Authors: Monica Fairview
ISBN-13: 9781402225130, ISBN-10: 140222513X
Format: Paperback
Publisher: Sourcebooks, Incorporated
Date Published: October 2009
Edition: (Non-applicable)
As a literature professor, Monica Fairview enjoyed teaching students to love reading. But after years of postponing the urge, she finally realized what she really wanted was to write books herself. She has lived in Illinois, Los Angeles, Seattle, Texas, Colorado, Oregon and Boston as a student and professor, but now lives in London.
Did you know that Mr. Darcy had an American cousin?!
Fairview's (An Improper Suitor) contribution to the growing genre of Jane Austen offshoots imagines what happens to Caroline Bingley after her hoped-for marriage to Mr. Darcy falls through. To her shock, Caroline finds that her heart was truly engaged when it came to Fitzwilliam. Those hurt feelings have convinced her that she needs to be even more practical when it comes to marriage. Thus, in her initial interactions with Darcy's American cousin, Robert Darcy, she makes it abundantly clear that she is not for him. But her resolve is challenged when she is forced into proximity with the troublesome Robert. As the novel progresses, many of the familiar and beloved characters from Pride and Prejudice make an appearance to help or hinder the couple. And, surprisingly enough, given Miss Bingley's unlikability in the original work, Fairview manages to make Caroline sympathetic and the progression of her romance with the other Mr. Darcy heart-warming and charming. VERDICT Given the steady stream of sequels, prequels, and alternate tellings (e.g., Pride and Prejudice and Zombies), it's not surprising that the resulting books have been uneven—good, bad, and ugly. Fairview's effort falls squarely in the good category. This will appeal to Austen and Regency romance fans alike. [See also Jane Rubino and Caitlen Rubino-Bradway's Lady Vernon and Her Daughter: A Jane Austen Novel, p. 54, and Jane Austen and Ben H. Winter's Sense and Sensibility and Sea Monsters, p. 53.—Ed.]—Jane Jorgenson, Madison P.L., WI