Monday, January 14, 2013

Loving Austen by Sophia Thorsen


I would like to welcome Sophia Thorsen to my blog. Sophia is an ardent admirer of Jane Austen's works. You can learn more about this budding authoress at the end of her guest blog. 

Firstly I want to thank Mary Simonsen for allowing me to write this little blog entrée. Thank you, Mary! And brilliant work on all your works!

As you all know, 2013 is the 200th year of the publication of Miss Austen’s second book, namely, Pride and PrejudiceThis year has already started off with the promised publication of Shannon Winslow’s second book, the sequel to The Darcys of Pemberley called Return to Longbourn and the next book from Abigail Reynolds. Meantime in the musical world, it is also the 200th year of Strauss and Wagner. Therefore, there is much to look forward to during the year, and then there is the annual Jane Austen Festival in September which I am personally attending. 

My year has started with writing my very first serious book, co-authored by my friend Laura Hannah Russell. My year also presents me with the beginning of half a year stay at a writing school, where I am to learn how to put a book together, with text, cover, and how to make it a real book. And now I am to write a blog for two of my favorite authoresses, this blog and the one for Mrs. Tiller Cole during the next few weeks, hopefully.

Pride and Prejudice is my favorite of all Miss Austen’s completed works. My love of Austen started funnily enough with another brilliant woman author, namely Victoria Holt, author of Daughter of Deceit and many other brilliant books. Victoria Holt’s books was the first step on my journey towards being a romantic at heart, as well as a lover of Austen’s works, and a young woman with a thing for Fitzwilliam Darcy and almost anything Pride and Prejudice.

Ever since I saw Keira and Matthew in the 2005 version of Pride and Prejudice, I have been a true Austen lover. My favorite characters from Miss Austen are definitely the two lead characters of Darcy and Elizabeth. The first time I read P&P in 8th grade, I didn’t understand the underlying meaning in the conversation that Miss Austen used since English isn’t my native tongue, but as I got older and understood the wit and feelings of the characters, I began loving Austen’s works and read all her completed works.

In 2007/2008 I joined as a member on fanfiction.net, where I began reading “what if” fiction of Pride and Prejudice, Harry Potter, and many more. Here I had my first encounter with Mr. Darcy personally, where he began talking to me and gave me ideas, a lot of them! So I began writing and have done it ever since. This autumn I was asked to join a group on Facebook called “Austen Authors” and here I meet Mary Simonsen, herself, for the second time, since I wrote her a review on her book, Searching for Pemberley, which is a brilliant book! Meanwhile I have begun to know a lot of other authors, namely Abigail Reynolds, Jack Caldwell, P. O. Dixon, Sharon Lathan and many more. I just want to thank all of those amazing authors who write all these different sequels to Pride and Prejudice, and thank them for a great year!

Thank you again for hosting me, Mary! 

About Sophia: Sophia is a native of Denmark and will graduate from college in July 2013. She is currently a student at the School of Creative Arts (Journalism, Author Writing, Game Academy, Event, DIY, etc.). She is the author of several short stories on fanfiction.net, including “The Masque” (P&P), “A Little Lizzie and Darcy” (P&P), “The Love of a Young Princess” (Romeo and Juliet), and the newly written; “Harry and the Three Ghosts” (Harry Potter, a H/HR story).


She is writing a book with her good friend, Laura Hannah Russell, that they have called “Power and Love,” a Pride and Prejudice sequel. It is set in 1955, and William J. Darcy has just been elected to Prime Minister in the United Kingdom.

Sophia loves to write and read and to spend time with her friends. She is hoping to get into Copenhagen’s Writing School after Vallekilde (School of Creative Arts). 

Tuesday, January 8, 2013

Book News + Free Download

Free Download: On 1/8, 1/9, and 1/10, Darcy Goes to War will be available for free Ebook download on Amazon. Please tell a friend.

Free stories on The Writer's Block: Elinor and Edward's Plans for Lucy Steele and Anne Elliot, A New Beginning

I would like to share a review that I received for Mr. Darcy's Bite on Amazon. It is particularly gratifying because the reviewer understood that this novel is a love story, something not obvious from the cover.

