Friday, October 16, 2015

Playing Catch-up Again...

Here I go again, playing catch-up on listing some past winners of books and eBooks on my blog. All winners have been notified and all have responded. I offer my sincere apology to all of you, dear readers, for my lapse in posting the winners. It has been entirely too long in coming. I promise I will try to be more prompt with my posts. Please know, that the authors have nothing to do with the lack of winners's posts. It is all on me and I take full responsibility.
I appreciate each of you and your support of More Agreeably Engaged.

I will start from the most recent giveaway and work backward.

Sketching Character by Pamela Lynne

eBook: tgruy
eBook: BookLuver88


A Jane Austen Christmas by Carlo DeVito

 Hardcover: Regina Jeffers


As Good as a Lord by P.O. Dixon

Paperback:  Dung Vu
eBook:  Patty Edmisson


Yours Forevermore, Darcy by KaraLynne Mackrory

eBook:  Eva


Denial of Conscience by Cat Gardiner

Paperback: tgruy
eBook:  Anji


Take a Chance On Me by Marilyn Brant

eBook:  Nik Baur


In Appreciation to Readers ~ Jan Hahn

Prize Package + Amazon Gift Card:  Luthien84
Prize Package:  Mrs. Darcy
Prize Package:  Tina Carter
Prize Package:  Chiari Lanzi
eBook:  Tiffany


Jane by the Sea by Carolyn Murray

eBook:  Eva
eBook:  BeckyC


Mr. Darcy to the Rescue by Victoria Kincaid

eBook: Michelle Fidler


Miss Georgiana Darcy of Pemberley by Shannon Winslow

Paperback:  Anonymous
eBook:  tgruy
eBook:  Luthien84


A Constant Love by Sophie Turner

eBook:  Anna


Sweet Caresses by Sarah Johnson

eBook:  tgruy


Inspired by Grace by Jeanna Ellsworth.

Choice of Paperback or eBook:  NovElla


Suddenly Mrs. Darcy by Jenetta James

Paperback:  rayvness79


Yours by Design by Robin Helms

Paperback:  BeckyC
eBook:  NikBaur


A Will of Iron by Linda Beutler

eBook:  VesperMeikle

Again, I apologize for my tardiness in posting these winners. 
Congratulations to each of you and I hope you will continue to visit my blog.

A special thanks to all the authors who make our reading time possible
and who have these wonderful giveaways. We love your books!

Tuesday, October 13, 2015

Joana Starnes and The Unthinkable Triangle

It is such a pleasure to welcome Joana Starnes to my blog today. I have been following her writing since her first book, From This Day Forward: The Darcy's of Pemberley, was published and she was a guest on my blog June 19, 2013 . It has been exciting to 'be along for the ride' with the release of each of her novels. I can honestly say, I have truly enjoyed each of them and can hardly wait to delve into this latest one, The Unthinkable Triangle. As I have mentioned before, Joana, you certainly know how to torture poor Mr. Darcy! You always give him his happily ever after but he definitely has to earn it! :)

I am so glad to have you visit again during your busy blog tour. Thank you for stopping by and for offering my readers a chance to win your new novel.

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Many thanks, Janet, for having me as your guest today. It’s always a great pleasure to be at ‘More Agreeably Engaged’, especially as you were the very first to welcome me ever so warmly, when I started publishing my books.

Available on Amazon

My visit today is again part of a blog tour, this time for the launch of my latest novel, ‘The Unthinkable Triangle’, a story based on a love triangle between Elizabeth, Mr. Darcy and Colonel Fitzwilliam. Predictably, throughout a large part of the story, Mr. Darcy is caught between his all-consuming love for Elizabeth and his longstanding affection for his cousin and, with his ingrained sense of honour added to the mix, we can imagine the depth of his struggles.

I hope this is not really a spoiler, nor would it come as a great surprise to anyone that in the end he must receive his just reward, and the hand and heart of the woman he loves would compensate for all the sorrow.

As the plot twists and turns, it just so happens that they reach their understanding in the spring. It was not planned so, not as such, and it was largely by happy chance that they should come together at a time when, after the bleakness of a long, desolate winter, the world around them, just like Darcy’s own world, bursts back into life and bloom.

