Tuesday, 12 November 2013
Leatherbound Reviews: Review: Steampunk Darcy by Monica Fairview
Leatherbound Reviews: Review: Steampunk Darcy by Monica Fairview: From the publisher: William Darcy is obsessed with his ancestors. So much so that he intends to rebuild Pemberley (destroyed during the...
Tuesday, 29 October 2013
Karen Aminadra: It's all about Steampunk!
Karen Aminadra: It's all about Steampunk!: Recently I came across a post on Facebook from a fellow author, regarding his Steampunk work. What is that? I asked. Well, Davi...
Wednesday, 16 October 2013
MY JANE AUSTEN BOOK CLUB: STEAMPUNK DARCY, INTERVIEW WITH AUTHOR MONICA FAIR...
MY JANE AUSTEN BOOK CLUB: STEAMPUNK DARCY, INTERVIEW WITH AUTHOR MONICA FAIR...: First of all, welcome back Monica! It's a great pleasure to have you here at our online club. Well, let me say I’m delighted to ...
Tuesday, 15 October 2013
Steampunk Darcy Book Launch
Well, it's finally here! Today is launch day, and to celebrate there are a few things going on
The Official Launch Party and Grand Giveaway
at
So please come and join us to find out more about what Steampunk Darcy is all about
I'm also visiting at
where I have 10 snippets of information about Steampunk Darcy that you might want to read.
For another chance to win an e-book head over to read yesterday's interview and enter the Rafflecopter at
And you still have a chance of winning a paperback copy of Steampunk Darcy at
Goodreads
Goodreads Book Giveaway
Steampunk Darcy
by Monica Fairview
Giveaway ends October 17, 2013.
See the giveaway details at Goodreads.
See the giveaway details at Goodreads.
Wednesday, 9 October 2013
Just thought I'd give you the thumbs up for my new Goodreads Giveaway. It starts in five days to coincide with the release of Steampunk Darcy, so don't forget to mark your calendars and spread the news.
Goodreads Book Giveaway
Steampunk Darcy
by Monica Fairview
Giveaway ends October 17, 2013.
See the giveaway details at Goodreads.
Friday, 27 September 2013
STEAMPUNK DARCY Blog Tour
Release day is almost upon us!
To celebrate the release I’ll be
doing a tour of various blogs as well as having giveaways. Please stop
in along the way and join the discussion or enter for a giveaway of
September
30/09 Goodreads giveaway (2 days)
October
03/10 To Read or Not to Read Interview
14/10 My Jane Austen Book Club Interview and Giveaway
14/10 Goodreads giveaway (2 days)
15/10 STEAMPUNK DARCY LAUNCH AND GIVEAWAY ON AUSTENPROSE!
15/10 Buckeye Girl Reads Post and Giveaway
16/10 Indie Jane Blog Post
16/10 Coffee Time Romance Revelry and Giveaway
18/10 Jera’s Jamboree Interview
21/10 Austenesque Reviews Post
22/10 Romantic Novelists Association Post
24/10 Long and Short Reviews Interview
26/10 Austen Authors Post and Giveaway
28/10 Jane Austen Sequels Post and Giveaway
29/10 Colette Saucier's Blog Post
29/10 Coffee Time Romance Steampunk Spook-tacular Event
16/10 Indie Jane Blog Post
16/10 Coffee Time Romance Revelry and Giveaway
18/10 Jera’s Jamboree Interview
21/10 Austenesque Reviews Post
22/10 Romantic Novelists Association Post
24/10 Long and Short Reviews Interview
26/10 Austen Authors Post and Giveaway
28/10 Jane Austen Sequels Post and Giveaway
29/10 Colette Saucier's Blog Post
29/10 Coffee Time Romance Steampunk Spook-tacular Event
9 PM EST / 8 PM Central / 6 PM Pacific USA
Live Chat (you'll need to register to participate -- it's free)
30/10 Reflections of A Book Addict Post and Giveaway
Coming up in November
12/11 Leather Bound Reviews Review
18/11 Indie Jane Review
17-26/11 vvb32 TEA at THE FILIGREE Steampunk Style
Coming up in November
12/11 Leather Bound Reviews Review
18/11 Indie Jane Review
17-26/11 vvb32 TEA at THE FILIGREE Steampunk Style
Friday, 13 September 2013
Winchester: A stop on the Jane Austen Tour
On Wednesday I took the train from Clapham Junction to Winchester to meet Laurel Ann Nattress (editor of Jane Austen Made Me Do It) and her Jane Austen Tour Group. Luckily, I didn't have to ride in a locomotive like the one below because it would have taken me a lot longer than the one hour forty-five minutes it took for me to get to Winchester where I was supposed to meet them. Though it might have been fun to chug along in the days when this steam-operated train (below) ran from London to Southampton, it would have taken me quite a lot longer!
