1. Congratulations on your recent marriage! As a romance writer, I hope you are willing to share a little of your own story. I am always comparing my husband to Mr. Darcy (poor man - it’s way too much to live up to!). Do you relate your relationship to any of those in Austen?
Certainly.   It is difficult to avoid it! Austen sets her heroes up to be just so!   Obviously, it is especially difficult not to compare David to Mr Darcy,   because in essentials, he is my Darcy--or more specifically--he   is my great Austen hero. If I could liken him more specifically to a   character, I would probably have to say it is Henry Tilney. Although he   doesn't exactly know muslin, he has easy manners and loves to tease me   as Henry loved to do to Catherine. David and I met nearly two years ago  and  had our first date on November 2nd. One year later, on November  7th, he  proposed with a box full of Taco Bell hot sauce packets that  said "Will  You Marry Me?" I looked up in surprise, and he said, "Well,  will you?"  It was all very sweet. If you've never noticed that Taco Bell has those packets that say "Will You Marry Me?" now you will.   We were married six months later on June 5th (we're very big on the   first weekend of the month). From our first date, I knew he was someone   special. He made me laugh, had a good heart, and actually watched all   five hours of Pride and Prejudice with me! David and I are most   happy doing our best to make one another happy. He indulges my writing   hobby and swears one day I'll make him a million dollars, and I indulge   his gross exaggerations of my abilities, haha. In all seriousness,   though we had it much easier than Darcy or Elizabeth usually have it in   any version of their story, I think we'll be very happy for a long time   to come. 
2.  Your wedding was entirely Austen themed (pictures can be viewed at Ms.  Childers’ blog),  which begs a variety of questions: how did you come up  with the idea,  what was your favorite themed item (I loved the programs  folded like  old letters and sealed with wax!), and how did you convince  your  husband to go along with it?
You   know, I love the Regency period and the simplicity of things that  comes  from a simpler time in life. I decided to plan my wedding around  that  theme, because I already collect and decorate with little trinkets  and  designs that remind me of that time and of props I might see in a  period  movie. It sounds silly, but I will watch period movies for ideas  on how to  decorate my house! I think it goes along with the Southerner  in me. I  grew up in a simple place, raised by grandparents who come  from a  different time. I'm really attracted to maintaining that  simplicity in  my own life, and thus, the combination of a small Austen  themed wedding  in the country seemed like the most obvious option. At  any rate, it gave  me an opportunity to indulge something that I had  only toyed with in  moderation prior. I had so much fun! 
I   think the love letter programs with wax were my favorite also--namely   because they were completely my own idea. On the inside, I wrote the   programs just like a love letter, beginning with "My dearest loves," and   it was in Jane Austen's handwriting font. I used that same font for my   invitations. 
My   second favorite was just a coincidence. A day before the wedding, I   finally went to get the book boxes. I was sure they wouldn't have enough   "Pride and Prejudice" boxes at Garden ridge and so resigned myself to   having to buy a few different kinds. However, I got in there and they   must have had a shipment or something, because they had something like   fifteen "Pride and Prejudice" boxes. It was awesome because I only   needed seven. I got so lucky, and I was delighted to be able to put   Austen on every table.
As   I mentioned before, David is very indulgent when it comes to my Austen   fetish, and was happy to sit back and let me have at it if it meant he   didn't have to do much of anything. I did run everything by him as I  did  it though, and he helped as much as I would allow. Thank goodness  he  didn't mind!
3. How did you first fall in love with Austen?
It   is kind of a funny story, really, because the first time I tried to   read Jane Austen, I hated it. Granted, I was about thirteen years old,   in a car with my family driving to Myrtle Beach for a week. The novel   was Sense and Sensibility,   which is ironically now my favorite. I couldn't understand how  everyone  was named Mrs/Miss/Mr Dashwood. I still have that copy of  S&S, it's  pretty ratty now, but it has since been read and  enjoyed thoroughly. 
