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Darcy's Passions
 
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Darcy's Passions (Paperback)

by Regina Jeffers (Author)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)
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Darcy's Passions + The Darcys and the Bingleys (Pride & Prejudice Continues) + Mr Darcy's Diary
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Product details

  • Paperback: 308 pages
  • Publisher: Xlibris Corporation (16 Nov 2007)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 1425781284
  • ISBN-13: 978-1425781286
  • Product Dimensions: 22.4 x 15.2 x 2.5 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.co.uk Sales Rank: 46,220 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

    Popular in this category:

    #89 in  Books > Romance > Genres > Adult

Product Description

Synopsis

Regency England speaks of love and romance when Darcy's Passions brings to life once again Jane Austen's classic love story. An interpretation of Austen's Pride and Prejudice, Darcy's Passions tells the story from Mr. Darcy's point of view. When Fitzwilliam Darcy comes to Hertfordshire as a service to his best friend Charles Bingley, who has recently let the Netherfield Park estate, Darcy assumes the locals will possess "vulgar" country manners. So, when the opportunity arises, he refuses to dance with Elizabeth Bennet at the Meryton Assembly; however, from that moment, the woman's charms possess his every waking and sleeping minute. Obsessed with Elizabeth Bennet, Darcy places himself in a position to learn more about her while realizing his social status will not allow him to marry her. He manipulates Bingley and others in order to spend time with her. He tells himself Elizabeth Bennet is simply a "diversion" from the lack of society he finds in Hertfordshire. However, if she is only a diversion, then why does he dream of her as mistress of his estate? Why does he seek her out as a friend for his shy, withdrawn sister? Why does he allow her to speak to him with a saucy attitude?Why can he not even breathe when she is in the room?

Why does a raise of her eyebrow or an enigmatic smile or the smell of the lavender she wears create havoc with his emotions? His duty to his family and his estate demand he choose a woman of refined tastes. Yet, what his mind tells him he wants and what Darcy's heart knows he needs are two different things. Darcy is a man in turmoil. He loves a woman he first denies as being worthy, but it is he who is found wanting when Elizabeth Bennet refuses his proposal of marriage because he does not conform to her standards of a "gentleman." Devastated, he must transform himself into the man she learns to love and respect. With the help of his cousin, Colonel Fitzwilliam, and his sister Georgiana, Darcy learns before he can find real love with Elizabeth, he must first love himself, and an emptiness he has never been able to acknowledge must be filled. Along the way, Fitzwilliam Darcy discovers himself - the master of Pemberley, but also a man who graciously accepts the love and respect of others. Fitzwilliam Darcy in the original Pride and Prejudice is a very major "minor" character.He, obviously, is the hero of the tale, but the reader never really knows how he creates the changes we accept as part of his personality all along.

He is a man who has lived his whole life among strangers; he has never felt he belonged. He has a respected position, and he has done all the things to be counted as a success in the world, but he possesses an emptiness, which Darcy cannot define. We never see his vulnerability, his loneliness, and his passions. In the year from the time Darcy first meets Elizabeth Bennet until she accepts his second proposal, he is only in her life for a little over three months - from Michaelmas in late September to the Netherfield Ball in late November, for a fortnight at Rosings, and less than a week at Pemberley. What did he do during those separations to replace his desire for Elizabeth? How did he complete his transformation? What occupied his time? To whom did he turn for comfort and support? How did he become the hero and not the villain of the tale?Darcy's Passions takes Fitzwilliam Darcy from his initial meeting with Elizabeth Bennet through the many misunderstandings, which define their relationship, eventually leading through her acceptance of his proposal.

Unlike Austen's summary, the courtship, the honeymoon and the marriage become part of Darcy's transformation as the book takes the reader back to Pemberley, showing Elizabeth claiming a "niche" in the estate's history while Darcy learns love and control are not the same thing. When he nearly loses her for good, Darcy gives up the standards he has known all his life and accepts that the Pemberley


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Customer Reviews

5 Reviews
5 star:
 (3)
4 star:    (0)
3 star:
 (1)
2 star:
 (1)
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Average Customer Review
4.0 out of 5 stars (5 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Not Passionate about this one, 12 Mar 2008
By Mrs. D. J. Smith "eowyngreenleaf" (Luton, England) - See all my reviews
(TOP 500 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)      
I'm afraid I couldn't feel as enthusiastic about this one as the previous reviewer. It's another attempt to tell P&P from Darcy's point of view, and does go further than the end of the novel and into the beginning of married life. As far as the story itself was concerned, I didn't have a problem - it was what you might call psychologically plausible! I particularly liked the drawing out of Georgiana.