As I passed through a quintessentially English scene with its gentle hills and its quiet "verdure" (Winchester is at the edge of the South Downs), I was surprised to see far more cows than sheep. The black and white cows reminded me of Switzerland, but only briefly. The small fields enclosed by hedgerows are too distinctive. It occurred to me then that, although we think of hedgerows as very much part of the English landscape, that wasn't necessarily the case when Jane Austen was travelling that way. The majority of English hedges were set up during the course of Austen's lifetime, as enclosure laws changed the look of the landscape and the spaces of open hunting grounds and public grazing land were cut up and clearly defined as private property.
Perhaps because it's autumn, when many of the golden fields have been harvested, and the weather is overcast and cold, but as I approach Winchester I find myself turning maudlin. Winchester is the city where Jane Austen came to die. I'm not usually one to linger over these things, but perhaps because I read The Mysterious Death of Miss Austen by Lindsay Ashford not so long ago, I can't help feeling that Winchester is one place where I can't follow in footsteps of Jane Austen because by the time she reached Winchester she was already too far gone to be able to leave the house.
Which is a shame, really, because Jane would have loved Winchester, and there was a lovely little bookshop right next door to where she lived which she would have enjoyed.
The bookshop is clearly old, with old wooden fittings and the small windows typical of 19th century establishments, so I went in to ask if they had existed at the time of Jane Austen.
A very helpful and knowledgeable woman working in P&G Wells who is a history enthusiast showed me a booklet outlining the history of the shop. Here is the cover.

As you can see, at the time of Jane Austen it would have also been a bookshop (with a different name), though since then it has been spruced up and given new glass with a beautiful art deco motif. A photo of the shop taken at the turn of the century gives us a glimpse of Jane Austen's house, which at that time had railings (melted down for the war effort, apparently).
All the time I was trying not to look at the plaque which said
I didn't stay gloomy for long, though. Another Jane was with me -- Jane Odiwe -- and a friend of hers, Caroline. I'm sure you're familiar with Jane O's work but she's the author of Searching for Captain Wentworth and Mr. Darcy's Secret. We snapped photos in the rain and I admired Jane Odiwe's parasol-like umbrella.
Then it was time to meet Laurel Ann and her Janeite crowd in an English pub that was having a very hard time adjusting to American demands. Iced water in a pitcher? Ordering at the table? What was going on? The poor waiter struggled unsuccessfully to cross the [English] language barrier as conflicting expectations clashed. When he finally gave up and said everyone had to order at the bar (which is the normal thing at a British pub), everyone looked so outraged he had to quickly backtrack.
But what a lovely evening when you're surrounded by a large group of people who all want to talk about Jane Austen. I also enjoyed hearing about the tour member's impressions of England. To top it all, I had the pleasure of meeting Nancy Kelley (author of Loving Miss Darcy and His Good Opinion) and Lynn Shepherd (Murder at Mansfield Park). Nancy and I had a great chat that included Dr. Who, her favourite Steampunk authors, and having fun with Darcy. If you want to know more about our conversation, Nancy has a great write-up on her blog called Having Fun With Darcy.
Tomorrow the weather forecast in Bath is for some rain. I wish I had a parasol/umbrella like Jane Odiwe's!
![]() |
Built in 1894 and withdrawn 1949 courtesy Ben Brooksbank |
Perhaps because it's autumn, when many of the golden fields have been harvested, and the weather is overcast and cold, but as I approach Winchester I find myself turning maudlin. Winchester is the city where Jane Austen came to die. I'm not usually one to linger over these things, but perhaps because I read The Mysterious Death of Miss Austen by Lindsay Ashford not so long ago, I can't help feeling that Winchester is one place where I can't follow in footsteps of Jane Austen because by the time she reached Winchester she was already too far gone to be able to leave the house.