In my senior year of high school, my teacher offered me Pride and Prejudice   as an alternative to what the class was reading (I am notoriously   scared of the dark, and was worried about how I would sleep after   reading Dracula). I don't know what she expected, but I think she   was pleasantly surprised with how much I loved it! I ended up making   her an obnoxious 45 page PowerPoint presentation about the entire book. I   later found out that she had actually never read the book herself, and   my enthusiasm motivated her to read P&P and subsequently all  of  Austen's novels. A peek at her online teaching information reveals  that  she has now added Austen to the curriculum! As for me, I have been  a  huge Austen fan ever since.  
4. In Twilight of the Abyss,   Elizabeth Bennet suffers terribly when Mr. Darcy withdraws from her   life due to a family scandal. What was your motivation/inspiration for   putting Elizabeth through such acute torment (I couldn’t stop crying)? 
I   had several elements of inspiration for that story. I wanted to  combine  the idea of Darcy and Elizabeth falling in love, and put  Elizabeth in  the shoes of canon Jane in London after Darcy leaves  instead of Bingley.  I had this emotional scene in my head, inspired by  Marianne Dashwood's seaside heartbreak, of Elizabeth looking out at a  gloomy beach  sunset with her heart just aching with longing. It moved  me to think of  her like that. I wanted her to experience something like  what Darcy  might have gone through after she declined his proposal in  the original.  Of course, I couldn't leave Darcy out of the mix, I  wanted him to feel  as deeply as she did. 
Firstly,   everything I write relies on where my heart is at the time. I can't   write happy and be sad, and I can't write sad and be happy. I have to   draw from something emotionally to have a sincere product that is worth   reading. While I was writing Twilight of the Abyss, I was going   through some personal sadness, as my father's marriage was crumbling,   and dealing with my young sister's pain at being caught in the middle of   the crossfire. I needed an outlet for such melancholy. I turned down   the lights, I lit candles, put actual pen to paper and even made myself cry. I thought of what that is   like, to love someone and them not love you back, to feel so hopeless   when things happen that you can't control or change, and I focused on   how that changes people. I didn't want them to suffer for nothing. I   wanted them both to learn things about themselves, and even change for   the better. Darcy ultimately learns something valuable from the cousin   he was so determined to disdain and censure for choosing to have what   Darcy gave up. Elizabeth learns that she can't internalize everything,   that it only festers that way. She learns to trust people more with her   feelings and that, ultimately, you have administer to your own   happiness. My characters overcome a lot, but they ultimately come out on   the other side. As sad as the bulk was, I really wanted the story to   also be one of hope. That it doesn't have to be so hard forever. I   didn't just want them to suffer in vain.   
5.   One of my favorite parts of your book is your development of Jane   Bingley, who is much more feisty and outspoken in your hands than she is   typically portrayed. Please tell us a bit about your decision to   highlight this aspect of her character?
I   have given a lot of thought to and even struggled with what type of   person Jane Bennet is, because I have a hard time understanding how such   serene sweetness can perpetuate through all situations. I cannot   discount that such goodness exists, and yet I felt she could be   developed a little bit. Of course, she is going to be protective of   Elizabeth. Think back to how protective Elizabeth was of her. Elizabeth's behavior in Twilight of the Abyss   could test the patience of a saint, hence when Jane finally loses her   temper with her sister, I think it's really important. Who else is   Elizabeth going to listen to a sit down from above Jane? Who else is   there to do the job once they've reached this point? 
And   then, naturally, Jane is going to have a hard time forgiving Darcy for   what he's done. I believe offenses against the people we love are much   more difficult to forgive than the one's committed against ourselves.   Besides, someone needed to provide relief from all immediate happiness   at D&E's engagement. Jane doesn't allow Darcy to instantly  forget  all the pain he's caused, especially since Elizabeth does not  ask him to  atone for it. She is a very important link to this story,  and thus I  allowed her affection for Elizabeth to give her a more  substantial and  emotional character. 
6. What are you currently writing? More Austen variations?
The  next story that will be available in hard copy is called "Single  Until...". The story is a modern retelling of Pride and Prejudice  through the eyes of relationship columnist Elizabeth Bennet. It is a  lighthearted comedy, and I had a lot of fun writing it. 
