'Tis the Season: Variations on a Jane Austen Christmas
- 676 pages
- 24 hours of reading
An author and editor specializing in Austenesque novels, this writer possesses a deep affection for history and romance. As a co-founder of Quills & Quartos Publishing, they contribute to the literary landscape with their particular brand of historical romance.




Charles Bingley is a man who relies on Darcy's judgment in all things yet understands very little of it, at least when Darcy is speaking Greek to a horse who only understands Latin or staring at the quick-witted sister of his own angelic Jane Bennet. What was happening behind the scenes at Netherfield, Pemberley, and Darcy House, and just what did those men talk about over billiards and brandy? A generous, kind, and always hungry Bingley sheds a little light on keeping company with the most interesting man in the world, and shares his thoughts on puppies, his dreadful sisters, and the meaning of happiness.
It is a truth universally acknowledged that a gossip in possession of misheard tales and desiring both a good wife and an eager audience need only descend upon the sitting rooms of a small country town in order to find satisfaction. And with a push from Lady Catherine, Mr Collins sets alight a series of misunderstandings, rumours, and lies that create obstacles to a romance between Fitzwilliam Darcy and Elizabeth Bennet.This slightly unhinged romantic comedy follows Darcy as he sets off to find himself a wife and is pulled into the mire of his aunt’s machinations and his own fascination with Elizabeth, whom he believes betrothed to another. With Meryton judging him the grieving groom of Anne de Bourgh and a caddish dallier with the hearts of others, Darcy must ferret out the truth behind his cousin’s disappearance, protect his sister from the fretful fate of all Fitzwilliam females, and, most importantly, win Elizabeth’s heart.