07/06/2010

AVALON'S GIVEAWAY WINNER + CONSOLATION PRIZE FOR THE OTHERS!!!

Last weeek you had the opportunity to meet Avalon on Fly High!, in  my weekly chat with one of  My Blogger Buddies. Have you read her interview? It's really special ! And have you visited  Avalon's Blog? As I promised,  today the winner of her Bury My Heart At Wounded Knee (DVD)  will be revealed.
But, I'm afraid , I have to complain ... just a bit...I 'm always there begging you to add your e-mail addresses ladies and girls with no result at all... no way , not in this post at least! I know I must have  your addresses somewhere in my computer or on my blog since you already commented or wrote to me but could you please help me next time? I'm entering all the names because I'm sure  this is what Avalon wants, and this is HER giveaway, of course ....Next time ... I'll be inflexible!!!
Here is the list of contenders... (I hope I know the winner and I will be able to get in touch with her somehow! )

1. Linda Henderson
2. Mulubinba
3. M.Gray
4. Traxy
5. Jackie
6. time4t
7. TeeTotallyNot
8. Phylly3

And here's the winning number...


TeeTotallyNot!!!

Could you please get in touch with me (my e-mail address is on the right sidebar) and send me your address to arrange the mailing of the DVD to you with Avalon? Thanks a lot and ... congratulations!!!

Since most of the ladies in the list above are RA's admirers,  here is a consolation prize for those of them who didn't win... not a booby prize, is it?

Richard Armitage  at Bafta 2010, yesterday June 6th

05/06/2010

MY BLOGGER BUDDIES WITH GIVEAWAY- MEET PHYLLIS AND HER FAVES

Phyllis is one of my most supportive buddies, she hasn't missed an RA - Friday since I started the event and she is also often interested in my posts about books and period drama. From a fond reader she has recently turned into a devoted blogger herself with PHYLLY'S FAVES. I'm glad to let you know more about her, her life and her interests. If you read through her interview and leave your comment and e-mail address, you'll have the chance to win the book she's giving away: a brand new copy of Mrs Gaskell's  "Cousin Phillis" ,  a collection of short stories. The giveaway is open worldwide, the winner will be announced on Monday 14th.

So Phyllis, just to have a start, tell us something about yourself.
I am a Library-Technician who lives in a very small gold mining district, at the western edge of the second-largest province of Canada – Ontario. It is quite a long journey to the nearest city and there are no bookstores here -- very little shopping at all, but the natural beauty of the area compensates for this lack. You can drive for hours and see nothing but trees, lakes, rocks and more of the same. Watch out for wildlife as you drive – we have plenty of moose, deer, wolves, black bears, and unfortunately, skunks! You will also pass by many fishing camps along the way, as tourism is one of the other main industries here.
I was born here and have lived here all my life, except for a few years when I lived in a city in southern Ontario to complete my education. My husband and I were high school sweethearts so when I was finished school I moved back home, got married, and started a family. Both my daughter and son are now in University, one in southern Ontario, and the other in England. In between having a family I have worked in at a mine, a Public Library, an elementary school with two libraries in adjoining towns, a newspaper, a High School library and finally, in an elementary school library (in a different town)

(Phyllis is fond of frogs, so she always does a Froggy Theme for a week every spring)

 As a library technician books are your job. But are they also something you love? What kind of reader are you?
I have always loved books and can usually be found reading something – if there’s nothing to read around me I am not above reading cereal boxes (in French – just for the challenge!) I sunburn easily so my summers as a child consisted of me getting massively sunburned at the beginning of the season and then spending the rest of the summer inside reading until the sun lost its intensity in the latter part of the afternoon, when I would emerge again to commune with nature.
I don’t read books as much as I used to, I did tend to watch a bit too much television, but now I am more to be found on the computer reading blogs or watching online shows that aren’t available in Canada.

