Monday, February 4, 2013

Giveaway and Guest Post: Pride, Prejudice and Cheese Grits


Welcome, readers, to my first guest post by an author! This isn't just another interview...nope, this author actually contacted me wanting to tell y'all about her new book, Pride, Prejudice and Cheese Grits. I haven't had a chance to read it yet, but it sounds like a fun book...so without any more ado, let's get started with Mary Jane Hathaway's post! Read through, and at the bottom, you'll get an author bio, a book blurb, and the thing you've all been waiting for...a giveaway!

 
Hello! I’m so excited to be talking about my new book, “Pride, Prejudice and Cheese Grits”! Wait, did the blogger reader count just slip? I think I heard the sound of hundreds of people quietly clicking past this post. But why, dear ones?? It’s historical and it’s about the Civil War and it’s funny.
What can go wrong?
I hear a brave soul in the back yelling out something about that title… I can’t quite catch it… Blasphemy? How can cheese grits, that so lowly of the Southern dishes, possibly occur in the same title with Austen’s wit and genius?
Oh. I see. Well, let me explain.
Like some girls who love romance and historical writing, I am beyond obsessed with Jane Austen. Obsession is for amateurs. Napoleon was obsessed with Josephine. Vincent Van Gogh cut off his ear for that girl whose name nobody can recall.
None of those ended well because they were merely obsessed. (Okay, also a bit nutso, to be honest.)
Austen fans sprint past obsession and head for the kind of clarity that comes from dedicating one’s entire life to the cause of all things Jane.
So, once we’ve established that point of reference, you can start to see how everything relates back to Jane. What Jane Austen thought of eating less than two courses at meal times. What Jane Austen thought of when to wear white. What Jane thought about refusing offers of marriage in a dignified way. (Maybe that last one doesn’t come into play much for a lot of us. *sob*) But still, Jane becomes a guiding force in our lives.
 
We whisper her best lines when we’re too mad to make up our own vicious come-backs. We put down that handful of frosted flakes and pick up a blushing red apple. We take time out from the endless e-mail and Twitter and facebook to arrange some flowers because that’s what Jane would do.
As I started writing this book, I had a firm idea of my heroine and my hero and my cast of characters and my plot. It was mine, mine, mine! I giddily wrote scene after scene that made me laugh or cry or glare. (I’m one of those writers that makes HERSELF laugh or cry, even re-reading it. I’m pretty easy that way.) So, it was a little annoying to have Jane’s best lines running on a loop in the background of my mind. I fought it mightily, drowned it with noise, and doused it with scads of NYT bestselling historical thrillers that made no sense and were completely inaccurate.
My brilliant heroine, a Civil War historian from a town named Flea Bite Creek, was good enough, right? Who needed Austen to muddy it up?
Nope.
She was still there. Sometimes arching a brow, sometimes hiding behind a book, but mostly laughing at me.
So, I started to write each chapter by getting my Jane quote out of my head and onto the page. I wanted hero and heroine to have a great big nasty fight? “I could easily forgive his pride, if he had not mortified mine.” Natch! I needed the villain to be fooling the entire world with his smarminess? “Mr. Wickham is blessed with such happy manners as may ensure his making friends- whether he may be equally capable of retaining them is less certain.” How about our heroine seeing the injustice in the world and not letting it pass without a comment? “My dear Lizzy, do not give way to such feelings as these. They will ruin your happiness.”
And on it went until we’d finally reached the end of our tale of the heart, set in Southern academia, with our hero realizing that his hopes were not dashed, after all. “It taught me to hope,” said he, “as I had scarcely ever allowed myself to hope before.”
Wonderful! The book was finished!! I promptly removed all the Austen quotes and set about editing it. Polishing and cutting and slicing and dicing. Ow. Owie. YOW. But it had to be done. Now it was a nicely sized novel, 300 pages, fun to read and ready to be submitted.
But it was missing something. I fiddled and rearranged and sulked and grumped.
The book was no good. Not without Jane. Not without her subtle (and sometimes not-so-subtle) wit and sense of irony. Certainly not without her as a compass for my story, when I use her as a compass for my living.
So back in she went. And from there I heard from dozens of agents, scores of editors and a handful of publishers that this book would never sell. Too weird. (Cheese grits? What is that exactly? Nobody loves Southern culture, they said.) Too complicated. (Nobody can follow Civil War history, a fight for antebellum mansions, a family drama, a mystery, a crime, and a romance all at once, they said.) Too boring. (Nobody reads about academics, they said. Academics are boring. They live in their own little world, surrounded by imaginary and real-but-dead people.) Too quiet. (Nobody wants to read about people who love Austen when they can read about a hot female bail bondsman in love with two even hotter men. Unless I could put some of that in the book? they asked. I actually laughed at that because some day, somewhere, maybe there will be a Jane Austen/ Stephanie Plum mash-up which will sell like hotcakes. But I think that’s a bit more than I can pull off.)
And that’s when I stopped listening. I love Southern culture! I love mysteries and crimes and romances and family drama and Civil War history! I love academia and professors and universities and memories of those all-night pizza parties when you’re a freshman and gain forty pounds because your mother isn’t there to tell you to eat something green and Twinkies aren’t breakfast food.. (Oh, maybe that was just me? *cough, cough*)
And mostly, I love Austen. I love Pride and Prejudice. I’m beyond ‘love it’ all the way into the ‘I think I would have to marry this book if it wasn’t illegal’.
So, that’s the story of how ‘Pride, Prejudice and Cheese Grits’ came to be written, and rejected, and resurrected by the good folks at Amazon. Bless their little hearts, letting us digitize any random thing! Yee-haw, my friends, that means more books about subjects we love!
I hope you enjoy my little slice of Austen mania. The next book in the series, ‘Emma, Mr. Knightley, and Chili-Slaw Dogs’ will be coming out in May 2013. Until then, my sweets, stand tall in whatever particular form of genius (not craziness, NOT!) your historical literature obsession brings you!
 