By happy coincidence again, I happened to visit Chatsworth in the spring, earlier this year. Perhaps now I should mention, with proper apologies to Matthew Macfadyen’s fans, that I did not go looking for Pemberley at Chatsworth, and that I write for a different Mr. Darcy. Nevertheless, it is at Chatsworth that I found some magical quiet corners that fitted so beautifully with my latest story.

In our writing, we are all influenced by what we find around us, and it is one of the greatest joys when, somewhere or other in this ‘green and pleasant land’, I come across a spot that reflects what I have imagined, or better still, provides small nuggets of inspiration for other scenes to come.

The place where Mr. Darcy and Elizabeth finally come to acknowledge their feelings for each other is not meant to be part of a grand estate, but of a fairly modest one, nothing like Chatsworth. Still, this is where I found open fields covered in spring blooms, and paths meandering under barren trees, and a very pretty little glade where a small temple stood, surrounded by daffodils.

I must say that the temple, although lovely, secluded and perfectly suited as the backdrop for the following excerpt, was in fact too modern for a Regency story. Not ‘a small Greek temple’ but Victorian in appearance, which is why I resorted to artistic licence and later had some fun with photo-shopping and moving temples up and down the country. In real life, this garden folly is at Cliveden, within sight of Windsor. But for the purpose of ‘The Unthinkable Triangle’, it stands in a small glade in the north of England and is about to shelter our favourite couple when, after months of secrecy and turmoil, Mr. Darcy begins to hope that he might have his heart’s desire at last.

* * * *

“Come,” Darcy urged again and tucked her hand into the crook of his arm, their fingers still tightly interlaced, a poor substitute for the much greater closeness they both craved.

He led her out into the garden, then down the gravelled path that sneaked away from the house beneath tall pines and barren trees, through the wide expanse of fresh green dotted with daffodils.


They did not stop to sit on any of the benches found along the way. There was no hope of privacy there either. Elizabeth could not care less where they were headed, nor that they soon must have their heart-wrenching conversation. She firmly pushed aside all thought of the dreaded future to savour this. The intimacy. The closeness. The certainty that he loved her. The feel of his warm hand clasping hers as though afraid that, should his hold slacken, she would vanish into thin air. Which was precisely what he felt: the most unsettling admixture of wild joy, tainted with the deepest fear that it might not last. […]

She looked down at her swishing skirts, blurred by yet another film of tears. She heard him sigh, and still would not turn to glance into his face, dreading the anguish she knew she would find there. Instead, she kept her eyes ahead, on the winding path that was now branching into another, a narrower one weaving its way through evergreens that made room here and there for leafless magnolias seemingly poised to burst into flower.

He led her down the new path and their further progress eventually revealed a garden folly shaped as a small Greek temple, which might well have been his intended destination.


Doubtlessly they would be assured of privacy there, far from the house and screened by the curtain of greenery that was only opened on one side, into a little glade overgrown with daffodils.

A bench stood in the deep recess of the temple, yet neither chose to sit. Instead, in wordless accord, they turned to face each other and Elizabeth raised her eyes to his at last, to find not anguish, but a warm glow that was infinitely more affecting.

They came together without haste this time, without the rush of feeling that had pervaded their earlier kiss, but in joint recognition that this was where they had to be. In each other’s arms, his lips slowly exploring her face, inch by soft inch. The wide brow, smooth and cool under trailing ringlets. A closed eye. A cheekbone. A cheek growing steadily warmer with a creeping blush. The other cheek, where his lips lingered whispering endearments, before descending at an exquisitely unhurried pace to find her own. The corner of her mouth first, and he lingered there too as she waited, eyes closed and breathless, until she could wait no longer and turned her head a fraction, to fully yield her lips to his.

* * * *

If you would like to know what sort of circumstances have conspired to influence Elizabeth’s decisions, please leave a comment to enter the giveaway of a Kindle copy, available internationally. The giveaway ends at 11:59 PM on 19th of October, 2015. Don't forget to include your contact info in the comment. Thanks for stopping by, best of luck in the giveaway and thanks again, Janet, for welcoming me here as your guest.

You can connect with Joana Starnes on:
Or visit ‘The Unthinkable Triangle Facebook page’ for details of giveaways and other images that have inspired this story.