Have you got a very special book on your bedside table? One you love to re-read from while to while?
Right now I am reading "Cousin Phillis", a collection of short stories by my new favourite author, Elizabeth Gaskell. I am enjoying it very much although it is somewhat melodramatic, and although I try not to, each story has brought me to tears. It starts with her earliest short stories and ends with her last one, so it is nice to see the progression of her talent.
I recently purchased Gaskell’s “Wives and Daughters” but as it is a much weightier tome, I am saving it for my summer holidays. I am very fond of her “North and South” and I do return to it quite often to re-read sections.

I recently listened to the audio book “Venetia” by Georgette Heyer, read by Richard Armitage. Audio books are a new experience for me but as I was listening to such a wonderful performer, I will definitely want to hear more of the same!

I had read quite a few of Georgette Heyer’s books in my youth, so it was a real treat to revisit that author.


Watching online shows ... this is something which sounds extremely familiar ... reading blogs and writing blogs ... yes! It takes time but what pleasant hobbies! I just love them all. What are your favourite TV shows?
Hmmm! I like so many…and many different kinds, but I don’t really follow any faithfully except MI-5 (or Spooks) which I was a fan of before Richard Armitage became a part of it. The show in North America has not caught up with Season 7 (where he made his appearance) yet. So I had to watch the last 2 seasons online! (I also bought the DVD!)

I enjoy humourous programs – witty shows like “Frasier”, crazy shows like “The Office”, and political satire -- of which Canada’s “Rick Mercer Report” is my absolute favourite!

I love to watch movies, new or old. I used to wish I could watch all the Oscar winning movies since the beginning of Hollywood. Now I know that the ones that win the Oscar are not always the best ones! My favourite genre is historical fiction so I really enjoy a good period drama. I also love romances, but my favourite would be a romantic comedy. Critics like to put them down, but a good rom-com is just the best medicine for me!

I like documentaries, news shows, really anything topical that strikes my fancy – I was told by my Reference teacher that a good Reference Librarian should have a “garbage mind” – meaning she should know a bit about everything so that when someone asks about something it will be easier to understand what they are talking about. I have always been interested in almost anything, but right now my interests seem to be pretty focused on a certain actor!

 As for blogging, what do you think are the pros of this online activity? What do you most like about it?
I certainly like reading all the blogs that I frequent. It is a wonderful way to meet people around the world who are interested in the same things. I have met some wonderful people, like yourself Maria Grazia, who inspire me to read more, think more and do more of the creative things I enjoy! I guess I started my own Blog because I have always wanted to write something, and I suppose I felt I needed to explain my fascination with (that certain actor) to myself as well as to anyone else who might be interested.

What do you usually blog about?
My Blog is called Phylly’s Faves so it is pretty open-ended to be about anything that I like. But I am using it as a framework to explain why I am so enamoured with Richard Armitage – all my interests seem to have pointed toward my fascination with him.

Since you mentioned RA a few times, I guess you found my blog searching the Net for news about him, then. Do you mind telling us the story of how everything started for you? You know you’ll find sympathy in me and so many of my readers!
Well, it’s a familiar story all right! As I said, I love period dramas and I first saw North and South televised on a public television channel in Canada probably in the Fall of 2006. I enjoyed it immensely and wished I could watch it again, but it wasn’t available on DVD for awhile. I remember scanning catalogues to see if the DVD was out yet and when it finally was available, (about a year later) I hinted broadly to my husband that it would make a great Christmas present. For some reason, I did not think I should just buy it myself! I didn’t do much online ordering then and I didn’t own very many DVDs, so it didn’t really occur to me to buy it for myself. When my “hinting” didn’t work for 2 Christmases I was a bit miffed, so I left the catalogue out with the DVD circled in red marker and pronounced that the only thing I wanted for my birthday was this DVD! (Sounds bossy, I know – but I was desperate!)

