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Showing posts with label Austen mashups. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Austen mashups. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 29, 2012

GIVEAWAY!! "Jane Austen:Blood Persuasion" by Janet Mullany ~ Loveable and Delectable!

Published by:  William Morrow/HarperCollins
Pages:  286
Genre:  Fiction/Paranormal
Find Janet also on Facebook and Twitter

Ms Mullany's Previous Novel
Prequel to "JA: Blood Persuasion"

GIVEAWAY!!!!!

Janet Mullany has generously offered to giveaway
 a copy of her book!

TO ENTER:
Leave your name and email in the comments,
and follow/friend me on the sidebar!

WINNER ANNOUNCED  Feb. 29th


Summary of "Jane Austen: Blood Persuasion"
It is 1810, and the Damned are out of favor—banished from polite society. Jane Austen’s old undead friends have become new neighbors, raising hell in her tranquil village just in time to interrupt Jane’s work on what will be her masterpiece. Suddenly Jane’s niece is flirting dangerously with vampires, and a formerly respectable spinster friend has discovered the forbidden joys of intimate congress with the Damned (and is borrowing Jane’s precious silk stockings for her assignations). Writing is simply impossible now, with murderous creatures prowling the village’s once-peaceful lanes. And with the return of her vampire characteristics, a civil war looming between factions of the Damned, and a former lover who intends to spend eternity blaming her for his broken heart, Jane is facing a very busy year indeed.


Meet the Author:

The author of Jane and the Damned, Janet Mullany was reared in England on a diet of Jane Austen and Georgette Heyer and now lives near Washington, D.C. She has worked as an archaeologist, waitress, draftsperson, radio announcer, performing arts administrator, proof-reader, and bookseller.


The Dame's Interview with Ms Mullany:
Hi, Janet, I'm so happy you've agreed to an interview!  I loved "Jane Austen: Blood Persuasion" and can't wait to find out more about you. It's always fun to pick an author's brain!  Have some questions for you...

Thanks so much for inviting me! Ask away …

1) First of all, please tell us a special something about what makes you "tick." When you aren’t writing, what are you doing?
I read. I think it’s the most important thing a writer can do when not writing. I usually have something I’m reading on my kindle on the commute to the day job and something else I’m reading at night before I go to sleep. I also like music, particularly opera and baroque music although I don’t go to nearly as many live performances as I’d like.

2) You chose a specific genre, a place and time to write about, what made you choose it?
Laziness. I thought I knew a lot about the Regency period, which in some respects I do, but for my Austen-vamp books I had to do a lot of research.

3) Please share with your readers where you like to write. Do you have a particular space or desk? What can you see from your desk? Do you have props you use to write from? What about special "charms?
I have an office that faces south west and gets a lot of light. It is also warm in the winter and cool in the summer—in other words, it’s the best room in the house! I share it only with the cat. I can see what’s going on outside in the street and there’s a large oak tree outside. I think the only item that qualifies as a prop or charm, other than the cat who inspires by sleeping, is my kitchen timer, which I use when I really have trouble getting going.
4) In your opinion, what makes a book a great one?  A book you can reread and find something new in every time. Like Austen!


5) Which author(s) most influenced your love of books from childhood? C.S. Lewis—as I grew older I recognized the Christian symbolism but it didn’t bother me particularly (see the next question), Kipling (ditto the jingoism, but he’s such a great wordsmith), Rosemary Sutcliff, Edith Nesbit. They’re all writers I’ve reread as an adult.

6) Read any good books in the past 6 months? "To End All Wars" by Adam Hochschild, which is about the first world war; "The Magician’s Book" by Laura Miller about C.S. Lewis, "The Mysterious Death of Miss Austen" by Lindsay Ashford, and a reread of "Sense & Sensibility."

7) Please share with us the underlying message of your book. What would you like your readers to take away after having read the book?
I’m very uncomfortable about fiction having messages. If a reader learns an important life lesson from my books I don’t even want to know because that would make me feel under some sort of moral obligation for future works. I’m writing mass market fiction and the goal is to entertain. I hope I’ve done that as well as leave readers fainting away from the beauty of my prose and urging their friends and family to buy a copy or two.

8) Were you able to keep your original title? What was it, if not?
My original title was "Charms of Flesh and Bone," a line from a poem Austen wrote, "Mock Panegyric on a Young Friend," addressed to her niece Anna, who is one of the characters in the book: Another world must be unfurled,
Another language known,
Ere tongue or sound can publish round
Her charms of flesh and bone
.