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Joana Starnes, it is always a such pleasure to have you as my guest and you are welcome anytime! I'm so happy to be a part of your blog tour and to have the chance to share with my readers this extremely enticing excerpt! Now I most assuredly cannot wait to start reading The Unthinkable Triangle. I have been anticipating it since I first heard it was 'in the making'! Thank you again for popping in and tantalizing us with this teaser! 

If any of you want to read past posts on this blog by Joana Starnes, just click the links below.

Past Posts:

From This Day Forward: The Darcy's of Pemberley 
The Subsequent Proposal post
The Second Chance 
The Falmouth Connection

Buy Link to All Books:

Joana Starnes Author Page on Amazon

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Dear readers, don't forget to comment to be entered in the giveaway for your chance to read more of this novel by Ms. Starnes. Good luck to all.

Saturday, October 10, 2015

The Last Waltz with Pat Santarsiero

Available on Amazon
Happy Saturday to you, Dear Readers! I hope you have a great weekend. My guest today is giving away two boos so that should get you off to a good start!

I would like to welcome Pat Santarsiero back to More Agreeably Engaged. The last time she was here was November 2, 2013, after the release of Thursday's Child. Now she is here to tell us how her newest book, The Last Waltz, came into being. I am so glad to have to visit again, Ms. Santarsiero. It is a pleasure.

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How and when did your interest in Jane Austen and Pride and Prejudice take root?

I would love to be able to tell you that I discovered Jane Austen as I sought to broaden my literary horizons, but the truth is I never read Pride and Prejudice, or for that matter any of Jane Austen’s novels, until I watched the 1996 BBC version of Pride and Prejudice, starring Colin Firth.  It was lust at first sight!

I became obsessed (a fortunate or unfortunate personality trait, depending on your point of view) with both Colin and Jane Austen, in that order.  Though I admit my motives at the time were not exactly literary, they did get me started down a certain path.  I soon had read every novel Jane had written and before I knew it, I was scouring P&P fanfiction websites for my weekly fix.  Eventually, I took the plunge and decided to write a story of my own.

Available on Amazon
Thursday’s Child was my first attempt at writing anything.  I never thought I had a talent for writing and had never even given it a thought.  But the idea of that story was so strong that I decided to give it a try. No one was more surprised than I was, when it was received so well.  Even then, I thought it was just a fluke.  I doubted that I would ever write another one, but here I am, telling you about my new book, The Last Waltz

Do you have a muse that causes your story to lead you at times or do you use an outline and follow it religiously? 

I have no outline, just a sketchy idea of how I want to start and how I want to end.  I have certain scenes pictured in my mind that I know I want to use.  I find inspiration in almost everything.  Music is one I rely on a lot.  If there is a song that makes me feel a certain emotion, I try to emulate that feeling in my writing.  One of the strangest places in which I found inspiration was a J. Peterman Catalogue!  So you never know what is going to trigger your imagination.  I really do try to get inside my characters’ heads and feel what they are feeling at the moment.  They tell me in which direction the story will go.

Tell us something about your newest book that you love the most.

It’s difficult to know where to start.  As with Thursday’s Child, The Last Waltz was a labor of love.  But I was lucky in one aspect as I believe the hardest thing about writing a new story is coming up with a good premise that you can build an interesting story around.  That difficult task was handed to me on a silver platter.  It started when I was first posting chapters of Thursday’s Child on a fanfiction website.  After each posting I would get dozens of comments.  After one particular chapter that had Caroline Bingley at her most despicable, comments flooded in as to how they would love to see me kill her off.  Suggestions ranged from being attacked by bees to an apoplectic fit.  When one reader suggested a FCA, I had no idea what it meant.  My commenters quickly informed me that it meant ‘freak carriage accident’.  I explained I had no FCA planned for Thursday’s Child, but would consider it for my next book.

So, naturally, I became obsessed with the idea and a FCA is the premise for The Last Waltz.  The possibilities seemed endless, but it was my own personal experiences and emotions that I was able to draw upon allowing me to give an authentic voice to my characters.  I can’t really say more without revealing too much of the storyline. But what I love most about this story is that I think every woman who reads it will be able to relate to this Elizabeth Bennet on some level.  We all have our own insecurities about ourselves, whether real or imagined, and this Elizabeth Bennet is no exception.  Whether she will learn to overcome them or allow them to dictate her life is the question.