My husband joked that he had no idea what to get me for my birthday – just to see me LOSE it! Well, when I finally received my birthday prezzie I was so happy and relieved (this was March 2009) that I posted a picture of the cover on Facebook with the caption: Best. Present. Ever!
My children were a bit put out because they gave me a copy of Rick Mercer’s Book, which was the 2nd best present ever!

Long story short – I watched the DVD right away and loved it again! But, I didn’t rewatch it over and over again, I wasn’t obsessed…yet! At the end of the summer I knew my daughter was going to England to finish her university studies and I wanted her to watch North and South with me because she was going to be around the same area as Manchester (where the story takes place). For some reason, when I watched it for the third time, I was suddenly overcome with the magnitude of Richard Armitage’s performance and I went to the computer almost immediately after watching to Google his name. The more I read about him the more I liked him, the more performances I saw, the more impressed I became! I am now completely addicted and a basket case!

What is it that you most appreciate in him? Your favourite among his characters?
I admire the way he completely inhabits his characters. He creates a complete back story for himself so that he can become the persona he has invented. I know that the writer actually creates the character initially, but the way Richard plays a character, you can see what he is thinking and feeling without a line of dialogue being said! He reminds me of the old silent film stars in that way, but he doesn’t over play the role or become melodramatic, it is all very subtle and natural.

My favourite among his characters! That is somewhat difficult to decide because I love them all for different reasons. The other character besides John Thornton that I fell in love with immediately was his portrayal of John Standring in “Sparkhouse”. I loved his transformation from a shy, awkward, love-sick farmhand to well-groomed, self-assured and strong helpmate to his romantic interest.

I also loved him in the Vicar of Dibley as Harry Kennedy. I really wish someone would offer him a comedy role. I think he’d be great in a romantic comedy and I don’t think it would be a waste of his talent, as some would say. Richard has a way of elevating any role he does into something better than it was originally conceived. The perfect example of this was his portrayal of Guy of Gisborne in the BBC’s Robin Hood series.
Originally this character would have been just a two-dimensional bad guy, but as Richard played him Gisborne developed into a flawed and tormented soul who was willing to change for the love of a good woman (Maid Marian). As soon as the writers realized what a talent they had unleashed they began to write better storylines for him, until he eventually outshone Robin Hood’s character completely!


You said your daughter is studying in England. Have you been there yourself? Would you like to go? Which places would you like to visit?
I have always wanted to visit England! My ancestors are from the British Isles; my mother’s father was the most recent immigrant. He came to Canada from London in the early part of the last century. My parents visited twice, but I have never been there. However, my husband and I are planning to go in July for three weeks! We are very excited about it.

There are so many places I’d like to see, and I doubt if I’ll be able to do it all in one trip, but we’ll do our best to see as much as possible. I’m very excited to see Northern England (which I have never been as interested in before reading North and South). Since I love history, visiting lots of castles, cathedrals and old homes will definitely be on the list. I will be happy to have a pint in a traditional English pub; hopefully there will be a sing-along! If I can scope out some of the locations of

North and South or the Vicar of Dibley, that would be a plus! I would like to visit Elizabeth Gaskell’s home in Manchester. I must go to Liverpool and immerse myself in some Beatlemania. I want to see Bath (is there still a Pump Room?), Brighton Beach, the White Cliffs of Dover, Stonehenge…do I have enough time to do it all?

 What are the things you most like doing?
I am a music lover and have very eclectic tastes there too. I enjoy all types of music, especially ones with good harmony, but the lyrics of a song are very important to me as well, so there are a few songs that I cannot like because of the lyrics alone. I have always wanted to learn to play the piano and recently my husband and I signed up for adult piano lessons! It has been quite challenging but very enjoyable as well. I love to sing and have participated in our church choir for many years. I have also discovered the joy of karaoke singing, and even have my own machine with quite a large collection of music!
(Speaking of music, I should mention how much I love the soundtrack to North and South -- just another reason why this miniseries is so marvellous.)
I love my job, especially when I can share my love of special books with students. Reading picture books, novels, or poetry aloud to a class is always fun and it is especially wonderful on those rare occasions when my performance elicits spontaneous applause! It is also a joy when I recommend a book to someone and they return to tell me how much they enjoyed it. I imagine you get that pleasure often yourself Maria Grazia, even from your Blog!

