Spotlight on ... Return to Longbourn by Shannon Winslow
By Mariagrazia
@SMaryG
The Book
What will happen to
the Longbourn family when Mr. Bennet dies? - seeing that his estate is entailed away from the female line.
The question was first posed by Jane Austen herself 200 years ago, in the
opening chapter of Pride and
Prejudice, and it’s still hanging there unanswered. Shannon
Winslow settles the matter once and for all in this next
installment of her P&P saga. Return to Longbourn picks up the story a few
years after the close of The
Darcys of Pemberley, and it centers on Mary, Kitty, and the new
heir to Longbourn (the unappealing Mr. William Collins having met with a
premature end in the earlier book).
With Mr. Tristan Collins on his way from America
to claim his property, Mrs. Bennet hatches her plan. The heir to Longbourn
simply must marry one of her daughters. Nothing else will do. But will
it be Mary or Kitty singled out for this dubious honor? When the gentleman in
question turns out to be quite a catch after all, the contest between the
sisters is on. Which of them will be the next mistress of
Longbourn? Or will the dark horse in the race win out in
the end?
Darcy, Elizabeth, and the rest of the Pride and
Prejudice cast are back as the socially awkward Mary emerges from the
shadows to take center stage in this captivating chapter of the Bennet family’s
story.
“A lot of us have a secret soft spot for Mary, and I believed she
might have the hidden makings of a heroine. Now, in Return to Longbourn, we learn what really makes her
tick. Find out if Mary is destined to be a governess
forever, or if she overcomes the misfortune of being ‘plain’ to discover love
and her own happy ending.” - Shannon Winslow
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Excerpt from Return to Longbourn
Mary and Kitty
exchanged a speaking look. They had already had a month’s worth of Sundays on
the topic of Mrs. Bennet’s “plan.” After her husband’s sudden demise, she had
wasted no time in convincing herself that the heir to Longbourn would prove to
be a single man of a most eligible aspect. To her way of thinking, it
immediately followed that he must be in want of a wife, and that either Mary or
Kitty ought to have him. By all that was natural and just, Mr. Tristan Collins
was the rightful property of the one or other of her daughters.
“You assume far
too much, Mama,” Mary observed when the plan first came to light. “He may not
even be single. As Mr. Bingley said, he is a man of thirty and has likely taken
a wife by now.”
“What? Marry an
American! Have you lost your senses? From what I hear, there is nobody there
but heathens and savages. What proper English gentleman would stoop so low? No,
mark my words. He left England
without a wife, and he shall surely return the same way. That is where you come in, Kitty.”
“Me?” Kitty
exclaimed with a violent start. “Why must I
be the one who secures him, Mama? Mary is older and therefore has the higher
claim.”
“Yes, why must
it be Kitty?” echoed Mary, hardly knowing why she said it.
It had then come
out that Mrs. Bennet, having clearly consigned her elder daughter to the shelf,
thought the younger, prettier one the only credible prospect for catching Mr.
Collins. “Consider, Mary,” she concluded, “if your sister can get him, then you
and I will always have a home here at Longbourn. It is the best solution for us
all; of that I am perfectly persuaded. It is unlucky, however, that we should
be in mourning, for black is not very becoming, even on you, Kitty. Still, in
another month, I think you girls may safely moderate your dress. That should do
nicely. Of course the wedding will have to wait until a full year has elapsed,
but that can be no great hardship I daresay.”
It had since
that day been quite a settled thing in Mrs. Bennet’s mind, and every week since
had brought forth from her lips further discourse on how her plan might best be
accomplished. Indeed, her daughters began to dread every mention of Mr. Tristan
Collins’s name. However, all their considerable disinclination for the subject
was insufficient to prevent its being canvassed again and again by their
mother. Like a tune lodged firmly in her head to where she could think of
nothing else, the tired refrain came out once more that Sunday in May. “Yes, if
only my plan for Kitty and Mr. Collins might succeed,” she said.
Meanwhile, Kitty
impatiently awaited the opportunity to set her own ideas at work, ideas that
were sure to sound a note of discord against her mother’s unremitting theme.
Although marriage was always her object, according to Kitty’s way of thinking,
being wed to anyone by the name of Collins could not possibly be agreeable.
The Author
Author Shannon Winslow specializes in writing fiction for the fans of Jane Austen, with three novels and one short story published to date. Her two sons now grown, she lives with her husband in the log home they built south of Seattle, where she writes and paints in her studio, facing Mt. Rainier.
Ms. Winslow’s books are available in paperback, Nook, and Kindle at online booksellers (Amazon, Barnes and Noble).
Follow Shannon at shannonwinslow.com, on Twitter, Facebook, and at Austen Authors.