I was at first turned off by the idea of Darcy's being a werewolf. After all, it seemed pretty far-fetched from Jane Austen. But as I read, I was totally captivated by this love story and felt that it captured Lizzy and Darcy's love in a way that reflected the authenticity and intensity of feelings that existed between Jane Austen 's original characters. This book is a page turner you won't be able to put down - it kept me up burning the midnight oil! I adored the active, loving roles that Anne DeBourgh and Georgiana Darcy played in bringing Lizzy and Darcy together, especially Anne's standing up to her overbearing mother and Georgiana's protective love towards her brother. Darcy continues to be the thoughtful, passionate, man of integrity whom we all - if we're honest with ourselves - dream of finding. Of course, Lizzy shines - her humanity is openly revealed, along with the depth of her passion for Darcy. I highly recommend this engaging book.

Tuesday, January 1, 2013

Fill Up Your Kindle or Nook

Tomorrow morning, just about the time you are enjoying your morning coffee or tea, six Austen Authors will place 28 of their eBook titles up for sale on Amazon and Barnes and Noble. This is a three-day sale (1/2, 1/3, 1/4). Here is the list of titles with their prices.


Mary Simonsen
$0.99
For All the Wrong Reasons
Mr. Darcy’s Angel of Mercy
A Walk in the Meadows at Rosings Park
Captain Wentworth Home from the Sea
Three’s A Crowd, A Patrick Shea Mystery (Kindle Only)*

$2.99
Darcy Goes to War (Kindle Only)*
Darcy on the Hudson
Mr. Darcy Bites Back
Becoming Elizabeth Darcy (Kindle Only)*

Saturday, December 15, 2012

Sense and Sensibility - Location, Location, Location


“In 1795, as Jane Austen was writing Elinor and Marianne, to be revised in 1797 and 1798 as Sense and Sensibility, Britons were experiencing the first financial crisis of Austen’s lifetime, the economic results of a harvest failure of biblical proportions.” Dr. Sheryl Craig in "The Economics of Sense and Sensibility"

This is the opening paragraph of one of the most interesting articles I have ever read about the economics of Jane Austen’s novels. The crop failure mentioned above affected everyone in England, but most especially the poor who were already struggling to get by. A population existing on the edge of starvation looked to benefactors and the government for assistance: “John Dashwood and the Members of Parliament initially promised to provide for those entrusted to their care, and surely it is no coincidence that Austen’s characters and her contemporaries were destined to be disappointed.”

What I did not realize when reading Sense and Sensibility was the importance of “place.” Norland, the Dashwood ancestral home, is located in Sussex. At the time S&S was written, “one in four people living in Sussex were classified as paupers. Another problem was that the taxes collected to aid the poor were being diverted…” and did not reach the poor.

The book's bad boy, John Willoughby, lives in Somerset, “a difficult county for the poor… The wages were low…, and the poor taxes were also low… Perversely, Willoughby is not only a wastrel, he is fully aware of the fact and yet unwilling to curb his excess.”

But there is an entirely different attitude toward the poor in Devon. The recently widowed Mrs. Dashwood and her three daughters are rescued by Sir John Middleton. “The reader’s first clue that Mrs. Dashwood’s relative is a very different kind of man [from her stepson John Dashwood] is the placement of Sir John in Devon. The poor rates of Devon were progressive and above the national average." An example given of the benefits of this progressive attitude toward the poor is that milk, considered a luxury in most of England, was a part of the daily diet of the people of Devonshire.

The people of Jane Austen’s time would have understood that by leaving the stingy John Dashwood and Sussex behind, the fortunes of the Dashwood women would improve in the more generous Devon. The placement of John Willoughby in Somerset was a hint that this man was going to be trouble for Marianne Dashwood.

S&S is all about "place" and possibly "name" as all three men whose lives interact with the Dashwood women are named "John."

I would recommend that you read Dr. Craig's entire essay which is available here.

Tuesday, December 4, 2012

Writers and Readers: A Partnership


I think authors who write Austen re-imaginings would agree when I say that we have the best fans/friends in the book business. Because of the internet and social media, we are able to share our love of the writings of Jane Austen with people from every part of the globe as if they were our next-door neighbors. Because of this, a symbiotic relationship has developed between writer and reader. Readers rely on the author to provide a compelling, well-written story, while authors are dependent on readers, not just for the purchase of our books, but for telling your friends about a story you have enjoyed.