I also like that I gave Mr. Bennet a fairly significant role in this story.  Since I killed him off at the very beginning of Thursday’s Child, I thought at least I owed him that much!

What have you learned from writing that has helped you in your daily life?

Well, first the most important thing that I learned from this whole experience is that you never know where life is going to take you.  When I think of how I got started on this journey (that would be my lusting after Colin Firth), it is almost unbelievable to me that it has led to my publishing two books. 

What I’ve learned from my writing is that if you have the desire to do something, you should just take a chance and do it.  You might discover that you have a talent you didn’t even know you had.  Nothing ventured, nothing gained as they say. Whether you succeed or fail, you should never regret trying something new.  I have friends who have told me I have inspired them and I must admit that I am more confident in my own abilities since I have taken up writing. 

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Both books are available on Amazon
The Last Waltz
Thursday's Child

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Well, I for one, am happy that you chose to write another book. It was good that the suggestions inspired you. I enjoyed Thursday's Child and found the premise believable because of the way you wrote the characters and story line. I look forward to reading The Last Waltz and seeing what you have in store for us this time. Thank you for answering these questions and for sharing your thoughts.

I also want to thank you for the giveaway. As I mentioned at the beginning of this post, Pat Santarsiero is giving away two copies of The Last Waltz. A domestic winner will have their choice of eBook or soft cover. An international winner will receive an eBook. To be entered, leave a comment and please include your contact info. The giveaway ends at 11:59 PM 16 October, 2015. Good luck to all.

Tuesday, October 6, 2015

Pivotal Points with Pamela Lynne

Available on Amazon
Good morning, dear readers. I have the pleasure of welcoming Pamela Lynne as a first time visitor to More Agreeably Engaged. This stop is part of her blog tour for her second book, Sketching Character.  Pamela, I am so happy to have you visit with us today and tell us a little bit about yourself and your books. I loved reading about the pivotal points in both books! Awesome!

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The people who know me well outside of JAFF will not be surprised with this next statement. I am a
non-finisher. Unmatched socks will always be left in the laundry basket. The sink will contain at least one dirty dish after the dishwasher is filled. I have a cabinet packed with partially completed craft projects and I fall asleep during movies. To put it simply, I bore easily.  Unsurprisingly, when I told my husband I had started writing again (I had not written fiction since college), he gave me a very dismissive, “that’s nice.”

You can’t blame the guy. He knows me well and no one is prouder than he that I have finished writing two novels in the past three years. He asked me recently what made this venture stick when several others failed to keep my attention. The simple answer is that I fell in love with the characters and they became so important to me that I had to finish their stories.

I can pinpoint the scenes in both books that gave me confidence that I would finish. Each come at a pivotal point in the character’s development. For Dearest Friends, it was this first conversation between Mary and Sebastian.

Sebastian returned to the drawing room less than an hour later and studied the scene in front of him. Richard and Bingley had returned from the carriage house and were attending the lovely Miss Bennet. Bingley poured more tea while Richard filled her plate and Anne scowled. Sitting apart from the rest was Mary, looking down into her folded hands. Sebastian bowed and offered a short greeting then walked over and sat next to her.

“Miss Mary, how are you?”

“I am well, my lord, just fatigued from traveling this morning.”

“Please forgive me for saying so, but you still seem a little out of sorts. I would offer to fetch a brandy for you, but I believe Georgiana has hidden the decanters.”

Her back stiffened as she sat up to her full height. “I would refuse it if offered. I know of no ladies who drink brandy, except medicinally, of course. Why would Miss Darcy hide the decanters? Is there cause to fear overindulgence?” She asked accusingly.

“Yes,” he answered plainly. “Except for Darcy, of course. He is perfect.”

She relaxed a little. “Then it is well he is marrying my sister. She is perfect, too.” They shared a tentative smile.

Those of you who have read Dearest Friends know why this would inspire my determination to finish. This was their beginning. It seems to be a theme with me, the beginning encouraging the end. We see much of the same with my inspirational scene from Sketching Character.

Elizabeth tied the ribbons of her bonnet beneath her chin as she walked down the stairs. She stepped quietly, hoping to avoid any of the household before she could walk off the stress of the night before. After she had managed to escape the house and gardens, Elizabeth inhaled the scent of earth and woods. To her, this was the smell of freedom. She could hide among the trees or run a race with the wind and no one would be the wiser—at least not until she came back with dirty petticoats.

