a boy.

I’m very pretty and very rich.

Charlie: There he is.

Darcy: So I should ask her out?

Charlie: Still going with no on that one. Play the long game.

You agreed to be friends. So ask to meet up with her as a friend.

Darcy: I never wanted to be her friend.

Charlie: This rejection thing is new for you, isn’t it? 

Welcome to the real world, pretty rich boy.

6:04 pm

Darcy: Hi, Eliza. I was wondering if you’d like to grab lunch. As friends. 

Maybe on Saturday?

Or Sunday, if you’re working Saturday.

Or whatever day you’re free. I’m flexible. Dinner is fine too.

6:05 pm

Darcy: OK, I already blew it.

I sounded totally desperate.

Charlie: I’m sure it’s fine. Whatever you said, we’ll fix it.

Darcy: I asked her to lunch on Saturday or Sunday or any day of her life or dinner too if that’s better.

Charlie: Yeah. That’s really desperate.

Darcy: I said as friends?

Charlie: Sounds VERY friendly.

Darcy: You said you’d help me fix it. Some advice?

Charlie: Remember that advice I gave you five minutes ago NOT to ask her out? You take that advice. That’s how you fix it.

Darcy: I’m going to remember this the next time you have woman problems.


Imagine Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice through the world of a cell phone…

What if the socially awkward Mr. Darcy tried to win Eliza’s heart through texts?

Darcy: You must allow me to tell you how ardently I admire and love you.
Lizzy: Who is this?

Or what if Mr. Collins’ wooing weapon was his phone?

Collanytime: Hello Jane Bennet. My name is Jonathan Collins. Your mother believed that you and I would be a most compatible match. May we arrange a time to explore this together?
Janie: I’m really flattered, but I’m seeing someone. Hope you find someone special!

Collanytime: Hello Eliza Bennet. My name is Jonathan Collins. Your mother believed that you and I would be a most compatible match. May we arrange a time to explore this together?

And then there’s Mama Bennet…what matchmaking adventures can she get up to when armed with a flip phone and full contact list? Lizzy and Jane, run now, while you still can.

Smart, funny, and unconventional, P & P & LOL! is a texting novella about learning to look past those glossy profile pics to find something a little deeper, a little more real, a little less, uh, shirtless. (Ahem, George Wickham.) Join Eliza and Darcy for a fast and witty adventure that’s full of LOL, smothered with ROFL, and topped with HEA!

Final Cover

You can find P&P & LOL at: 

Amazon.com

Amazon.co.uk

and Kindle Unlimited

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Kirstin Odegaard likes taking long walks on the beach, relaxing in a warm bath until the skin on her toes wrinkles, and sipping her tea while it’s still hot. But she has three kids, so she never does any of that. In her non-fantasy life, she’s into Lego battles, stuffed animal parties, and kiddie cuddles. When she’s not writing or with her family, she runs her tutoring center, where she advises students on how to solve for X and which date to take to prom.  She fell in love with Pride and Prejudice with that first viewing of a dripping Colin Firth emerging from the lake.  She is also the author of First Impressions: a Modern Retelling of Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice and Emily: a Modern Retelling of Jane Austen’s Emma.

You can reach Kirstin Odegaard through the following social media:

Website

FB

Amazon


Leave a comment on today’s blog for your chance to win one Kindle copy of P & P & LOL.  

Kirsten Odegaard  is giving one eBook away at each of her future blog tour stops.  Follow her here on FB to find out where she is next.

Thanks for reading!  If you liked this post and want to see more of what to expect in P & P & LOL, you can click here or here or here to read other texting posts she has written.  Or click here to find this book on Amazon.

Good Luck Everyone!


36 Comments

Filed under JAFF

A Favorable Impression by Amanda Kai – Excerpt & Giveaway

Good Afternoon everyone,

I hope you had a good week. Mine was really good and I’m hoping the weekend will be even better 🙂 It will, at least, start really well with Amanda Kai’s visit to From Pemberley to Milton. She is here to share with you an excerpt of A Favourable Impression, her second book in The Other Paths Series, a series of standalone novels that take Elizabeth and Darcy into different paths to hapiness. A Favourable Impression starts out at Pemberley, which is a trope many of you like, and the excerpt takes Elizabeth and the Gardiners there, so I’m hoping you will love it too 🙂

Let us know what you thought in the comments and apply to the giveaway 🙂

Thank you so much for stopping by Amanda! I wish you all the best with this new release 🙂


June 1812

Elizabeth

It is a truth universally acknowledged that a favorable impression goes a long way in securing the good opinion of another. Elizabeth Bennet’s opinion of Mr. Darcy was first formed during her tour of the beautiful house and grounds of Pemberley with her sister, aunt, and uncle.

In the past few weeks, they visited all the principal sights that the region had to offer. They saw the beauties of Dovedale and Matlock and the ruins at Kenilworth, climbed the Peaks, and toured Chatsworth and Blenheim Palace.

They reached the town of Bakewell and, over breakfast at the inn, discussed if there was anything worth seeing on their way to Mrs. Gardiner’s childhood home of Lambton.

“I believe we are quite near Pemberley,” Mr. Gardiner remarked, sipping his coffee.

“Indeed, we are!” his wife remarked. “I would very much like to see it again if it is not too much trouble.”

Mr. Gardiner consulted his map and determined that it would not take them more than a mile out of their way to see it.

“What do you recall of the place?” Elizabeth asked her aunt.

“I have not been there since I left to go away to school, but it was very grand. As beautiful as Chatsworth, if not more so. And the woods are some of the finest in the county. A river runs through the property and feeds its lake, which I am told boasts excellent fishing.”

“Well, in that case, we had certainly better go!” Mr. Gardiner chuckled. He was an avid fisherman, though he seldom had the opportunity to enjoy it.

Jane agreed. “It all sounds marvelous.”

With nothing to impede their plans, they set off immediately after breakfast.

“You know, Lizzy, I believe your friend Mr. Wickham spent his whole childhood at Pemberley. His father was the steward,” Mrs. Gardiner remarked while they were in the carriage.

