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Linda Berdoll
Darcy & Elizabeth
Author of the #1 Best Selling Pride and Prejudice Sequel Brings Us the Continuing Saga of One of the Most Exciting, Intriguing Couples in
Jane Austen Literature!
Hold onto your bonnets, Pride and Prejudice continues! The Darcy’s marriage is passionate, loving, exciting and wonderful. After giving birth, Elizabeth Bennett Darcy’s figure is so luscious, so buxom, so enticing, that Mr. Darcy is in a constant state of desire. Their happiness knows no bounds.
Sourcebooks is proud to present Darcy and Elizabeth: Nights and Days at Pemberley by bestselling authorLinda Berdoll(ISBN: 1-4022-0563-5; Fiction; May 2006; $16.95 U.S./$23.95 CAN; paperback), taking you further into the exceedingly passionate marriage of Mr. and Mrs. Darcy in this continuing saga of one of the most exciting, intriguing couples in the Jane Austen sequel literature.
As the Darcy’s raise their babies, enjoy their conjugal felicity and manage the great estate of Pemberley, Lady Catherine, who was determined to marry Mr. Darcy to her sickly daughter Anne in Jane Austen’s original Pride and Prejudice, is hell-bent on revenge, and is hatching a plot.
The beloved characters from Jane Austen’s original are joined by Linda Berdoll’s imaginative new creations for a compelling, sexy and epic story guaranteed to keep you turning the pages and gasping with delight.
About the Author
Linda Berdoll is the author of the number one best-selling Jane Austen sequel—her first novel, Mr. Darcy Takes a Wife. Linda Berdoll is a self-described “Texas farm wife” whose interest in all things Austen was piqued by the BBC/A&E mini-series of Pride and Prejudice. Four years and much research later, Mr. Darcy Takes a Wife (originally titled The Bar Sinister) appeared, to the acclaim of readers and the horror of Jane Austen purists. Darcy & Elizabeth (May 2006) is the continuing saga of one of the most exciting, intriguing couples in the Jane Austen sequel literature. Linda Berdoll and her husband live on a pecan farm in Del Valle, Texas. Although she admits that she eloped in a manner similar to Lydia Bennet’s, to her great fortune it was with Darcy, not Wickham.
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