Which is a shame, really, because Jane would have loved Winchester, and there was a lovely little bookshop right next door to where she lived which she would have enjoyed.
The bookshop is clearly old, with old wooden fittings and the small windows typical of 19th century establishments, so I went in to ask if they had existed at the time of Jane Austen.
A very helpful and knowledgeable woman working in P&G Wells who is a history enthusiast showed me a booklet outlining the history of the shop. Here is the cover.

As you can see, at the time of Jane Austen it would have also been a bookshop (with a different name), though since then it has been spruced up and given new glass with a beautiful art deco motif. A photo of the shop taken at the turn of the century gives us a glimpse of Jane Austen's house, which at that time had railings (melted down for the war effort, apparently).
All the time I was trying not to look at the plaque which said
![]() |
In this house Jane Austen lived her last days and died 18th July 1817 |
I didn't stay gloomy for long, though. Another Jane was with me -- Jane Odiwe -- and a friend of hers, Caroline. I'm sure you're familiar with Jane O's work but she's the author of Searching for Captain Wentworth and Mr. Darcy's Secret. We snapped photos in the rain and I admired Jane Odiwe's parasol-like umbrella.

But what a lovely evening when you're surrounded by a large group of people who all want to talk about Jane Austen. I also enjoyed hearing about the tour member's impressions of England. To top it all, I had the pleasure of meeting Nancy Kelley (author of Loving Miss Darcy and His Good Opinion) and Lynn Shepherd (Murder at Mansfield Park). Nancy and I had a great chat that included Dr. Who, her favourite Steampunk authors, and having fun with Darcy. If you want to know more about our conversation, Nancy has a great write-up on her blog called Having Fun With Darcy.
Tomorrow the weather forecast in Bath is for some rain. I wish I had a parasol/umbrella like Jane Odiwe's!
Tuesday, 20 August 2013
Cover Reveal and Excerpt: Steampunk Darcy: A Pride and Prejudice Inspired Adventure
Alright everybody. Here's my new cover. What do you think?
Designed by the talented JD Dixon
White Soup Press
What kind of impression do you get from the cover?
Thank you for following me here to my blog! Please remember to sign up to receive news, updates and posts.
Now, exclusively here on My Steampunk Darcy Realm, I'm posting the first teaser extract from the novel.
Excerpt
Chapter 1
Alright, Mr. Hoity-Toity. This had better be good. I’m risking skin and
bone to get here.
The door opened and she strode into—.
Whatever it was, it wasn’t an office. It was an
emporium, a museum and the Great Exhibition of 1851, complete with Victorian
gents and ladies who had the glazed look of trophy animals. Except that the
Victorians were standing around instead of hanging on the wall.
“Are these actual people? Did you have them stuffed
and embalmed?” she asked, by way of greeting, “Or are they wax figures, like
Madame Tussauds?”
In the gloomy gas lamp-lit interior, she couldn’t tell
which one of them was William Darcy until he stepped forward and bowed.
“Welcome to Longbourn Laboratories, Miss Grant.”
The smirk fell off her face.
Raven black hair with a green swirl draped over his
left eye. Silver eyes like the sheen of a dagger.
Gorgeous was not the right word for him. Gorgeous was
a word invented for ordinary mortals. This particular specimen was splenderous. She didn’t know if it was a
real word but it was the right one.
For just a second, she had a sense of vertigo.
Vertigo? A seasoned aviator like me? To bring
herself back down to earth, she focused on the flaws in his appearance. The
tailored green frockcoat that skimmed the top of his knees was shipshape,
except for the fluffy bits (cotton? Did he manufacture cloth?). His silver
cravat would have done the most demanding gentleman proud, but it looked
crooked, as if he’d been tugging at it. The silver earpiece with jade stones
matched perfectly with his outfit, but it was lopsided as if he’d put it on in
a hurry. Everything about him suggested a need to keep moving.
Looking for his flaws hadn’t helped at all. If
anything, it had given her a chance to ogle him more closely, which somehow had
an undesirable effect on her knees – and other parts of her. Her knees
especially.
Nobody turned Seraphene’s knees soggy. Not without her
permission.