Oh, that is so absolutely charming, Janet!  It fits so well with your book.  Perfect!

9) Is there a song or music in general that might best represent your book as a theme song?
Not really. I listened to quite a lot of opera and Bach while I was writing it, and I find choral music excellent for love scenes. Not quite sure why.  

I agree with you.  Something about Vampires and their gothic beauty is operatic.  I've often wondered if Bach were a vampire!  ;]
10) If you could write your book again, what would you change?

I would hate to have to write this book again! It was very hard to write. I think what I would do is spend more time in Chawton. There’s a lot of educated guesswork and peering at maps and I did visit Austen’s house and the Great House, but I should have spent a lot more time in the area.

11) What was the worst distraction you had to fight through while writing your book? My natural inclination to laziness and the siren call of the internet.

12) What did you feel or think when you held the first copy of your book in your hands?
I find once I have the book in my hands the emotional connection isn’t really there. It’s become a product. It’s nice to touch the cover and to flip through and recognize what you wrote: at the same time it’s really the point of no return. I do, however, get very excited about seeing my books in libraries.  

That's very interesting, Janet.  No one has said that about seeing their book in a library before!
13) Tell us a secret about your book we wouldn’t otherwise know, please!  I think it’s one of the sexiest books I’ve written. There’s very little explicit material but a lot of yearning and desire.  


I agree!  I didn't really understand that en sanglant when I first read that Jane experienced it in close connection with the "Damned" vampires. But, I soon got the full intention!  It's a very sexy addition to an Austenesque book!  :]
Thank you for bending to these busybody questions, Janet! It’s been a pleasure from my end of things!

Thank you for having me visit

.The Dame's Review:
Exceptionally good reading, this novel of Jane Austen, her sister, Cassandra; her feisty little niece, Anna; her mother and their close friend and housekeeper, Martha, is set in the sleepy little village of Chawton.  What shakes up an otherwise pleasant but routine existence for them is the new neighbors...renting Jane's brother's house.  A family of vampires including Jane's creator, Fitzwilliam/Fitzpatrick, the handsome vampire who became Jane's "maker" when the French and English were battling and the help of the "Damed," those recognized as vampires, was required to win against the forces of Napoleon.  Jane's worried about the safety of her family given the hunger and lack of morality of most of the vampires she knows!  It's the push-pull of these gorgeous creatures, their blood lust ways and their enticings of the innocents vs. Jane's eagerness to protect and not fall back into her own vampiric ways that makes this a wonderful read.  Not to mention Jane's love interests... :]

Janet Mullany's research is impeccable.  But, more than that, she writes with such believability.  Every scene is beautifully rendered; so much so that you can hear the china tea cups clink in Mrs. Austen's drawing room, and the see the crystal chandeliers gleam in the gothic ballroom of Fitzpatrick's house.  I felt like swooning myself as she describes the dazzling vampire men.  Who could resist them?  I have such a weakness for dark and mysterious, dangerous men...especially vampires!  Mullany knows how to create them, and she places them like gems in her Georgian vignettes.  I love Jane Austen, but dress her up with a struggle over three main, gorgeous vampires of the "Damned" and I'm there for the asking every time!

Anything Mullany writes should be a must read for those who love "mash ups" of Miss Austen.  In this case, the book is so entertaining, engrossing from the start, including a beloved cast of characters that all Janeites will be familiar with. It's not possible to be anything other than delighted to be reading "Jane Austen:  Blood Persuasion."    I loved it, and tried to read it in one sitting.  Would have accomplished that, if it hadn't been for a grandson who wanted to go swimming all day!

5 stars for this brilliantly vampirish Jane!

Thursday, February 16, 2012

"Jane Austen Made Me Do It..." Compiled by Laurel Ann Nattress ~ Valentine's Week Tiny Tidbits

Published by:  Ballentine Books/Random House
Pages:  434
A Compliation of Various Authors
Edited by:  Laurel Ann Nattress


GIVEAWAY !!!
Laurel Ann Nattress is offering a signed
paperback copy of her book

TO Enter:  Please leave a comment about
your favorite Jane Austen character, leave your name
and email address...and follow/friend me
on the sidebar
GOOD LUCK!