She reached the line of the trees and was pleased to find a path soon after she ventured inside. She walked a little ways, attempting to empty her mind when she heard a thundering sound behind her. She barely had time to move to the side when a great horse, carrying a great figure, ran past her then stopped a few feet ahead.

“Miss Bennet, good morning.”

“Good morning, Mr. Darcy.”

It seemed for some moments this would be the extent of their conversation, as the gentleman sat on the magnificent steed and looked at her as if he expected something more. She was about to curtsy and be on her way when he dismounted.

“Do you often roam the woods so early in the morning, Miss Bennet?”

“I do at Longbourn. Today is my first opportunity to explore here at Rosings. I find the exercise to be helpful in clearing one’s mind before getting on with the arduous tasks of breakfast and embroidery.”

He smirked at her impertinence, the one that always left her wondering if he was offended, amused, or something else altogether. This man’s character was impossible to sketch, yet, she found his presence—and that smirk—oddly familiar, like an old friend.

He finally dismounted and walked toward her. “Did you leave the inhabitants of the parsonage in good health?”

Elizabeth’s irritation at the mention of the parsonage was evident. Darcy raised his eyebrow in question.

“I did not have the pleasure of seeing anyone this morning, but last evening they were all quite themselves.”

“I have the impression you do not believe that is a good thing.”

“You can be sure, Mr. Darcy, that I think Charlotte to be everything that is excellent and pleasant.”

She received another smirk in response to her omission. He would not let it pass.

“And Mr. Collins?”

Elizabeth sighed. If he would press the subject, then she would be honest. “I cannot comprehend, Mr. Darcy, why some people must hold themselves so high above others. It seems unfair that opportunity of education and growth, not to mention fortune of birth, can be bestowed on the ridiculous. That man will inherit all that my family has and he takes every opportunity to remind me of it. And there is, of course, the matter of my unfortunate nature that leads me to do such unseemly things as love my family or walk in these woods.”

Darcy searched her face for a moment. The fatigue he noticed in the carriage the morning of the accident had returned. He wanted to carry her somewhere, hold her close to him and demand that she rest. He chose instead to speak.

“What can I do, Miss Bennet? How may I help settle your mind this morning? Will you to speak to me more of your troubles?”

She gave him a soft smile then shook her head. “I thank you, Mr. Darcy, but for once in my life I am tired of words. If I were alone. . .” she paused, knowing she was about to divulge a secret that would undoubtedly shock the staid man at her side. “If I were alone I would run so fast the thoughts that plague me this morning could not catch me.”

The shocked expression she expected did not emerge. Instead, his features softened as the corners of his mouth lifted just a little.

“You would like me to leave you so that you may run through the woods by yourself.” It was a statement more than a question. He looked at her for a moment before he led his horse to a nearby tree and tied its reins to a branch. “I will not give you the isolation you seek, madam. The woods are too full of dangers, especially for one who does not know their secrets.”

Elizabeth knew she should be angry at his refusal, but she was too distracted by the sight of him removing his greatcoat and hat, which he carefully placed over the horse’s saddle. Her heart rate quickened and she had to remind herself that he had always acted like a perfect gentleman.

“You will not leave me?” The strength she intended to display failed to materialize as he returned to her side and without it, her voice seemed but a whisper.

“No, I will not.” He tilted his head and extended his hand. “I will run with you.”

After that, finishing was the only option. I hope you enjoy getting to know these characters as much as I did. Sketching Character is now available in ebook and paperback at Amazon. Please comment below for your chance to win one of two ebook copies. Thank you, Janet, for hosting me. Happy reading, everyone.

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Buy Links:


Contact Info:


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Aren't those some fantastic scenes? I want to read more for sure! I can imagine the scene of them running together. I like this Darcy! Thanks again, Pamela Lynne, for stopping by and sharing with us today. I hope you will visit again soon. Best wishes with your new release.

Pamela is giving away two eBooks of Sketching Character and it is worldwide! Thank you so much. I know my readers appreciate your generosity. Leave a comment with your contact info, to be entered. The giveaway ends at 11:59 PM, 12 October, 2015. Good luck to all.

Friday, October 2, 2015

My share in the conversation...