BIO: Mary Jane Hathaway is the pen name of an award-nominated writer who spends the majority of her literary energy on subjects un-related to Jane Austen. A homeschooling mother of six young children who rarely wear shoes, she’s madly in love with a man who has never read Pride and Prejudice. She holds degrees in Religious Studies and Theoretical Linguistics, and has a Jane Austen quote on the back of her van. She can be reached on facebook at her regular author page of Virginia Carmichael (which is another pen name, because she’s just that cool).
Book blurb: Shelby Roswell is a history professor on the fast track to tenure until her new book is crushed in a review by the famous historian, Ransom Fielding. She struggles to regain her momentum only to discover that Fielding has taken a visiting professorship at her college. The place that was once a refuge from the poverty of her past is now a battlefield of Civil War proportions.
Ransom is still struggling with his role in his wife’s accidental death six years ago and was hoping a year at Shelby’s small college would be a respite from the reminders back home. He never bargained for falling in love with the one woman who would give anything to make him leave. Together Shelby and Ransom learn that home is never very far away, and when you least expect it, love arrives.
With a cast of Civil War re-enactors, an evil wedding planner, antebellum mansions, and several mysterious diaries, 'Pride, Prejudice and Cheese Grits' will take you on a touching and hilarious ride through a modern South you haven't seen before.

Book Facebook page: http://www.facebook.com/PridePrejudiceAndCheeseGrits
a Rafflecopter giveaway

24 comments:

Kirsten Fichter said...

I love Pride and Prejudice, and though I've never actually read any spin-offs of Jane Austen stories, I've read all of her major novels and loved them! Yes, some more than others, but that fact is beside the point. :)

So, a question for the author: What exactly are cheese grits? Living in the northern USA, I admit I am not very familiar with southern cuisine. I would ask how cheese grits fit in with Elizabeth, Mr. Darcy, and the whole P&P story, but I guess I would have to read the book in order to find that out. ;)

Kara said...

