Status Updates From A Summer to Remember: A Pri...
A Summer to Remember: A Pride & Prejudice Variation (In Want of a Wife) by
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Lit Reader
is 88% done
Cnel Fitzwilliam’s brother has died only weeks ago, and instead of keeping mourning, he is planning to attend an assembly in Lambton and dancing rhe evening away !
I was already shocked that the Darcys of Pemberley were not going into half mourning for their Uncle’s heir (their blood cousin!). I would have expected Darcy to wear a black armband and Georgiana to darken her gowns…
— Apr 22, 2026 09:38PM
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I was already shocked that the Darcys of Pemberley were not going into half mourning for their Uncle’s heir (their blood cousin!). I would have expected Darcy to wear a black armband and Georgiana to darken her gowns…
Lit Reader
is 50% done
Halfway into the story and there are two main mysteries remaining >> What horrible thing happened to Elizabeth, or what did she witness 5 years ago at Pemberley? And what happened to Georgiana before Elizabeth’s present visit, to make her health & spirits deteriorate (lack of sleep, nightmares?, depression, refusing to eat)
The time leaps are awkward, 3 months into E’s visit and hardly any progress in the plot
— Apr 22, 2026 09:54AM
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The time leaps are awkward, 3 months into E’s visit and hardly any progress in the plot
Lit Reader
is 30% done
Cnel Fitzwilliam calls 20-year-old Elizabeth “a woman”, Lizzy calls 15-year-old Georgiana “this woman”, the two LADIES (girls) are called “women” by Darcy and his cousin — it sounds crass.
It’s absolutely tone deaf to Austen and to Regency speech/mindset !! Social niceties exist(ed) for a reason…
— Apr 21, 2026 02:55PM
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It’s absolutely tone deaf to Austen and to Regency speech/mindset !! Social niceties exist(ed) for a reason…
Lit Reader
is 19% done
I often see a misuse of the words “woman” or “female” in JAFF/Austen variations. It’s used carelessly, without furthet meaning, maybe as authors would use them today to describe any woman…
But in Regency England “woman” alone was too generic and even more coarse. Language demanded more specific terms denoting age/class/education/status >> lady (preferable for Gentry), maiden, lass, for ex.
— Apr 21, 2026 09:20AM
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But in Regency England “woman” alone was too generic and even more coarse. Language demanded more specific terms denoting age/class/education/status >> lady (preferable for Gentry), maiden, lass, for ex.
Lit Reader
is 18% done
There are two strange points so far >>
1) Elizabeth has some mystery memories from her previous visit to Pemberley, which are painful/traumatic, and her strong emotions + avoidance to name them gives it a sordid, unsavory vibe.
2) Darcy hardly remembers she girl who visited Pemberley one summer, but Elizabeth has a set recollection of a cold, distant, dismissive Darcy, and she has beef against him ! Why ??
— Apr 21, 2026 09:00AM
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1) Elizabeth has some mystery memories from her previous visit to Pemberley, which are painful/traumatic, and her strong emotions + avoidance to name them gives it a sordid, unsavory vibe.
2) Darcy hardly remembers she girl who visited Pemberley one summer, but Elizabeth has a set recollection of a cold, distant, dismissive Darcy, and she has beef against him ! Why ??




