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Category: Jane Austen

Scenes_from_Pride_and_PrejudiceThanks to everyone who made our Jane Austen week such fun. It has been a delight to welcome you all to our new, pretty home for this week long party.

I have the happy task of announcing our winners!

Monday.Diane’s prize is the British Library Writers Lives edition of Jane Austen by Deirdre Le Faye. And the winner is….Bess Gilmartin!

Tuesday. Amanda’ prize is a Jane Austen puzzle. The winner of the puzzle is….Susan D!

Wednesday. Carolyn’s prize is a hardback copy of Persuasion. And Carolyn’s winner is….Jeanne Miro.

Thursday. Janet’s prize is a couple of copies of Jane Austen Made Me Do It, a collection of short stories edited by Laurel Ann Nattress of Austenprose. Janet’s two winners are….Lesley A. and Crystal GB.

Friday. Elena, who gets all the credit for our new home, gives away an “Amiable Rancor” calendar from The Republic of Pemberley. Her winner is….Kathleen!

And our Grand Prize Winner of a $50 Amazon Gift Card is…………….Maureen!!

Ladies, look for emails from the Riskies. We’ll need your mailing addresses. If you don’t hear from us today, email us at riskies@yahoo.com

tt0178737This past weekend I joined several Washington Romance Writer (WRW) friends at the home of Kathleen Gilles Seidel to watch two film versions of Mansfield Park: The 1999 version with Frances O’Connor and Johnny Lee Miller; and the 2007 TV version with Billie Piper and Blake Ritson. Kathy had invited us to watch the movies with her, because she is scheduled to give a talk about Mansfield Park at WRW’s January meeting next Saturday. Also in preparation for Kathy’s talk, I am rereading Mansfield Park and am about halfway through.

Kathy Seidel’s annual Jane Austen-related talk is a WRW highlight for me. Kathy is an Austen scholar, having written her Ph.D. dissertation on Austen, but she is also hugely entertaining and her talks are always intelligent, stimulating and useful for writers. More on her Mansfield Park talk next week.

tt0847182We’ve discussed the Mansfield Park movies here at Risky Regencies before, most recently after the 2007 TV version was released, and most of us have generally thought the movies pretty dreadful. The WRW group was no different. The 1999 version was particularly abysmal, having very little to do with the book and having almost none of Austen’s sensibilities included. The 2007 version did not change the story quite as drastically, but when it did, it changed it in incomprehensible ways that made no sense at all. In both versions, the main characters were changed very drastically–except for Mary and Henry Crawford, the worldly brother and sister who come for an extended visit. The Crawfords are often described as the most interesting characters in the book.

The Fanny and Edmund of the book are very unlike the heroine and hero we would expect in a book of romantic fiction today.

Fanny is timid, self-effacing, and long-suffering, but she is the moral compass of the book, the one character who consistently acts in a principled manner. In other words, she doesn’t change in the book. She stands firm, no matter what happens to her. This was obviously Austen’s vision for Fanny, but I think today’s reader wants heroines who strive actively to reach their goals, not ones who merely endure what happens to them.

Edmund shares Fanny’s view of morality, but he is very easily swayed by the manipulations and allure of Mary Crawford. That is not the sort of hero who interests me. I want my hero to be strong enough and wise enough to see through the clever manipulations of others, and I do not want him to be tempted to fall in love with a character who is not the heroine.

At the end of the book (or the movies) you are glad Fanny and Edmund wind up together, but it was hard to feel strongly enough about either of them to actually root for them to wind up together.

I was thinking that today’s romance novelist would probably choose Mary and Henry Crawford as more likely candidates to be hero or heroine. Now those are two characters who could do with a strong character arc. Do you know if anyone has written such a version?

What do you think are the most important elements in a hero or heroine?

I also watched the first episode of season three of Downton Abbey. It occurred to me that one of the reasons that the series is so successful is that all of the characters are interesting and all have ways they can change, ways we can root for them.

 

greenjaneAs an adjunct blogger, I missed Risky Regencies’ Jane Austen week, but I cannot let another week go by without my own acknowledgement of what Jane Austen has meant in my life.

I have been reading Jane Austen yearly since – well, since before I can remember.  I was delighted when, in the 1980s, the BBC productions of Jane Austen’s novels were brought to us on PBS.  But nothing thrilled me as much as the BBC/A&E production of Pride and Prejudice in 1995.  Along with half the women in the English-speaking world, I fell in love with Colin Firth’s Fitzwilliam Darcy and the adaptation in general.  I had ordered my own videotapes (yes, it was that long ago) before A&E had even completed broadcasting the series.

atlogNot long after that, I began developing The Republic of Pemberley along with Amy Bellinger, who had started a discussion forum just to talk about that 1995 adaptation.  Over the years, Pemberley has grown into a pretty big Jane Austen destination on the web.  We talk about a lot of things besides  Colin Firth these days and have created some interesting Jane Austen-related material.  I’m pretty proud of what we’ve done and would like to share some with you.