Elizabeth felt her cheeks warm. Mr. Wickham’s good looks and charming manners made a fine impression on all the ladies of Meryton when he joined the regiment that was quartered there the past autumn. Elizabeth could not help but like him, also. He was friendly and affable, and though they had little in common, they always seemed to find plenty to discuss. But, though she found his company pleasing and thoughts of him made her heart flutter from time to time, she knew that her lack of dowry made it impossible for their relationship to evolve beyond friendship. Besides that, her youngest sister, Lydia, was hopelessly infatuated with him. They argued more than once when Mr. Wickham had given Elizabeth preference over Lydia at a gathering. Elizabeth hoped Lydia would realize, as she had, that there was little chance of either of them ever receiving an offer of marriage from someone as poor as Mr. Wickham.

Despite all this, Elizabeth was curious to see the home where Mr. Wickham grew up. The carriage passed over a bridge fording the River Derwent, and then the great house came into view, situated prominently on rising ground. The river wound through the property, feeding into a shimmering lake that enhanced the beauty of the mansion overlooking it. Pemberley House was a magnificent stone structure built in the Palladian style with a triangular pediment and columns gracing the front.

“I believe you are right, Aunt Gardiner,” Elizabeth said, “Chatsworth House has its equal in Pemberley.”

Jane suggested, “Perhaps the builders took Chatsworth as their inspiration for Pemberley.”

“Or perhaps Pemberley was the inspiration for Chatsworth,” Elizabeth countered. “Which came first: the chicken or the egg?” She grinned.

Aunt Gardiner gave a little laugh. “I do not know which was built first, so I cannot say. But in my opinion, Pemberley is just a little more superior.”

“Who is the master here?” Elizabeth asked.

“Mr. Fitzwilliam Darcy,” Mrs. Gardiner replied. “His father and mother knew my parents.”

“Have you ever met the son?”

“Just once, when he was a lad.”

The carriage pulled onto a broad, paved sweep. After requesting to see the house, they were admitted entrance. As they waited for the housekeeper, Elizabeth marveled at the hall. The ceiling, covered in a fresco depicting life-size angels and biblical figures in various scenes, rose two full stories. The walls, too, held several massive Renaissance-era paintings in the same style. The housekeeper entered, her heels clicking along the marble floors. Her graying hair peeped out from beneath her white mob-cap, and she bore a friendly expression. She introduced herself as Mrs. Reynolds.

They asked whether they might be given a tour.

“Oh yes, the master does not return until tomorrow, so I would be happy to show you the house.”

They followed her up a staircase lined with plush red velvet. The main floor of the house bustled with servants carrying on various tasks.

“You must excuse the state of things,” Mrs. Reynolds said. “The house has been vacant since last August. The master spends most of his time in London and other parts of the country. We only received word yesterday that he is arriving with a large party, so we are preparing everything.”

“We seem to have come at a bad time, then,” Jane said.

“Oh no, Miss, we have it all well at hand!” Mrs. Reynolds answered cheerily. “But it is well that you have come today, for much of the furniture was covered yesterday. The house is in a much better state today.”

She showed them the formal drawing room filled with Italian furnishings, a dining room decked in luxurious red carpets and curtains, an impressive library that made Elizabeth more than a little envious, and a music room with gilded walls that matched the gilded harp that stood as the focal point of the room.

“Who plays the harp?” Elizabeth asked.

“The master’s sister, Miss Georgiana Darcy. She is a most accomplished musician. She plays the pianoforte and sings as well.”

“It is a pity that your master is not at home more often to enjoy such splendid surroundings,” Mrs. Gardiner said.

Mrs. Reynolds nodded as she led them up another staircase. “Indeed. If he were to marry, we might see more of him. But I do not know when that will ever be. Here is his picture now. This was painted only last year.” They reached a long gallery filled with paintings of members of the Darcy family. Elizabeth looked at the portrait of Mr. Darcy that stood before them. She judged him to be a young man, perhaps in his late twenties. He had dark, curly hair, a strong jaw, and a noble mien. His expression was somber, but the kindness in his eyes stirred her.

“What sort of man is Mr. Darcy?” Elizabeth asked.

“Oh, the very best!” Mrs. Reynolds exclaimed. “I never heard a cross word from him, and I have known him since he was four years old. He takes prodigious good care of all the servants and tenants under his domain, and you never saw a more attentive brother– or a better friend.”

Mr. Gardiner’s head bobbed. “He seems quite a good fellow!”

“Indeed!” Mrs. Reynolds agreed. “I hope you have the good fortune to meet him one day.”

They passed a set of miniatures on display, and Mrs. Gardiner leaned closer to examine them.

“Here is one you might recognize, Lizzy and Jane.” She pointed to a small oval frame containing a portrait of a handsome young man. The artist had expertly captured his boyish smile.

“Why, it is Mr. Wickham!” Elizabeth exclaimed.

Mrs. Reynolds tilted her head in curiosity. “Do the young ladies know Mr. Wickham?”

They explained their acquaintance with him through his being quartered in their hometown.

“He was the son of our late steward,” Mrs. Reynolds said. “But I am afraid he has turned out very wild. Very wild indeed.” She shook her head with a frown.

Elizabeth wondered what she meant by that, but she did not think it proper to ask.

After they saw all the principal public rooms of the house, Mrs. Reynolds turned them over to the care of the gardener to show them the gardens and the grounds.

The beauty of the gardens was beyond anything Elizabeth had ever witnessed. Even the other great houses they had visited were no match. A rose garden with every color of rose you could imagine. Fountain gardens, a hedge maze, a cottage garden, kitchen gardens, and numerous flower gardens. Near the eastern side of the house was a long pool with a fountain springing from the center, in which you could see the reflection of the mansion behind it. All this in addition to the lake and the river and miles upon miles of wooded trails.

As they followed the gardener along the path that encircled the lake, Mr. Gardiner enjoyed the gleam of the trout, bass, and other fish leaping from the water.

Mrs. Gardiner teased. “You wish you could be lazing by the bank catching a few of these, eh?”

“Aye!” he chortled.

Hoofbeats echoed off the bridleway, precipitating the appearance of a rider through the break in the trees. He crossed over the same bridge that their carriage had passed earlier. As he neared the stables, he saw them and tipped his hat.

“That be my master, Mr. Darcy,” the gardener told them.

Elizabeth’s brow wrinkled. “I thought he was not due until tomorrow.”

“Perhaps he decided to come ahead of his guests,” Jane said. “We ought to offer our greetings and apologize for intruding on his land.”

The others agreed, and they walked toward the stables.

