L.L. Diamond

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Moira’s answers are in!

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I now you’d rather read what she had to say, so let’s get down to it, shall we? 

 

First of all, I’d like to thank Leslie again for having me here. The wonderful JAFF universe has helped me so much; I love everyone who writes Darcy and Lizzy variations. It’s an honor to be amongst you.

 

Is Jane Austen popular in Brazil?
(Joy Dawn King)

Yes, incredibly. We have Facebook groups of 10k fans, our ‘Jane Austen Society of Brazil’ is pretty big too. I have to say the 2005 movie has opened Austen’s domain to lots of people – and that’s the beauty of adaptations, right?

 

 

Hi Moira, I am so excited over these books. Three! My question is how did you get introduced to this Jane Austen world and how old where you?
(Shelley Hoisington)

Late 20s, I guess. I have a dear friend who challenged me to read ‘the classics’ – her favorite classics – and gave me Tolkien, Balzac, Austen. But it was S&S and the first pages killed me. I wanted to jump in the book and punch John Dashwood in the face! Then shake Elinor’s shoulders! As I complained, my friend grimaced and said: ‘Honey, you need Elizabeth Bennet.’ Here I am, a P&P junkie!

 

 

Which is your favorite Jane Austen novel and why?
(Debbie Fortin)

P&P. Always.

But I have to say Lady Susan gnaws on my heart, she’s my guilty pleasure. 😉

 

 

Who is your favorite Austen hero and why?
(Debbie Fortin)

Darcy! Always! *grin*

I like a bunch of other great Austen men but Darcy for me is perfect because he is so flawed. He offends the woman he adores when he’s trying to compliment her, his clumsy flirting is adorable, his efforts to make things right are to swoon for… Darcy, definitely.

 

 

Who is your favorite Austen heroine and why?
(Debbie Fortin)

Elizabeth Bennet, without a question.

I find it very hard to digest women being tramped upon. Of course, we’ve come a long and hard way from the social situation in Austen novels, women in Regency England’s society was a lot different, but still Elinor Dashwood’s or Anne Elliot’s reactions kill me. Lizzy fights back, she refuses two very good matches, she doesn’t fall under Lady Catherine’s diatribe, she’s great. I love her.

 

 

Who is your favorite Jane Austen villain and why?
(Debbie Fortin)

I should be loyal do Wickham but no one pars Churchill to me. Wicky, as I see it, is a dimwit bad boy, what we call a ‘malandro-cocô’ in Rio. He scams and lies and deceives and ends up tied to poor and empty-headed Lydia. *shrug* But Emma’s Churchill… horrible, horrible man. He flirts and lies and scams and humiliates the very woman he’ll marry. I was so shocked when I first discovered his secret engagement to Jane Fairfax…

There’s also Isabella Thorpe, Fanny Dashwood, Caroline Bingley but these sweet ladies can never have any spotlight because Lady Susan is, wow, perfect.

Actually, I’d pick Susan over Churchill. (I love Susan to the moon and back!)

 

 

How did you become interested in the world of Jane Austen? Muito obrigada!
(Jennifer Joy)

De nada! Que fofa!

As I said, finding Lizzy after Elinor opened the Austen wonderland to me. I searched for more, the BBC series (Firth!… awww…), graphic novels and fanfics. When I discovered Mrs. Darcy website I was in Heaven!

 

 

Do you write your stories in Portuguese first and then translate?
(Joy Dawn King)

No, I write in English and revise and revise and revise…

I studied the language from 8 to 18 years-old, taught children and teenage courses for a while.

 

 

Do you find it hard to translate your thoughts in English?
(Shelley Hoisington)

I don’t realize I do it, but I’ve been told my syntax is ‘peculiar’, so I probably think in a neat jumble of English+Portuguese. I write as I think about it, in English, as I’m doing now. (I apologize for any syntax weirdness.)

 

 

What is the biggest challenge you face writing in English?
(Joy Dawn King)

The colloquialisms. I love them. Love slangs and accents and how they color a character’s personality, make him/her more believable. But, it’s tricky sometimes… every time I visit US (I have a six-years-old who loves Orlando Parks) I spend my time trying to engage as many people in conversation as I can.

 

 

Do you have a special time of day and place to write?
(Debbie Fortin)

Do you have a special place to write?
(Shelley Hoisington)

I usually write after arriving from my morning jog at the beach, but sometimes the plot is too juicy not to stop everything and put it to paper.

My hubs gave me a ‘writer’s office’ as a 40th birthday gift. My design (I’m an architect), it’s really cute but in reality he wanted me to dissolve the mess I created in our dining room table. So, my smallish balcony is now a lovely office.