I also love my home away from home (only 5 minutes away) at our cottage on the lake. With fewer technological distractions as the sun is our main power source, I can get a lot more reading done. There is a lovely sandy beach where I love to swim (when the lake warms up), and we seem to do more entertaining of friends and family in the summertime.

(Phyllis wishes she had a Guy of Gisborne action figure to add to this scene!)


I have many interests but mostly I love to laugh, listen to music and sing -- and sometimes I do all three at once!

You’ve decided to give our readers and commenters the possibility to enter a giveaway of one of your favourite books. Can you explain the reasons for your choice?
Since I am enjoying “Cousin Phillis” right now, and my name is the same (but spelled slightly differently), I thought this title might be a suitable choice. I think you might have quite a few followers who enjoy Gaskell’s novels, but they may not be familiar with her short stories. The introduction to the book also has a very good discussion about the history of short story writing. Apparently short stories used to be frowned upon by the upper classes until people like Gaskell and Dickens began writing especially for the middle and upper classes. (That was news to me!)


THANK YOU PHYLLIS!!! IT'S BEEN A GREAT PLEASURE TO TALK TO YOU. TILL NEXT MEETING ON YOURS OR MY BLOGS!

So, now, dear readers and friends,  it's your turn. Leave a comment for Phyllis, don't forget to add your e-mail address and ... come back on Monday 14th to check who the winner of this giveaway is.

JANE IN JUNE - JANE AUSTEN'S JUVENILIA

When I studied Jane Austen at university I imagined her a middle-aged, strong -willed , intelligent woman who happened to live in the wrong age to fulfil her wish for independence and was, for that reason,  quite angry for her unlucky fate. I thought her as proud as Elizabeth, as sensible and good mannered as Elinore, quite reserved and very generous like Anne Elliot. Anyhow, I got the image of the serious, reserved spinster feeling rather superior to many other women who had to come to a compromise with marriage.

Reading her minor works, Lady Susan last summer , and these Juvenilia this weekend gave me a new image of Jane Austen. That of a lively, open-minded, humorous young woman who loved laughing, reading, gossiping and being under the spotlight.

04/06/2010

RA FRIDAY - WATERBOARDED , HE SPOKE!


1. LAST WEEK my RA Friday post contained a video quiz (click and see it) . A few of you took the time to watch it. Mulubinba and Phylly3 immediately guessed. It was not that hard, was it? Thanks for watching and commenting,  of course! For all the others , here’s the answer. The title of the clip is Strike Back quoting Spooks because … they used the same soundtrack. Have you noticed the music in the background while Lucas and Elizaveta talk is the same as that while John Porter is informally debriefed by his superior. I noticed it immediately, as I told you, because I had seen that scene from Spooks 7 more than once. Congratulations to those of you who guessed, then!

2. THIS WEEK I’d like to go on with the comparison . No quizzes, relax, but not too much. Tough issue, I'm afraid. I’m sure you noticed there is something more Spooks 7 and Strike Back have in common. You have to focus on the first two episodes of SB, those set in Iraq in which JP has to rescue reporter Katie Dartmouth (Orla Brady). What else do they have in common?




Waterboarding. Richard Armitage was again waterboarded as John Porter. But did Richard accept to be actually tortured this time too? It seems he did. I had doubts at first,  but watching carefully the sequence I think they didn’t use a stand-in. Though this time Richard didn’t talk about it at all, or did he? Promoting Spooks 7 he happened to discuss the shooting of that torture scene (series 7 ep. 3) in detail in many interviews, this time he didn’t even mention it, if I’m not wrong. Has he told anything about waterboarding in SB?