 A Jane Austen Christmas by Carlo DeVito

Since Christmas is my favorite holiday, I was especially interested in reading more about how it was celebrated in the time of my favorite author. This non-fiction book is a delightful and informative look into the lives of the Austen family during six special Christmastides. From balls and assemblies to the publishing of Emma, we get a glimpse into some of the history of Jane and her family as well as the traditions of the times.

The book is divided into the six Christmastides plus an Epilogue and in this review I will break it down into parts with a sampling of what is contained in each.

Part One: 1786

This section consists of some background history of George Austen which I found both interesting and sad. The Twelve Days of Christmas, Twelfth Night and holiday decorations are discussed. Cousin Eliza is introduced and her flirtations with Henry and James begin.

Part Two:  1794

England is at war with France. Eliza shows up at Christmastide but this time as a widow. Jane’s father, George indulged her in her passion for writing. For her nineteenth birthday, he gave her a mahogany writing desk. There is more history revealed between Eliza, Henry and James.

Part Three:  1795

Jane is friends with Madame LeFroy. This was the Christmastide when Jane met and fell in love with Tom LeFroy. Some of her letters to Cassandra indicate her feelings during this time.

Part Four: 1802

Jane’s father retired and moved the family to Bath. Edward Austen (Knight) is adopted by Thomas Knight, who is the brother of George Austen. Jane and Cassy visit the Bigg sisters, where Jane, almost twenty-seven years old, receives a proposal from Harris Bigg-Wither. Some of the card games that are played during the festive season are explained, an interesting side note to the traditions of the times.
Part Five: 1809
George Austen died in 1805 and Jane, Cassandra and their mother have moved to Gay Street in Bath. Henry, Jane’s favorite brother, and Eliza join them for the holidays in Lyme Regis in 1803 and 1804. The Austen ladies receive an invitation to move to Chawton Cottage on October 24, 1808 where they actually move July 7, 1809. There are quite a few holiday and other recipes contained in this part. Most importantly, Jane renews her writing.
Part Six: 1815
Jane Austen is now a published author. This is the year of the great Battle of Waterloo and also the year that Emma is published in December. There was an article in a paper that came out on Jane’s birthday telling about the publication of Emma although it had not actually happened yet. Some of Jane’s last letters are included and her feelings about the dedication of Emma to the Prince Regent are revealed.

Epilogue: Two Christmases

Jane’s health is obviously deteriorating. More of her last letters are revealed. Northanger Abbey and Persuasion are published together with a touching ‘Biographical Notice of the Author’ by Henry. In Cassandra’s own copy of Persuasion, she marked a passage. In the margins of the book (at that passage) she had scribbled in her own hand, “Dear, dear Jane! This deserves to be written in letters of gold.” (Page188 of A Jane Austen Christmas)


I found A Jane Austen Christmas by Carlo DeVito to be well researched and fascinating. Some things I had read before and others I had not. For any fan of Jane Austen or the Regency period, this is a book to own and have readily available. I highly recommend it to anyone wanting to learn more of how Christmastide was spent in the life and times of Jane Austen, from what was cooked to card games and dances. Add to that some history of Jane and her family, a few illustrations and a gorgeous book jacket on a hardcover book, you have a book worthy of a special place in any library. 

Now to the delight of all you dear readers, there is a giveaway offered by the publishing coordinator of Cider Mill Press, Brittany Wason and author, Carlo DeVito. One hardcover book will be given away and the giveaway is US and Canada only. Please leave a comment with your contact info. The giveaway will end at 11:59, the 8th of October, 2015. Thanks for visiting and good luck in the giveaway.

Wednesday, September 30, 2015

Angel of the Centerfold Cover Reveal

Meryton Press author, Michaela Robertson, has a new book, Angel of the Centerfold, which will be released the first of October. The Blog Tour will begin October 5th and run through October 19th. Be sure and watch for the release of the book and the schedule for participating blogs. There will be many entertaining posts, excerpts and giveaways! On the 17th of October I will host a giveaway and excerpt! You are officially invited to come on over! :) For now, take a look at this lovely cover and enjoy reading the book blurb.



Book Blurb:

Disguise of every sort creates difficulties for recent Yale grads Elizabeth and Jennie Blackwell, who are eager to begin the next chapter of their lives.