I  am currently writing another modern  that pays particular attention to  the differences of Southern culture:  between those of us who live in  the country, and the old money families  that live in the city and  metro-area of Atlanta. Like I did with my  wedding, I've combined the  Southerner and Austen and I'm seeing what I  can come up with. I've also  got some more Regencies up my sleeve,  including one with a mentally  unstable Georgiana that I'm excited about  finishing.
7. What other authors are amongst your favorites?
This   is such a difficult question for me to answer concisely. The list is   huge! In particular, I love Harper Lee, Helen Fielding, Rebecca Wells,   Virginia Woolf, J.K. Rowling, and James Dickey. To Kill a Mockingbird is my favorite non-Austen novel.  
8.  You just launched a blog, The Newlywed Austenite.  How are you enjoying  it so far? When I first started blogging, I had  no idea what a prominent  and fulfilling part of my life it would  become. Any surprises thus far?
I   have dabbled in blogging before, but I've never been that great with   having a theme or direction. I decided that I wanted some sort of   sounding board that wasn't necessarily linked to Austen Underground,  of  which I am a co-founder/owner, and I could still chat about Austen  and  my own writing. I'm surprised about how much I love sitting down  and  chatting about my ideas and what I'm writing about. I have decided  not  to review books for the sake of reviewing them, rather I'm just  going to  point out what it is that I am reading and what I like about  it. I want  it to be conversational and honest. I want to talk about  Austen,  writing, and trying to live up to the expectations associated  with being  a good Southern wife, and chronicle my successes and  failures with it  all. I basically want a chance for people to get to  know me outside of  just my writing or just being an administrator at  Austen Underground. I  have an intense appreciation for Jane Austen that  goes further than just  Pride and Prejudice, I have an  appreciation of books and words  in general, I'm a burgeoning educator,  and I'm struggling to find the  most fitting niche from which I can  build my writing. It at least gives  me something to talk about, so I  decided that it might be nice to put  myself out there. 
What's   surprising is I've been having to pace myself. I have so many ideas   about what I want to write about and discuss that I had to tell myself   to stop posting all at once. I've instead been writing blog ideas on   post-its and leaving them on my desk for later. I have to remind myself   to have just one post a day right now.  
9. Please tell us about some of your non-Austen interests and hobbies.
The   easiest answer is loving to read in general. I love books, and I have   so many that my husband begs me to avoid bookstores!  Writing is my   hobby. When David goes into his office to play his computer game, I go   into mine, close the door and write. As I mentioned in passing, I am   also finishing up my degree in English Education, so I spend a lot of   time reading young adult novels (some of them are absolutely wonderful)   and doing "teacher stuff." I'd like to take up some gardening in the   future. I love fresh vegetables and flowers. 
10.   According to your “What Austen Heroine are You?” Quiz badge, you are   Elinor Dashwood. I am Emma Woodhouse, but I’d like to be Anne Elliot.   Are you a happy Elinor or do you wish, like me, that you were more like   one of the other heroines. If so, why?
I'm   a big fan of Elinor Dashwood, though, like you, I think Anne is   definitely a character to admire. If I could only have the patience of   Anne Elliot, the sense of Elinor Dashwood, the goodness of Fanny Price,   Emma Woodhouse's beauty, and Elizabeth Bennet's sense of humor and wit,  I  think I would be just perfect! As for Catherine Morland, I've been   feeling quite a bit like her lately whilst reading Vampire Darcy's Desire. I've had my nose tucked in that book then something in my house will make a noise, and I'll nearly fly out of my chair! 
Thank you, my dear Ms. Childers, for sharing so much of yourself with us! It's a been a pleasure!
Casey  Childers is a native of Atlanta, Georgia, and was a student of  both  Young Harris College and Kennesaw State University where she has   studied literature and education. She became a lover of all things   Austen in her teens and has never looked back. She now lives peacefully   in north Georgia with her husband, two cats, an ever-growing book   collection, and writes Austen-fiction in her free time.
 


 
 
Thanks for the interview, Alexa. I was honored to do it and be featured on your blog!