Mr. Darcy emerged a few minutes later on foot. He was even more handsome in the flesh than his painting made him out to be. His hair, damp with moisture from his ride, had curled into tight ringlets beneath his fashionable D’orsay top hat. He wore a well-fitting jacket that hugged his athletic form. Elizabeth forced herself not to let her eyes linger on the buckskin leather breeches that clung to his shapely thighs like a second skin but to keep her gaze fixed on his face. His perfectly bow-shaped mouth turned upwards at the creases when he looked at her, causing Elizabeth’s breath to quicken and her own mouth to break into a smile.

He greeted them, walking toward their group. His hailing them signaled that he was open to an introduction. Mr. Gardiner led the way, presenting himself, his wife, and their two nieces.

“A pleasure to make your acquaintance.” Mr. Darcy bowed. “What brings you to this area?”

Mr. Gardiner explained that they had been touring Derbyshire the past few weeks and had wished to see the house.

“Of course, you are very welcome. The house and grounds are open to you. Where are you all visiting from?”

“My nieces reside in Hertfordshire,” Mr. Gardiner answered. “My wife and I live in London, but my wife grew up in this area, in Lambton.”

“In fact, I believe I met you once, sir,” Mrs. Gardiner said, “when you were just a boy. Though I doubt very much that you would remember me. I was Miss Andrews then.”

He asked her who her parents were and said, “Ah yes, I do seem to recall them, and I believe I remember you, ma’am. You came with the Davies and the Harris families for a picnic gathering. Charlie Davies and Rose Harris were there, and we all played hide and seek together in the hedge maze.

“You do remember!” Mrs. Gardiner exclaimed in delight.

“Yes, in fact, Charlie and Rose will both be of the party I am hosting this week. They are married now, if you can believe it.”

Mrs. Gardiner was overjoyed. “I have not seen either of them since before my days at school. I am sad to say that we did not keep in touch. I would love to see them again and revisit the old days.”

“In that case, I must insist that you all come to dinner tomorrow evening if you have the time. Nothing would give me greater pleasure than facilitating your reunion with your friends.”

His invitation was most agreeable to all. As he walked them to their carriage, Elizabeth said, “Our meeting you seems quite serendipitous, Mr. Darcy. I hope you know the joy you bring to my aunt by including us in your gathering. I wonder whether we have any other mutual friends in common who will be at your party.”

He smiled. “My sister will be there with her companion, along with several of my friends. Where did you say you were from again, Miss Elizabeth?”

“My sister and I live at Longbourn, near Meryton, in Hertfordshire.”

“Hertfordshire, yes. My good friend Charles Bingley leased a place in Hertfordshire last autumn. I believe it was very near to Meryton.”

Jane’s eyes shot over to them at the mention of that name. Elizabeth’s mouth parted slightly as she looked at her sister in response.

Elizabeth turned her face back toward Mr. Darcy. “We had the good fortune to become acquainted with Mr. Bingley during that time.” She forced herself to smile.

“Did you! As it happens, Bingley wrote yesterday that he and his whole family are to join our party. I rode out a day early to ensure the house was prepared for the additional guests. I am sure that he will be pleased to see you again.”

“I do hope so, Mr. Darcy,” Elizabeth answered. Jane could only nod in response. Elizabeth took Jane’s hand and squeezed it before entering the carriage.

Mr. Darcy bid them all farewell. “Until tomorrow, then.” He tipped his hat.

“Until tomorrow, Mr. Darcy,” Elizabeth said through the open window as the driver shut their door and climbed up to his seat.


NEW book blurb

What if Elizabeth Bennet and Mr. Darcy had met at Pemberley?
Coming home to Pemberley, the last thing Mr. Darcy expected was to find strangers taking a tour! Upon learning that the Gardiners and their nieces have mutual friends among his house party guests, Darcy invites them to stay. Over the course of the week, Miss Elizabeth Bennet’s wit and vivacity make a favorable impression on Darcy, and she is equally impressed with his kindness and generosity.

Mr. Darcy expects that the rest of the Bennet family will be as well-mannered and genteel. But he soon learns they are quite the opposite: loud, vulgar, and rude. To make matters worse, the youngest sister has eloped with Mr. Darcy’s nemesis!

But Darcy is convinced that if he can swallow his pride and ask Elizabeth to marry him, she will certainly accept. He did not count on her also having a sense of pride…

Elizabeth knows her family is imperfect, but being told that she is loved in spite of her reprehensible family is an insult that can not be borne. Such a degrading proposal ruins Elizabeth’s good opinion of Mr. Darcy and convinces her that she was sorely mistaken about his character.

How can Mr. Darcy and Elizabeth Bennet find their way back to one another after such favorable impressions have been utterly dashed?

You can find A Favorable Impression at:

Amazon.com

Amazon.co.uk

and on Kindle Unlimited


.NEW author bio

Amanda Kai’s love of period dramas and classic literature inspires her historical romances and other romances.  She is the author of several stories inspired by Jane Austen, including Not In Want of a Wife, Elizabeth’s Secret Admirer, and Marriage and Ministry.  Prior to becoming an author, Amanda enjoyed a successful career as a professional harpist, and danced ballet for twenty years. When she’s not diving into the realm of her imagination, Amanda lives out her own happily ever after in Texas with her husband and three children. 

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Amanda Kai is giving away one eBook of A Favorable Impression to one of my readers. The giveaway is international and is open until the 29th of April. To apply to it, just leave a comment on this post and let us know your opinion of the excerpt 🙂  

The winner will be announced shortly after.

Good luck everyone!

11 Comments

Filed under JAFF, North and South, Pride and Prejudice

Four Proposals of Marriage by Laura Moretti – Excerpt & Giveaway

Good Afternoon everyone,

My guest today is a rising name in our Austenesque community and an author I was lucky to meet in person the last time I visited Paris. I am talking about Laura Moretti, the only author I’ve known to have written a Pride & Prejudice dystopian novel! But I know most of you are not as enthusiastic about this genre as I am, so you’ll be glad to know that today she visits with an excerpt of Four Proposals of Marriage, her recently released regency variation which has plenty of Darcy & Elizabeth in it 😊 In fact, she has many regency books by now, so if you don’t know them, you should check them out.

I hope you can all join me in welcoming her once more, and that you enjoy this excerpt. I really liked it, especially the ending 😉

Thank you so much for visiting Laura, and best of luck with this new book.


