Loving Mr. Darcy: Journeys Beyond Pemberley
by Sharon Lathan
Paperback, 448 Pages
List Price: $14.99
Published 2009 by Sourcebooks Landmark
ISBN-10: 1-4022-1741-2

My Take:
This is one of the most romantic take off on Pride and Prejudice that I have read. There are many takes on Lizzie and Darcy: some authors put them at odds with each other, or they’re made into amateur sleuths, or even power hungry and doormat couple, etc.  While each one is enjoyable to read for it’s variations, Sharon Lathan’s take on the couple is my all-time favorite. It’s how I imagine Fitzwilliam Darcy to be with his shyness coming off as arrogant. He’s sweet and loving, sexy and insatiable, strong and kind. He’s everything that a dream man should be. Lizzy is wonderful in this story also. She hasn’t lost her witticisms. I was afraid that the book would be overly sweet, but Ms. Lathan did a superlative job of making this couple very much in-love without making the book ridiculous. Sometimes, I can’t help but squeal in delight at the antics of this Mr. and Mrs. Darcy. I love it. I bet you’re going to love it, too. It’s a Pride and Prejudice version that cannot be missed. Check out below. One lucky winner will get book 1 and 2 of this series.

Guest Post:

Stargazing in the Regency
One of my favorite childhood memories was visiting my grandparents in Lake Isabella, CA. My grandfather held a nightly ritual of sitting in his lawn chair and gazing up at the stars. Sitting beside him as we stared into the vast, glittering expanse, waiting for one to fall so we could make a wish while attempting to trace patterns and images is one of my fondest memories. Grandpa Baker knew nothing of astronomy and I never did take up the study in later years, but we loved gazing. I still do.

Writers frequently incorporate our passions, memories, and life experiences into our writing. Part of the fun for me is taking these characters birthed by Jane Austen and giving them a deeper personality and history. In Lizzy and Darcy I instilled a common interest in stargazing. Naturally there is the clichéd romantic element of handholding lovers lying under the nighttime sky. However, I honestly didn’t approach it from that angle. I remembered how pacifying it was to sit in the still darkness with someone I loved, listening to the sounds of crickets, feeling the cool breezes, and trying in vain to recognize more than the Big Dipper. Those comforting, relaxing, and fun nights came alive in my story without me initially realizing where it came from.

Can you even imagine how amazing it must have been to walk under a canopy of heavenly bodies in an age before the air was clogged with haze? When the only sounds would have been natural ones undisturbed by machines clamoring? Picturing Darcy and Lizzy walking along the spacious lawns of an English country estate was too vivid an image of tranquility and romance to pass up!
But I then wanted to take it a step further, and that is where research came in. Staring into the sky above and counting stars is as old as Adam and Eve. I knew that since before Galileo there were scientists mapping the planets and stars. What I was not so sure about was when functional telescopes and star-charts first appeared. I wanted Darcy to be more than just a casual observer. Could he have a telescope at Pemberley? Could he have studied astronomy at Cambridge? Would he know the constellations and planets?
Thankfully the answer to both is yes!

Telescope invention is traced to the Dutch as early as 1608 using optics created by the Egyptians 400 years earlier. Galileo later expanded and perfected the device. Isaac Newton made more improvements some decades later, and then William Herschel offered the largest leaps in technology in the late 1700s. While it is true that bigger is better in terms of seeing farther away, smaller telescopes were quite the norm. Having a reasonable sized telescope standing on a balcony, as I do in my novel, is perfectly plausible.
The connections between astronomy (and all the sciences) and Cambridge University are too numerous to name. Many of the great scientists and astronomers through the decades, including Newton, either studied or taught at Cambridge. Often both. Mr. Darcy, a graduate of Cambridge and man deeply interested in new inventions and science, (as I have written him) would definitely have taken a class or two.

So there I had the facts to back my idea! I created a Darcy who happily discovers his new wife also enjoys stargazing, even if it annoys him that she (like me) can’t figure out the patterns. Scenes burst forth with intimate conversations, romance, and humorous happenings occurring. My childhood fondness came alive in this small but significant way, thus I can glance upward into the heavens and thank my grandpa for giving me a love that manifested in my books.