 

 

Where do you find your inspiration?
(Shelley Hoisington)

I dreamt the last story I wrote. It was a long scene about a couple meeting again after a bad breakup and it’s clear they still love each other but can’t find a way to be together. When I opened my eyes I knew I had to write it. From that scene came the whole story and then two more to form a cute project: Persian cats plot to unite three couples.

 

 

When your muse decides to be uncooperative what do you do to get her cooperation again (walking, cleaning, listen to music, etc)?
(Debbie Fortin)

I give her time.

My muse is a whimsical indolent Lady, she smokes smelly cinnamon cigarettes, those brown long ones with swirling smoke and she smirks when whispering a good idea in my ear. When she’s taking a break, I put the work aside and wait.

The Prince of Pemberley was left half-written, simmering untouched for several months, almost a year.

At first Darcy and Lizzy are friends, pals, ‘bros’ until the sexual tension wins them over. Conducting them was easy. Their life together as a rightful couple once their divorces were done, that wasn’t difficult because it’d be so nice – a life together after emerging from hell. But the period in between when they cheat on their spouses repeatedly, are lovers with so much baggage, so much love and contradicting emotions was very hard to make it right (sorry for the pun, it’s wrong and they know and Lizzy freaks out).

My muse took her time to help me write exactly the way I wanted this story to be told.

 

 

When writing do you need quiet or do you listen to music, and if so what kind?
(Debbie Fortin)

I’d love to have peace and quiet! Loooove it!

But I write in my free time, often shared with my hubs and son. Especially when I’m in the middle of a hot scene, whenever Darcy does this or that to Lizzy, I hear: ‘Mom!…’ *groan*

When I can’t absolutely concentrate, I work on covers or playlists. Every story I write have a wicked playlist I like to enjoy when working out.

 

 

Which of Jane Austen’s characters would your mother say you are most like? How about your friends? Who would they say you are most like?
(Joy Dawn King)

My mom is into Brazilian historical biographies. But, I’d say she would choose Catherine Morland for me because my head has always been filled with fantastic stories, imaginary friends, alternative views to everything.

My friends would dare to put me anywhere far from Lizzy!

 

 

Who is your least favorite Jane Austen character and why?
(Joy Dawn King)

What a sad thing to think about… Elinor Dashwood, I have to say. She’s lovely and sane and sensible and intelligent but also so very compliant. I’d kick and complain, but she is so very classy… coming to think of it, I dislike her reactions, not her.

 

 

If Darcy was on an Olympic football (soccer) team, what position would he play? Who would be his biggest competition? (Neymar Da Silva Santos, Lionel Messi, or Christiano Ronaldo)
(Joy Dawn King)

I never see Darcy as a spotlight guy, a forward in soccer. I always see him as a backstage man, one that makes sure everything goes smoothly, let someone else take the lights. So I’d say he’d be midfielder, Zidane or Pirlo. (I may have been distracted by Mr. Pirlo’s looks.)

But I have to say that, after Germany shamed us here in our own Maracanã stadium during World Cup, soccer is no longer something we’re so fond of. We’re very hurt with our national team.

 

 

Actually, if Darcy and Lizzy each competed in an Olympic event during the 2016 Olympic games in Brazil, which sport would YOU want to watch them participate in?
(Joy Dawn King)

I’m laughing here! What a great scenario! Tall, dark and handsome Darcy in tight sportswear!

For Lizzy, a team… maybe handball. I see her as a leader. Or tennis, she’d be great shooting cannonballs towards an opponent, wouldn’t she?

For Darcy I’d say rowing. He does row in my P&P inversion (he’s middle class and Lizzy is filthy rich).

Wouldn’t it be great to have a light and funny fanfic about them meeting at the Olympic Village?

 

 

Which is your favorite Darcy and Elizabeth to read – modern or Regency?
(Joy Dawn King)

Do you like modern or regency?
(Shelley Hoisington)

I like modern, love them. Because of what I said, my difficulty to accept women’s whole in the past. But I’ve read so many marvelous Regency pieces…

I’ve recently tried to write Regency and while these short stories are good reads, I’d say they are modern stories in Regency clothes.

 

 

Do your family and friends know you write Jane Austen fan fiction?
(Joy Dawn King)

Oh, yes! They’ve learned to love Darcy because of me!

My hubs said he’s thinking about buying us a cat to name it Darcy and be able to say: ‘Darcy, leave my bed now!’

 

 

Hi Moira! Your covers are gorgeous! So, I’d like to know what inspired your covers? Do you also paint/design?
(Jennifer Joy)

Thank you, I loved them too.

