Charlie Lovett's First Impressions in out in Paperback. Read an Excerpt and Win a Copy.

By Mariagrazia @SMaryG
Charlie Lovett’s FIRST IMPRESSIONS is now out in paperback! To celebrate the event, here's a   great excerpt to read and the chance to win a copy! (See  the rafflecopter form below this  post)Read an  excerptSteventon,  Hampshire, 1796  FOND AS  SHE  WAS of solitary walks, Jane  had  been  wandering rather  longer  than  she had intended, her mind  occupied not so much with the story she had lately been  reading as with one she hoped  soon to be writing. She was shaken  from this reverie by the sight of an unfa­ miliar  figure, sitting  on a stile, hunched over a book. Her first impres­ sion was that  he was the  picture  of gloom - dressed in shabby clerical garb, a dark look on his crinkled  face, doubtless  a volume of dusty ser­ mons clutched  in his ancient  hand.  Even the  weather seemed  to agree with this assessment,  for while the sun shone all around  him, he sat in the shadow of the single cloud  that hung in the Hampshire sky. Realiz­ ing how far she  had come  from  home,  Jane thought it best to retrace her steps without  interrupting the cleric's thoughts as he had  unknow­ ingly interrupted hers. During the  long walk home, across fields shimmering with  the  haze  of  summer   heat,  she  amused   herself  by sketching  out  a character  of this old  man,  storing  him  away, like so many others,  for possible inclusion  in some novel yet to be conceived. He was, she decided, a natural history enthusiast, but his passion lay not with anything beautiful  like butterflies  or wildflowers.  No, his particu­ lar expertise  was in the way of garden slugs, of which he could  identify twenty-six varieties.
By week 's end, Jane had filled in the  pathetic  details of his life. Dis­appointed in love, he had turned  to natural history, where the objects of   his pursuit were less likely to spurn his advances. As his passion for his study grew, and as he shared it more enthusiastically with those around him, his invitations to dine gradually declined until he was left alone on most evenings with his books and his slugs. He was a melancholy  fig- ure, which made it all the more shocking to find him, on Sunday morn- ing, not only seated in the Austen family pew, but smiling broadly and greeting her by name.Jane had led the family procession from the rectory to the small stone church of St. Nicholas, where her father was rector. The church stood on the far outskirts of the village, flanked by flat, green meadows. After pass- ing through the rectory gates into the narrow lane that led to the church, the Austens had fallen in with several villagers. When she had concluded her pleasantries with these acquaintances,  Jane had not a moment  to re- spond to the stranger’s greeting before the service began and she found herself separated from him by her mother  and her sister Cassandra; of her six brothers, none were currently in residence in Steventon.
The  man’s robust baritone  voice, evident in his hymn singing, ex- uded a spirit that was anything but melancholy.  Jane endured  a sharp elbow from Cassandra for not attending to the gospel reading; instead, she was trying to watch the man out of the corner of her eye. She failed to follow the thread of her father’s sermon, lost as she was in a reevalua- tion of the stranger’s history. By the time the service ended she was thor- oughly intrigued and determined  to secure a proper introduction to satisfy her curiosity about the true nature of his character.
“Go along home and I shall wait for Father,” she told her mother and Cassandra as they stood beside the ancient  yew tree that clung to the west end of the church.  Jane felt certain that a visiting clergyman with leave to occupy the Austen pew must be known to her father, and she expected Mr. Austen to make the necessary introduction, so it came as a surprise when she felt a tap on her shoulder and turned  to face the stranger, who addressed her in a cheerful voice.“Miss Jane Austen, if I am not mistaken.”“You are at an advantage, sir,” said Jane. “You know my name, but Ido not know yours.” Mansfield. Reverend  Richard  Mansfield  at your service,” he said with a slight bow. “But we have nearly met already.”“What can you mean, sir?”“Only that two days ago you emerged from the waving grain of Lord Wintringham’s field and stopped in your tracks when you spotted me reading on a stile just outside Busbury Park. At the time I conceived the idea that you were a rather dull and impetuous young lady, but I already begin to suspect that I may have been mistaken.” His eyes twinkled in the morning  sun as he said this, and his smile transformed from one meant  for the general public to one that seemed to be reserved solely for Jane.“I hope you will come to believe so, Mr. Mansfield. I have been ac- cused of having many faults by those who know me well, but neither dullness nor impetuousness has been among them.”“And of what faults do they accuse you?”“My worst, or so I am told, are a too highly developed interest in fic- tionalizing my acquaintances  and a tendency to form opinions of others hastily.”“Opinions such as the one you formed of me when you saw me alone with my book?”“You do me wrong, sir. You assume first that I saw you, second that I gave your appearance  sufficient thought to form an opinion, and third that my opinion was ill considered.”