Giveaway Ends:  Feb. 29th



Book Cover Rating:
I love this cover!  Loved it from the moment I saw it!  The Austenish girl peeking out from behind hot pink grosgrain ribbon with "Jane Austen Made Me Do It" all over it is genius. The ribbon crisscross is mindful of our fancy, decorative posting boards,. The smattering of faux calling cards with authors' names set randomly behind the ribbons is enough to call us in for the "buy;" these authors have rank!! And Laurel Ann Nattress's name as the Editor is a stand out with its pearl tipped straight pin.   Absolutely A+

Overview:
JANE AUSTEN MADE ME DO IT: Original Stories Inspired by Literature’s Most Astute Observer of the Human Heart is a new short story anthology edited by Laurel Ann Nattress and available in trade paperback and eBook format.

This delightful collection inspired by Jane Austen—her novels, her life, her wit, her world—features an introduction and twenty-two never-before-published stories written by twenty-five authors from a diverse range of interests and writing experience; their uniting link is their admiration and love of the literary great, Jane Austen.
In Lauren Willig’s “A Night at Northanger,” a young woman who doesn’t believe in ghosts meets a familiar specter at the infamous abbey; Jane Odiwe’s “Waiting” captures the exquisite uncertainty of Persuasion’s Wentworth and Anne as they await her family’s approval of their betrothal; Adriana Trigiani’s “Love and Best Wishes, Aunt Jane” imagines a modern-day Austen giving her niece advice upon her engagement; in Diana Birchall’s “Jane Austen’s Cat,” our beloved Jane tells her nieces “cat tales” based on her novels; Laurie Viera Rigler’s “Intolerable Stupidity” finds Mr. Darcy bringing charges against all the writers of Pride and Prejudice sequels, spin-offs, and retellings; in Janet Mullany’s “Jane Austen, Yeah, Yeah, Yeah!” a teacher at an all-girls school invokes the Beatles to help her students understand Sense and Sensibility; in Jo Beverley’s “Jane and the Mistletoe Kiss,” a widow doesn’t believe she’ll have a second chance at love . . . until a Miss Austen suggests otherwise; and one story from a debut voice, Brenna Aubrey, the Grand Prize winner of the Jane Austen Made Me Do It Short Story Contest.

Regency or contemporary, romantic or fantastical, each of these marvelous stories reaffirms the incomparable influence of one of history’s most cherished authors.



The Dame's Personal Favorite:
This was a tough one for me, and I really can't say I have an ultimate favorite, since I loved all the stories in this fabulous collection.  The authors are hand-picked, just like you wish every book would be in a very special and newly discovered small bookstore you've ferreted out somewhere.  These stories are like beautifully iced cupcakes at a tea party...just carefully crafted and delicately written without a word to spare. I will always cherish my personal volume and, I'm sure, will return to it over the years.
That being said, I have chosen one story to talk about that I loved because it had to do with one of my very favorite Jane Austen characters, Captain Wentworth.  Capt. Wentworth is a favorite because he's a man with so much heart and feeling. So earnest and caring, Wentworth is a man with undying devotion, his few heartfelt expressions to Anne Elliot stole my heart in "Persuasion" and in this story. He's  a man who never forgot his love for Anne, and was willing to endure anything for her. I fell in love with him when his heart was laid bare and broken in "Persuasion."  Such amazing verbal expressions...I'm still moved every time I read this Austen book or his quotes.

Because of her wonderful extension reminiscent of my favorite Austen story, I want to recommend "Waiting" to you by Jane Odiwe. Ms Odiwe is a writer who kept to the truth of Jane Austen's characters.  She's an author whose books I'm dying to read after having a taste of her talents in this short story. While the whole of the tension between all the parties doesn't completely translate in this new adaptation, we get a hearty flavor of the original and enough to enjoy another few moments with them.

Jane Odiwe lives in North London and Bath with her husband, family and two cats.  More than anything she loves a house full of people, music and good books, which is just as well, because that's the norm!  She is the author of Effusions of Fancy, Lydia Bennet's Story, Willoughby's Return, and Mr. Darcy's Secret.  When she isn't writing, she loves painting watercolors, expecially of Jane Austen and the world in which she lived.

In addition, I want to compliment Laurel Ann Nattress once again for the extraordinary gift of compiling this fabulous book of stories inspired by our Miss Austen.  I've never read anything quite like it.  Her choices of authors leaves no stone unturned.  Only the best and the brightest are included in this collection.  I don't know how Laurel Ann managed to find her way through what must have been a multitude of submissions!!

Others of my favorite stories include:  Jane Austen's Nightmare by Syrie James; A Night at Northanger by Lauren Willig; and Intolerable Stupidity by Laurie Viera Rigler starring Lady Catherine de Bourgh as a Judge!!

