Austenesque Lovers TBR Pile Reading Challenge 2015 discussion
Challege Levels
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Marianne Dashwood Level: 6-10 Books



Sophia, I LOVE that quote you chose! I'm more like Elinor but I totally agree with Marianne on that! Haha!!


https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
Glad it turned out good, Kirk! I know what its like to get twitchy over what an author is going to do with a favorite character.


Haven't decided where I am going next.
Nicely done, Ahnya! A book a week will pass up Anne and head straight on through the levels. Hopefully the next one will be a 'great' for you.

January 2 I finished reading "Murder at Mansfield Park".
I liked it but , in my opinion , there is very little of the original book, only the names are the same , while the behavior and relationships are completely different.
But the style was perfect and it was a pleasant reading.

https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/1...
She really was so witty and I love it when author's capture that in their bios and stories about her. Glad this one was a hit, Kirk! I'll have to check it out.

Holidays with Jane is getting such lovely comments and reviews that we really need to add it to the recommends section. Glad you loved it, Nancy! And holiday reads totally can be read anytime and all the time in my book.

https://www.goodreads.com/review/list...
Absolutely, okay! Non-fiction totally counts here. Read whatever you've got related to Jane Austen, her stories or her characters- even just something that has the 'flavor' of Jane Austen. Good start! I've had my eye on that one, Kristine.

Most definitely, Nancy!
This is definitely about getting through our unread shelves and I didn't want to make the challenge too narrow and difficult to achieve that. Unofficial motto- let the challenge work for you and not the other way around. Haha!
This is definitely about getting through our unread shelves and I didn't want to make the challenge too narrow and difficult to achieve that. Unofficial motto- let the challenge work for you and not the other way around. Haha!

Now reading Henry Tilney's Diary
Haha, no, Ahnya, Rockstar isn't for a purist. Oh man, it would short circuit one of them. I got a huge surprise when it was one of the earliest of my Austenesque reads. Glad it worked in a quirky way!

Already 3 books in. Woot! Woot! I will probably make the jump to Anne Elliot level soon.
That's cool that you're finding books on Overdrive. I need to check that out. Agreed about the narrators being good. I just listened to one that was distracting from the story. I'll have to check out your thoughts on 'Confessions' I have a paper copy of it for some point. It's gotten several mixed ratings.
*Fist pumping* Woohoo! Three is good. Moving on up.
*Fist pumping* Woohoo! Three is good. Moving on up.

I will now be taking a bit of a break from all things Austen, and try to shrink some of my other mountainous TBR piles!


I confess I expected something more engaging, but it was an enjoyable read all the same. Here's my review: Jane Austen & the Archangel.


It is funny, ironic, very well written (sometimes I thought I was reading Jane Austen herself!). The characters are perfect!
I was disappointed only by an event in the end, but in spite of this, I'm eager to read the sequel... of the sequel.
Here is my review on Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
and on my blog: http://iltesorodicarta.blogspot.it/20...
Nicely done, Carmen!
I can't read Italian, but your rating was good so I'm glad to see that scene didn't disappoint too much. I have this one on my list to read.
I can't read Italian, but your rating was good so I'm glad to see that scene didn't disappoint too much. I have this one on my list to read.

I can't read Italian, but your rating was good so I'm glad to see that scene didn't disappoint too much. I have this one on my list to read."
Thanks, Sophia.
So, I'll wait your future review to read your thoughts about the book!
(Thanks for stopping by on my blog and leaving a message).

I think that is 5 now. However, I don't know if I am meeting the goal of this group. My TBR is growing not shrinking. It is so interesting to see what you all are reading, and thinking.

January 2 I finished reading "Murder at Mansfield Park".
I liked it but , in my opinion , there is very little of the original book, only the names are the same , while the behavior..."
I agree with you!I finished it last month and I exactly thought the same thing.
"Murder at Mansfield Park" is the first book I read in 2015 for this challenge and I also wrote a review http://www.sololibri.net/Murder-at-Ma...
I gave it 3 stars... I hope my next Austenesque reading will be 4 o 5 stars ;-)


I haven't been very lucky with my second book Revisit Mansfield Park: How Fanny Married Henry

Fanny, in this book, is too naive and believes everything that Henry says.. It's so easy persuade her to marry him that I could not believe what I was reading.
I usually like the epistolary style, but here I found trivial letters between Fanny and Henry.
What was supposed to be a romantic love letter, was flat and without feeling.
Furthermore, at that particular historical period, it isn't credible that Sir Bertram has accepted without objection the correspondence between tFanny and Henry.