Because self-published authors are so dependent upon Amazon for their sales, we have to pay attention to what drives book sales on their site, and it has an array of metrics to measure a book’s popularity. For example, below the title on the book’s main Amazon page is a “like” button. Apparently, if you get fifty “likes,” your book is more prominently featured on other Amazon pages. The tags near the very bottom of the page will place your book on other Amazon lists. For instance, Mr. Darcy’s Bite has “tags” for paranormal and Gothic, among others. If the book does well, it will appear on these lists, greatly increasing the chance of a reader finding my book.

This is where the reader plays a huge role in helping an Austen author or any author whose books they buy. If everyone who visited a book’s page clicked on the “like” buttons and the “tags,” it would be a bighelp in bringing that book to the attention of other readers. The insert shows exactly what you can do to help your favorite authors.

Tuesday, November 27, 2012

Becoming Elizabeth Darcy - Free on Kindle

On November 27, 28, and 29, my time-travel novel, Becoming Elizabeth Darcywill be available for free download on Amazon. Here is description from the back jacket:

In 2011, American Elizabeth Hannigan, suffering from the flu, falls into a coma and wakes up in the bed and body of Elizabeth Bennet Darcy. Beth soon realizes that the only way back to her life in the 21st Century is through the Master of Pemberley, Jane Austen's Fitzwilliam Darcy. But first she must uncover the dark secret that brought her to Pemberley in 1826 in the first place.

Becoming Elizabeth Darcy is a story of love, loyalty, and loss, where a modern woman is called upon to resolve the problems of Jane Austen's most beloved couple. If you are a fan of Lost in Austen, you will enjoy the time-travel novel, Becoming Elizabeth Darcy.


However, you do not have to be a Jane Austen devotee to enjoy Becoming Elizabeth Darcy. Please tell your friends.

A reminder: The sale of the Mr. Darcy's Bite for $1.99 on Nook and Kindle ends on November 30.

A Killing in Kensington, a Patrick Shea mystery, is now available in paperback on Amazon.

Sunday, November 25, 2012

Lot's Going On with Mary Simonsen

November and December will be busy months for me personally and as a member of White Soup Press which launches on Monday on Austen Authors:


"... as for the ball, it is quite a settled thing; and as soon as Nicholls has made white soup enough I shall send round my cards."  - Pride & Prejudice

This month has been full of surprises and gifts from Austen Authors to our readers - giveaways, sales and Pride and Prejudice 200  posts for your enjoyment.  Today's surprise is different; it's a present for us, one that's been in the works for many months.  Today is the 201st anniversary of the Netherfield Ball, the perfect day to unveil White Soup Press, a new publishing imprint for the authors who are part of this blog. - Abigail Reynolds

For much, much more on this venture, please visit Austen Authors.

Thursday, November 22, 2012

Happy Thanksgiving!



I have so much to be grateful for, including my wonderful family. Because of social media, I have met so many terrific people from around the U.S. and the world. This has been such a blessing. Whether you celebrate Thanksgiving or not, know that you are appreciated. I would like to thank Jane Austen for bringing us all together.

Tuesday, November 20, 2012

Launch of Mr. Darcy Bites Back


Today, I am launching Mr.Darcy Bites Back, the sequel to Mr. Darcy’s Bite on Austen Authors. I will be giving away two e-books for either Nook or Kindle. I hope you will pop on over and enter the giveaway. Winner announced on November 26.

P.S. Mr. Darcy’s Bite is currently on sale on Nook and Kindle for $1.99 for the month of November only. It is also available on Amazon in paperback for only $6.00. These prices WILL go up, so grab a copy or download an e-book today.

Sunday, November 11, 2012

Let the Revels Begin

This post was originally posted on Austen Authors by Abigail Reynolds.
November is a very special month at Austen Authors!
You are cordially invited to attend 
the 200th anniversary of the wedding of
Mr. Fitzwilliam Darcy to Miss Elizabeth Bennet
& Mr. Charles Bingley to Miss Jane Bennet  
Naturally, this means LOTS and LOTS of P&P200 vignettes – so many that during the entire month of November we’re cancelling our regular daily post to make room for daily P&P200 and wedding-related posts. THIS is the event we have been working toward since our inaugural P&P200 post on September 18, 2011.
As of today, there have been 117 P&P200 behind-the-scenes vignettes. All of them can be read, in order, either by clicking anyP&P200 icon (start on the last page), or on The Writer’s Block P&P200 Board. This month alone we have over 40 additional P&P200 blogs planned surrounding the November 16 nuptials. WOW! You won’t want to miss a single day!
Here is a mere sampling of what is in store for your reading pleasure–
Colonel Fitzwilliam learns of Darcy’s engagement
Lydia complains that she can’t come to the wedding
Mrs. Bennet’s advice for the wedding night
Mr. and Mrs. Collins marriage
The Longbourn ladies go shopping in London
Lady Catherine & Anne de Bourgh talk about the wedding
Caroline Bingley explains it all
Darcy & Elizabeth’s last walk before the wedding
The wedding!
The wedding nights of the Bingleys & the Darcys
Numerous reflections of the wedding
~~and so much more~~ 

