The Calico Critic is pleased to welcome author Regina Jeffers with her guest posting today. I had the pleasure of reading Regina's Christmas at Pemberley last year, and I'm looking forward to her latest novel, The Disappearance of Georgiana Darcy, which is available today! Here's a taste of what we can look forward to in Regina's new Austenesque mystery:
Shackled in the dungeon of a macabre castle with no recollection of her past, a young woman finds herself falling in love with her captor – the estate’s master. Yet, placing her trust in him before she regains her memory and unravels the castle’s wicked truths would be a catastrophe.
Far away at Pemberley, the Darcys happily gather to celebrate the marriage of Kitty Bennet. But a dark cloud sweeps through the festivities: Georgiana Darcy has disappeared without a trace. Upon receiving word of his sister’s likely demise, Darcy and wife, Elizabeth, set off across the English countryside, seeking answers in the unfamiliar and menacing Scottish moors.
How can Darcy keep his sister safe from the most sinister threat she has ever faced when he doesn’t even know if she’s alive? True to Austen’s style and rife with malicious villains, dramatic revelations and heroic gestures, this suspense-packed mystery places Darcy and Elizabeth in the most harrowing situation they have ever faced – finding Georgiana before it is too late.
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What an intriguing premise! I'm looking forward to this one. With that in mind, I hope you enjoy the following thoughts from Regina. After that, take a moment to enter to win a copy of The Disappearance of Georgiana Darcy by filling out the Rafflecopter form. Thanks to Regina for generously offering this copy to one of our readers.
Incorporating Fascinating Legends
in Classic Story Lines
Regina Jeffers
in Classic Story Lines
Regina Jeffers
The legend of the Black Shunk comes to us from the late 16th Century in the small towns of Bungay and Blythburgh and serves as part of my first mystery, The Phantom of Pemberley. According to church records, on August 4, 1577, during a violent thunderstorm, an apparition of a black dog entered unseen by the assembled parishioners the nave of the church of St. Mary’s in Bungay. The apparition touched two of the congregation and immediately fell dead. As Abraham Fleming stated in his 1577 pamphlet, “A Straunge and Terrible Wunder,” a third parishioner was “drawn together and shrunk up as like a piece of leather.” Thirteen miles away, at the Holy Trinity Church of Blythburgh, three parishioners were killed and others “blasted” by the demonic creature.
All down the Church in midst of fire,
The hellish monster flew;
And passing onwards to the Quire,
He many people slew
In Fleming’s own words, he described the apparition as, "This black dog, or the divel in such a likenesse (God hee knoweth al who worketh all), running all along down the body of the church with great swiftnesse, and incredible haste, among the people, in a visible fourm and shape, passed between two persons, as they were kneeling uppon their knees, and occupied in prayer as it seemed, wrung the necks of them bothe at one instant clene backward, in somuch that even at a momet where they kneeled, they stragely dyed." Fleming also said of the dog, "[s]ame black dog...passing by an other man of the congregation...gave him such a gripe on the back, that therwith all he was presently drawen togither and shrunk up, as it were a peece of leather scorched in a hot fire; or as the mouth of a purse or bag, drawen togither with a string." This victim "dyed not, but as it is thought yet alive.”Those in Blythburgh described the event as, "[l]ike thing entered, in the same shape and similitude, where placing himself uppon a maine balke or beam...sodainly he gave a swinge downe through ye church, and there also, as before, slewe two men and a lad, and burned the head of another person that was there among the rest of the company, of whom diverse were blasted." Fleming thought these events as a "woderful example of God's wrath, no doubt to terrifie us.”
The Black Dog of Bungay became part of the local folklore; the official Bungay coat of arms features the famous Black Dog and the local Bungay Town Football Club goes by the popular name of the Black Dogs. However although the local St Mary's Church does possess a wooden carving that depicts the legendary Black Dog, there are otherwise no remaining signs of the beast's visit. On the other hand, if you travel down the A144 and then nip across the B1123 to Blythburgh, and visit the Holy Trinity Church the north door still bears the marks of the Black Dog to this day (or perhaps these are the remnants of a lightning strike during the storm).
The legend of the Hat Man served as the “Phantom” in “The Phantom of Pemberley.” Shadow People are supernatural shadow-like humanoid figures that, according to believers, are seen flickering on walls and ceilings in the viewer's peripheral vision. They are often reported moving with quick, jerky movements, and quickly disintegrate into walls or mirrors. They are believed to be evil and aggressive in nature, although a few people consider them to be a form of guardian angel.
Reportedly, Wes Craven based Freddy Krueger on an experience that he had as a young boy. Craven once saw a scary looking man wearing a bowler hat. The man had scars all covering his face. People who reportedly come across a hat man usually claim to feel a frightening feeling, as if they are being threatened. While some ghosts do not seem aware of the presence of the living, it appears that shadow people do. Witnesses claim that, despite not seeing his face, they have a sense that the hat man is staring right at them. Furthermore, it would seem that this entity’s sole purpose in visiting people is to make them as uncomfortable and frightened as possible. They normally don’t try to communicate, except for the fact they are emitting bad vibes. Their mere presence alone is enough to make someone feel extremely uncomfortable and even threatened.
