Senin, 06 September 2010

Darcy's Second Chance, by Don Miller

Darcy's Second Chance, by Don Miller

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Darcy's Second Chance, by Don Miller

Darcy's Second Chance, by Don Miller



Darcy's Second Chance, by Don Miller

Read Online and Download Ebook Darcy's Second Chance, by Don Miller

This novel begins after Darcy’s proposal at Hunsford Cottage near Rosings Park in Kent. In this version, Darcy decides to leave the country with his sister Georgiana to visit his farm in Ireland and his estate in Scotland, hoping that time and distance with help him forget Elizabeth. While he is away, Elizabeth is sponsored in the ton by Lord and Lady Denby, friends of her Aunt and Uncle Gardiner. Her debut is successful and she is courted by the second son of the Duke of Leister, Lord Daniel Cavendish, the Earl of Weatherstone, who is a very good man and she believes is her perfect match. Could it be that Darcy has lost Elizabeth forever?”

Darcy's Second Chance, by Don Miller

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #163860 in eBooks
  • Published on: 2015-03-29
  • Released on: 2015-03-29
  • Format: Kindle eBook
Darcy's Second Chance, by Don Miller


Darcy's Second Chance, by Don Miller

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Most helpful customer reviews

9 of 9 people found the following review helpful. Darcy's waste of time By Kindle Customer I was so disappointed with this variation. I thought it would be another take on Darcy & Lizzy's rocky road to love. However, it was a road that led Lizzy to marry Lord Weatherstone (a friend of Darcy's), the love of her life and have twins with him. Eventually, she overcomes her dislike of Darcy and marries him after her husband is killed. This is a total of about more or less 10 pages. I personally do not like any variation that has my favorite couple married to others, bear children and then get together at the end of the book.

8 of 9 people found the following review helpful. Different Twist. By Christine I appreciated having a different twist in the variation. I was engaged and truly wondered how Lizzy and Darcy would end up together. However, after the climax, the story became mundane and far too predictable. I don't care for the variations that tell the tale of a perfect Lizzy who is smarter than all and wins everyone over within a moment of making some rude remark that somehow proves her worth. This is one of those retellings - you've been warned. Also, is it really that difficult to hire someone to edit? Many errors that did become distracting.

3 of 3 people found the following review helpful. Like an unedited manuscript, but not as entertaining. By Bonnie315 This is definitely among the half dozen worst books I have ever read. There are so many grammatical and spelling mistakes that it is apparent it had no proper editor. It reads like a first draft, almost like an outline, with too many dates and introductions, too much recitation of comings and goings, almost no descriptive imagery, and no heart whatsoever. You would only read this in the first place if you loved Elizabeth Bennet and her spirit that transcends class boundaries and humbles the haughty Darcy, but she and her family are insulted on every page as being unworthy and of the "lower class," and amazingly she gives into it. The first part of the book, about Elizabeth's preposterous (for the time) but admirable work with her Aunt Gardiner, is mildly interesting, if only for its novelty, but ultimately gives way (and the Gardiners inexplicably disappear, never to resurface) while Elizabeth gets sucked into the rather shallow but powerful vortex of class envy -- and oddly, for someone who had never learned to ride, into horse breeding. Except for Kitty, the least entertaining character in the Bennet family, Elizabeth blithely abandons them all, including the Bingleys and the Gardiners, for a life among the fabulously rich and condescending and a chance to walk down the aisle to her second groom, Mr. Darcy, on the arm of her father-in-law, who is a Duke. Meanwhile, her own father is relegated with the rest of the Bennets and Bingleys, and even the Gardiners, almost to the servants' table. They are not permitted to attend the wedding ball, for which even Elizabeth appears to agree they are unsuitable. Seriously. No one in her new noble family will attend her wedding to Darcy unless she slights her own family, and even Darcy is forced to abandon his own long-standing family traditions to mollify her stubborn, stuck-up relatives, while Elizabeth calmly discusses with the Duke and Duchess how hard it will be to stay "chaste" in the meantime. Good grief. By this time, she already has two children, and who would possibly care about her chastity, much less discuss it in the drawing room. In the end, despite Darcy's half-hearted efforts, that "dastard" Wickham totally escapes and is mentioned no more, and his murder of Elizabeth's husband almost becomes an afterthought. The entertaining characters of Pride and Prejudice are cast off like old clothes and replaced by two-dimensional, interchangeable rich folk. They all sound exactly the same, kind on the surface, and bigoted beneath. Not even Lady Catherine de Bourgh appears on the scene to break the monotony of the morning call circuit. In this rarified air, the charm and romance of the Darcy/Elizabeth love-hate relationship evaporates, and neither she nor Darcy gain any self-knowledge or experience any real transformation, except that Elizabeth is turned into a social climber. The dialogue reads like a laundry list, repeated over and over, and only artificiality and vapidity remain. If I could give this zero stars, I would.

See all 22 customer reviews... Darcy's Second Chance, by Don Miller


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Darcy's Second Chance, by Don Miller

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Darcy's Second Chance, by Don Miller
Darcy's Second Chance, by Don Miller

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