NEW excerpt

Elizabeth let out a strangled laugh. 

“Thank you so much, Fitzwilliam… This is an unexpected honour, and such a generous, affectionate offer. I shall always be grateful. I shall always remember how you reached out to me in my time of need. And Father— He would have been so proud of you. But I… I cannot accept your proposal of marriage.”

Darcy was extremely disappointed. It was—an odd, unexpected blow. It hurt, for some irrational reason. All night, he had thought of it, and in his mind, a future had been created. A version of him, as a married man, with a sweet, impertinent, and kind young lady at his side, a ray of sun to warm any cloudy day.

But this vision was not to be. It did not matter, of course. It was only a rational scheme, and a friendly one, as Elizabeth had rightly said. Just an interesting possibility. There would be many others.

Elizabeth sat down. She laughed again; it was nervous, and her hands were trembling. “I feel like I may just have made a decision I may regret all my life. In ten years, you will be married to the most elegant lady there is, and I shall be an old maid, entertaining your children with the mythological tales Father told me.”

“Lucky children,” Darcy said, forcing a smile. A gentleman took rejection well. A gentleman did not show weakness or regret. “You will be as charming at thirty-two as you are now.”

“How gallant. This is all Jane and Charles’s fault, you know. If not for them, for the beauty of their union, I would have gladly accepted your offer. But… When I see them together…” There were tears in Elizabeth’s eyes again. “I am a silly, stupid girl, and I want a marriage of affection, not a union of reason. Do you remember their wedding day? I want my husband to look at me with the same passion in his eyes as when Charles saw Jane that morning. I want to look at my husband and think, this is the man I love, with all my heart. You are finding me ridiculous.”

“No.” Something hurt in Darcy’s chest. “No.”

“But you cannot reason like this, of course. You have Pemberley to think of, and all the responsibilities that come with it. While I— I have no one but myself to please. It is utterly selfish, really.”

A silence fell, only broken by the barks of the dogs, someone calling, faraway.

“You know what this conversation needs?” Elizabeth whispered. “A second cup of coffee.”

“At the very least. I would take some of your father’s brandy if it were not so early.”

She poured them a new cup—as she would have done every morning if— Darcy pushed the thought away.

“I should have accepted your first proposal, by the river,” Elizabeth said with a short laugh. “We were so young… Sixteen years old? We did not have such complex moral quandaries then. And now it would all be settled.”

Darcy raised his cup of coffee. “You should have.”

“Can you imagine? We would have walked back to your parents’ house…”

“I would have announced our engagement in the middle of a room, standing very tall, feeling proud and important. Of course, we would have gone to your father first.”

“I can just picture the look on his face. Your parents would have talked him out of the match, though.”

“Not necessarily. Thinking of it now… Mother would have been displeased. At the time, I did not quite realise the familial pressure she was subjected to. But Father—I was not wrong there, I feel. Father would have approved.” Darcy smiled. “Then, of course, my aunt…”

“Oh my.”

Just picturing Lady Catherine de Bourgh’s displeasure was almost enough for her to marry Darcy right there on the spot.

Almost.


What if Darcy had to propose marriage four times—yes, FOUR—before Elizabeth accepted his hand?

The Darcys and the Bennets have always been neighbours and close friends, and Fitzwilliam Darcy grew up scampering through the fields in the company of Mr Bennet’s two daughters, the very pretty Jane and the very impertinent Elizabeth.

Now, Elizabeth is a proper young lady with an excellent education and a sizable dowry. Elizabeth and Darcy see each other daily, they debate, they laugh. Till Elizabeth is whisked away to London to find a husband and Darcy realises, belatedly, that she is the only woman he could ever marry.

Friendship blossoming into love—a common story! This should be a simple, uneventful tale.

But no love story is ever simple…

Cover - Four Proposals 4

You can find Four Proposals at:

Amazon.com

and Kindle Unlimited


NEW giveaaway time

Laura Moretti is kindly offering 3 ebook copies of Four Proposals of Marriage to my readers. The giveaway is international and all you have to do to apply is leave a comment on this blog and let us know your opinion of the excerpt. The giveaway is open until the 29th of April and the winners will be announced shortly after.

Good Luck everyone!


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Never Inconstant by Lyndsay Constable

Never Inconstant4.5 stars

Never Inconstant is a Persuasion epistolary sequel in which scenes portraying current events in the Wentworth’s life a few years after their marriage are intertwined with letters Captain Wentworth wrote to Anne Elliot during the 8 years they were separated.

I loved the fact that as Anne Wentworth reads these letters, which were never meant to be read, she gets to know her husband a little better and to truly understand that his love for her was never inconstant. There are a few interesting details that Captain Wentworth’s retells in his letters that make the reader warm up to him, and dislike Lady Russel a bit more. In fact, a few details concerning Lady Russel spiced up this book and gave it a very curious twist I really appreciated.

I also enjoyed the fact that this was an epistolary book in which the reader is privy to Captain Wentworth’s most intimate thoughts and feelings throughout the years. I thought it was a beautiful way to tell a love story and to reveal to the reader the depth of Captain Wentworth’s soul. We know nothing about the years in which he was separated from Anne, so having a chance to picture his daily life and to witness how life treated him and how he reacted to it was fascinating. I felt this book really revealed Captain Wentworth’s personality to us.

The way the book is written is very interesting and captivating, and I particularly enjoyed the fact that while Anne is reading the old letters, the reader is following her life events. The book becomes increasingly exciting as the main story goes from a quiet living in England to an incredible adventure at sea. We get to see it all with this book, namely what it is like to be the wife of a navy captain, and I absolutely loved to know more about their life away from England.

Summing up, Never Inconstant is a must-read book to every Persuasion fan. It  adds up a few more pieces to a story Jane Austen started telling us 200 years ago, and if you loved Wentworth’s letter, then you shouldn’t miss a book full of them.

 

You can find Never Inconstant at:

Amazon.com

Amazon.co.uk

and Kindle Unlimited


 

2 Comments

Filed under Persuasion, Reviews

An Accomplished Women – An Interview with Suzan Lauder & Giveaway

Good Afternoon everyone,

I am very happy to welcome Suzan Lauder to From Pemberley to Milton today not only because this time she is not here to talk about an Austenesque book, but her recently released regency romance An Accomplished Women, the first in the new series Cecilia’s Mismatches, but also because she agreed to answer a few of my questions!