Perhaps this history lesson and tidbit from my life has intrigued you enough to pick up Loving Mr. Darcy: Journeys Beyond Pemberley when it is released on Sept. 1. Or “Mr. and Mrs. Fitzwilliam Darcy: Two Shall Become One” that is already available. But for now, tell me of a favorite stargazing experience! Perhaps on the beach in some tropical locale? Or on a mountaintop where the stars are so close you can almost touch them? Or just in your backyard. I would love to hear your memories.

About the Author

Sharon Lathan is a native Californian currently residing amid corn, cotton, and cows in the sunny city of Hanford. She divides her time as homemaker nurturing a husband and two children, plus the cat, dog, and fish; while also working as a Registered Nurse in a Neonatal ICU. Somewhere in there she finds time to write! Sharon Lathan can be found on her website/blog at: www.darcysaga.net, on Facebook as “Sharon Lathan, “ on Twitter as “@SharonLathan,” and on the Casablanca Authors’ blog at: http://casablancaauthors.blogspot.com/

The Giveaway:
Thanks to Danielle at Sourcebooks for my copy and giveaway.
One (1) winner for a set of  Mr. & Mrs. Fitzwilliam Darcy and Loving Mr. Darcy on September 21.

Contest open to US and Canada. No PO Boxes on address please.
Winners will be announced within a week after deadline. Please make sure to subscribe to this blog’s feed to find out if you’re a winner. Please contact me within 1 week of posting the winners, or I get to pick another winner.
+1: Blog or link to this contest on your sidebar.
+1: (for each link) Tweet, stumble, or facebook this contest. Make sure to leave me link where I can find it.
+1: If you can only ask Sharon one question and one question only, what would question would you ask?
+2: Bring a friend, and make sure your friend mentions your name. Both of you get extra entries.
+3:  Sharon Lathan asked:

tell me of a favorite stargazing experience! Perhaps on the beach in some tropical locale? Or on a mountaintop where the stars are so close you can almost touch them? Or just in your backyard. I would love to hear your memories.

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This entry was posted on Friday, August 28th, 2009 at 3:38 am and is filed under Author Guest Post, Free Book, L authors, Rating: 5, Review. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.
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31 Comments(+Add)

1   Jaclynn    
August 28th, 2009 at 10:52 am

My family owns a lake home off Grand Lake in Grove, Oklahoma. There is this amazing view from their balcony, where you can see every star in the sky and the reflected image of them dancing on the lake. It’s definately an awestruck wonder of God.

But every once and a while an overwelming desire to drive out away from the city lights of Dallas /Forth Worth to gaze upon the stars.

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2   Wanda    
August 28th, 2009 at 11:24 am

My question would be: “How did you decide to write a book about Mr Darcy?”

wandanamgreb (at) gmail (dot) com

I subscribe via Google Reader.

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3   cheryl c.    
August 28th, 2009 at 2:05 pm

I loved Pride and Prejudice, and I have read some follow-up stories. I have not as yet read these two, but they do some wonderful. Thanks for the review, Shoshana!

+1 If I were to ask a question, it would be “What TV or movie version of P&P is your favorite?”

+3 My favorite stargazing experiences have taken place on the ocean aboard a cruise ship in the Caribbean. Truly beautiful and awe-inspiring!

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4   cheryl c.    
August 28th, 2009 at 2:09 pm

Oh, I must learn to proof-read! It’s supposed to be “sound” not “some.” :-0

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5   etirv    
August 28th, 2009 at 3:26 pm

Please count me in! I subscribe via google reader.

+ 1 Question that I would like to ask Sharon: What do you think of parodies like Pride and Prejudice and Zombies and paranormal versions like Mr, Darcy, Vampire?

+3 Reside in Hawaii and the backyard is perfect for star gazing!

delilah0180(at)yahoo(dot)com

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6   Winning Readings    http://winningreadings.blogspot.com
August 28th, 2009 at 5:24 pm

In Mozambique, my 1yo daughter and I had a routine of going outside before locking everything up for the night, looking at the sky, and singing Twinkle Twinkle Little Star… Sweet memories!

janemaritz at yahoo dot com

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7   Sharon Lathan    http://www.darcysaga.net
August 28th, 2009 at 5:46 pm

Hi ladies! Sorry I haven’t been on earlier. I work night shift so today I needed to sleep. It is now my morning, so I’ll say, “Good Morning!”