Friday, November 2, 2012

New Cover for For All the Wrong Reasons

I am happy to unveil my new cover for my Pride and Prejudice re-imagining, For All the Wrong Reasons. A few months ago, I purchased a book cover program, and I'm finally learning how to use it! I hope you like it, and if you do, that you will let me know. Here is the blurb from the back jacket:

For All the Wrong Reasons - A Novella - Pemberley, the Darcy estate, is entailed away from the female line. When Fitzwilliam Darcy learns that Peter Grayson, the prospective heir, is to marry Caroline Bingley, he realizes that he must quickly find a wife so that he might have a son. But will Elizabeth Bennet agree to a loveless marriage, and if so, will she marry for all the wrong reasons? This novella explores Darcy and Elizabeth's path to a happily-ever-after ending.

Also don't forget that Mr. Darcy's Bite is on sale on Amazon and Nook for the month of November for $1.99. This title is owned by Sourcebooks, so when the sale is over, it's over for good.

Thursday, November 1, 2012

Mr. Darcy's Bite E-Book on Sale - $1.99

Exclusively for the month of October, Mr. Darcy's Bite will be available on Nook and Kindle for only $1.99. If you would like to listen to an excerpt, please visit Jakki's Leatherbound Reviews.

Available on Amazon
Available on Nook

Monday, October 29, 2012

Newark Star Ledger - Review of Mr. Darcy's Bite

This review of Mr. Darcy's Bite from the Newark Star Ledger (New Jersey's largest newspaper) is a year old, but because Halloween comes around once a year, I thought I would rerun it. This review is particularly gratifying because the Newark Star Ledger was the paper my family read every Sunday when I was growing up in North Jersey. It had a TV guide before there was a TV Guide, and my sisters and I would fight over the insert to see what movies would be showing that week.

Now, where was  I? Oh, yes, the review. Here it is in its entirety.


This book is written with enough originality, whimsy and respect for Jane Austen’s style to make it stand out in the crowded field of Austen genre mash-ups. Simonsen revisits Darcy and Elizabeth’s tempestuous courtship and provides an explanation for Darcy’s erratic behavior: He’s a werewolf. Bitten on a childhood sojourn in Europe, Darcy has guarded his secret: He transforms at the full moon.
Because Simonsen carefully imagines how a werewolf nobleman would adapt to society and how that would play out with Austen’s characters, the story works as earnest rather than camp. After Darcy reveals his nature to Elizabeth, she must decide whether she still loves him. Simonsen’s characterizations are faithful to Austen, but engagingly playful with the possibilities of a werewolf double-life. His werewolf nature connects Darcy to the passions of the natural world, letting Simonsen ratchet up the couple’s romance. The classic love story between Elizabeth and Darcy holds firm, even if things do get a little hairy once a month.
Newark Star Ledger: Five Books You Will Be Able to Sink Your Teeth Into by Elizabeth Willse
Mr. Darcy's Bite is available from: Amazon and Barnes and Noble


Tuesday, October 16, 2012

Mr. Darcy's Bite - $6.00 on Amazon

Mr. Darcy's Bite is now available in paperback for $6.00 and qualifies for Amazon's super saving shipping discount. This is cheaper than the e-book price! These promotions come and go without warning, so now is the time to buy Mr. Darcy's Bite--just in time for Halloween.

Available from Amazon

Wednesday, October 10, 2012

Launch and Giveaway of A Killing in Kensington


Today, I am launching A Killing in Kensington, the second mystery in the Patrick Shea series. Here is the blurb from Amazon:

Detective Sergeant Patrick Shea of London's Metropolitan Police and his new partner, Detective Chief Inspector Tommy Boyle, have been handed a high-profile murder case. In the penthouse of Kensington Tower, playboy Clifton Trentmore lay dead with his head bashed in, and the investigation reveals a man who was loathed by both sexes. With too few clues and too many suspects, Shea and Boyle must determine who hated Trentmore enough to kill him. But as Patrick digs deeper, he finds his suspects have secrets of their own.If you enjoy Law and Order UK, you will enjoy A Killing in Kensington.


