Fill Up Your Kindle or Nook – Day 2 of 3

 

For three days only, six Austen Authors will place 28 of their eBook titles up for sale on Amazon and Barnes and Noble. The sale runs from January 2-4, 2013. Nothing higher than $2.99. Only 48 hours remain to scarf up some great deals. Here is the list of titles with their prices.
Regina Jeffers
$1.99
The First Wives’ Club
Second Chances: The Courtship Wars
$2.99
A Touch of Velvet
A Touch of Cashémere
A Touch of Grace
Honor and Hope: A Contemporary Romantica Based on Pride and Prejudice
Mary Simonsen
$0.99
For All the Wrong Reasons
Mr. Darcy’s Angel of Mercy
A Walk in the Meadows at Rosings Park
Captain Wentworth Home from the Sea
Three’s A Crowd, A Patrick Shea Mystery (Kindle Only)*
$2.99
Mr. Darcy Goes to War (Kindle Only)*
Darcy on the Hudson
Mr. Darcy Bites Back
Becoming Elizabeth Darcy (Kindle Only)*
Abigail Reynolds
$0.99
Morning Light
A Pemberley Medley
$2.99
Mr. Darcy’s Refuge
Mr. Darcy’s Letter
By Force of Instinct
Marilyn Brant
$0.99
Double Dipping
$2.99
On Any Given Sundae
Holiday Man
Shannon Winslow
$0.99
Mr. Collins’s Last Supper
$2.99
The Darcy’s of Pemberley
For Myself Alone
Maria Grace
$1.99
Darcy’s Decision
$2.99
The Future Mrs. Darcy
Great way to start the new year!*A promotion on Amazon for these titles exist. When that happens, Amazon has exclusive digital rights for 90 days. Once that time period has expired, the titles will become available on Nook.
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The Twelve Days of Jane Austen – Day 10

(Sung to the tune of “The Twelve Days of Christmas”)

On the tenth day of Christmas, Jane Austen gave to me,
Ten in Fanny’s Family
Nine Named Musgrove
Eight Minor Pieces
Seven Austen Children
Six Classic Novels
F-i-v-e Bennet Sisters
Four Abbey Tilneys
Three Sailing Captains
Two Dashing Colonels
And a love for Mr. Dar…cy.

Fanny Price’s Brothers and Sisters

Lt. Price+Mrs. Price (neé Francis Ward)

William          John          Susan          Sam          Charles

FANNY          Richard          (Mary)           Tom          Betsy

Note! Tom, Betsy, and Charles were born after Fanny went to Mansfield Park.

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Fill Up Your Kindle or Nook

 

Beginning today and for three days only, six Austen Authors will place 28 of their eBook titles up for sale on Amazon and Barnes and Noble. The sale runs from January 2-4, 2013. Nothing higher than $2.99. Here is the list of titles with their prices.
Regina Jeffers
$1.99
The First Wives’ Club
Second Chances: The Courtship Wars
$2.99
A Touch of Velvet
A Touch of Cashémere
A Touch of Grace
Honor and Hope: A Contemporary Romantica Based on Pride and Prejudice
Mary Simonsen
$0.99
For All the Wrong Reasons
Mr. Darcy’s Angel of Mercy
A Walk in the Meadows at Rosings Park
Captain Wentworth Home from the Sea
Three’s A Crowd, A Patrick Shea Mystery (Kindle Only)*
$2.99
Mr. Darcy Goes to War (Kindle Only)*
Darcy on the Hudson
Mr. Darcy Bites Back
Becoming Elizabeth Darcy (Kindle Only)*
Abigail Reynolds
$0.99
Morning Light
A Pemberley Medley
$2.99
Mr. Darcy’s Refuge
Mr. Darcy’s Letter
By Force of Instinct
Marilyn Brant
$0.99
Double Dipping
$2.99
On Any Given Sundae
Holiday Man
Shannon Winslow
$0.99
Mr. Collins’s Last Supper
$2.99
The Darcy’s of Pemberley
For Myself Alone
Maria Grace
$1.99
Darcy’s Decision
$2.99
The Future Mrs. Darcy
Great way to start the new year!*A promotion on Amazon for these titles exist. When that happens, Amazon has exclusive digital rights for 90 days. Once that time period has expired, the titles will become available on Nook.

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The Twelve Days of Jane Austen – Day 9

(Sung to the tune of “The Twelve Days of Christmas”)

On the ninth day of Christmas, Jane Austen gave to me,
Nine Named Musgrove
Eight Minor Pieces
Seven Austen Siblings
Six Classic Novels
F-i-v-e Bennet Sisters
Four Abbey Tilneys
Three Sailing Captains
Two Dashing Colonels
And a love for Mr. Dar..cy.