I always love to ask authors some questions, and because Suzan is now starting a new series that is not Austenesque, I was even more excited to talk to her about it. If you’re like me, leave her your questions in the comment session as that will also allow you to enter the giveaway Meryton Press if offering.

Thank you so much for talking to us about the characterization in this novella and for answering all my questions Suzan! It is a true pleasure to have you here 🙂


.

Obrigada, Rita, for welcoming me to your blog. Rather than an excerpt today, I thought I’d offer a glimpse into my thoughts as I wrote the book, particularly the characterization. 

Having been a writer of Jane Austen Fan Fiction for a dozen years now, I couldn’t help but be influenced by Austen’s characters when writing the Cecilia’s Mismatches series. In fact, the whole idea came from a member of chat in A Happy Assembly saying there should be a story written where Caroline Bingley was a matchmaker. I asked for permission to take that story idea, and the beginnings of Cecilia’s Mismatches was born. 

I don’t write character studies, but I keep the characters in my head as if they were real people. It’s the same when I read, and it works for me. In fact, even in each of my past variations, the lead characters were a little different, as they took on magnified versions of specific traits shown in Jane Austen’s complex characters. It’s quite the same with Cecilia’s Mismatches.

Cecilia herself is a little more Caroline than she is Emma, but she has a little of each in her characterization. Lady Hoxley, as she’s also known, is a bit of a gossip, accomplished in many ways, full of herself, and so pleased with her choices in life that she interferes with others. As Audra’s best friend, we see her soft side. She’s not unkind like Caroline, and we do like her despite her mismatches. Like Emma, Cecilia means well as she makes herself useful, but her decisions are not well thought out most of the time.

In the case of Book One, An Accomplished Woman, we meet Audra Hales, who works hard to be the most accomplished of young ladies, is very easily manipulated and copies her best friend Cecilia, and has an active imagination partly influenced by gothic novels. She is Mary Bennet, Kitty Bennet, and Catherine Morland all mixed up in a pert little package, and that’s how I wrote her. Readers have called her endearing, and I agree. The novel is told totally from her perspective.

The gentlemen of the novel are less directly related to Austen’s characters and more of my own imagination. Both are impossibly handsome in their own way, and they’re brothers.

Lord Garner Tremaine is an immature, spoiled, foppish, yet friendly man who was Cecilia’s idea of the perfect match to Audra. He loves to dress like the Beau, attend the best parties, race his curricle, and enjoy life to the fullest like a rich young man should. He’s outgoing and not at all serious. Perhaps Lord Garner could be Frank Churchill, though he wasn’t intentionally modelled after him.

His older brother, Everett Tremaine, Marquess of Vernon is serious and mature in comparison to Lord Garner. He spends a good deal of his time with his ailing father, the Duke of Alderton, and takes his father’s place as leader of the Tremaine family. Lord Vernon could be a bit Mr. Darcy and a bit Mr. Knightley, but it wasn’t deliberate. He’s somewhat more talkative and less prideful than the former, though he could be said to be protective and officious like the latter. He and Audra have several instances of verbal sparring that spark an attraction that he denies. Readers say he’s swoon-worthy. You’ll have to decide for yourself!

That concludes the characterization of the lead characters of An Accomplished Woman. I hope this peek into the story background entices you to learn more by reading my book.

Thank you for your characterization of the lead characters Suzan, that gave me a better understanding of what I’ll find in the story, which, to be honest, I am looking forward to read because I believe it will be a breath of fresh air. Can you also share a glimpse of the setting of this story?

The story takes place mostly in Bath, with a little in London. The house that Cecilia rents for her summer party is supposed to be on Royal Crescent, and the party goes shopping on Milsom Street. I went to Bath in 2019 and so I’ve seen these sites.

What was the biggest challenge of writing a Non-Austeneque book? How did you find a balance between adding and/or removing Austen’s features?

I had to keep all these new characters and their characterizations straight. I had a spreadsheet for names and relationships that I referred to. Otherwise, witty banter works no matter who the protagonists are, and that’s the key to an engaging story. I found that I wasn’t bound to canon plot spots, which was freeing. On the other hand, I had to make up new ones!

Are you afraid readers will come looking for Mr. Darcy when they read this book?

Very much so. I expect that some of my best readers won’t be interested because it’s not D&E. But Everett smoulders as much as Darcy does. He’s like fanon Darcy after he changes.

Are Cecilia’s Mismatches your attempt to branch out and start writing more non-Austenesque books?

Yes, to some extent. It’s a wider market, and I have another book outside of the series partly written. But a wider market means I’m a small fish in a bigger pond as well. I doubt I’ll ever fully leave Austenesque, though. I love my D&E. I just need to find a great plot for them.

Which type of hero’s/heroines do you value the most in your stories? And which ones will we find in the series?

I’m not tied to any specific type of hero or heroine in writing, and you’ll find that they vary in the series, as the sisters are all different, as are their suitors. I always thought I wanted to write the reformed rake, but then, I didn’t want him to be a man-whore when it came down to the relationship with the female protagonist. You want a certain purity to their love. I do love my standard D&E, though. But they’re really not in the series!

Can you rate the level of romance in An Accomplished Woman?

The romance is swoon-worthy, heated with no sex. There’s immediate attraction, but a continual denial since Audra doesn’t consider Everett her type. This allows the romance to grow as she encounters him. I feel that good romance needs good flow and a sort of a story arc just as the plot does, and can’t be too fast or too slow.

What about the following books in the series? What can we expect?

They’re each different in their own way. The eldest sister, the widowed Lady Cassandra Reddener, or Cassie, is the heroine of the second novel, The Chaperon, and she’s beautiful, cool, and a bit vain, yet somewhat unsure of herself. She’s got some Jane Bennet to Reeve Charington’s warm, kind Charles Bingley, who is Cecilia’s brother. The third couple have the hottest situation: Julian Lange, Lord Remington is supposed to be that reformed rake. In Secret Affairs, he’s steamy Darcy to Alexandra (Lexie) Hales’s witty yet sarcastic Elizabeth, who can’t wait to have an argument with anyone. Lexie is the most confident of the sisters. Remember, in each case, they are not meant to be matched, yet end up together! In each book, we see recurring minor characters who we grow to love and who have potential for later books in the series.