In 2007 Richard declared that consultants from both the CIA and the FSB, the Russian intelligence service, assured him that waterboarding was much more of a psychological device of extracting information, “a humane way of extracting information without hurting people”. According to Kudos Film & TV, producers of Spook , there was a health & safety advisor on the set and Lucas /Richard was totally in charge during the filming to the extent that there was an agreed upon signal that he could end the procedure should it become too much to handle. Richard said the signal was given somewhere between 3 and 5 seconds. He couldn’t resist more and he also said it was definitely awful. It was not a psychological device, a humane procedure but a real physical torture.

Think about it … It must be terribly hard - though you know you can stop it waving your hand. Think how stressing it can be when one - Richard - has not got a very good relationship with water. Reading what Richard said in 2007 can help us realize what a physical and psychological effort it may be even to a strong and fit man as he is.

Here are some articles/interviews in which Richard talked about it ( The Telegraph co.uk, Times Online and Daily Mail Online) . It seems Richard was really shocked by the experience. So it is incrdible that he  accepted to repeat it for Strike Back. I personally wouldn’t do it. But knowing his extreme sense of duty and his wish for authenticity in  acting, I suspect he might have done it again.


Richard goes on saying he is nothing like the tough blokes he has or had to play in Robin Hood, Spooks or Strike Back , that he could never be a good soldier like John Porter, but maybe he undervalues his strength. What makes a man heroic? was the title of my interview with author Beth Pattillo. I agree with her answer to my question: "I think a man who is a hero is strong enough to know when he can be weak, courageous enough to know when to be afraid..."

3. INTERVIEWS . I’ve loved reading Richard’s latest interview in The Mirror (it seems conducted on the SB Premiere but came out only on 30th May) and listening to the second part of the audio recording David Stephenson, TV editor for the Sunday Express, released from his interview with Richard a few weeks ago. Actually,  they didn’t have to waterboard him to extract information. He just seems to like speaking about himself, his work, his future plans.

From the audio interview
- It’s interesting to know  how much he cares for his Richard III project. (20 episodes? I’d love to see such a long costume series with Richard as the protagonist!)

- To listen to his voice talking about his middle-aged, quite well-educated , radio 4 listener fans is less disagreeable than reading the same words as they were put in the article by the journalist. The tone of his voice was caring and respectful, not ironic at all. He explained he knows the attention to him came through his John Thornton but it has then gone on . His fans even watched Robin Hood which was meant for kids ( black leather – clad Gisborne for kids? ) and now were ready to see Strike Back ... but maybe not to approve of it (He still doesn’t know or can't imagine how much his admirers are ready to widen their horizons!)


- He also jokes about working in the movies and going to America . Does he really want to do it? He doesn’t sound so sure. He seems to prefer Rupert Penry- Jones staying there and he being engaged in good British productions. But … who knows what he actually wants?
From the Mirror
- He still can’t believe he is considered sexy, a hot date, the not-so-much-secret dream of many a woman . A beanpole with a nose?!? That gorgeous giant?

- He was wearing Italian designer clothes at the SB Premiere (Dolce and Gabbana suit + Prada shirt) but usually wears Lucas’s clothes. He doesn’t like shopping for clothes. Neither do I.

- He would like to get married and have children but suffers from a sub-form of the Peter Pan syndrome: he doesn’t feel about 40 but 25 in his mind! ( I sympathize with him, I always remove how old I am!) Anyhow, my husband got married at 25 and had his first child at 26 … with me, of course. So, if he is 25 at least in his mind, it is not that early… what does he need? To find the right woman. Let’s see…
- His dream woman should be a bit naughty and should love eating. Just that? Why hasn’t he found one yet? It shouldn’t be so difficult … naughty and loving food…. The world must be full of women like that. But of course, he was joking. I'm sure he must want much more.