Mr. Musgrove+Mrs. Musgrove

Mary Elliot+Charles Musgrove         Dick Musgrove          Henrietta Musgrove

   Walter         Charles                          Louisa Musgrove        Henry Musgrove

(2 unnamed Musgrove children)

         

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British Industrial Age Personality~William Hulton: Industrial Strategist or Hard Task Master?

PRhultonWilliam Hulton (23 October 1787 – 5 April 1864) was an English landowner and magistrate who lived at Hulton Park, in the historic county of Lancashire, England.

William Hulton was the son of William Hulton and Jane (née Brooke). He was educated at  Brasnenose College, Oxford. In 1808 he married his cousin Maria Ford with whom he had 13 children, 10 of whom survived to maturity.

In 1811 he was appointed High Sheriff of Lancashire. In this capacity he ordered the arrest of 12 men, Luddites, for arson at Westhoughton Mill in Westhoughton town centre. Four of the offenders were hanged outside Lancaster Castle, including a boy aged 12. Hulton gained a reputation as being tough on crime and political dissent and in 1819 was made chairman of the Lancashire and Cheshire Magistrates, a body set up for dealing with the civil unrest endemic in the area.

In 1819 he summoned the local Yeomanry to deal with a large crowd in St. Peter’s Field in Manchester which had gathered to hear the political agitator Henry Hunt. The Yeomanry, on horseback with sabres drawn, forced its way through the crowd to break up the rally and allow Hunt to be arrested. Twelve people died from sabre and musket wounds or trampling and the event became known as the Peterloo Massacre. Hulton was vilified by the local population and was obliged to decline a safe parliamentary seat offered to him in 1820.

As the owner of Hulton Park, he derived income from the seven collieries working the coal measures under the park or nearby and in 1824 became chairman of the Bolton and Leigh Railway Company, which planned and built the first public railway in Lancashire. The line ran to the west of his estate from Bolton to the Leeds and Liverpool Canal in Leigh, enabling him to deliver his coal to market more cheaply. The line was connected to the Liverpool and Manchester Railway in 1830 giving him and other local businessmen access to the Port of Liverpool.  

Until 1831 Hulton paid his workers with tokens or vouchers  that could only be redeemed in his company shop, a practice outlawed by the passing of the Truck Act of 1831. In 1843 Hulton paid his colliers the poorest wages in Lancashire. He remained opposed to permitting the right to free assembly and was vehemently opposed to miners congregating with the object of forming a union. He established the Hulton Colliery Company  in 1858.

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The Twelve Days of Jane Austen – Day 8

(Sung to the tune of “The Twelve Days of Christmas”)

On the eighth day of Christmas, Jane Austen gave to me,
Eight Minor Pieces
Seven Austen Siblings
Six Classic Novels
F-i-v-e Bennet Singers
Four Abbey Tilneys
Three Sailing Captains
Two Dashing Colonels
And a love of Mr. Dar…cy.

Love and Freindship [satiric-humorous]
The Three Sisters
[more serious]
Frederic and Elfrida [satiric-humorous}
Jack and Alice
[unrestrained Juvenilia]
Henry and Eliza [early humorous]
Lesley Castle
(excerpts) [satiric-humorous]
Lady Susan [Jane Austen’s wickedest tale]
The Watsons
[uncompleted novel]

If you are interested in a summary of each of these works or if you are interested in reading them by eText, visit The Republic of Pemberley.

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British Industrial Age Personality~Henry “Orator” Hunt, British Radical of the Industrial Age

NPG 956,Henry Hunt,by Adam Buck

Henry “Orator” Hunt (6 November 1773–15 February 1835) was a British radical speaker and agitator, who advocated parliamentary reform and the repeal of the Corn Laws.

Because of his rousing speeches at mass meetings held in Spa Fields in London in 1816-17 he became known as the ‘Orator’, a term of disparagement accorded by his enemies. He embraced a programme that included annual parliaments and universal suffrage, promoted openly and with none of the conspiratorial element of the old Jacobin clubs. The tactic he most favored was that of ‘mass pressure,’ which he felt, if given enough weight, could achieve reform without insurrection.

Although his efforts at mass politics had the effect of radicalizing large sections of the community unrepresented in Parliament, there were clear limits as to how far this could be taken. Invited by the Patriotic Union Society, formed by the Manchester Observer, to be one of the scheduled speakers at a rally in Manchester on 16 August 1819, it became the Peterloo Massacre. Arrested and convicted, the incident cost him more than two years in prison.

