Take His Likeness: A Pride and Prejudice Variation
β Scribed by Lyndsay Constable
- Book ID
- 115124209
- Publisher
- Lyndsay Constable
- Year
- 2024
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 178 KB
- Category
- Fiction
- ASIN
- B0D3G9YZ1G
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
*Sir,
Scorn me if you must, but let it be done for reasons that are just and true. The idea of you moving through the world with disdain for me based on false notions is too much to bear. Once I have given you all the reasons for my deceptions, if you still choose to hold me in contempt, it will be done honestly. *
ELIZABETH BENNET has a secret. The finances of Longbourn are more dire than is generally known and she has been forced by necessity to help keep food on the table of her family home. Her secret is safe. Until the night the handsome face and kind attentions of Fitzwilliam Darcy lay claim to her affections.
FITZWILLIAM DARCY is in dangerously low spirits. He cannot forgive himself for his mistakes in judgment that almost caused his young sister to marry George Wickham. This visit to Hertfordshire was supposed to cheer him. But nothing works until that odd night in the libraryβ¦
Take His Likeness is a Pride and Prejudice Variation with a nod towards Jane Eyre. It has a touch of Magical Realism, Elizabeth in disguise, Elizabeth falls first, and a Happily Ever After for Elizabeth and Darcy.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
Elizabeth remembers nothing but her name. Darcy is determined to claim her anyway. She remembers nothing.Certainly not the cold, furious face of the avenging angel who claims he is her husband. Certainly not the inexplicable yearning, the undeniable desire she feels when Darcy claims her from her a
What if Mr. Darcyβs father took the time to teach his son what was right and to correct his temper? This story begins earlier when Fitzwilliam Darcy is 23 years old and he meets Elizabeth Bennet as a young woman, who is visiting the Gardiners in London. The elder Mr. Darcy is alive and several ant
βYou must come home instantly and make our horrid aunt Gardiner go away to London again. I do not know why Jane and Lizzy liked so much to stay in Gracechurch Street, for our aunt is most unfair. She read me an odiously dull lecture, which was so long that I scarce could have been expected to listen