“In the first case,” said Mr. Mansfield, “I observed you myself, for though your mind may have been elsewhere, your eyes were certainly on me; in the second case, your father tells me, somewhat to my sur- prise, that you aspire to write novels, so I can only assume that anyone you meet may become  a victim of your imagination;  and in the third case it seems impossible that you would have guessed the  extent to which our interests overlap.”“I confess that shared interests did not occur to me. I imagined you a student  of natural  history, reading . . . but  you will laugh  when  I tell you.”“I enjoy a good laugh,” said Mr. Mansfield.“I imagined you reading a book on garden slugs.”Mr. Mansfield did laugh,  long and heartily, before confessing the true nature of his reading. “It may shock you, Miss Austen, but in fact I was reading a novel.”“A novel! You do shock me, sir. Do you not find novels full of non- sense? I myself find them the stupidest things in creation.”“Then you read novels?”“Novels! I’m surprised at you, Mr. Mansfield, suggesting that a young lady such as myself, the daughter of a clergyman, no less, could occupy her time with such horrid things as novels.”“You tease me, Miss Austen.”“Indeed I do not, Mr. Mansfield, for though you know that I aspire to write novels, you cannot expect that I would take my interest in the form so far as to actually read them.” Because Mr. Mansfield was old enough to be her grandfather, Jane took the bold step of adding a wink to this statement and turned toward the rectory. The congregation had dispersed and only the sounds of birdsong and the breeze in the yew tree disturbed the silence of the morning.  Jane was pleased when Mr. Mansfield fell into step beside her as she made her way up the tree-lined lane. With the summer sun now high in the sky, she was grateful for the cooling shade.“Surely, Mr. Mansfield, your shortest route to Busbury Park lies in the opposite direction,” said Jane.“Indeed it does, but you are assuming again, Miss Austen. First that I am staying at the park, and second that I am taking my luncheon there.”“And my novelist’s imagination has deceived me again?”“Not entirely,” said Mr. Mansfield. “For I am a guest at Busbury Park, but though he can offer me only cold mutton, your father has asked me to take my luncheon at the rectory.”“I confess, Mr. Mansfield, I am sorry to hear it.”“And why is that? Are you so embarrassed to be seen in the company of a novel reader?”“On the contrary, it is because you are a novel reader that I had rather hoped to keep you to myself. Once  you enter the doors of the rectory, you will become  a friend to my mother  and my sister Cassandra, and you will no doubt  retire after lunch  to the study with my father and abandon the rest of us.”
“Surely, Miss Austen,” said Mr. Mansfield, “I can be both a visitor at the rectory and a special friend of the rector’s younger daughter.”
“I believe, Mr. Mansfield,” said Jane as she took the clergyman’s arm, “that I should like that very much indeed.”  “From First Impressions by Charlie Lovett, published on September 29, 2015 by Penguin Books, an  imprint of Penguin Publishing Group, a division of Penguin Random House LLC. Copyright by   Charles Lovett, 2014.” About the BookIn First Impressions Lovett immerses readers in a world where books hold closely guarded secrets that threaten to turn the literary world upside down. For Lovett, a former antiquarian bookseller and collector, old books hold a power like none other; in his thrilling, suspenseful mysteries, their contents become matters of life and death.In 1796, Jane Austen is living in Hampshire and working on her first book, an epistolary novel tentatively titledElinor and Marianne, when she strikes up an unlikely friendship with an aging cleric named Richard Mansfield. An author himself—albeit of a less-than-artful book of allegories—Mansfield soon becomes Jane’s closest literary companion. On long walks through the countryside and engaging chats by the fire, they offer each other not only friendship, but also professional advice. Neither can foresee the impact their collaborations will have on future generations.In present day London, Sophie Collingwood is a lifelong book lover bereft at the loss of her beloved Uncle Bertram. After his books are sold off to pay debts, Sophie takes a job at an antiquarian bookshop hoping to earn enough to slowly buy back the books and restore his collection. When, in one day, two customers request a copy of the same obscure book—the second edition ofLittle Book of Allegoriesby Richard Mansfield—Sophie is drawn into a mystery that will cast doubt on the true authorship ofPride and Prejudice. Sophie, a dogged researcher and devoted Jane Austen fan, is quickly drawn into a frantic search for a book that threatens not just Jane Austen’s reputation, but Sophie’s own life.Combining a very Austen-like love triangle; a portrait of one of our greatest literary legends; and a tribute to the typesetters and printing presses of the eighteenth century,FIRST IMPRESSIONSwill charm bibliophiles and Jane Austen lovers everywhere. Lovett skillfully pulls readers into his world where true joy comes from a life lived in books.About the AuthorCharlie Lovett is a writer, a teacher, and a playwright. He and his wife split their time between Winston-Salem, North Carolina, and Kingham, Oxfordshire, in England.
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