The debacle at Peterloo, caused by an overreaction of the local Manchester authorities, added greatly to his prestige, but it advanced the cause not one step. Moral force was not sufficient in itself, and physical force entailed too great a risk. Although urged to do so after Peterloo, Hunt refused to give his approval to schemes for a full-scale insurrection. Thereby all momentum was lost, as more desperate souls turned to worn out cloak-and-dagger schemes, which surfaced in the Cato Street Conspiracy.  

While in prison for his part in Peterloo, Hunt turned to writing, to putting his message across through a variety of forms, including an autobiography. After his release he attempted to recover some of his lost fortune by beginning new business ventures in London, which included the production and marketing of a roasted corn Breakfast Powder, the “most salubrious and nourishing Beverage that can be substituted for the use of Tea and Coffee, which are always exciting, and frequently the most irritating to the Stomach and Bowels.” He also made shoe-blacking bottles, which carried the slogan “Equal Laws, Equal Rights, Annual Parliaments, Universal Suffrage, and the Ballot.” Synthetic coal, intended specifically for the French market, was another of his schemes. After the July Revolution in 1830 he sent samples to Gilbert du Motier, Marquis de La Fayette and other political heroes, along with fraternal greetings.

In his opposition to the Reform Bill Orator Hunt revived the Great Northern Union, a pressure group he set up some years before, intended to unite the northern industrial workers behind a platform of full democratic reform; and it is in this specifically that the germs of Chartism can be detected. Worn out by his struggles he died in 1835.

A monument to Hunt was erected in 1842 by “the working people”, in Every Street, Manchester, in Scholefield’s Chapel Yard. A “spiral” march was held on the anniversary of Peterloo, from Piccadilly around the town past the Peterloo site, down to Deansgate and through Ancoats to the monument. The monument’s stonework deteriorated and it was demolished in 1888.

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The Eighth Day of Christmas (Jane Austen Style)

(Sung to the tune of “The Twelve Days of Christmas”)

images-5On the eighth day of Christmas, Jane Austen gave to me,
Eight Minor Pieces
Seven Austen Siblings
Six Classic Novels
F-i-v-e Bennet Singers
Four Abbey Tilneys
Three Sailing Captains
Two Dashing Colonels
And a love of Mr. Dar…cy.

 

Love and Freindship [satiric-humorous]
The Three Sisters 
[more serious]
Frederic and Elfrida [satiric-humorous}
Jack and Alice
 [unrestrained Juvenilia]
Henry and Eliza [early humorous]
Lesley Castle
 (excerpts) [satiric-humorous]
Lady Susan [Jane Austen’s wickedest tale]
The Watsons
 [incomplete novel]

If you are interested in a summary of each of these works or if you are interested in reading them by eText, visit The Republic of Pemberley.

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The Twelve Days of Jane Austen – Day 7

(Sung to the tune of “The Twelve Days of Christmas”)

On the seventh day of Christmas, Jane Austen gave to me,
Seven Austen Siblings

Six Classic Novels
F-i-v-e Bennet Sisters
Four Abbey Tilneys
Three Sailing Captains
Two Dashing Colonels
And a love for Mr. Dar…cy

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Dr. Amy Smith and the Appeal of Jane Austen’s Characters

This is the transcript of a podcast with Professor Amy Smith, who recognized a common thread among her students when she taught Jane Austen, as opposed to when she taught other classic writers, such as Dickens or the Brontes. To read the complete article, please visit  WAMC: Northwest Public Radio’s website at http://www.wamc.org/post/dr-amy-smith-university-pacific-appeal-jane-austen-s-characters

In today’s Academic Minute, Dr. Amy Smith of the University of the Pacific probes the international appeal of the characters that populate the work of Jane Austen.

Amy Smith is an associate professor of English at the University of the Pacific in Stockton, California. In addition to a course in technical communication, she also teaches a popular course on Jane Austen.

About Dr. Smith

Dr. Amy Smith – The Appeal of Jane Austen’s Characters

Something fascinating happens when I teach Jane Austen – something that doesn’t with novels by Bronte or Dickens or Hemingway. Students immediately recognize people they know in Austen’s characters.

With Sense and Sensibility, somebody inevitably says, “My friend is such a Marianne, she drives me nuts!” Or with Pride and Prejudice: “Mrs. Bennet is hilarious – she’s just like my aunt!” Nobody’s ever read Wuthering Heights in one of my classes and said, “That Heathcliff is just like my boyfriend!” I got to wondering . . . would this “Austen Connection” happen with readers in other countries? I decided to run an Austen road test in Latin America to find out. I did book groups on Austen’s novels, in Spanish, in Guatemala, Mexico, Ecuador, Chile, Paraguay, and Argentina.

So, did readers connect with Austen? Yes and no – but mostly, yes.

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