Her gaze drifted back to his face.
He was scrutinizing her with his right eyebrow slanted
arrogantly upwards, a monocle in hand.
She was definitely averse to arrogant eyebrows and she
absolutely did not like monocles, no matter how fashionable they might be.
That put some backbone into her knees. She snapped out
of it. He could be as splenderous as
he wanted. She was here to do a job, and unless he happened to be interested in
dead-end scientific research, which was her legal work, then he wanted her for
something illegal and she intended to make him pay through his teeth. That
meant she couldn’t afford to even look in his splenderous direction or he might
just manage to distract her.
She looked at the closest surface to her, which was a
shelf, and there, casually cast there – too casually --was a print newspaper
with a large headline announcing the opening of the Great Exhibition with a
daguerreotype photograph of Queen Victoria.
She examined the newspaper. She could have sworn it
was the genuine article. Yellowed pages, jagged edges and all. It would fetch a
good price. She wondered if he would notice if she nicked it. Her hand twitched.
“It’s authentic,” said the deep, British-sounding
voice. “You may have it if you like.”
It was a bribe. She knew it, and he knew it. He’d
chosen that newspaper deliberately to entice her.
“No thanks,” she said, putting her hands behind her
back and holding them tightly together. The newspaper was bait but she wasn’t
going to play fish.
“Take it with you when you leave, then,” said Darcy,
with bored indifference. He took down the newspaper, folded it, and tossed it –
tossed it! – onto the neighboring chair. Seraphene cringed. It was like tossing
a Spode china cup onto a side table.
She refused to be rattled by his pretentious disdain
for valuable objects.
“You sent me an invitation, Mr. Darcy.” A flat
statement of fact.
“Call me Darcy. Most people do. May I call you
Seraphene? It makes negotiating much less cumbersome. I’m delighted you agreed
to see me, Seraphene.”
There was definitely something smug about the way he
said it. He was taking her for granted, assuming she’d agree to any terms he
set.
He didn’t know her yet.
“I wouldn’t exactly call it agreeing.” Though
technically, she supposed she had, just by showing up. “Perhaps I came out of
curiosity.”
“Of course. I’d counted on that. It’s every
scientist’s weakness.”
She was tempted to point out that it must be his as
well, but she bit her tongue. Just because she didn’t like his arrogance didn’t
mean she should start being petty. Besides, she was ready to bet he hadn’t
invited her here because she was a scientist.
“Let’s get down to business, then,” she said. “If you
have cargo to unload I might as well warn you that I charge a high price for
anything that involves risk.”
His silver grey eyes glimmered in amusement.
Hades’ hounds! Those eyes could melt whatever was left
of the icebergs. They certainly turned something inside her to slush. She
struggled to pull her scrambled thoughts together.
At this rate, she’d be selling her soul to him within
the next three seconds. Now she knew how he’d earned his reputation for never
taking no for an answer. He turned his victims into jelly-legged squat-fish the
moment they walked through the door.
He’s probably counting on having this effect on me.
The thought worked like a splash of cold water. It
dampened her pheromone-controlled response long enough to unscramble her
thoughts into something close to logic.
“I see you like to come straight to the point,” he
said. “Good. I like that in my employees.”
“May I point out, Mar. Darcy, that I haven’t agreed to
anything, let alone being your employee.”
Darcy was only too well aware of that fact. He didn’t
reply, preferring to use his time more effectively by examining her instead.
There were too many unknowns about Seraphene, and far too much depended on him
getting things right. He couldn’t afford to take any chances.
So far she was living up to expectations. He liked the
grit he saw in her face. As for that jutting jaw, it confirmed what he’d
originally suspected. He wouldn’t be able to acquire her easily.
Her clothing was another matter entirely. Most of the
projections pictured her in a cardinal laboratory coat with a shiny silver
collar – trademark of Copperfield Laboratories – that concealed her feminine
curves. Today she looked different. An aviator and not a scientist at all. He
hadn’t quite expected the tight orange tailcoat with the leather fastenings
emphasizing rounded breasts, nor had he anticipated the impact her
orange-and-black checkered bloomers had on him, with their frilled black border
and ribbons trailing over curvaceous calves as she walked.
Not many women of his class revealed their calves.
These particular calves were—alluring.
