I am a big admirer of Karen M Cox's works, which generally take Austen's works to another era. The books I have read are mainly based on Pride & Prejudice, but last year Karen released I Could Write a Book, which transported Emma to the 1970s. I loved the book, and you can read my review of it here. Karen is currently going through the process of having I Could Write a Book converted to audiobook, and has come here to post about that. I'll share the book description with you first, and then hand over to Karen.
Book Description
“Emma Woodhouse, handsome, clever and rich…”
Thus began Jane Austen’s classic, a light and lively tale set in an English village two hundred years ago. Yet every era has its share of Emmas: young women trying to find themselves in their own corners of the world.
I Could Write a Book is the story of a self-proclaimed modern woman: Emma Katherine Woodhouse, a 1970s co-ed whose life is pleasant, ordered, and predictable, if a bit confining.
Her friend George Knightley is a man of the world who’s come home to fulfill his destiny: run his father’s thriving law practice and oversee the sprawling Donwell Farms, his family legacy in Central Kentucky horse country.
Since childhood, George’s and Emma’s lives have meshed and separated time and again. But now they’re adults with grown-up challenges and obligations. As Emma orchestrates life in quaint Highbury, George becomes less amused with her antics and struggles with a growing attraction to the young woman she’s become.
Rich with humor, poignancy, and the camaraderie of life in a small, Southern town, I Could Write a Book is a coming of age romance with side helpings of self-discovery, friendship, and finding true love in the most unlikely places.
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The
Real “Highbury”
Hello
everyone!
And
thank you, Ceri, for inviting me to stop in at Babblings of a Bookworm.
I
have some news to share: after a long wait, the audio book version of my
“modern” (1970s) variation of Emma,
titled I Could Write a Book, will be
available very early next year (which is actually next month!) We are
anticipating a release on 5 January, 2019 to ring in the new year.
I’m
so excited about this new project, in part because I think I have found the
perfect narrator, Emily Rahm. She has just the right amount of Southern flair
for I Could Write a Book’s Emma
Woodhouse, and her other characterizations are spot-on as well. I think you all
will love her rendition of the book.
Today,
though, I want to take a look back to when I was first imagining the world of I Could Write a Book. I’ve always
thought that two of the most important “characters” in Emma were places: Donwell Abbey, where Emma begins to see
Knightley as he truly is, and not just as her own particular friend; and the
village of Highbury, the backdrop for all the humorous, secretive, kind,
silly—very human inhabitants to play
out the drama of their lives. I think one reason I found Emma such an engaging read was because these “character-like” places
reminded me of my beloved Kentucky home. Highbury seemed familiar enough to be
right outside my door, and the Bluegrass area horse farms spoke to the elegance
and tradition I expected in a Donwell Abbey. When I first began collecting
images and thinking about settings for I
Could Write a Book, I found two real-life places that “spoke Austen” to me.
In
the fall of 2012, I took a tour of Lane’s End Farm in Woodford County. The
quiet grace and sophistication of the farm suggested to me what a 20th
century Donwell Abbey might be like: a place respectful of tradition yet
willing to adapt to modern ways. Perhaps it was because Lane’s End was founded
by Will Farish in 1979, around the same time period as I Could Write a Book is set. From the majesty of rolling fields to
the poignancy of the thoroughbred cemetery to the beautiful offices of the
horse breeding and boarding business, Lane’s End was such a perfect fit for my
Donwell that I could almost see George Knightley standing in the doorway. In
fact, seeing him there in my mind’s eye inspired one of my favorite scenes in
the book.
The
town of Midway is the other place that informed so much of I Could Write a Book. It is actually in
the same county as Lane’s End Farm. Originally named “Middleway” because it was
half way between the big town of Lexington and the state capital, Frankfort,
Midway’s streets and buildings pay homage to its Victorian-era beginnings. It’s
small (a little over a mile square), and charming, a place where Emma and Mary
Jo Smith (the Harriet character in) would sit outside on the sidewalk and lunch
on salads and sweet ice tea, surrounded by quaint shops and friendly neighbors.
When
I first beginning envisioning a story and writing first draft, I go to the
settings in my mind (even if I’ve never been there, I watch video or read
descriptions) and walk around a piece.
I
recorded this video right before I Could
Write a Book was released, so it’s summertime, not the way it looks now.
It’s a nice breath of summer, given how cold it is here.
Enjoy
your brief tour of “my Highbury”!
Thanks
for stopping by, and I hope you all enjoy Emily’s interpretation of Emma and
the other “usual suspects” in our audio version of I Could Write a Book, which will be available in early January on
Audible, Amazon, and Apple books.
About the Author
Karen M Cox is an award-winning author of novels accented with romance and history, including 1932, Find Wonder in All Things, and Undeceived. She also contributed a short story, “Northanger Revisited 2015”, to the anthology, Sun-Kissed: Effusions of Summer, and a story titled, “I, Darcy” to The Darcy Monologues. The Journey Home, an ebook novella companion piece to 1932, is now available.
Karen was born in Everett WA, which was the result of coming into the world as the daughter of a United States Air Force Officer. She had a nomadic childhood, with stints in North Dakota, Tennessee and New York State before finally settling in her family’s home state of Kentucky at the age of eleven. She lives in a quiet little town with her husband, where she works as a pediatric speech pathologist, encourages her children, and spoils her granddaughter.
Channeling Jane Austen’s Emma, Karen has let a plethora of interests lead her to begin many hobbies and projects she doesn’t quite finish, but she aspires to be a great reader and an excellent walker—like Elizabeth Bennet.
Connect with Karen:
• Website • Amazon Author Page • Facebook • Twitter • Pinterest • Instagram • Tumblr •
About the Author
Karen M Cox is an award-winning author of novels accented with romance and history, including 1932, Find Wonder in All Things, and Undeceived. She also contributed a short story, “Northanger Revisited 2015”, to the anthology, Sun-Kissed: Effusions of Summer, and a story titled, “I, Darcy” to The Darcy Monologues. The Journey Home, an ebook novella companion piece to 1932, is now available.
Karen was born in Everett WA, which was the result of coming into the world as the daughter of a United States Air Force Officer. She had a nomadic childhood, with stints in North Dakota, Tennessee and New York State before finally settling in her family’s home state of Kentucky at the age of eleven. She lives in a quiet little town with her husband, where she works as a pediatric speech pathologist, encourages her children, and spoils her granddaughter.
Channeling Jane Austen’s Emma, Karen has let a plethora of interests lead her to begin many hobbies and projects she doesn’t quite finish, but she aspires to be a great reader and an excellent walker—like Elizabeth Bennet.
Connect with Karen:
• Website • Amazon Author Page • Facebook • Twitter • Pinterest • Instagram • Tumblr •
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I live the video of your Highbury! Looking forward to the audiobook
ReplyDeleteThanks! I'm excited about it too :)
DeleteGlad you enjoyed it, Christina!
DeleteThat is very interesting and I love that you're putting it on audio Karen.
ReplyDeleteFun post, Ceri!
Thanks Sophia, glad you liked it :)
DeleteI think it's a story that lends itself to audio - I was just so grateful to find Emily. I think she did a wonderful job!
ReplyDelete