Early on, we incorporated the Jane Austen Information Page, an idiosyncratic compilation of Jane Austen facts and criticism, collated and created by Henry Churchyard (an early member of The Republic of Pemberley’s management committee).  Henry has moved on, but Jane Info, remains and I keep threatening to reorganize it one day.

qbackAlso in our early days, we were a big fan fiction hub.  Our Bits of Ivory board drew everything from the initial version of Pamela Aidan’s best-selling Fitzwilliam Darcy, Gentleman trilogy to stories like “Pemberley High.”  Eventually, we decided that fan fiction was not our focus and it made its way to other sites such as The Derbyshire Writers’ Guild (an early spin-off from Pemberley). But we continue to maintain, The Bits of Ivory Archive, a collection of the early fan fiction posted on our site.

As the Republic of Pemberley focused more on Jane Austen, we began developing some interesting additional material.  I’m particularly fond of Jane Austen Locations, a compilation of links to sites in Jane Austen’s life and locations used in adaptations of her work.  Like everything on our site, it’s a work in progress.

Another fun addition to Pemberley is The Jane Austen Gazetteer.  This page is an exhaustive exploration of actual locations used in Jane Austen’s novels.  It uses period maps, guidebooks, and illustrations to provide information that Jane Austen would recognize regarding each location mentioned in her six novels.

There’s more (there’s always more).  We maintain a database of current Jane Austen-related events:  celebrations, meetings, festivals, plays, readings.  This is not exhaustive, although we wish it were.  We do group reads of Jane Austen’s work two or three times a year.  We maintain on-line copies of her work.  We do other stuff.  We celebrate Jane every day.  We’d love to have you celebrate with us.

Posted in Jane Austen | 4 Replies

Rupert-Friend-Wickham

This week, we’re examining what Jane Austen has meant to us–and to say that Austen has informed every aspect of my subsequent reading and writing would not be an overstatement. In fact, Austen’s themes and style is present in my own writing even when I don’t realize it.

My romantic women’s fiction title, Vanity Fare, comes out in less than two weeks (Dec. 26), and some early reviewers are pointing out the similarities to Pride and Prejudice–more similarities than I even realized I had! I knew that I had put in a very Mr. Darcy moment when one of the characters rescues another from a bad financial situation. But there’s more Austen in there, as a review from Book Lovers, Inc. points out:

“In fact, it was clear to see many connections with Pride and Prejudice in the book, from the portrayal of Nick and Simon, to the financial mess Molly’s mother was going through. It was a modern take on the classic, albeit one that could stand on its own merits too.

As much as the story was about Molly finding a way to pay the bills and maybe find love, it was equally about Molly finding herself. Jane Austen’s generation might have tsk’d at the idea of this, but it was very cool to see Molly go from being dependent on her ex-husband to being able to speak for herself and find the strength within to become self-sufficient.”

While this example is both self-serving and timely, my Austen experience covers more than just my latest release. Austen embedded human truths within a deceptively simple read, and each reading, or viewing of the screen interpretations of her work reveals some new facet to the truths.

Thanks, Jane. You rock.

Megan

 

Posted in Jane Austen | Tagged , | 8 Replies

Hi all.  My name is Myretta Robens and I’m going to be sharing Saturday blogging with Megan.  If you don’t know me (and millions don’t), I thought I’d make this post about myself – fascinating topic. 

I met Megan when we both preparing for the publication of our first Traditional Regencies.  Hers was for Signet and mine for Zebra (the last two Trad Regency hold-outs).  We were both writing journals about the road to publication for All About Romance and we just hit it off.  We have since become close friends with an alarming tendency to put each other in our books.  We were also both produced close to the last book in the world of print Traditional Regency.  Mine was Just Say Yes, which was a RITA finalist in 2005.  It lost to Riskies’ own Diane Gaston.  I’m just working my way around to forgiving Diane for this.
 
My first love, however, is Jane Austen, about whom I’m sure you’ll be hearing more from me in the future.  In 1997, a friend and I began The Republic of Pemberley web site.  Admittedly, this site was born of the deep-seated lust provoked by Colin Firth in the role of Fitzwilliam Darcy in the BBC’s 1995 adaptation of Pride & Prejudice.  But it’s grown and changed since then to a rather large and highly interactive Jane Austen site that manages to take up quite a lot of my time.  If you love, Jane, you should visit us.
Have I bored you sufficiently talking about myself?  Would you like to also know that I live near Boston with three cats (11, 11, and 21)?  That I worked for Harvard University until recently and that I still do web design for extra dough?  That I use all these excuses when I’m procrastinating?  That I am writing – really! – currently a Regency-set single title which is about half way there?  My own web site is at myrettarobens.com.  Feel free to visit me there.
I’m happy to be among you and look forward to frisking with the Riskies.  Thanks for inviting me.