He curbed his reaction firmly. This wasn’t the time
for distractions. What she looked like was irrelevant. He would take her on
even if she’d happened to be a squat-fish. She was the right person for the
job, which was the only thing that counted.
“Shall we be seated, Seraphene?” he said, in as
soothing a manner as he could. He needed her to let her guard down.
As if reading his thoughts, she advanced towards the
most uncomfortable seat; a genuine Victorian chair with an elaborate foliage
motif. He found it impossible to lean back in that chair without scraping his
back. He never sat on it himself. Its purpose was strictly decorative.
So much for getting her to let her guard down.
She sat down, bolt upright, completely alert and most
definitely watchful. She really wasn’t going to concede anything, was she?
Darcy realized he was still standing, which wasn’t a
good idea at all. It wouldn’t do to loom over her and look intimidating. He sat
down in the sofa opposite her and leaned back, bringing his hands behind his
head, trying to put her at ease.
He also needed to put himself at ease. If he somehow
misjudged, made a mistake…
There would be no mistake.
“It so happens I didn’t bring you here to unload
cargo, as you call it,” he said. “I’m not at all interested in you as an
aviator.”
He noted the stiffening of her body, the way her eyes
grew even more wary.
“What I’m looking for is a scientist with a particular
type of training. I picked you out from a list of thirty potential candidates –
who were themselves whittled down by my assistants from over four hundred
possibilities – because you have several unique traits that make you ideal for
the work I have in mind. I should perhaps point out that, brilliant as you are
as a researcher, there is a long list of other outstanding qualities that
prompted me to choose you.”
He was probably laying it on a bit too thick, though
every word was true. He needed her on his side and he was going to use anything
that might smooth his way.
“You don’t have to list my qualities, thanks. I’m not
susceptible to flattery.”
He grinned because she’d confirmed his suspicions. She
was going to fight him all the way. He felt better, now that he could predict
her reactions.
“Everyone’s susceptible to flattery, my dear girl. Part
of the human condition. It’s just a matter of discovering the chink in the
armor. But now that you’ve seen through me, I won’t stoop to such measures with
you. From this point onwards, let’s agree that flattery will get me nowhere.”
He unlocked his hands and leaned towards her.
“Do you want to know what the job involves?”
He paused for a long moment, making her wait, arousing
her curiosity.
Suspicion rather than curiosity lurked in her eyes. A
thundercloud loomed around her, ready to spark lightening.
Faced with her open suspicion, he felt a tiny niggle
of guilt. She was right to be suspicious. He intended to hire her under false
pretenses. Not that he had any choice in the matter. He wanted her on board and
there simply wasn’t any other way. He would bring her round, by hook or by
crook. He hoped, for her sake, that the hook would be enough but he suspected
it would be more of the latter.
He hated being in this situation, but what was a
gentleman to do?
“The job involves researching my ancestors,” he said.
Which said nothing at all, of course. He needed to
keep things as vague as possible at this stage.
She bit her lip and shifted in her chair. Her gaze
flicked over to the door. He was losing her. He had to reel her in quickly or
she would slip through his fingers.
“Give me a chance to explain. As you know, Pemberley
was my ancestral home before it was destroyed, first during the Blitz, then by
the slime rain before the Uprising. What I require – in a nutshell -- is a
detailed record of Pemberley as it was at its height, during the Regency
period. I want to know everything about it, from the paintings on the wall to
what the servants ate for breakfast. I would also like a detailed rendition of
Fitzwilliam Darcy and his wife Lizzy at the beginning of their marriage. I want
to know their manners, their personal peculiarities, their interactions with
each other, their food preferences, their taste in music -- just about
everything there is to know.”
She leaned forward. Aha. She was taking the bait.
“We know very little about them beyond what their
biographer recorded,” she said.
“I know you’re already familiar with Jane Austen’s
account.” He allowed a heavy pause to fill the air between them. “But there are
other records.”
He took out his monocle from his waistcoat and trained
it on her as he watched her digest this. He loved
a sense of drama.
“Well?” she prompted.
Impressive. She was keeping her options open.
“Well,” he said, tucking the monocle back where it
belonged. “You can expect generous compensation.”
Normally people looked eager when they heard the words
“generous” and “compensation,” in the same sentence. Seraphene frowned instead.