Elizabeth hopes her remarkable voice and academic training will help crown her the new darling of the Met. But will her burgeoning romance with world-renowned philanthropist Lliam Dafydd benefit her career or derail it before it begins?

Elizabeth’s minutes-older twin, Jennie, plans to translate her impressive résumé into a successful medical research program, but her demanding academic pursuits leave little time for romance.

Feeling trapped by her girl-next-door image, Jennie adopts a daring alter ego who behaves as she never would. As “Ariel De Mer,” Jennie becomes captivated by mysterious photographer, Chance Bly. Handsome and suave, he smoothly awakens her desires, while Ariel’s sexiness and sassiness mesmerize her smitten lover.

But Jennie’s innocent charade has a powerful impact on the lives of those she loves, and she is not the only one playing games.

Author Bio:

Michaela Robertson has dabbled in writing since her teenage years. In college, she initially majored in music until deciding she'd rather eat than enrich the world with her talent. A few years later, with a still-damp business degree in hand, Michaela entered the world of statistics. As the author of many dry technical documents, her artistic side was hidden from the world. Only her husband and daughter were aware of the musical talent hidden beneath the surface.   

In the late 1990's, she began traveling extensively for her job, and being away from home and family created something she was previously unfamiliar with—spare time. Bowling, mixed-doubles darts, and touring temporarily filled the void. A chance encounter in 2004 with the 1995 Pride and Prejudice mini-series starring Colin Firth and Jennifer Ehle led Michaela’s down a new path. Having read Fan Fiction in other genres, she went on a quest for Austen Fan Fiction and discovered a world rich in stories and history.

Music continues to be Michaela’s muse and has inspired her writing. Now a widow, she lives on a couple of acres on the edge of the world in the Pacific Northwest with the current love of her life, a border collie.

Release Date: first of October

Tuesday, September 22, 2015

As Good as a Lord...P.O. Dixon

Available on Amazon
I am happy to welcome P. O. Dixon back to More Agreeably Engaged. It is always a pleasure, Ms. Dixon. I am quite intrigued by your new release, As Good as a Lord, and the character with the starring role. I agree with you on the comical rantings of this particular character!  Dear Readers, let us know what you think and if you have any favorite rants by this person named below! Your comments will enter you in the giveaway! Yay!

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The title of my newest release is As Good as a Lord. With such a title, can there be any doubt of which Pride and Prejudice character has a starring role? If you guessed Mrs. Bennet, then you are correct.

Many of Mrs. Bennet’s rantings provide some of my best laugh aloud moments in the story.

Here’s one of my all-time favorites:

“Oh! I am not afraid of her dying. People do not die of little trifling colds. She will be taken good care of. As long as she stays there, it is all very well.”

By the way, that particular quote to some extent inspired parts of As Good as a Lord. Of course, the following passage is the primary inspiration for the story:

“My dearest child,” she cried, “I can think of nothing else! Ten thousand a year, and very likely more! ‘Tis as good as a Lord! And a special license. You must and shall be married by a special license.”

As Good as a Lord includes the following question as its premise: What happens when Mrs. Bennet learns that her headstrong daughter has refused the hand of a second respectable man in less than six months?

I hope you will enjoy the following excerpt from Chapter 1.

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Elizabeth sat up in bed. “Jane, you will not believe what happened to me while I was in Kent.”

“Does this have anything to do with Mr. Darcy?”

Puzzled, Elizabeth asked, “Why would you think that?

“From my knowing he was there also. It is no secret that the two of you do not always get along, despite his having confided in you regarding Mr. Wickham’s true character.”

“Oh, dearest Jane, that is precisely the reason I find all this so troubling.”

“What happened? Did the two of you get into some sort of altercation?”

“In a manner of speaking that is exactly what occurred. That is to say, immediately after he offered me his hand in marriage.”

Jane gasped. “Are you—are you secretly engaged?”

“I most certainly am not!” Elizabeth stiffened. She thought she heard a thump from the other side of the door. “Did you hear that?”

Jane could not say that she did.

Elizabeth shrugged. “I suppose it is merely my imagination. Who would be afoot at this hour?” Having reasoned away the sound to her satisfaction, she resumed telling Jane all those things she could about the proposal.

“Why did you not tell me any of this before?”