It took us – my cover designer and I – a long time to choose an image that could translate the long and hurtful journey these Darcy and Lizzy take – from friends to lovers to a married couple – and we toyed with several sequences of pictures until we found this one. The kiss seems ambiguous; it can be a stolen kiss, a reunion or a celebration of free love.

I do paint and try craft arts but writing takes most of my free time these days. My son is too curious, I cringe thinking how much he’d mess with my painting gear…

 

 

What makes your variations different from other writers of p&p variations?
(Phylisha Dianna Stone)

My Darcys and Lizzys are half Brazilian.

In my first story ‘Friendship of a special kind’, they barely knew each other but he greeted her with a kiss on her cheek; it’s a common thing to do here in Brazil, I didn’t think twice of it but my Beta said ‘Whoa! What a forward guy! Why would he do that?’ *laugh* Since then I’ve been taking care to ‘clean’ them of Brazilian zest, but there’s the syntax…

 

 

Your series looks very intriguing. I like the covers. Are your books set in the present day, or the Regency period? What inspired you to write them?
(Katie Oliver)

Thanks.

Present day. The story starts in the 80’s when they meet as teenagers, than there’s a twenty years gap.

When I met my hubs, he was practically engaged and I had an older boyfriend who was always threatening me with a proposal. It was meant to be, we broke our commitments to be together but the ‘what if’ never left me. What if we had met a year later and we were both married? What if we hadn’t managed to be together? What if… The Prince of Pemberley is about this doubt, a leap of faith, second chances.

Darcy and Lizzy meet as teenagers through letters, England to Brazil by post, stamps, paper, envelopes – late 80s. They try to meet in person but fate intrudes. Then life gets between them, they grow older and their friendship is put aside for twenty years. They both marry and have children (in England, Darcy marries Anne; in Brazil; Lizzy marries Wickham) until Lizzy finds him on Google almost twenty years after their last letter. The friendship rekindles instantly and from that to love is the journey told in three books.

 

 

I see three books above. Are they all about Darcy? Or are we looking at future generations? Or are there men at Pemberley the we know not of? Or are these sequels?
(Sheila L. M.)

All Darcy and Lizzy. They both have children, there is the next Bennett-Darcy generation, but it’s centered on them. He is the King of Pemberley!

In my stories, Darcy and Lizzy are together from the beginning and most of the time, I try not to fill it with subplots that don’t add to their timeline.

The books are part of a single touchy story– they are friends in book 1, cheaters in book 2, struggling to make it work in book 3. Sequels, yes… but continuations, that’d be better said.

 

 

If you could spend two months at Pemberley in the 1800’s, what three items would you have to pack in your suitcase?
(Joy Dawn King)

A toiletries bag, a phone (to record conversations, take pics and notes), calming tablets – I’d freak out!

 

Don’t forget to comment for a chance
to win Moira’s Prince of Pemberley trilogy! 

 

The giveaway is open internationally!

Rules for the giveaway – 

If you asked a question, you have 1 chance in the drawing.

If you comment on the final interview, you get 1 chance in the drawing.

If you leave a question and a comment, you get 2 chances in the drawing!

Please join in and leave a comment. Authors love answering your questions
and hearing from you! 

**Final date for comments is Wednesday, 20 April, 2016**

 

Leave your comments below! 

Good luck everyone!!

 

10 thoughts on “April 2016 – Moira Bianchi

  1. Jennifer Redlarczyk says:

    Fantastic Interview. I have never read Moira, so thanks for the introduction. Jen Red

    Like

    1. moirabianchi says:

      Hello, hope you like my ‘Prince of Pemberley’… It’s such a passionate story.

      Like

  2. tgruy says:

    I haven’t read her either but will do my best to do it sometime soon… great interview!

    Like

    1. moirabianchi says:

      Hey, hope you do enjoy the story when you have time. 😉

      Like

  3. deborahanne2 says:

    I enjoyed getting to know Moira better. I ave not read any of her boos either but am adding her books to my wish list. Thank you for the generous give away.

    Like

    1. moirabianchi says:

      Thanks for taking part in this, it was so much fun.

      Like

  4. Jennifer Joy says:

    Awesome interview and great answers, Moira! Thank you for letting us get to know you a bit better 🙂

    Like

    1. moirabianchi says:

      Oh, but the questions! I had to think about the Olympics! Such fun! Tks for having me here!

      Like

  5. Suzan Lauder says:

    Your novels sound fascinating! Thanks for telling us more about you and what inspires you.

    Like

    1. moirabianchi says:

      I should thank you all. Austen world is a lovely place, I love to be part of it.

      Like

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