Thank you so much for taking the time to talk to us about this new project Suzan! We wish you all the best with it. 


Audra Hales is a lady of many perfect accomplishments—at least she believes so. It is no wonder: she has mirrored her great friend Cecilia, the newly minted Lady Hoxley, so how could her talents not be worthy of the highest praise? A self-described matchmaker, Cecilia has brought Audra to Bath—where balls and excursions abound—with the intention of matching her with the gregarious Lord Garner Tremaine. Though he seems an affable and talented gentleman, his brother, the marquess, is quite the opposite. 

As head of his family, Everett Tremaine, the Marquess of Vernon acts on behalf of his father, the duke, who remains secluded from Lady Hoxley’s guests. With his obligations, Everett has no time for foolish temptations such as Miss Hales…so why does he constantly find her thrown into his path? 

Meanwhile, Audra has conjured all sorts of wild imaginings concerning the frustrating marquess, and every time she encounters him, he leaves her breathless rather than answering her questions! After all, what is ailing the mysterious duke? Could the marquess be a villain masquerading as the savior of his family? And most importantly: should she marry Lord Garner, the safe suitor, or follow her heart?

Book One of the Cecilia’s Mismatches series is a stand-alone novel.

AAW Final FW 03_30_23 wobld S

You can find An Accomplished Women at:

Amazon.com

Amazon.co.uk

and on Kindle Unlimited


NEW author bio

A lover of Jane Austen, Regency period research and costuming, yoga, fitness, home renovation, design, sustainability, and independent travel, cat mom Suzan Lauder keeps busy even when she’s not writing novels based on Austen’s Pride and Prejudice, all of which are published by Meryton Press.

She and Mr. Suze and their rescue tabby split their time between a loft condo overlooking the Salish Sea and a 150-year-old Spanish colonial casita in Mexico. Suzan’s lively prose can be found on her Facebook author page, www.facebook.com/SuzanLauder; on Twitter, Instagram, and Pinterest as @SuzanLauder; and on her Meryton Press blog, road trips with the redhead www.suzanlauder.merytonpress.com. Her Amazon author page is https://www.amazon.com/author/suzanlauder

Prior to publishing An Accomplished Woman of the Cecilia’s Mismatches series, Lauder had four novels, a novella, and a novelette published by Meryton Press and has short stories in two Austenesque anthologies. All are popular, most earning four-plus star ratings on Amazon and Goodreads. Accolades include Amazon bestseller for Letter from Ramsgate and The Barrister’s Bride, a Finalist for Sexy Scribbles for an excerpt from Alias Thomas Bennet, and several of her books were placed on top ten of the year lists by influential bloggers.

She even finds time to bake muffins! Suzan Lauder photo

.Contact Info

FacebookTwitterInstagramPinterest  ; Amazon Author Page

Meryton Press Blog, road trips with the redhead 

Email: suzanlauder@gmail.com

.

Meryton Press will be giving away one eBook for each stop on the Blog Tour, so if you’d like to enter the giveaway please leave a comment below and let us know what you think about Cecilia’s Mismatches. The giveaway is open until the 21rst of April and the winner will be announced shortly after.

Good luck everyone!

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Handsome, Clever, and Rich by Jayne Bamber – Excerpt & Giveaway

Good Afternoon everyone,

Today I’m very happy to bring to you an excerpt of Jayne Bamber’s Handsome, Clever, and Rich. This book was released today, and it is a fusion of her two favorite Austen novels, Emma and Pride & Prejudice. Curiously, these are my favorite and least favorite Austen novels, so I’m a bit curious to see how it will turn out, plus there are a few big changes in the Bennet family, so we might be surprised 😊

What about you? How do you feel about a fusion of these two books? If you’re wondering how Ms. Bamber pulled this together, you should check out the excerpt 😊

Happy release day Ms. Bamber! And thank you for visiting, it is always a pleasure to have you here!


NEW excerpt

Hello again, dear readers! It’s such a treat to be back at From Pemberley to Milton to promote my long-overdue new release, Handsome, Clever, and Rich, which is now available on Kindle and Kindle Unlimited! 

To celebrate my much-awaited release day, I will be giving away a free digital copy of the book. As you might guess from the title, my ninth novel is a fun fusion of Pride & Prejudice and Emma. To those of you familiar with my work, it will come as no surprise that this isn’t the only twist on canon! In Handsome, Clever, and Rich, Elizabeth is not a Bennet by birth but by marriage, and the story opens with our dear widowed Lizzy as mistress of Longbourn. Another shocking revelation soon follows, when Charlotte brings the news that Netherfield Park is inhabited once more….

***

Elizabeth and Jane were reading together in companionable silence in the study; Mr. Bennet had always sought solace here when the rest of the house was in uproar, and it was a routine Elizabeth had adopted herself in the two years since his death. She and Jane had always been welcome companions for Thomas Bennet, and in quiet moments Elizabeth sometimes imagined she could still feel his presence in that sacred space that had become her refuge. The quiet moments at Longbourn had grown scarce as little Tom grew older, but it was a balm to Elizabeth’s spirits to imagine Mr. Bennet’s laughter mingling with the racket of Tom’s wild antics that rang through the corridors of their cozy, chaotic home. 

Jane lowered her book and smiled at Elizabeth, laughing softly. 

“What?” 

“You are humming again, Lizzy. I am glad to see you happy.”

“I hope that you are, too, dearest.”

“I am perfectly content, but then I always am,” Jane said evenly. She had no need to add that they were nearing the time of year when Elizabeth was most apt to grow morose. 

There was a gentle tap on the door; Charlotte slipped into the study, closing the door on a cacophony of merry squealing. “My step-mother has brought Harry and Betsy to play with little Tom.”

Elizabeth arched an eyebrow – this could only portend that Lady Lucas, who was just a few years older than Charlotte, had some new gossip to share with Mrs. Bennet. “What news in the village?”

Charlotte glanced over at Jane and sat down beside her on the sofa nearest Elizabeth’s desk. “There is news,” she said slowly. “But have you truly not heard? Netherfield Park is to be inhabited again at last.”