“You cannot know how much I wanted to tell you, but I did not want to put you in the uncomfortable position of keeping secrets from Mama. Oh, Jane, you and I know only too well how impossible my life would be were our mother to learn that I spurned such an advantageous alliance.”

~*~

The moon was high in the midnight sky, and the lady of the house was quite restless. This must certainly account for Mrs. Bennet’s being out of bed at that hour when the house was otherwise still. That and a healthy dose of fate, for what she heard while passing by the slightly ajar door of her eldest daughters’ room might very well be the means of changing the rest of her life. Why, she was certain it would. She only needed to devise the means of using this newly discovered information to her best advantage. The first half hour after her startling discovery she spent pacing the floor.

“What a sly creature Lizzy is,” she cried to herself for she was the only one in the room. “Everyone in Meryton is aware that Mr. Darcy was in Kent at Easter. Sir William saw to that bit of information—he and his daughter Maria Lucas. Lizzy said nothing of his being there. Of course, no one expected her to. Everyone knows how much she has always hated the man. Nevertheless, is that any excuse to refuse such a man as Mr. Darcy? Oh, what on Earth was she thinking?”

Mrs. Bennet drifted to the window and stared out into the darkness. Fretting while watching the moon slip behind the clouds, she said, “Obstinate, headstrong girl! She has been the means of frustrating my hopes not once but twice. Who does she think she is always rejecting proposals of marriage from decent, respectable men?”

The aggrieved matriarch was half-tempted to march into her husband’s room, awaken him from his sleep, and consult him on the matter. Indeed, she made it to the door before the memory of what had happened last autumn halted her footsteps. Alas, recollections of the nasty business with Mr. Collins flooded her mind.

“I will not marry the odious man! You cannot force me to, either!”

Mrs. Bennet winched. It was months ago and yet her daughter’s defiance distressed her still and gave her cause to wonder what she had done to deserve such a disloyal child. She had thought that surely her husband would be an ally in forcing Elizabeth to be reasonable, even though he always considered their second born his favorite. His flippant reply had been the means of placating the latter and wounding the former.

“An unhappy alternative is before you, Elizabeth. From this day, you must be a stranger to one of your parents. Your mother will never see you again if you do not marry Mr. Collins, and I will never see you again if you do.”

Mrs. Bennet, who had persuaded herself that her husband regarded the affair as she wished, was excessively disappointed. Her own husband had been a party to ruining her fondest wish that the next mistress of Longbourn would be one of her daughters owing to that ridiculous entail on the estate to the male line.

“I shall have no help at all in getting Mr. Bennet to force Lizzy to marry where she will not this time either.”

Such a marriage would be the means of saving us all, she silently lamented. “Why, even I would not have been so foolish as to refuse such a man as Mr. Darcy, even if he is haughty and above his company. The man has ten thousand pounds a year. How rich and how great she might have been! What pin money, what jewels, what carriages she might have had!

“If only I’d had the slightest hint of Mr. Darcy’s regard for Lizzy, I might have better spent my time encouraging a match in that quarter. Instead, I wasted my time on his inconstant friend, Mr. Bingley, and my Jane. Mr. Bingley is nothing to Mr. Darcy—nothing at all.

“Lizzy might have had a house in town! Everything that is charming! Ten thousand a year, and very likely more! ‘Tis as good as a Lord!”

A fierce motherly impulse infused Mrs. Bennet’s resolve. “I cannot stand idly by and allow such an opportunity as this to escape. Mr. Darcy proposed to my Lizzy once. Surely he can be worked on and thereby persuaded to do so again. I shall take matters into my own hands to see that he does.”

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Loved the excerpt from Chapter 1. I can just hear Mrs. Bennet and see her 'nerves' on full display. Oh, but to wonder what she will do taking matters into her own hands...that is a scary thought, indeed! ;) Thank you so much for sharing this excerpt and your favorite rants! Now readers, it is your turn to have 'your share in the conversation'! Tell us your favorite rant/rants by Mrs. Bennet and you will be entered in the giveaway! P.O. Dixon is generously offering one paperback of As Good as a Lord, for giveaway, US only, and one digital book of the same, worldwide! Fantastic, isn't it! Thank you, Ms. Dixon, for this opportunity for my readers! The giveaway will end at 11:59 PM, 28 September, 2015. Good luck to all!