Dale Abbey Archway |
I used the tale of the Baker of Depedale in my latest novel, The Disappearance of Georgiana Darcy. Dale Abbey is in Derbyshire, the shire in which Jane Austen placed Fitzwilliam Darcy’s magnificent estate of Pemberley. Once known as Dependale, Dale Abbey is three miles SW of Ikleston and six miles NE of Derby. Augustinian monks founded the abbey in the 13th Century.
Behind All Saints’ Church, one can find an ancient woodland area with beech, ash, oak and lime trees. Within these woods is the Hermit Cave, which was hewn out of the sandstone cliff by a 12th Century Derby baker. It is said an angel had visited the baker and had told him to find his way to this place and to live as a recluse. The cave is six yards by three with a doorway, two windows, a peephole, and a niche that let in more light. Part of the legend includes how the Norman Ralph Fitz-Geremund found the hermit in the woods, and touched by the baker’s piety, gave the man the site of the hermitage and a tithe of his mill at nearby Borrowash. Then the hermit built himself a more pretentious oratory and a cottage to end his days.
One of my favorite legends to incorporate into a story was that of St. Cuthbert and Lindisfarne Island. I used Lindisfarne as the final location of vampire George Wickham’s remains in Vampire Darcy’s Desire. The island is said to have magical powers.
One of those powers is the idea that those buried on the island do not decay. This comes from the tale of St. Cuthbert. Cuthbert, monk, hermit and Bishop of Lindisfarne, died on 20 March 687. Eleven years after his death the monks went to dig up the body, to translate it into the fine new shrine inside the church, and found, to their astonishment, that his body was incorrupt. Bede, the first English historian, said that Cuthbert was more like a sleeping than a dead man.
418 years after Cuthbert’s death, questions arose as to whether Cuthbert’s body remained undecayed. Therefore, nine monks, led by Prior Turgot, examined the contents of the coffin. The first account of this is in Symeon of Durham’s 'Historia Ecclesiae Dunhelmensis,' written in the 12th Century.
St. Cuthbert's Coffin |
Two of the monks nervously lifted out the body, and the watchers reported that it sagged, as if alive. A new floor was made for the coffin and Cuthbert’s body replaced. News of the revelation spread quickly amongst those who had been invited for the translation ceremony, but skepticism persisted.
Lindisfarne is a tidal island off the NE coast of England. It is also known as Holy Island and constitutes a civil parish in Northumberland. A causeway connects the island to the mainland of Northumberland and is flooded twice a day by tides–something well described by Sir Walter Scott: “For with the flow and ebb, its style/Varies from continent to isle/ Dry shod o’er sands, twice every day/ The pilgrims to the shrine way/ Twice every day the waves efface/ Of stave and sandaled feet the trace.” This fact played out well in Vampire Darcy’s Desire because Darcy and Colonel Fitzwilliam chose the island because vampires supposedly cannot cross water. However, a causeway would provide Wickham an escape. Large parts of the island, and all of the adjacent intertidal area, are protected as Lindisfarne National Nature Reserve to help safeguard the internationally important wintering bird population. I did not use the birds in the story line, but I am enthralled with the idea of how the birds return to the island year after year.
I have added several more new and unusual legends to The Disappearance of Georgiana Darcy. When you read it, I hope you will think of the way I have previously used distinctive tales in my novels, while you enjoy the reading journey.
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Author Bio
Regina Jeffers, an English teacher for thirty-nine years, considers herself a Jane Austen enthusiast. She is the author of 13 novels, including Darcy’s Passions, Darcy’s Temptation, The Phantom of Pemberley, Christmas at Pemberley, The Scandal of Lady Eleanor, A Touch of Velvet, and A Touch of Cashémere. A Time Warner Star Teacher and Martha Holden Jennings Scholar, as well as a Smithsonian presenter, Jeffers often serves as a media literacy consultant. She resides outside of Charlotte, NC, where she spends time teaching her new grandson the joys of being a child.
Website – www.rjeffers.com
Twitter - @reginajeffers
Publisher – Ulysses Press
The Disappearance of Georgiana Darcy Giveaway!
Would you like to win a copy of The Disappearance of Georgiana Darcy? Check out the guidelines below, go to the Rafflecopter form and enter to win!
- The contest period ends at 12:01am EST on May 13th, 2012.
- Contest is open to U.S. and international entrants.
- Make sure you leave your email address in the one required portion of the Rafflecopter form. Should you win, I will contact you on Sunday, May 13th. Please take measures to ensure that my email will make it past your spam filters, lest you miss my message. (CalicoCritic@gmail.com) You'll have 72 hours to respond before I pick another winner.
- The winner's mailing information will be sent to Regina Jeffers for prize shipment.