The Daughters of Delaford: A Continuation of "Mrs. Dashwood Returns" and Jane Austen's "Sense and Sensibility"
Edgerton, Lucia *
Mrs. Dashwood Returns
Edgerton, Lucia *
"Lizzy & Jane" deals with some issues I won't normally read about. Not my usual "small beer", to borrow from Downton's Mrs. Patmore.
Lizzy & Jane
Reay, Katherine *
Not as bad as I feared. "Romance" is also half the length of Mysteries of U!!!! Spoiler plot summary: Heroine is sad, heroine weeps, heroine dusts herself off. Repeat. Repeat. Repeat.....
The Romance of the Forest
Radcliffe, Ann
"Mr. Darcy..." So funny and enjoyable!
Mr. Darcy Came to Dinner
Caldwell, Jack *
Neatly done, Kirk!
Oh good about Jack's book. I've got that one to read too. I was hoping it would be a fun one.
Oh good about Jack's book. I've got that one to read too. I was hoping it would be a fun one.



I loved them both, Letters from the Heart was romantic and sweet. The Muse was absolutely sexy and engaging! I recommend them! :)


I only read 2 Austenesque books, bringing my total up to 7 this year and progressing me from Caroline Bingley to Marianne.
They were

and

My previous reads are on my shelf for this group: https://www.goodreads.com/review/list...

-

(my review: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...)
-

(my review: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...).
Last, but not the least, I finally updated my group shelf:
https://www.goodreads.com/review/list...
I choose Marianne Dashwood level, but my tbr list is worthy of Mr Bennet, groan!
Have a nice weekend! :)

I think we can all say that Carmen!

Thanks Abigail!!!!!!
Unfortunately, I read Evelina for one Austen book club and soon after Belinda for another Austen book club(I'm a two timing Austen book clubber!). Pre-Goodreads! So, I get them kinda mixed up. Having said that, if I'm remembering it correctly, it's fine in spots. In others, soooo tedious. I can claim very little knowledge(Read: none) of "good writing". I'm about the story only, usually. However, I really appreciated Austen's writing vs Barney. There's a joke in Evelina for what seemed to go on for 40 pgs. It wasn't funny.....methinks Austen would have handled it in 2 pgs....and it would been actually funny. I checked out the reviews of Evelina and this guy's review seems to have my views. He gave a 3....methinks I'd give it 2-2.25(if I could):
*********SPOILERS**********************
Bill Kerwin rated it 3 of 5 stars
Shelves: 18th-c-brit, epistolary
This is a very good 18th century epistolary novel. The prose is precise and elegant, the voices of the various letter writers are well delineated and individualized, and the author makes us admire the heroine and fret over the difficulties which obstruct her happiness. The two lovers—the naive Evelina and the elegant Lord Orville—exhibit sentiment and good sense even in the midst of misunderstandings in a way that looks forward to Austen, and the misunderstandings themselves are both credible and interesting.
The novel is, however, not completely successful. Some of the comic characters—Captain Mirvan and Madame Duval, for example—are so crude in conception and so coarse in their behavior that they appear to have traveled here from a very different novel, making the charming Evelina sometimes look like a Disney princess surrounded by escapees from a Warner Brothers’ Looney Tune. These zanies soon take a back seat, however, and the novel resolves itself in a way that is both harmonious and satisfying.
("Evelina" is clearly within the tradition of the "sentimental" novel. Characters are continually commenting on the delicacy of sensibility that may serve to distinguish the superior person from the ordinary one. It is easy to make fun of this literary fashion, but some of the events in the novel--I'm thinking of the abduction, terrorizing and humiliation of the middle-aged Mme. Duval as a practical joke and the wager of two respectable noblemen on a race between two infirm old ladies--are treated in such a cavalier fashion by even this well-bred young female author that I have become convinced that eighteenth century society desperately needed the sentimental impulse--and its embodiment in popular fiction--as a civilizing force.)
Ah, sometimes we're just not in the mood and have to reach for something else. However, two is good, Ceri, especially when one is the Theo Darcy book which isn't exactly short. Haha!
Kudos to you, Carmen.
I didn't know there was a Fanny Price vampire book. That could be fun.
Oh good, glad you enjoyed Mrs. Dashwood. Very cool that it had a cross over with Persuasion. I liked Frederick's sister a lot in that story.
I didn't know there was a Fanny Price vampire book. That could be fun.
Oh good, glad you enjoyed Mrs. Dashwood. Very cool that it had a cross over with Persuasion. I liked Frederick's sister a lot in that story.

I think we can all say that Carmen!"
Hahah! I think so!! :D

Exactly my take-away from Camilla! She would say something witty and then feel obliged to explain it to you. Cringeworthy. Whereas JA just drops it in there, and sometimes you don’t notice the joke until your third reading. . . .

I read An Assembly Such as This

This book is the first part of Pride and Prejudice, from the point of view of Mr. Darcy.
I liked it but I think that Darcy is a little different from how he was represented in this book...
I love books from Darcy's POV. Glad it was a good one and yes, so hard to get his character precise, I'm sure.
Books mentioned in this topic
Bits of Ribbon and Lace: Pride & Prejudice Tales Vignettes (other topics)Mansfield Park (other topics)
One Love Two Hearts Three Stories: A Pride & Prejudice Anthology (other topics)
Jane Austen Cover to Cover: 200 Years of Classic Book Covers (other topics)
Jane Austen's Journeys (other topics)
More...
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