In the introduction the author says she has decided not to use Austen's dialogue, as it didn't sit with her own style of writing. Fair enough - I can appreciate this as who can write half as well as Austen? I think the trouble here is that many of the lines from P&P are so well known and that they are so cleverly filled with precise nuances and shades of meaning, that Jeffers' paraphrases look unnatural and sometimes clumsy by comparison. I always say that Austen never wasted a word, and I think this proves my point.

I also thought that in the post-proposal period it was a bit over the top with the constant `I love you' and `passion' and touchy-feely stuff! I'm not prudish, and I think that Darcy & Elizabeth would have had a passionate relationship, I just don't need to be told about it in every other line!

Finally, obviously the author is American, and American spellings in a book set in England in this period are one of my pet hates! No matter how hard I try, I cannot imagine Mr Darcy saying "I guess so" either! The book could also have done with a really good proof read as it was riddled with instances where it looked like someone had just clicked on `Yes' to the Spell Checker! Several times I had to try and puzzle out what the author actually meant.
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6 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Wonderfully Passionate., 27 Jan 2008
By Lynne Robson "Lynne Robson" (Dronfield, Derbyshire United Kingdom) - See all my reviews
I thoroughly enjoyed this book and did not want it to end. The insight into the passionate marriage of Fitzwilliam and Elizabeth was a joy to read. I also enjoyed the courtship as well.

I think that the best bit I liked in the courtship was when Lydia came home for her sisters wedding without of course her husband. She admits to now knowing what her husband is like but states that all she has is her child like innocence not like her sisters. I also like that Elizabeth tells Lydia that she and Darcy will not carry on supporting Wickham but she will send bits out of her pinn money to help Lydia herself not her husband. She also tells Lydia to tell Wickham that if he tries to come to Pemberley it will be her that will see him off with a gun and that she will enjoy shooting him. lol.

Many writers today give us Darcy's side of things. I must admit that this is the first which has gone further into married life. I have been reading on the authors site that she is to write a sequel and I must admit that I am looking forward to reading this.

I would like to say how highly I recommend this as a Pride and Prejudice sequel fan I must admit that this is one of the best out of the new ones so far. I now look forward with anticipation to the sequel Darcy's Dreams when it comes out.
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1 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Love the Insight into a Favorite Character, 14 Mar 2008
Most of us who love Pride and Prejudice, look for insights into our two favorite characters: Fitzwilliam Darcy and Elizabeth Bennet. This book satisfies that need. It stays with Austen's story line, offering what this author feels is a reliable interpretation of what Mr. Darcy was thinking during the "courtship" of Elizabeth Bennet. She extends that courtship through the first two months of their marriage. What I enjoyed is the character stays true to himself throughout. The author makes sure that each of his actions are within the "realm" of Darcy's character. What he does, he does honorably and with passion.
The language is the author's style, not Jane Austen's, but the situations are the same up until the proposal. We have all wondered what Darcy did all those months apart from Elizabeth; this book offers up a likely situation. Now, we also see what might have happened after the proposal and the marriage.
The author tells the story more through dialogue than did Austen's original probably because she has been influenced by media productions, but the woman's love of a true classic is evident at all times.
I found this interpretation very satisfying. Not every scene is how I would have imagined Darcy to have lived and acted, but they were all connected and within the scope of this interpretation. Some people judge works on their own interpretations. I judge works on their merits as a piece of reading, and I find this book has merit.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews

2.0 out of 5 stars The retelling of a story is not always successful.
Once I received this book I was very anxious to begin reading it. I am an avid fan of Pride and Prejudice and I have enjoyed many versions of the story from the perspective of... Read more
Published 1 month ago by J. Lesley

5.0 out of 5 stars a must buy sequel for passionate p&p fans
this is really an excellent sequel.
all characters stay true to the original as does the plot, and the way some of the original text is interwoven is excellent. Read more
Published 17 months ago by paul adams

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