- You may tweet about the giveaway once per day for bonus entries. Please report the direct URL to the tweet in the Rafflecopter form.
- Entries will be verified. If a fraudulent entry is detected for the winning name, another winner will be drawn.
If you can't see the Rafflecopter form below,
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a Rafflecopter giveaway
What a remarkable post and such great pictures too.
ReplyDeleteEach one of those stories could generate a novel of its own, if not a complete series.
There are so many great plots available to someone who examines history.
I agree, Carl! Thanks for stopping by!
DeleteThanks, Carl. I agree. I don't like to look for the "ordinary" when I'm seeking out a new setting. I always want my reader to say, "Gosh, I never knew that."
DeleteThanks, Regina! Love your post, and thanks for stopping by to respond to comments. I hope you have a great day with your precious grandson-- you know how fast these days go by!
ReplyDeleteLaura
This sounds so good! I would love to read it thanks!
ReplyDeleteHello, Margaret.
DeleteI hope the weather in BC is not as unpredictable as it is in the States right now. Thank you for stopping by!
The little one is already doing what a 7 or 8 month old should do. I'm exhausted just trying to keep up with him, but I wouldn't trade these moments for a king's fortune.
ReplyDeleteluving all the tales of intrigue, Regina!
ReplyDeletecaptivated by this story and looking fwd to reading this creative work of your imagination !
TY for the giveaway generosity :))!
FHC, the book has received excellent reviews. I am always anxious when a new novel hits the market.
DeleteSome of those old legends are just chilling. I love how you incorporate them into your book. The mystery and tragedy in this story sounds like a great read.
ReplyDeleteThanks for the giveaway opportunity.
It's important to allow the legend be the backdrop of the story and not swallow the story.
DeleteHello, Sophia. I am certain that you will enjoy "The Disappearance of Georgiana Darcy."
ReplyDeleteThis book seems to be an amazing read. I cant wait to get my hands on this book.
ReplyDeleteI've been a fan of Austen for years. They're some of the only romances I can stomach, and while I've heard of spin-off novels, aside from Pride and Prejudice and Zombies, I haven't read any. This book looks especially interesting.
ReplyDeleteThank you for the giveaway! This seems like a most interesting read! I'm a HUGE fan of Jane Austen! P&P is one of my favourite books!
ReplyDeleteUmm, I have a question...
In the rules you say that the giveaway is international... then in the rafflecopter when asking for the email it says that we must provide a US postal address... so is it US only?!
If so, then please don't count my entry :)
Crystal, Laura has responded to your question. Truthfully, I'm learning Raffecopter too.
DeleteCrystal:
ReplyDeleteYes, it IS international-- so sorry about that typo in the Rafflecopter. I'm still learning how to use it! So please do enter the contest!
I'll try to go fix that...
Laura
Hello, Molly, I haven't heard from you for awhile. I understand that's the weather has been crazy in Columbus of late.
ReplyDeleteI love tales like this. All the history mixed with lore. Just my kind of thing. :) I've also heard good things about this dark retelling of Austen.
ReplyDeleteMelissa, I am pleased with how the book came together. As a pantser (writing by the seat of my pants) rather than as a plotter, I sometimes do not know what divergent paths the story will take.
Deletei've added this giveaway at Murphy's Library giveaway list [updated regularly]
ReplyDeletesortof like tweeting ;)
http://www.murphyslibrary.com/?p=6120#comment-182124
Dear PurpleMist or Arika, you live in Malaysia too? Me too, nice to meet you. If you stay in KL area, Kinokuniya Bookstores at KLCC has most of Regina Jeffer's novels. Last I check, The Disappearance of Georgiana Darcy was sold out but they will re-order.
ReplyDeleteRegina, I love reading your explanation on the legends you use in your novels. And thank you very much for the giveaway.
To Laura, sorry for hijacking your post.
Lúthien84:
ReplyDeleteNo apologies necessary! If I considered your comment a "hijack", I wouldn't have approved it to post. Thanks for the good info on how to get Regina's books in Malaysia!
Laura
I agree, Laura. Sylvia has done me a service by mention the name of the bookstore. It was information I did not have readily available.
ReplyDeleteThis comment was in my moderation box, but I don't know where it went... I'm going to re-post it here:
ReplyDeleterhonda said:
"Would love to read this wonderful book."
I am so very intersted in this book. The way that the author has incorporated lore with history looks to be brilliant. I love historical fiction. I always wonder how it would be to live during that time. Thank you for offering a chance to win this book.
ReplyDeleteI love reading JA spin-offs and historical fiction. Can't wait to read this one.
ReplyDeleteSounds good! Thankss for the chance to win it.
ReplyDeleteYou're most welcome, Laura and Regina. I can't wait to find out who the winner will be.
ReplyDeleteI would love to read this! Thank you for the giveaway!
ReplyDeleteThanks for the indfo Luthien! But I don't live anywhere near KL :/
ReplyDelete