Mrs. Bennet had often lamented that the grand estate three miles from Longbourn should be sitting empty, as it had done for as long as Elizabeth had resided in Hertfordshire. Elizabeth could not resist laughing at what raptures her mother-in-law must even now be sharing with Lady Lucas. “I hope it has been let by a gentleman of large fortune,” Elizabeth drawled, leaning back in her chair with a sardonic smile at Jane.

“Let,” Jane stammered. “I did not know the family ever meant to rent it out.”

Charlotte shifted uncomfortably, her gaze still fixed on Jane. “You are sure to hear of it ere long – I thought it best to speak privately, if you can bear it.”

“You wish to tell us, and I have no objection to hearing it,” Elizabeth replied, though the mirth died on her tongue as she perceived Jane’s inexplicable distress.

The door to the study burst open and Mrs. Bennet rushed into the room, waving her hands about in a gesture of glee. “Oh, Jane, Jane! I am so happy for you, my dear! He is coming back at last! Lizzy, what do you think? But we must all have new gowns, even if we must pay more for the expediency – Mr. Bingley is to be at the assembly next week, and he is to bring a large party of friends! Six gentlemen and five ladies!”

“No, it was seven ladies and five gentlemen,” Lady Lucas cried, hurrying behind Mrs. Bennet.

“Too many ladies,” Elizabeth replied, hoping to elicit a smile from Jane, but her sister had grown pale and seemed not to hear anything. “Jane?”

“Oh, Jane!” Mrs. Bennet seized her daughter’s hand. “I knew how it would be – I always knew he would come back!”

Elizabeth looked to Charlotte for some explanation. “Surely you have heard talk of the Bingleys,” Charlotte said cautiously. 

She turned the name over in her mind, testing the vague sense of familiarity about it, but Elizabeth had no chance to reply before Tom and his young friends came tumbling into the study. 

“Harold Lucas,” Mrs. Bennet cried, the Bingleys instantly forgotten. She scooped up her grandson and wagged a finger at his playmates. “You must not shove Master Tom in such a way! Really, Lady Lucas!”

Elizabeth smirked in spite of herself. Tom was robust for his age, and even now seemed eager to return to his rambunctious game with the youngest Lucases. “Mamma,” she chided, quickly ascertaining her son had no scrapes or bruises to cause alarm. She understood her mother-in-law’s anxiety – they had each given Longbourn an heir but not a spare. Still, it chafed at Elizabeth’s old wounds; she had been raised by a man who responded to loss and grief by robbing his daughters of a full and lively childhood, and she would not pass these inhibitions along to her son. 

“Off with you, little darlings! Go outside and play in the dirt,” Elizabeth said, giving her son a quick kiss and tousling the young Lucas’ heads before she called out to the housekeeper. “Hill, please ask Mary to watch them. She has been practicing her instrument all morning!”

Knowing Mary would keep one eye on the children and the other on whatever book she was working through, Elizabeth turned her attention back to Jane, who had scarcely noticed the interruption.

“The Bingleys left Netherfield just before you came to us,” Jane said flatly, finally seeming to recover herself. “It has been many years now that we have expected them never to return.”

“I am sure you have heard of them, Lizzy,” Mrs. Bennet declared, swatting playfully at her daughter-in-law. “Old Mr. Bingley bought Netherfield a dozen years before you came to us. His daughters played with Jane when they were girls, scarcely older than Tom and his confederates, and surely Benjamin spoke of his friend Charlie! Indeed, I know I have boasted of him, for he was Jane’s first conquest. He wrote her some very pretty poetry when she was but sixteen. We were all sure he would make her an offer someday, but….”

“But when his father died, his mother took them all to London, and shut the house up,” Jane said, her countenance turning hard. “He has been happy to abide by that decision ever since, and I am sure they have not spared any of us a thought in five long years, is it not so, Charlotte?”

“He would have left university two years ago,” Charlotte said carefully. “As to his sisters, we severed all ties after Caroline’s first season in London – I am sure his sisters have wed and had children, and he has had much to occupy him. I understand his mother suffered a sudden apoplexy and….”

“Enough,” Jane cried, abruptly jumping out of her seat. “I will hear no more, just now.” She turned and fled the room, leaving Elizabeth full of questions that Charlotte had not the chance to answer.

Mrs. Bennet hesitated but a moment, her gaze following Jane from the room, and then she turned back to Elizabeth. “You must call on his sister when they come – she is to keep house for them. Yes, you must call on them, it is the neighborly thing to do – it is what Mr. Bennet would have done, I am sure of it. Charlotte will be happy to introduce you, is that not so, my dear? Oh, poor Jane!” Again Mrs. Bennet glanced at the open doorway that Jane had just fled through. 

“I will go to her,” Charlotte said, swiftly making her own exit, and looking nearly as agitated as Jane.

“She was very much in love with him, you know. It is such a pity that he was obliged to go into mourning just as Jane came of age,” Mrs. Bennet sighed. “Poor Charlie! He was full young to run the estate then, you know.”

“I do know,” Elizabeth said, her reply sounding more curt than she had intended. Benjamin had not ever mentioned his friend Charlie, as far as Elizabeth could recall, and though she might be moved to sympathize with anyone who had lost one or both parents, she was not sure what to think of a young man who had abandoned Jane and his own estate, and whose sisters, she suspected, had used Charlotte rather ill. But with the assembly only a week away, she would not have to wait long to form her own opinion.

lizzy jane charlotte

***

I hope you all enjoyed today’s excerpt! Follow the rest of my blog tour for more sneak peeks of this Austenesque romp, including appearances by some familiar faces from Highbury….


What if Elizabeth is not a Bennet by birth, but by marriage?

When Netherfield Park is let at last, the village of Meryton is inveigled in romance, intrigue, and a few less-than-happy reunions. The Bingley siblings return to the home of their youth, an estate purchased just before the death of their father. The neighborhood, especially the Bennet family, is ready to welcome them back with open arms, but Mr. Bingley’s attempt to make a good impression on his community backfires so badly that it is his awkward friend Mr. Darcy who is obliged to salvage the situation in the aftermath of Mr. Bingley insulting Jane Bennet at the Assembly.

Young widow Elizabeth Bennet begins her acquaintance with Mr. Darcy on amiable terms, but the reckless folly of his friend and the regrets from her own past create a bumpy path to Happily Ever After for them.
Not long after an injury obliges Elizabeth to recover at Netherfield Park, her estranged sister finally discovers Elizabeth’s whereabouts, and journeys from Highbury to Meryton in all haste, suitors in tow.