Cheryl and Wanda, I’ll answer your questions together since they overlap. I saw the 2005 movie version of P&P and absolutely fell in love! The entire story is told on my website, but the very short answer is that I wanted to read the happily-ever-after story of Darcy and Lizzy, could not find it already written somewhere, so decided to write it myself! I love the movie version SO much, and although I have nothing against other versions, it is still my favorite.

etirv, I haven’t read any of the newer paranormal versions. The reasons are varied, but the bottom line to me is that although a bit weird, anything that is inspired by Jane Austen’s fabulous work is a loving homage to her. Certain stories may not interest me in a personal sense, but they kept her alive and focus interest back onto her books. That is a wonderful thing, as far as I am concerned!

janemaritz, thank you for sharing your stargazing memory! Such memories are indeed very sweet.

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♥Shoshana reply on September 8th, 2009 4:28 pm:

Sharon, thank you so much for stopping by. I still get giddy when authors stop by my blog and leave a comment. Thank you!

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8   Vee    
August 28th, 2009 at 6:56 pm

As a lover of P&P for whatever amount of time, you need to know that the love Darcy and Lizzy find for each other will continue and develop into a deep commitment. Weel at least thats what I always wanted. They had enough angst trying to get together. I wnated to see them happy loving passionate and devoted.
Sharon provides all of this in her novels with my all time fav couple!
Sharon cleverly mixes just the right amount of humour and drama in amongst all the loving.
I have had the pleasure of reading the whole collection numerous times and it always makes me sigh in contentment and smile. I’m sure those of you that haven’t read it will love it!
Happy reading!
TSBO devotee
Vee

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9   Diane Lynne C.    
August 28th, 2009 at 8:56 pm

I first got interested in Pride and Prejudice when watching the movie “You’ve Got Mail.” Up to that point I’d never heard of Jane Austen. (I know, I must live under a rock.) There is a scene where Kathleen Kelly (Meg Ryan) is discussing the book with Joe Fox (Tom Hanks). Naturally, I had to investigate said Austen book. I was hooked. I read the book twice in less than 5 days. I then watched the 1996 TV version and was immediately in love with Jennifer Elhe and Colin Firth. I still do not know how I got hooked on P&P FanFiction and your Darcy Saga web site online. Just an accident, I guess. But what a fun journey I have had! Loved the first book.
+1 If I were to ask Sharon a question it would be: When your first book is made into a movie, who would you select as the actors to play Elizabeth and Darcy?
+3 Favorite star gazing memory: A few years ago, my husband, 10 year-old son and I were laying on a blanket in our backyard just after the July 4th fireworks. We were too confortable to move, so we started looking for the Little Dipper. We could not find it so we made up our own constallations, such as a starfish, a broom and a baseball cap. We had fun just being silly and enjoying our little family time. dianelc217(at)verizon(dot)com

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10   bridget3420    
August 28th, 2009 at 10:10 pm

Tweet

http://twitter.com/bridget3420/status/3618027232

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11   Freda Mans    http://www.fredamans.blogspot.com
August 29th, 2009 at 9:16 am

Thank you for the entry.

freda.mans[at]sympatico.ca

My favorite star-gazing memory was from age 6-7. My grandfather always took me for the Summer, and he had two boys my age that lived next door. We played together all the time. Well one starry night, we stayed up in the backyard, laying on a blanket… just talking. The talking led to my first kiss. Between the warm summer evening, and that kiss, it will stay with me always.

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12   Louise    
August 29th, 2009 at 12:08 pm

+1: In the 2005 film, why do you think Lizzy won’t allow Mr Darcy to walk her back to Lampton when they meet at Pemberley unexpectedly? It bugs me that she doesn’t!
+3: My favorite stargazing was just a month and a half ago: waking my 3 1/2 year old daughter to take her stargazing in an apricot orchard in the south of France. delightful to experience the wonder through her eyes.

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13   Sharon Lathan    http://www.darcysaga.net
August 29th, 2009 at 1:09 pm

Good morning everyone and happy Saturday!

Vee, thanks for stopping by. You are one of my best spokespersons!

Hi Diane! Wonderful stargazing experience. That is what my grandfather and I would do, just make up patterns. It was partially that humorous aspect that crept into my story as Lizzy makes up constellations and the ever-stuffy Darcy learns to enjoy the silliness as well.

To answer your question: Of course it is hard for me to imagine anyone besides Matthew Macfadyen and Keira Knightley. I am sure there are many British actors who could perfectly play the parts, but my mind is blank!

