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). She is here today to meet the readers of My Jane Austen Book Club and present her new " Emma, Mr Knightley and Chili-Slaw Dogs" . She has kindly accepted to answer some of my questions and to grant you a paperback of Pride, Prejudice and Cheese Grits or an e-book copy of her new Emma - inspired novel! (check the giveaway details below the interview)
Hello and welcome back to my little corner in the blogosphere! Here's my fist question for you: you seem to be rather
appreciative of both Jane Austen and typical Southern dishes,
Mary Jane. How does this odd pair came to your mind for a series of
book?
I really wanted the title of
the book to give the reader an idea of the story. There is the series title
which is ‘Jane Austen Takes the South’ but it wasn’t enough. So, of course an
Austen title should be first... but what about The South? What would really
make every reader say ‘oh, it’s about The South’? So, I Googled for a bit,
wondering if I should put in famous Southern sites, or perhaps Southern people
like Elvis. Even though I’ve been to Tupelo (Elvis’ birth place) I can’t name
more than two songs of his! In the end, I realized that I probably knew more
about Southern food than I did anything else that came from that region.
Your first book in the series was Pride, Prejudice and Cheese Grits. Now
you have Emma, Mr Knightley and Chili-Slaw Dogs coming out the 28th
of May. What is left of the original Austen world in your
modern humorous take on Pride and Prejudice and Emma?
In these stories, the plot of the romance
closely follows the plot of Austen’s novel. But many people may not have read
any Austen novels at all (although it’s hard for me to imagine such a thing
*ahem*) and I still wanted them to be able to enjoy the story. So, I introduce
characters who love Austen, who drop lines from the books and poin out
similarities to the characters. Of course anyone who has read Emma will know
that our hero, Brooks, is Mr. Knightley, but I also have a character in the
story pointing out the fact that Brooks is ‘just like’ Knightley and needs ‘an
Emma’.
In both books it seems you believe in the fact
that love comes when you least expect it ….
Is this something you’re very sure about?
Well,
strangely, I never thought about it... but you’re absolutely right!
I graduated with a college degree in
theoretical linguistics and studied at the Warsaw School of Economics. I
focused on Eastern European languages (but of course took the modern European
ones, too). I came back to my tiny home town for just a summer while waiting to
be accepted in the Foreign Service. My church’s youth group needed a helper,
and although it was the Hispanic (Spanish-speaking) group, I still volunteered.
I didn’t hardly speak a word of Spanish. J
I was working at Whitman
College and could get free classes so I took Spanish. And the director of the
youth group, Crusberto, didn’t speak much English but decided to take English
classes. (You know where this is going...) Three months later we had our first
real conversation and a year later we were married in Jalpa, Mexico.
Surprise!
Love
is weird and a surprise love is the best kind.
Let’s focus on your Mr Knightley. What can
you tell us about him?
Well, I do love academics, so
this character is one who was cut from the last book about Midlans College.
Brooks Elliot is a journalism professor, very happy in his current situation.
He grew up in Thorny Hollow and is the heir to Badewood, one of the great
antebellum mansions in his state. Through a field and over a brook, his
childhood friend Caroline Ashley still lives in her family home. They’re in
that shady area of almost-related, best friends,
know-each-other-too-well-to-date. He doesn’t come home much but his father’s health
is failing and he decides to spend the summer at Badewood. Everything is as it
should be, nothing ever changes in Thorny Hollow... right? (You should know the
answer to this question! Loves changes everything!)
And now Emma. Is she as spoilt and rather self – centred as the one we met in Austen
novel?
Oh,
boy. I really had no idea how hard this book was going to be until I started.
First rule of a heroine is to make her likable. Emma is NOT likable. She’s sort
of silly and snobbish and can be petty. But she does love to help people and
she has a good heart.
I hope the reader can excuse some of
Caroline’s pettiness when they find out she used to have a very good job at The
Washington Post (she saves Shelby’s reputation in the first book). But after
the death of her father, her mother asks her to come home. So she does. And she
lives a frustrated life that revolves around throwing parties and being set up
with eligible men. That’s probably enough to drive anyone to a little petty
behavior.
Caroline also has a good heart and truly
wants to help people. But her plans aren’t really well thought out. She and
Brooks argue over these plans, especially when they involve young,
impressionable people he’s been hoping to see leave Thorny Hollow and get a
college education.
Another thing: Jane Austen loved to
read, and she made Elizabeth a reader. People reading Pride and Prejudice now
identify with Elizabeth because we’re.. readers. Emma is always meaning to
read, but never really getting around to it. How can an author make a reader
lvoe a main character who... doesn’t like reading? It’s enough to boggle the
mind! But Jane Austen did it and I love Emma even though she’s not a bookworm.
When does your obsession with everything
Austen come from?