All I can tell you is that this book needs to be on your Jane Austen shelf.  What?  You don't have an Austen shelf on your bookcase?  Time you did....  And this is the short story collection to have.

5 stars!!

Hope you enjoy this video of Laurel Ann Nattress giving a talk about her book!!

Deborah/TheBookishDame

Monday, February 13, 2012

GIVEAWAY!! "Caroline Bingley" by Jennifer Becton~ May Reflect The "..itch" In All of Us!!

Book:  Caroline Bingley
Pages:  262
Author Jennifer Becton
Genre:  Fiction/Jane Austen Mash-Up


Author's Blurb:
Caroline Bingley: Jane Austen fans love to hate her. We cannot forgive her for attempting to separate her brother Charles from Jane Bennet, nor can we forget that she had her eye on Mr. Darcy. Moreover, Caroline can be catty, manipulate, and downright unpleasant. Pride and Prejudice left me wondering why Caroline would take such manipulative actions against her own family and friends and why she was such a shrew. So I delved into her psyche to find the answer, and--horror of horrors!--I actually found myself understanding and sympathizing with her. I couldn't help but wonder how she would cope once Jane and Elizabeth joined her social circle. What will she do next? And most importantly, can dear, sweet Caro ever find true love?

GIVEAWAY Included!!!  Jennifer Becton is offering a free book: your choice of an ebook  in an international contest!

Entry: Just leave a comment, your name and email address & follow me on the side bar.

              How did you feel about Caroline?

Summary:

When Charles Bingley and Mr. Darcy made proposals of marriage to the Bennet sisters at the end of Jane Austen's Pride and Prejudice, Caroline Bingley was both distressed by her brother's choice of bride and humiliated by Mr. Darcy's rejection of her. And she made her objections known.

Now banished from her brother's household, Caroline must return to her mother's home in the north of England until she can make amends with both Bennet sisters. Desperate though Caroline may be to return to polite company, she absolutely refuses to apologize to Miss Elizabeth Bennet, and instead, she seeks an alternative route back into society in the form of Mr. William Charlton, heir to a barony.

Through her connections with Mr. Charlton's sister Lavinia, Caroline begins to infiltrate the household in the hopes of securing the gentleman and his title for herself. However, she must also contend with her vexing emotions regarding Mr. Patrick Rushton, a once-wealthy landowner, and the meddlesome opinions of Mrs. Rosemary Pickersgill, the companion sent by her brother.

When all that Caroline has ever dreamed of attaining--an ancient family name, a title, and a home of her own--is finally within her reach, will she grasp for it even if it means disregarding the workings of her own heart? Or will she cast off the trappings of society and give herself to true love?
The Bookish Review:
I was drawn to this book because secretly, I've always sympathized with Caroline Bingley.  Afterall, she saw Darcy first, she was friends with him first, and her brother was his best friend...didn't she have a right to feel she could be considered the obvious choice for his wife?  I thought Darcy's leaving her in the cold was a bit heartless.  And, Jane Austen's treatment of poor Caroline as a villianous,  hateful creature seemed harsh.  She was the jilted maiden, wasn't she?
Thus, Jennifer Becton's book, "Caroline Bingley" gave me hope that someone else held that sneaking suspicion that she wasn't all bad, but was only acting like "a woman scorned." A young woman whose social pressures got the best of her.
Ms Becton employs a wonderful, descriptive hand with her book.  Caroline is very much in character as Austen presents her in the beginning, and she then grows into a more sane and understandable character as love and opportunity finally flow her way.  At least, I think she does!!
Filled with a touch of the ironic and the forgiving spirit, this book will help you understand and, perhaps, learn to tolerate poor, grasping Caroline better. I, for one, had a great treat in reading the book!  I'll never see Miss Bingley the same again!
Highly recommended as a continuation of "Pride and Prejudice" by a very talented writer.
5 stars

Who is Jennifer Becton

Jennifer has worked in the publishing industry for twelve years as a proofreader, copy editor, and freelance writer. In 2010, she accepted the challenge to self-publish her first novel Charlotte Collins: A Continuation of Jane Austen's Pride and Prejudice. Upon discovering the possibilities of the expanding ebook market, she created Whiteley Press, an independent publishing house, and has since sold more than 55,000 books. Caroline Bingley, Jennifer's second historical novel, was released in October 2011.