When one unexpected betrothal arises out of necessity, Jane Austen’s most notorious matchmaker is inspired to work her magic at Longbourn, Netherfield, and Lucas Lodge – but she, too, will have met her match in matters of meddling & mischief….

Kindle Cover

You can find Handsome, Clever, and Rich at:

Amazon.com

Amazon.co.uk

and Kindle Unlimited


NEW giveaaway time

Jayne Bamber is offeering one ebook copy of  Handsome, Clever, and Rich to readers following her blog tour, to apply to it click on the below link.

Good Luck everyone!

Blog Tour 9


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Mrs. Wickham by Sarah Page

 

Mrs Wickham5 stars

There are good audiobooks, exceptional audiobooks, and then there is Mrs. Wickham written by Sarah Page. I mean, this Audible Originals Production is mind blowing! I have never heard anything as good as this audiobook, it is totally out of the charts when it comes to quality and care about reader enjoyment. It feels like it was specifically written to be narrated in this manner, and listening to this audiobook is a completely different experience than any other. It’s exactly like watching a movie, except the images you’re seeing in front of you are created by your imagination as a consequence of the vivid audio you’re listening to.

In this Pride & Prejudice sequel we get to hear Lydia’s version of the story, and let me tell you, you won’t be as judgmental as you previously were once you hear Lydia through Jessie Buckley’s beautiful interpretation.

Mrs. Wickham is a short a novella where not only we hear Lydia’s version of her story, but also accompany her on her road to redemption. Her life was not easy once she discovered Wickham’s true character, but she is fierce, and she did not gave up. This Lydia fought for her future, for that of her husband, and was able to change her circumstances, her personality, reputation and even the respect her family had for her. Lydia was driven, feisty, funny and you will love her! It is nearly impossible not to empathize with this character, and not to feel how right she is about the unjust treatment she is receiving. Even though this story is placed in the 19th century, it is still very up to date as it approaches the relevance of kindness and second chances. It reiterates the importance of not casting the first stone when someone makes a mistake because we all make them, and we all deserve to be helped. It is an emotional tale where the consequences of people’s behavior towards others, and the regret that often follows it are very touching.

I loved everything about Mrs. Wickham. I loved the main character, but also the secondary characters who were crucial to Lydia’s character development. I loved the fact that it made me laugh, but also cry at times with a story that is both gaudy and deeply emotional. I loved the vivid narration, and the fact that we have several different people portraying different characters, and I absolutely loved the background sounds which blended in perfectly with the story making the scenes alive for the reader.

Mrs. Wickham is without a doubt the best audiobook I have ever heard, and I highly recommend it to those who love audiobooks, and those who don’t because after listening to this one, I doubt anyone will ever disconsider this format ever again.

 

You can find Mrs. Wickham at:

Audible


 

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Filed under 4 stars

Giveaway Winners Announcement

Good evening everyone,

I hope you’re all well. I have been on vacations, so I am very relaxed and only a bit sad to know I’ll get back to work tomorrow, but then again, I had a wonderful time this week in the Azores, so I can’t complain 😊

Today I am bringing you the winners of the last 2 giveaways that were hosted here at From Pemberley to Milton, an ebook copy of Mistaken Premise, offered by Cherith Boardman, and an ebook copy of The Bennets: Provide & Perception, given away by Meryton Press.

I would like to thank both Cherith Boardman and KC Cowan for visiting, and also Meryton Press for their generosity towards my readers. Lastly I would like to thank you all for participating in these initiatives and sharing your support with these authors!

Now, without further ado, the winners are:

Mistaken Premise

*** Sophia Rose***

The Bennets: Providence & Perception

*** Christina Holden***

I would like to ask the winners to please send your email contacts and the amazon store you use to ritaluzdeodato at gmail dot com so that the prizes may be sent to you.

Happy Reading everyone!

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The Perfect Gentleman by Julie Cooper

The Perfect Gentleman4.5 stars

The Perfect Gentleman is a Pride & Prejudice regency variation, but it is so far of canon that it is even hard to explain its entire storyline, however, readers will like to know that this is an epic book that starts out with one plotline but ends up developing different plots, so it is perfect for people who love long stories where they can follow different dimensions of the characters they love.

The book starts out with Elizabeth and Darcy joining forces to search for Georgiana who has apparently eloped, but after their long chase throughout the country they end up getting married and we will see them overcome different obstacles as a solid couple. To me this book felt like two different books combined in one single story but I did enjoy both plotlines. The first part of the book is full of action and fast paced, we see the characters taking part of many different adventures while getting to know, respect and love each other. On the second part of the book we get a slow paced story focused on personal goals, life visions and relationships. Having these two different dimensions in the book made it a very complete, rich and interesting read in my opinion.

I believe this story could easily be a regency romance without any connection to Pride and Prejudice, and that allowed the book to have very interesting twists such as Elizabeth’s predicaments concerning her independence, her dreams and her priorities, Darcy’s struggle concerning his mother and his values etc. I found the topics approached very enticing and interesting, especially because some of them are not usually found in P&P variations. I particularly loved Elizabeth’s dilemma between following her artistic dreams and married life. Her character was interesting due to her intelligence and resourcefulness, but what I valued the most was seeing a woman whose goal in life was not simply to bear children for her husband and live a simple country life. There was much more than that to Elizabeth’s personality, and I enjoyed that very much.

I liked many different aspects of this book which was well thought of and well written. I liked the exploration of different types of relationships between so many different characters because it allowed me as a reader to explore the human nature in many different angles. I also enjoyed witnessing how so many different characters reacted differently to many situations, this book is a good description of human nature, and the reality of it all made it a great read.

Summing up, The Perfect Gentleman is an epic regency romance that has it all: adventure, romance, and character development. It is well written and explores the human nature in many different situations making the reader examine his own position in life. I highly recommend this book to those who love good novels 😊

Elizabeth Bennet’s Level

Lillian Rachel excelled in her narration and allowed me to lose myself in the story. She adjusted her voice to the many different characters and gave the book the right cadence at every time. I recommend the audiobook version of The Perfect Gentleman.

 

You can find The Perfect Gentleman at:

Amazon.com

Amazon.co.uk

Kindle Unlimited and Audible


 

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Filed under 4 stars