At
age 13, I read Emma. I thought she was hilarious and I laughed all the way
through! Don’t kick me off the site, but I actually thought Mr. Knightley was
kind of yucky. I was 13 and a 16 years age difference would be 29, which was
practically dead. I couldn’t imagine Emma, at 21 with someon 37. GROSS. I just
tried to ignore that part. Now that I’m
almost forty, it all seems sort of normal.
Jane Austen, for me, is sharp and witty. To
skewer the current customs, slip in her own opinion, and still tell a beautiful
love story? Genius.
If you could live in one of her novel which
one would it be? And which character in it would you like to be? Why?
Emma!! She’s funny, rich, can
paint, and pretty much does whatever she wants. I just love her. J
What is it that you find most amusing in
writing Austen-inspired fiction?
The funniest moment for me is to find
something about the modern South that correlates to Jane Austen’s Regency
world. Southerners are different. If no one has told you that, there it is.
There is a quote that I think sums up what is really at the heart of the
misunderstandings by Northerners and Westerners. This is from a non-fiction
book called Confederates In the Attic.
The book traces the path of the Civil War through the South and explores the
current obsession with the war. This quote actually refers to Shelby Foote, for
whom I named my heroine of the first book. J
“I also sensed that Foote’s
initial aloofness, which I’d taken for a distinctly un-Southern frostiness on
his part, was more akin to gentlemanly reserve; an old-fashioned, rather
English sense of frienship and respect for personal space. There are people one
knows and people one doesn’t. One shouldn’t cheapen the former by feigning
intimacy with the latter.”- Tony Horwitz
If that doesn’t scream ‘Regency manners’, I
don’t know what does!
Do you think you share anything with Jane
Austen?
I’ve read that Jane Austen
was very sensitive to the plight of women in her society. I hate the disparity
of pay and other benefits for women.
There are states where a woman with a law degree with the same number of years
experience, will earn 61.6% of what a man will earn. The gap begins right out of college, so it’s
not women taking time off for a family.
This
makes me sad on many levels, but it also makes me determined to raise my
daughters to be aware of the disparity. You can’t change what you don’t know.
When they work, I want them to value their own work and expect to be paid
accordingly. When they participate in projects, I want them to be able to
evaluate their contributions in a reasonable way. Too often, I think women are
afraid to rock the boat. We feel we should be happy with what we’re given. But
work is work, pay is pay. Gender should not enter into the equation.
Jane
was making a statement in a really effective way. The reader truly feels
Elizabeth’s plight over the prospect of them being forced from their home. In a
time when that was legal and right, she created sympathy for Elizabeth, and
hopefully a small movement of change.
What instead do you think Jane would have
appreciated of our world, if she could have lived nowadays?
She would have loved the ease
of the technology. In her personal letters she complains about breaking pens,
losing pens, being out of paper. Can you imagine how prolific she might have
been if she’d had a laptop?? :D
She also would have appreciated reading all
the wonderful romances out there. For the thinking woman, I bet she would find
quite a few favorites.
Are you planning to write other novels
Austen-based? What are your plans?
Of course! Persuasion is next
and although Anne Elliot isn’t the fiercest heroine, I think we’ll find some
really interesting quirks in her personality. Sometimes the long-lost love
burns brightest. Regret can be a horrible burden and when we get a second
chance, out of the blue, there’s not a more glorious feeling!
Now a final task for you. How would you
persuade Janeites to read your own versions of Austen classics?
Hm. Well, probably the best
advice I could give is to know that it’s not a straight re-telling of the enire
story. There are similarities, and characters appear that you may recognize,
but it’s not so close that you might bang your head on your desk and cry, “Why
is Emma saying that? Emma would never say that!”
I’m not sure if anyone can truly reproduce
Jane’s genius and I would never try. But her stories have sparked so many other stories, both modern
and historical, that I think she would be pelased to see us all using her as
our own personal muse.
So, if you love Austen, then reading a story
that inludes characters discussing and fighting over Austen is sort of fun. I
love to find clues in a book about where the author got her ideas and
especially when a classic book features in the story, as if it’s another
character!
Thanks a lot, Mary Jane. That's all for now. I'm really glad you accepted to be my guest again.
Thanks to you for having me again, Maria Grazia!
Emma, Mr. Knightley, and Chili-SlawDogs is
available on Amazon.com!
Giveaway
Mary Jane Hathaway has kindly provided 1 paper copy book #1
in the Jane Austen Takes the South series to give away to a lucky commenter! (US addresses)
There is also a digital copy (Kindle only
at this point, sorry) of Emma, Mr. Knightley And Chili-Slaw Dogs to win! (Open internationally)
Leave a comment and add your e-mail address + the giveaway contest you want to be entered in (remember, the paperback is only for US readers). This giveaway contest ends on 13 June.
Books Magazine
Emma, Mr Knightley and Chili-slaw Dogs - Interview with Author Mary Jane Hathaway + Double Giveway
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