She twitched her fingers as if to drum them against the armchair then stopped
herself. He followed the gesture, stored it in his memory. She’d reached the
limit of her patience.
“You’re going to be studying daguerreotypes of
Pemberley – exact images. The real thing.
Retro-vectrographs.”
He realized as soon as he said it that he shouldn’t
have used that particular word. It implied too much knowledge of the scientific
investigations going on at Copperfield.
A long silence followed, interrupted only by a
grandfather clock that sounded the half-hour. Ding. Dong. Ding. Dong. Like the drums just before an acrobat performed
her most daring act.
Seraphene struggled to control her expression. She
felt as though someone had just thrown her back into the river after pulling
her out and saving her. She didn’t want Darcy to know the depths of her dismay,
if only because she didn’t want to look entirely naïve and stupid.
Meanwhile, he sat there, waiting expectantly, as if
he’d made a perfectly acceptable suggestion.
She’d come to meet Darcy in good faith. Granted, she’d
had her doubts. And granted, curiosity had
been her main motive. But some part of her had wondered what he’d come up with,
hoping it was something that wouldn’t burden her conscience, because she really
could do with a halfway legal job that would earn her decent tin. She’d been
trying to go straight for seven whole years now and it hadn’t netted her much.
With two other mouths to feed, some seriously extra credits would be more than
welcome.
She’d hoped he wouldn’t ask her to do something
impossible.
She’d hoped he was a gentleman.
He wasn’t much better than a common crook. This, then,
was how he’d built his empire on the Charles; not through his own ideas, not
through his own designs, but by paying to steal ideas from other people.
“Mr. Darcy,” she said coldly. “You’ve made a serious
mistake here. Even if I weren’t committed to a Guild – which I am – I have a
strong sense of loyalty towards Copperfield. You’ve clearly failed in your
background search if you think I’d quite simply hand over years of scientific
investigation to you for what you call so very politely compensation. We’re not living in the pre-Uprising era, when greed
and material gain were commonly accepted traits and people were willing to sell
anything given the right price. You must know, surely, that I played an active
part in the Restoration Movement and that my work comes from a real desire to
recapture the positive values of the past.”
“Now listen, old girl—”
She didn’t know which part of the phrase she objected
to most. She was definitely not a girl, and she certainly didn’t like being
called old.
“No, you listen, old
boy,” she replied. “As of this instant, we have nothing further to discuss.
I’m off.”
If Seraphene expected him to look the slightest bit
upset by her announcement, she was doomed to disappointment.
“You can’t leave,” said Darcy, in a most matter of
fact tone.
Was he actually smirking? It was difficult to tell.
Anyway, he could smirk all he wanted. It wouldn’t change the outcome.
“Of course I can leave.
You’re not planning to keep me here by force, I hope?”
Was he capable of it? Surely not? Fear blew through
her like a winter wind. She’d gone and put herself completely at his mercy.
Hardly anyone knew she was here.
“Tut, tut,”
said Darcy. “I can see we have a misunderstanding. You’ve omitted to read the
fine print on your invitation.”
“What fine print?”
“My point exactly.”
Highly apprehensive now, her heart sinking like a
mercury thermometer, she took out his calling card. Yes, there was some
minuscule print at the bottom, but it was so microscopic, so infinitesimally
tiny, it was impossible to read with the naked eye. It didn’t even look like
letters. It looked like a line with irregular parts to it.
He opened a drawer obligingly and produced a
magnifying glass. “You’ll find this helpful.”
She snatched the glass from his hand and balanced it
above the dots. The dots resolved themselves into engorged letters.
Accepting this invitation to visit constitutes a legally binding
commitment to become an employee of William Darcy.
She should have known better. She should have checked for small print, of course. The fact that it
was miniscule didn’t excuse her.
She examined the words carefully, looking for the
tiniest hint of a loophole. For a heart-chilling moment, she thought he had the
better of her.
When she raised her gaze to him, she had difficulty
holding back her sense of triumph.
“Was your father called William Darcy?”
“Yes.”
“And your father before him?”
“Of course.”
“Then in that case, this contract is null and void.”
She tore the invitation up into pieces and tossed it to the floor. “My
commitment was to your grandfather, and since he’s no longer alive to honor it,
the contract no longer holds.”