- His love life is nil. He’s not in a relationship any longer – He’s working too much – but he would like to settle down at some point. That’s probably why he’s going to LA soon... What does that mean? The naughty, food loving lucky, very lucky girl must be American and from LA? ( I found this answer to the question “ how’s your love life?” rather awkward). Did I get it wrong? Well, I’m Italian, that is, English is a foreign language to me, after all.
- Then we learn about his being addicted to skiing , his being very proud of his grey 2-year-old  BMW, his being able to plumb and sand floors and not fearing to remain unemployed if his phone stops ringing, his nostalgic dragging out his cello from the loft recently.

- He started the interview drinking water (good!)   but ended up with a glass of white wine ( better!) , he is a gent and helped the journalist to see  SB screening (she had forgotten the tickets!)

So what? Well… I feel that the more one reads/listens to his interviews the more one must admit he is so incredibly... human. Not an alien from the stardom planet.  He's just very … Can you help me? Which is the right adjective to you? ( Have I already told you my favourite among his performances are ... his interviews? Yes, in Richard being Richard )

COMING SOON ... RICHARD AT BAFTA 2010
Sunday June 6th
(Fingers crossed for Spooks!)

03/06/2010

THROWBACK THURSDAY - MRS DALLOWAY by VIRGINIA WOOLF (1925)

For this event hosted by Jenny at TakeMeAway , this time I've chosen a beautiful novel I've been recently re-reading pages from with my students, MRS DALLOWAY by  Virginia Woolf. Throwback Thursday is a corner to write about good reads from the past. Those books we so much loved and we don't want to forget .

I've been teaching about epiphanies in Joyce as well as  moments of being in Virginia Woolf and I think I've  had one while reading Mrs Dalloway with my students few days ago.

" ... Clarissa Dalloway has recently  turned 51 ... The novel covers one day from morning to night in her life. Clarissa Dalloway, an upper-class housewife, walks through her London neighborhood to prepare for the party she will host that evening. When she returns from flower shopping, an old suitor and friend, Peter Walsh, drops by her house unexpectedly. The two have always judged each other harshly, and their meeting in the present intertwines with their thoughts of the past. Years earlier, Clarissa refused Peter's marriage proposal, and Peter has never quite gotten over it. Peter asks Clarissa if she is happy with her husband, Richard, but before she can answer, her daughter, Elizabeth, enters the room. Peter leaves and goes to Regent's Park. He thinks about Clarissa's refusal, which still obsesses him... (Clarissa Dalloway is 51!?!) "

(Young Clarissa refusing Peter Walsh)

I went on talking to  my silent 19-year-old students ,  I was telling them something  about the plot of this novel before reading some passages to them when ...my heart leapt into my mouth... I was talking about Clarissa Dalloway as if she was so much older than me but she actually wasn't! I'm not that far from her age! Why hadn't I realized before? Last year, for instance? Because my mind goes on kind of disconnected from my age. Does this happen to any of you? Not that I go on acting as if I were in my twenties but, I must admit , I have to make an effort to remember how old I am  when asked. And when,  after the effort of recalling,  the answer comes to my mind ... oh, gosh! ...my heart leaps into my mouth, just as it happened while explaining  Woolf to my students. Does this actually means I am becoming old?  What I'm sure of is that I read Virginia Woolf's Mrs Dalloway with a greater sense of self - recognition this year.

Let's go on with the plot of the  novel...

The point of view then shifts to Septimus, a veteran of World War I who was injured in trench warfare and now suffers from shell shock. Septimus has an Italian wife, Lucrezia, they pass time in Regent's Park. They are waiting for Septimus's appointment with Sir William Bradshaw, a celebrated psychiatrist. Before the war, Septimus was a budding young poet and lover of Shakespeare; when the war broke out, he enlisted immediately for romantic patriotic reasons. He became numb to the horrors of war and its aftermath: when his friend Evans died, he felt little sadness. Now Septimus sees nothing of worth in the England he fought for, and he has lost the desire to preserve either his society or himself. Suicidal, he believes his lack of feeling is a crime. Clearly Septimus's experiences in the war have permanently scarred him, and he has serious mental problems. However, Sir William does not listen to what Septimus says and diagnoses “a lack of proportion.” Sir William plans to separate Septimus from Lucrezia and send him to a mental institution in the country.