Jennifer also writes thrillers under the pseudo-pseudonym J. W. Becton. Absolute Liability, the first in the six-book Southern Fraud Thriller Series, made the Amazon Kindle Best Sellers list and spent three nonconsecutive weeks on the Indie Reader Best Sellers list. Death Benefits (SF2) is out now and At Fault (SF3) will be released in 2012. The Southern Fraud series blends suspense, humor, and Southern charm with just a touch of romance. If you enjoy reading humorous mysteries or watching TV crime dramedies like Castle or The Mentalist, you should like the Southern Fraud series. For more information on Jennifer's thrillers, visit http://www.jwbecton.com/.
Please stop by and check out her newest book on Amazon:
And read an excerpt:
http://www.scribd.com/embeds/76443304/content?start_page=1&view

Monday, January 30, 2012

Giveaways & Jane Austen! Valentine's Week~"For The Love of Miss Austen: A Janeite Extravaganza of Reviews"

Here are the books I'll be reviewing.

Some will  have author blurbs...

Some will have giveaways.
Others will feature author interviews and interesting information about Miss Austen...
There will be different books for different "tastes!"  Mash-ups, paranormal, mysteries, and novel extensions!
And, truly, what would any Extravaganza be these days without a little vampire to spice things up?  :]


Please join The Bookish Dame and Author Guests
from Saturday, February 11th, through Saturday, the 18th for

"For the Love of Miss Austen: A Janeite Valentine's Week
Extravaganza of Reviews"

Here are the dates for each book and author:


Feb. 11th:  "The Phantom of Pemberley: A Pride and Prejudice Murder Mystery" by Regina Jeffers

Feb. 12th:  "Caroline Bingley" by Jennifer Becton
Feb. 13th:  "Modern Day Persuasion" by Kaitlin Saunders

Feb. 14th"Midnight in Austenland" by Shannon Hale
and
"Mr. Darcy's Bite" by Mary Lydon Simonsen

Feb. 15th:  "Jane Austen Blood Persuasion" by Janet Mullany

Feb. 16th:  "Mr. Darcy's Letter" by Abigail Reynolds

Feb. 17th:  "Jane Austen Made Me Do It" by Laurell A. Nattress

Feb. 18th:  "Mother-Daughter Club:  Pies & Prejudice"
by Heather Vogel Frederick


Remember there will be Giveaways and Prizes!!

Wednesday, March 9, 2011

"Lady Dr. Wyre: Jane Austen Austen Space Opera, Book l" ~ Jane, at it again!

Will there ever be an end to the tortures of poor Miss Austen?  Here we have what appears to be an erotic space opera about her.  Oh, Miss Austen, how doth the flower wilt in summer sun!?  I'm sure your bonnet would be pulled down to hide your face and your lacey handkerchief delicately patting that precious face of yours had you but suspected that your very name would cause such a stir in another time!

Here though, is the review...and I'm sure I have to have the book....in fact I've already procured a copy.  I'll be reviewing it soon, simply to save the beloved Miss Austen's name and nature:


"A dangerous technology could conquer the universe. Love could set it free.

Jane Austen Space Opera, Book 1
Charlotte, Duchess of Wyre, once held the Queen’s highest confidence—and the technological secret that keeps the royal heart beating. Fearful of what atrocities that Britannia might commit with her research, Charlotte turned to the galaxy’s most infamous assassin, Lord Sigmund Regret, to stage her own death.
Even without the simplest of luxuries, seven years hiding in the Americus colony is preferable to one day in the Tower of Londinium. Until a bounty hunter’s bullet forces her to revive her research. Now the same nanobots that keep the Queen alive also run rampant in Lord Regret’s body. Making his yearly Solstice visits increasingly…intimate…and complicating her courtship with the safe and honorable Sheriff Gilead Masters.
When the Americus colony declares independence, and her humble sheriff makes a shocking confession, Charlotte has had enough. Weary of running, tired of living without tea and silks, she fires a warning shot across Britannia’s bow: cease hunting Lady Wyre, or lose the technological power the crown holds so dear.
Her next task isn’t so simple. Somehow she must keep the two men she loves alive—and prevent them from killing each other.

Warning: Ladies in positions of power, stylish spaceships, BDSM. A ménage a trois featuring a duchess on the run, a gentlemanly assassin, and a rough-and-tumble sheriff willing to gun down anyone who gets between him and his lady."

Oh, yes, you can see it's Bustlepunk (steampunk) once again!  Until I've read this new genre, I'm off...but I shall return with good news, I hope and pray.

Yours,
Deborah/TheBookishDame