He was silent for so long she allowed the triumph to
spread through her, hugging it to herself.
“Several shrewd businesspersons have fallen for that
one,” said Darcy, finally. “I’m impressed that you saw through it so quickly.
Unfortunately.”
She shrugged and grinned. “You lose some, you gain
some. No hard feelings.”
“No hard feelings,” he replied. He reached out for a
bell-pull. “Now that we’ve settled things, perhaps we can break for a cup of
tea? I’ll ring for a tea tray.”
She had the feeling of being maneuvered into
something, but her mouth was dry and she could do with some tea. It would
bolster her up for the next round.
Because she had the strongest feeling there was going
to be one.
Don't forget to leave a comment and/or share. I'd love your feedback.
So glad you made it here. Thank you for joining me in the cover reveal!
![]() |
With no petals, must have been hard work going uphill!!! |
Cover Reveal for Steampunk Darcy Tomorrow
Hello everyone!
I'm thrilled to say that I'm finally able to reveal my new book cover on Facebook. Please drop in and help me celebrate!
Monica Fairview requests the pleasure of your company
at
Steampunk Darcy Cover Reveal
Where: Facebook
When: Wednesday August 21
Tuesday, 13 August 2013
Oh, my! Is Steampunk to become mainstream?
According to the Independent, UK, stores across the country are gearing up for the new fashion trend: Steampunk! Is it possible? Are we to find corsets and top hats in every shop window?
It would be strange if Steampunk fashion transforms from niche to trendy, and if people all around all start wearing Steampunk-style clothing, but I find the idea thrilling. If I were an artist, I would try to depict how this would look, like the person did in this 1909 postcard. Perhaps the future the artist is depicting might come true after all!
Isn't it great? Could we all be dressed like this in the near future?
The postcard, by the way, is from Revere Beach, Massachusetts. I used to drive to work every day passing through that very street. They don't have the tram cars anymore, but they do have the exact same bandstand, so it looks familiar.
It seems to have been a fashion at one point to create postcards of various towns in Massachusetts with predictions of what the towns would look like in the future. There's one of Boston, as well.
Imagine if our world were really to look like that.
It would be strange if Steampunk fashion transforms from niche to trendy, and if people all around all start wearing Steampunk-style clothing, but I find the idea thrilling. If I were an artist, I would try to depict how this would look, like the person did in this 1909 postcard. Perhaps the future the artist is depicting might come true after all!
![]() |
The Future of America (courtesy Steampunk Morris) |
The postcard, by the way, is from Revere Beach, Massachusetts. I used to drive to work every day passing through that very street. They don't have the tram cars anymore, but they do have the exact same bandstand, so it looks familiar.
It seems to have been a fashion at one point to create postcards of various towns in Massachusetts with predictions of what the towns would look like in the future. There's one of Boston, as well.
Imagine if our world were really to look like that.
Sunday, 11 August 2013
Ladies and Gentlemen. Coming sooner than you think!!
Steampunk Darcy
A Pride and Prejudice-Inspired Comedy Adventure

Blurb
William Darcy is obsessed with his ancestors. So much so that he intends to rebuild Pemberley (destroyed during the Uprising) stone by stone, and he wants to employ reconstruction expert Seraphene Grant to help him.
COMING IN OCTOBER!
A Pride and Prejudice-Inspired Comedy Adventure

Blurb
William Darcy is obsessed with his ancestors. So much so that he intends to rebuild Pemberley (destroyed during the Uprising) stone by stone, and he wants to employ reconstruction expert Seraphene Grant to help him.
Or does he? Seraphene wasn’t born yesterday. She can smell a
rat, particularly when it stinks all the way up to her airship. She knows Darcy
is hiding something. But with the Authorities after her and her other options
dwindling by the moment, the temptation of genuine English tea and a gorgeous
Steampunk gentleman are very difficult to resist.
But what if Darcy’s mystery job courts nothing but trouble?
What if Darcy is harboring a secret to kill for? When kiss comes to shove, will
Darcy’s secret destroy Seraphene, or will it be her salvation?
Join us on a romantic adventure like no other in this
whimsical Pride and Prejudice-inspired
tribute, featuring Wickham, Georgiana, dirigibles, funky fish, and
swash-buckling pirates.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)