Regina Jeffers brings North Carolina sensibilities to her modern adaptation of 'Pride and Prejudice,' and writes a sensual, fiery retelling of William and Elizabeth. But, this couple seems to have more in common with Burton and Taylor than Austen's legendary duo.
Will and Liz meet in college and begin a VERY heated affair that consumes them both, except for Will's plans to support his family. A love affair was never part of a Quarterback's success story, and Will would never deviate from the expected narratives of his team, school, family and himself. Liz lashes out in anger by dropping out of his life, while keeping a secret that will forever tie them together and tear them apart at the same time. The novel thrives in in the North Carolina countryside, bringing heaping servings of angst, passion and tension.
Much like Liz and Dick, versus Elizabeth and Darcy, Liz and Will's manipulations and verbal battles can grow weary on the reader. Both characters have a tendency to be immature and lash out their frustrations on those around them.
Jeffers is an expert regency storyteller, who weaves passion, plot, dialogue and historical accuracy into a tidy narrative. Liz and Will, at the beginning of the book, slipped into regency speak a bit to easily for me, pulling me out of the story a few times.
Overall, if you want to see Elizabeth Bennet and Fitzwilliam Darcy mirror Heathcliff and Catherine, this is the story for you!