ReplyDeleteWow, what a great, in-depth interview! I appreciate your asking questions about Twilight but also about Casey's personal life. Being a big fan --and friend--of Casey, I am so happy that she let everyone have this little glimpse of her. Well done Casey and Alexa!
ReplyDeleteSara
I was thrilled to read this interview. Casey is one of my favorite people, to say nothing of her as a writer. "Single Until..." is a delightful story and I'm so glad that she is publishing it. I look forward to having it for my ever expanding Austen library.
ReplyDeletePat
Alexa and Casey, congrats on this wonderful interview ! Loved reading it !
ReplyDeleteThank you, Alexa for introducing Casey to all of us! It has been delightful to read your Austenesque conversation. And now...I've become Casey's follower on her blog and I have a new book on my TBR list!
ReplyDeleteSimply fantastic! There is so many things I want to comment on! (I'll try to keep it short!) I loved that you had an Austen-themed wedding! I wish I thought of that! It must have been so beautiful. I think my husband is a Tilney too, he loves to tease, but doesn't no muslin either! I wish they had an Austen Hero quiz for husbands, that would be fun! Twilight of the Abyss sounds wonderful, I have yet to read it and after this interview want to even more! I am very interested in seeing a different Jane Bingley and Mr. Darcy's family being the scandalous one instead of Elizabeth's. I was wondering, Casey, if you were planning to write anything for S&S since it is your favorite novel?
ReplyDeleteThank you so much for the terrific interview ladies, I greatly enjoyed it!
I'm so happy everyone enjoyed this interview!
ReplyDeleteCasey - The pleasure was all mine!
Sara - Thanks for stopping by! It's always great to hear from another writer of JAFF! I just started reading modernizations, so I have yet to read your book, but it's on my list!
Pat - I'm going to wait until it comes out to read "Single Until...". Something to look forward to! Thanks for helping me get in touch with Casey in the first place!
Maria - Always happy to oblige! I like Casey's blog - isn't it amazing how many permutations there are of blogging about Austen! This southern homemaker spin of Casey's is a neat new way of approaching the topic.
Meredith - We totally need an Austen Hero Quiz! I'm going to try to contact Kali at Strangegirl.com with the idea. So glad you enjoyed the interview!
Whoops! I almost missed Lori!
ReplyDeleteLori - Great to hear from you! I'm so pleased you enjoyed the interview and hope you are having a lovely summer. Keep in touch!
Maria and Meredith, thanks for the blog follow, I do hope you like "Twilight of the Abyss."
ReplyDeleteMeredith, I do have ideas about an S&S story, but I can never seem to get it going once I begin. It is definitely something I would like to do. I think I'm getting too used to these P&P characters for my own good!
Yes, I definitely think an Austen hero for husbands quiz is in order!
Alexa, if you read any modern, you gotta read Trials. It's one of the very best in my opinion. :)
Great interview Alexa and Casey, really enjoyed! I am privileged to personally know Casey (and David) and have always enjoyed her stories. She is all that you read and more. She and David are the absolute cutest couple!! I am prejudiced but Casey's Twilight is in my top list of all time favorite stories and I was so thrilled (and thankful so I got stop re-printing) when Casey decided to publish. In my opinion it is one of the most well written and accurate portraits of Darcy and Elizabeth’s love (in the realm of the fan fiction world) and one that JA herself would approve and enjoy. It's nice to see her receive the praise and accolades she has so long deserved. Read her stories, you will see that she does write from her heart! Theresa (tac)
ReplyDeleteTheresa, you are too nice to me! Such praise is more than I deserve certainly, but thank you nonetheless. I am nowhere near as talented as Jane Austen, I will not allow that, and I have plenty of room for improvement. Even so, I think it is obvious that there was no question why I dedicated "Twilight of the Abyss" to you. It is your book, and I am delighted you like it so much. -Casey
ReplyDeleteGreat interview Alexa and I'm looking forward to reading Twilight of the Abyss,
ReplyDeleteHi Jj. I think you'll really enjoy it. I'd go with a porter - something comforting.
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