Love the title of this book AND this fabulous post! I have not read any spinoffs, but I enjoy movies made regarding Jane Austen's books. Some examples of this are The Jane Austen Book Club, Becoming Jane, and Clueless (based on book Emma).
Thanks for the giveaway, shared on facebook :) Blessings!

Mary Jane Hathaway said...

Hi Kiri!

Well, you're exactly right about how it figures in to the story! But I'll just say that the heroine is a Southern woman, and ehr best friend is an Austen fan. She sees our dear Jane everywhere!
Cheese grits, to answer your first question, is boiled corn mean and cheese. It's not a fancy dish, but very Southern.
BY POPULAR DEMAND: I added the recipe to the end of the book. :)

Mary Jane Hathaway said...

Hi Kara! A woman after my own heart! (And I recognize you from Seekerville, I believe?)

I love almost all Austen spin-offs, but I've had to be careful which to buy. It's nice to know in advance whether the book is clean and something Jane Austen would be proud of, I think.

That's why I love Austenitis and why I contacted her. I love her featured books and figured her readers would, too!

Katelyn said...

This sounds like it would be a good read! Definitely interested in it!

Kara said...

Hey Virginia! You DO know me from seekerville, THAT's where I recognize you from!! Didn't realize you were under a pen name, noted from here on out :)

So glad to see you here and so happy for you about the book, it sounds like a great read!

Indeed, this blog is a blessing to all things Jane Austen :) Praise God for Charity and the creativity she places here, blessings Virginia!

Mary Jane Hathaway said...

Hi Katelyn!

Thanks for stopping by!

Charity U said...

Virginia, Kara, thank you SO much for your kind words. :) They are a huge blessing! Appreciate you ladies. :)

To all of you entrants...best of luck! :)

Mary Jane Hathaway said...

Charity U- this blog is a blessing (and the pictures are lovely!)

Mary Jane Hathaway said...

Kara, I don't see my other comment to you, I think blogger ate it!

I was going tos ay, my debut with Love Inspired was under Virginia Carmichael. :)

Anonymous said...

WOW looks cool. Jane Austen is one of my favorite authors. Haven't read a super good spin off but I'd like to give this a try!!!!
Charity, I just found your blog a few weeks ago and now I love it!!!!
Jacinta Rose S.

Sherrinda Ketchersid said...

You had me with the title! Wow..this looks like a great read! Thanks for the opportunity to win it!

KayM said...

Very energetic and fun post! I imagine the book is also. Thank you for an opportunity to win it.
may_dayzee(at)yahoo(dot)com

Jan said...

Such a great post. I would love to read this. I'd love some grits please.
godblessamerica.jan(at)gmail(dot)com

Wendy Newcomb said...

I have heard of them and let my daughter know when I see a new one, she loves Jane Austin.

wfnren(at)aol(dot)com

Mary Cline said...

What a fun read, and that was just the blog, I can't wait to read the book!

chappydebbie said...

This book sounds great! I have to admit, *hides face shamefully*, I have never read anything by Jane Austen....My TBR list does include Emma and Pride and Prejudice.

Anonymous said...

Sounds like a fun story.

Pam K. said...

Beth Pattillo has written some Jane Austen spin offs that are quite entertaining. "Pride, Prejudice, and Cheese Grits" sounds quirky in a very fun way. I'd like to read it; thanks for giving away a copy.

pmk56[at]sbcglobal[dot]net

Anonymous said...

No, I have not read any books by Jane Austen. Your book sounds good. Please enter my name. Maxie
mac262(at)me(dot)com

Anonymous said...

This sounds fun! I adore Jane Austen!

Marsha Ward said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Marsha Ward said...

This book is witty and wonderful. Y'all will enjoy it, whether you're from the South or not. And I'm not [grin]

My review at Amazon

I hate word ver. 6 tries. Really?

Kara said...

I have read several Austen sequels. And like them a lot. :) Mr. Darcy's Diary by Amanda Grange was one of the first ones I read, and therefore still an old favorite.

Also I'm a new follower! I love Jane Austen! :)