This theme of shell - shocked veterans from WWI is quite recurrent on my blog these days (Regeneration, A Month in the Country) and I do  find it quite interesting . It is especially interesting to see how Woolf deals with it. In fact,  she wrote “I adumbrate here a study of insanity and suicide; the world seen by the sane and the insane side by side” (14 October 1922).  At the end of this story Septimus will choose death and Clarissa Dalloway life (and old age),  but all through the day they will often be in the same places in London reacting differently to the same events, watching with different eyes the same reality. They share much, though.

 Let's go back to my notes...

(Clarissa accepts Richard's proposal)

Constantly overlaying the past and the present, Clarissa strives to reconcile herself to life despite her potent memories. For most of the novel she considers aging and death with trepidation, even as she performs life-affirming actions, such as buying flowers. Though content, Clarissa never lets go of the doubt she feels about the decisions that have shaped her life, particularly her decision to marry Richard instead of Peter Walsh. She understands that life with Peter would have been difficult, but at the same time she is uneasily aware that she sacrificed passion for the security and tranquillity of an upper-class life. At times she wishes for a chance to live life over again. She experiences a moment of clarity and peace when she watches her old neighbor through her window, and by the end of the day she has come to terms with the possibility of death. Like Septimus, Clarissa feels keenly the oppressive forces in life, and she accepts that the life she has is all she'll get. Her will to endure, however, prevails.


 

 I love this novel, melancholic and tragic as it is, I just love it.

( The pictures and the clip in this post are taken from  Mrs Dalloway 1997 )

01/06/2010

JANE IN JUNE - WHAT MAKES A MAN HEROIC ? BETH PATTILLO ANSWERS MY QUESTIONS ABOUT HER LATEST NOVEL , MR DARCY BROKE MY HEART

Beth Pattillo is a talented American writer of women’s fiction born Texan and now living in Nashville. Her most recent publications are two successful Austen-based novels, Jane Austen ruined my life and Mr Darcy broke my heart, but she wrote many others! I’m glad she accepted to answer some questions about her latest book, which I have recently read , and accepted to be my guest on FLY HIGH! This interview opens my Jane in June events. Jane in June is hosted by Misty at her Book Rat .

Leave your comment after reading this interview and do not forget to add your e-mail address. You’ll have the chance to win an autographed copy of MR DARCY BROKE MY HEART by BETH PATTILLO. The giveaway is open worldwide. The winner will be announced at the end of the month, on June 30th.

Here's my interview!

 

 
 
 I’ve recently read and reviewed your delightful Mr Darcy’s Broke my Heart. I rated it 5 out of 5 stars on Goodreads and wrote a post about it on My JA Book Club. It was such a pleasant reading. I particularly liked the idea of the two books in one, I mean, Claire’s story interwoven to her reading of Jane Austen’s manuscript of First Impressions. Do you really think Austen’s first draft of our beloved P&P was so different from the final version or was it just something you needed for the plot of your novel?
Austen wrote First Impressions when she was nineteen, and then returned to it when she was thirty, so I’m sure the novel changed significantly simply because of her greater ability as a writer and her enhanced life experience. Whether it changed as much as I portrayed in Mr. Darcy Broke My Heart is anyone’s guess, but my verison of First Impressions gave me the chance to raise the whole question of what makes a man heroic. I think it’s terrific that we can all ‘play’ together in this wonderful world of ‘three or four families in a country village’ that Jane Austen created for us.

What is your personal relationship with Mr Darcy? As for me, for instance, I prefer Mr Knightley, Captain Wentworth or Henry Tilney to him.
I love the relationship between Elizabeth and Darcy, because I think they both have to overcome a significant flaw in their character before they can appreciate the other. Darcy is perhaps the ultimate challenge for an Austen heroine.  For myself, I would choose Captain Wentworth. I love a reunion story and Persuasion, for me, is Austen’s most meaningful ‘happily ever after.’

