Jennifer Becton
Auteur de Charlotte Collins
A propos de l'auteur
Séries
Œuvres de Jennifer Becton
Death Benefits (Southern Fraud Thriller, #2) 4 exemplaires
At Fault (Southern Fraud Thriller, #3) 2 exemplaires
Cancellation Notice (Southern Fraud Short Story) 2 exemplaires
Christmas Cheer (Holidays With Jane #1) 2 exemplaires
A Year with Jane Austen: Modern Austen Short Stories 2 exemplaires
Southern Fraud Thrillers, Box Set (Books 1-3) 2 exemplaires
Shock Loss (Southern Fraud Thriller 5) 1 exemplaire
The Personages of Pride & Prejudice Collection: Charlotte Collins, "Maria Lucas," and Caroline Bingley (2012) 1 exemplaire
The Personages of Pride & Prejudice Collection 1 exemplaire
Oeuvres associées
Naughty or Nice: 10 Unique Tales to Get You Through the Holidays (2013) — Contributeur — 3 exemplaires
Étiqueté
Partage des connaissances
- Sexe
- female
Membres
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Statistiques
- Œuvres
- 22
- Aussi par
- 1
- Membres
- 416
- Popularité
- #58,580
- Évaluation
- 3.8
- Critiques
- 32
- ISBN
- 14
- Langues
- 1
The first story, The Work of an Instant by Jennifer Becton, takes Persuasion and sets it on a modern Navy base. It seems a camo wearing Santa is granting all sorts of wishes this year including showing Anne Elliot that she still has a chance with the dashing Frederick Wentworth. Persuasion is my favourite Austen tale and Becton does it justice. What a fun way to tell the story! I felt myself blushing by how sexy the modern Wentworth was. Well done!
In Melissa Buell's Mischief and Mistletoe, the familiar Northanger Abbey heroine, Catherine Morland, is a modern day thrift store chic fashion designer. When she gets the chance to get away from her sheltered life, will meeting Henry Tilney be mischief enough or will she find herself in a worse situation? Buell's modern Catherine is spot on, exactly as I could see her if Austen had written her today. The updating of the story is flawless and interesting.
A Tale of Three Christmas is Rebecca Fleming's bittersweet twist of Sense and Sensibility. When the Dashwood girls lose their father near Christmas, a journal brings a little joy to Margaret Dashwood as she shares the ups and downs of her sisters' love lives, spread out over three Christmases. Fleming makes the Dashwoods Southern belles and the translation is perfectly fluid. The use of the journal to tell the story and give Margaret a chance to shine was refreshing and sweet. The magic of the journal was very touching (you have to read the story to know what I'm talking about...no spoilers here!)
I really enjoyed With Love, From Emma by Cecilia Gray. Emma Woodhouse is always playing matchmaker but what should she do when she realises that Lance Knightly is her knight in shining armor and not just that jerk that owns the bar down the street. Gray made Mr. Knightly sexy, something that I would have never thought before. Again, a great translation into the modern world with Emma being a very popular small town girl who isn't interested in her own love life but everyone else's is up for pondering!
It's a Wonderful Latte takes a slight left turn from the other stories. Jessica Grey turns Mansfield Park into It's a Wonderful Life, staring Jane Austen as the angel. It's a cute twist with Edmond Bertram becoming Evie St. Laurent, owner of Mansfield Perk (one of them at least) where she works with her best friend, Frank (Fanny in modern disguise). It's not until the Piper siblings come into the picture that Evie realises how much she really (really really) cares for, nay, loves Frank. The twist of the story was unexpectedly fun and the way Grey brought Austen to life was wonderful. I think it was the one I liked the most, if I was forced to pick. But I beg you not to, since all were fab!
Finally, Pride and Presents is Kimberley Truesdale's modern idea of Pride and Prejudice. The Bennet's run the local community center and they are barely keeping their heads above water. Enter the dashing Charles Bingley to save the day and win the heart of Jane Bennet...oh don't think Liz and Darcy aren't involved! Liz wants to take over so her father can retire. Leave it to Will Darcy to save the day when the paperwork they need to keep their lease gets conveniently 'lost'. All the magic of P&P is here with the right amount of modern changes to make it work. Truesdale brought all the best of P&P to her addition, making it a sweet urban Christmas story that anyone can relate to.
Each story made me smile and at times laugh out loud. The authors translated each to modernity with what seemed like little effort (but obviously took great thought!). This is something you could read each year to bring a little cheer into your holidays.
5 of 5 stars for keeping me entertained with lovely modern versions of Austen.
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