Thanks for tweeting the link, Bridget!

Ah Freda, what a lovely memory! The first kiss is special, even if one is so young. How sweet that you remember it. I am told by the fam that my first kiss was at about that age, with a family friend. Neither of us ever remembered, but the grown-ups loved to tease us about it! Thanks for sharing.

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14   Charles Ravndal    http://www.queerchef.com
August 29th, 2009 at 1:40 pm

So romantic! I find stargazing on the balcony with your partner quite romantic. Especially with a cup of warm tea on hand and some biscuits. Then just talk while admiring the beauty of the moon and stars.

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♥Shoshana reply on September 8th, 2009 4:28 pm:

That’s one of the best way to spend starry night, Charles.

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15   Lois    http://home.comcast.net/~loismerritt1013
August 29th, 2009 at 7:18 pm

Well, first off, I twittered at twitter.com/OV_099. . . I just signed up on facebook, and I put a mention there, but sure not sure what the url is for that, so I’m hoping this is it from the badge it created for my site — http://www.facebook.com/people/Lois-Merritt/100000225278700 — and if it doesn’t work, I’m Lois Merritt, with the space shuttle picture. :)

Okay, all that out of the way. . . my most memorable stargazing moment was some years ago, when it was a really good Mars opposition. (when Mars and Earth line up every two years, some are favorable, others not so much. . . and just ignore those emails that keep getting passed around, saying it’s getting to be the closest it’s ever been because they are outdated and wrong now. . . ) I tried it with the telescope I had, but didn’t know how to work the thing. Anyway, I really didn’t know what to look for, even though I was staring out the correct direction, but went away disappointed. The next day, duh moment. I was staring at it the whole time – stupid me was thinking it was going to be as large as the Moon, it’s not, nor will it ever (and if it does, we’re in some serious trouble!). So that reddish star I kept looking at, there was my Mars. Then I cried like a looney tunes. LOL Since I was 5 I wanted to be an astronaut, and most especially go to Mars, so obsessed little old me got to stare at it for a little while. Still haven’t gotten bored after that though. :)

Lois

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16   CherylS22    
August 30th, 2009 at 1:21 pm

+1 I’d ask Sharon how in the world she juggles it all – homemaker nurturing a husband and two children, plus the cat, dog, and fish; while also working as a Registered Nurse in a Neonatal ICU; & writing!
megalon22{at}yahoo{dot}com

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17   CherylS22    
August 30th, 2009 at 1:24 pm

+3 My favorite stargazing experiences occur in the dead of winter when there’s occasionally not a cloud in the sky. I usually just gaze from my driveway or my backyard. megalon22{at}yahoo{dot}com

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18   Sharon Lathan    http://www.darcysaga.net
August 30th, 2009 at 3:32 pm

Hi Charles! I love hearing from the menfolk! Not too often does the masculine side of our species step up and admit to enjoying romance. I love it when they do! By your words I can easily tell you are a romantic. See, I KNEW my Darcy was not a fantasy. :)

Lois, thank you for sharing your memory with us. I love the humor of it! I am one of those who can make no sense of the stars and planets. I just like to look into the sky.

Cheryl, LOL! I get asked that question ALL the time! And I always answer that I have no idea! HA! Thankfully I have an amazingly supportive family and children who are older and thus not needing “mommy” as much. But it is very difficult to juggle it all. The house isn’t as clean as it once was and I don’t even want to look at my yard! If I really stopped to think about it I would probably burst into tears. But in the end, it is worth it as I love all the jobs life has given me. OK, that isn’t totally true as I sure wouldn’t mind not being a housecleaning!

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19   Jenny N    
August 30th, 2009 at 5:33 pm

+3 I havent had any significant star gazing experiences and can only say that when me and my sister were little we would lay out on the deck in the summertime and look out at the stars

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20   Wanda    
September 1st, 2009 at 7:09 pm

My favourite stargazing experience was when I used to live out in the country as a child and my dad pointed out all the constellations. I can still remember that precious moment.
wandanamgreb (at) gmail (dot) com

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21   Sharon Lathan    http://www.darcysaga.net
September 1st, 2009 at 7:48 pm

Hi Jenny and Wanda! Thanks for dropping by and commenting.

Stargazing experiences do not have to be significant in a momentous way. Just the fact that you remember lying with your sister, Jenny, means that the moments were important to you. That is beautiful.