 I’ve stolen a question from the final discussion proposed in the last pages of your book: Mr Darcy has truly become an iconic hero. But what makes a man a hero?
I think a man who is a hero is strong enough to know when he can be weak, courageous enough to know when to be afraid, patient enough to put up with a strong-willed woman, and loving enough to put his beloved’s needs ahead of his own. I think, too, that a woman has to show these same characteristics to be considered a true heroine.

Among the Mr Darcys we have had on screen, who is your favourite one?


Colin Firth. ‘Nuff said.
James Beaufort, Claire’s Mr Darcy in your novel , is “like a Michelangelo statue come to life” . Who inspired this character?
I wanted James Beaufort to be that ideal that so many women secretly long for. So he had to be incredibly good looking! I think we’ve all had that experience, women and men alike, of seeing someone who was so physically perfect that our jaws dropped. That’s the reaction I wanted to see in Claire.

I was moved by Claire’s final choices, though I don’t want to give big spoilers away, I must ask. Do you agree with me on the fact that sometimes we idealize literary heroes and dream about perfection to the point of not realizing our “Mr Darcy” is just at hand?
I don’t think women confuse the hero of a romantic novel or film with real life, but I think it’s important to remember the things that matter. My favorite love stories are ones where love is right under the characters’ noses all along. I’ve seen that in real life, when someone really opens their eyes one day and realizes the person they’ve been searching for is right there in front of them. That’s a great moment!

Your story of the manuscript is partly inspired to Jane Austen’s flirt with Tom Lefroy . Do you think it was really that crucial in her life? Have you seen the movie Becoming Jane based on those events in Jane’s life? What do you think about it?
I thought that Becoming Jane was really well done, but like so many of the Austen-inspired books and movies, much was made out of very little. I’m not casting stones – I did the very same thing in Jane Austen Ruined My Life. Honestly, I don’t think we’ll ever know whether Tom Lefroy was the love of her life or simply a flirtation and a fancy.



Since I’m a period drama addict and I really like Austen adaptation, I ‘d love to know if you like watching them, if you’ve got a favourite/favourite one/s?
I adore all the Jane Austen adaptations. I tend to rotate among them, but now, with the help of iTunes, I can carry all the Lizzies and Emmas and Elinors and Annes with me wherever I go. Bliss! The Amanda Root/Ciaran Hinds version of Persuasion is at the top of my list, I have to say. Recently, I’ve enjoyed the newer Andrew Davies-penned version of Sense and Sensibility.

Guess what, I’d love to see a film based on your MR DARCY BROKE MY HEART. It’d be great fun. If you were asked would you accept? If you could also suggest names for the leading actors/actresses, who would you choose as your Claire-James-Neil?
I would love to see someone make a film or television movie from the book. I’m currently enamored of Matthew Morrison of Glee, so he could play Neil. (If he’s not available, I’ll take John Krasinski.) I’m not sure about who should play James. And as for Claire – maybe Amy Adams? She’s not super glamorous but is pretty and perky. I think Claire has a lot of resiliance and that’s what I’d love to see come through on the screen.


Are you working on a new Austen-based novel? Can you tell us anything about it?
’m currently writing a third Austen-related novel. The title is still under construction, but the book will tell the story of three sisters on a Jane Austen walking tour in Hampshire who come into possession of Cassandra Austen’s diary. Mrs. Parrot of the Formidables makes an appearance, so there’s sure to be intrigue!

Thank you, Beth! It’s been very kind of you and definitely a great pleasure to me !

Now for the giveaway of an autographed  copy of MR DARCY BROKE MY HEART, leave your comment and e-mail address here and …GOOD LUCK everybody! Winner announced on June 30th.

Good Jane in June to you all!

Have a look at my schedule for the event at My Jane Austen Book Club! You’ll find another double giveaway there!