To celebrate the launch, I am giving away two e-books, either Kindle or Nook. All you have to do is leave a comment and an e-mail address where I can contact you by Sunday, October 14. Winners will be announced on October 15.

To whet your appetite, her is an excerpt from Chapter 2:

Patrick studied the profile of the prostrate Trentmore. The dead man was in his early to mid fifties, tall, lean, with a full head of dyed blond hair and sagging jowls. When struck, he had been holding a whiskey glass that went flying through space, emptying its content onto the wood floor. A formal dinner jacket, hung over the back of the couch, indicated that the victim had been out at some time during the evening. After removing his shoes and opening his tie, he had poured himself a drink in preparation for settling in for the evening, but that was when the killer had come calling.
“Who found the body?” Patrick asked a detective constable standing behind him.
“Diane Namur, the chief financial officer of Trentmore World Imports,” Detective Constable Jane Millard said, handing Patrick Miss Namur’s business card.
“Where is Miss Namur?” Patrick asked, looking around the flat.
Wearing an uncomfortable look, DC Millard explained that because Miss Namur had been sick in the loo, she had been allowed to leave after agreeing to an interview the next day.
“Miss Namur couldn’t stop crying, sobbing actually, very near hysterical,” the constable explained. “She kept saying ‘no,’ ‘no,’ ‘no,’ over and over, and then she got sick. It seems she had stepped in the victim’s blood. We believe those are her shoeprints in the blood trail.”
“Did you get the shoes?”
“Yes, and they’ve been bagged and tagged by SOCO. Before leaving, she told us how she found the body, but anything else…,” she said, shaking her head. “It just wasn’t possible. But we were able to get hold of Trentmore’s driver, Charles Wyatt. I spoke with him thirty minutes ago, and he’s on his way here.”
“Thank you, DC Millard,” Patrick said, smiling. He wanted to reassure her that her decision to allow Miss Namur to leave had been the right one. Vomiting witnesses were rarely helpful. “We’ll contact Miss Namur in the morning.”

Monday, October 8, 2012

Last Chance for Free E-book

On October 8 and October 9, Three's A Crowd, my British mystery, will be available on Kindle for free download. Otherwise, it is a whopping .99. This novella is an introduction to my character, Patrick Shea, a police detective who wants to be on a murder investigation team at Scotland Yard. Here's the blurb from Amazon:


In Three’s A Crowd, we are introduced to Patrick Shea, a young detective sergeant with the Hampden Criminal Investigation Department, whose career is being fast-tracked by the Metropolitan Police in London. With an eye to an appointment with a murder investigation team at New Scotland Yard, Shea is doing everything by the book. Unfortunately, his love life is a bit of a mess and gets messier when he learns his former lover, Annie Jameson, has been assaulted on someone else’s patch. Will Shea’s involvement in the under-the-radar investigation of his ex-girlfriend put his career in jeopardy and possibly her life as well?

If you are a fan of the television series Law & Order UK, you will enjoy Three’s A Crowd. This novella is the first in the Patrick Shea Mystery Series.

Included is Chapter 1 of the second Patrick Shea mystery, A Killing in Kensington.


On Wednesday, I will launch the second Patrick Shea mystery series on this blog.

Wednesday, September 26, 2012

Amazon Review for Darcy Goes to War

One of the advantages of being a writer of Austen re-imaginings is that you get to meet so many wonderful people from all around the world. The review below was written by a young lady who lives in the UK. I have greatly enjoyed getting to know her. It is especially gratifying because my friend is British, and this novel is a tribute to her countrymen.

I loved this book. It was well written as you would expect from the genius that is Mary Lydon Simonsen.


I loved the detail in the book and the locations used. I would have loved to see Elizabeth see Pemberley for the first time and meet Georgiana. The other sisters were well developed and it was good to see another side of them. Darcy and Elizabeth's relationship was beautifully developed and the real danger that the bomber pilots faced really came across as well as the hardships faced by the women left behind. The little trips they made really made me want to find the love that they share. I would love to see a sequel to it.


Mary Lydon Simonsen is one of my favourite authors and will remain so for many years to come. I would recommend this book to anyone who loves a twist on that classic story. (5 Stars)