How cool, Wanda, that your dad knew the constellations! And how great that you have that memory to hold on to. Thanks for sharing.

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22   heatherzilla    
September 4th, 2009 at 5:12 pm

I love to stargaze at the beach; the ocean ahead and the stars above.

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23   Tracey    
September 7th, 2009 at 8:50 am

I’m looking forward in reading this series.

I posted on Twitter (bl0226)

Thanks.

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24   Cheli    http://chelisshelves.blogspot.com/
September 7th, 2009 at 1:34 pm

I’d ask what made herdecide to further the stories this way?

You are posted on my blog

Cheli
Cheli’s Shelves

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25   Sharon Lathan    http://www.darcysaga.net
September 8th, 2009 at 11:18 am

Glad people are still stopping by! Hi Heather, Tracey and Cheli. Hope you ladies do pick up my novels and enjoy them.

Cheli, There are so many reasons why I felt I HAD to continue this story that I can’t possibly write them all here! The question is a good one and you will find the complete story on my website: http://www.darcysaga.net

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♥Shoshana reply on September 8th, 2009 4:30 pm:

I’m really enjoying your books. They’re just what I wanted for Lizzy and Darcy.

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Sharon Lathan reply on September 9th, 2009 12:01 am:

Thank you Shoshana. That is why I continue to write them: the hope that there are more people like you in the world who believe in and enjoy happily-ever-after.

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26   Lena Lee    
September 10th, 2009 at 11:31 am

Sounds like I would like to read this.

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27   Jackie Wisherd    
September 13th, 2009 at 2:26 pm

It seems like the stars are so close you can touch them when you are camping out on the Arizona desert without buildings or trees or anything else to get in the way. I always loved it when my family camped out.

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28   karen k    
September 14th, 2009 at 3:13 pm

i like to gaze at the stars from my front porch…

would love to read these books.

karen k
kmkuka(at)yahoo(dot)com

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29   Patti    http://www.sleeplessinneworleans2.blogspot.com
September 14th, 2009 at 6:44 pm

This book sounds wonderfully romantic!

+1 Linked to my sidebar:
http://sleeplessinneworleans2.blogspot.com/
+1 Question: How much research do you do for each book and is it difficult to do since you have a regular job also?
+3 I live in a relatively big US city, but in 2005 I traveled to Uganda. My stargazing experience was exactly as you described in your interview – no noisy machines, no haze…I’ve never seen stars as clear and bright as I did while I was there. I literallly stopped in my tracks to stare up at the sky. I’ll never forget it, it was beautiful.

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30   Sharon Lathan    http://www.darcysaga.net
September 17th, 2009 at 7:13 pm

Hi Lena and Jackie. Thanks for commenting. I hope you enjoy my books, Lena, if you do decide to read then. Naturally I think they are fabulous!

Jackie, I live in smog dense California and have for most of my life. A few years ago we traveled to Montana and Wyoming. I was blown away by the crystal clarity of the sky – both day and night – and by the crispness of the stars. Arizona is amazing too. I lived there for a brief time, and it is the vastness of the uncluttered horizon in all directions that is mind-boggling.

I appreciate you sharing your memory with us. :)

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31   Deanna Walter    
September 20th, 2009 at 10:13 pm

+1 my question to Sharon would be “Do you prefer Colin Firth or Matthew MacFadyen as Mr. Darcy? Or someone else?”
+3 My favourite stargazing experience would be when I was 9 or 10 and I went to Girl Guide camp for a week. We went outside one night with star maps and we each had to find a constellation. I remember just getting lost in how bright it was and how small I felt. It was BEAUTIFUL!
+1 linked on twitter @DeannaWalter
I hope I win! I used to read Sharon’s chapters on her website before the books were published! I LOVE them :D

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2 Trackbacks/Pings

  1. Once This Book For Free ~ "Loving Mr Darcy" by Sharon Lathan Book Giveaway/Sept21 - CoolCanucks.ca - Canada    Aug 28 2009 / 5am:

    [...] Book For Free ~ "Loving Mr Darcy" by Sharon Lathan Book Giveaway/Sept21 Loving Mr. Darcy: Journeys Beyond Pemberley by Sharon Lathan| Guest Post, Review and Giveaway at Thi… [...]

  2. Book Giveaway - Two Sharon Lathan Books - Ends - 09-21-2009    Sep 02 2009 / 10pm:

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