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Mr. Darcy Takes a Wife: A Deliciously Steamy Historical Romance that Starts After the Wedding Night Kindle Edition
Mr. Darcy Takes a Wife: The sexiest Austen-inspired novel that has readers talking
You thought Bridgerton was steamy? Well hold on to your bonnets! This sexy, epic, hilarious, and romantic sequel to Pride and Prejudice goes far beyond Jane Austen fanfiction to give the curious reader a titillating taste of how it would feel to be Mrs. Darcy.
Every woman wants to be Elizabeth Bennet Darcy—beautiful, gracious, universally admired, strong, daring, and outspoken—a thoroughly modern woman in crinolines.
And every woman will fall madly in love with Mr. Darcy—tall, dark, and handsome, a nobleman and a heartthrob whose virility is matched only by his utter devotion to his wife.
Their passion is consuming and idyllic—essentially, they can't keep their hands off each other—through a sweeping tale of adventure and misadventure, human folly, and numerous mysteries of parentage.
Keep your smelling salts handy: this steamy bonnet-ripper is Austen like never before.
What Readers Are Saying:
"I found myself up until 3AM because I couldn't stop and have read it again and again."
"Who says Jane Austen can't be literate AND sexy... I just kept envisioning Colin Firth all hot and sweaty."
"A lady needs to have a fan and her smelling salts at hand to read this modern day sequel to Pride and Prejudice."
"This is probably my favorite feel-good book; I end up giggling in almost every chapter"
"I am reading it for the 8th time since I bought it four years ago."
"I laughed, I cried, and I blushed!"
"It's the love story we hoped for Lizzy and Darcy. The writing is witty, the language superb and I have gone back to this book many times when I simply didn't have anything else on hand!"
"If you want to know what happens to Darcy and Elizabeth after they are married and uncensored, this is the book for you!"
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherSourcebooks Landmark
- Publication dateMay 1, 2004
- File size1.5 MB
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Editorial Reviews
Review
I highly recommend Mr. Darcy Take a Wife. It’s not too often that we get to find out what happens next, and Berdoll does an admirable job of continuing a wonderful story." ― Epinions.com
"I loved Mr. Darcy Takes a Wife, and I want more! And being the lucky girl I am, there's more, because Berdoll has written a sequel to this sequel. I will be continuing the exciting story of Darcy and Elizabeth in Darcy & Elizabeth: Nights and Days at Pemberley. I can't wait!" ― blogcritics.org
" If you want to see what a romance writer can do with Austen’s characters, then Mr. Darcy Takes a Wife is an overheated potboiler of a bodice ripper that can’t fail to elicit a strong opinion one way or the other." ― This Gaudy Gilded Stage
"In short, with this book, Linda Berdoll proves herself to be a worthy novelist, and her continuation of Austen’s evergreen tale will live long in readers’ memories, perhaps even as long as the original." ― CurledUp.com
About the Author
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
The renowned (if occasionally peevish) lady of letters, Charlotte Brontë, once carped of fellow authoress Jane Austen's work, "...she ruffles her reader by nothing vehement, disturbs him by nothing profound: the Passions are perfectly unknown to her...what throbs fast and full, though hidden, what the blood rushes through, what is the unseen seat of Life and the sentient target of death-this Miss Austen ignores."
It is forever lost what Jane Austen might have made of Jane Eyre, hence we shan't dally with such a conjecture. And however we are moved to defend Miss Austen's unparalleled literary gift, we cannot totally disregard Miss Brontë's observation, for it was quite on the money. Jane Austen wrote of what she knew.Miss Austen never married, it appears her own life passed with only the barest hint of romance. Hence, one must presume she went to her great reward virgo intactus.
As befitting a maiden's sensibilities, her novels all end with the wedding ceremony. What throbs fast and full, what the blood rushes through, is denied her unforgettable characters and, therefore, us. Dash it all!
We endeavour to right this wrong by compleating at least one of her stories, beginning whence hers leaves off. Our lovers have wed. But the throbbing that we first encounter is not the cry of a passionate heart. Another part of her anatomy is grieving Elizabeth Bennet Darcy.
Part One
As plush a coach as it was, recent rains tried even its heavy springs.Hence, the road to Derbyshire was betimes a bit jarring. Mr. Darcy, with all gentlemanly solicitousness, offered the new Mrs. Darcy a pillow upon which to sit to cushion the ride.
It was a plump tasselled affair, not at all discreet. His making an issue of her sore nether-end was a mortification in and of itself. But, as Elizabeth harboured the conviction that she had adopted a peculiar gait as a result of her most recent (by reason of matrimony) pursuits, her much abused dignity forbade her to accept such a blatant admission of conjugal congress. Thus, the cushion was refused.
Dignity notwithstanding, the unrelenting jiggle of the carriage demanded by the puddles bade her eye that same pillow wistfully as its soft comfort lay wasted upon the empty seat opposite them. As she clung to the handgrip, she knew it was indefensibly foolish not to admit to her husband that he was justified in suspecting that she needed it. But at that moment, not making a concession to him was a matter of principle.
Suffering both from the road and from knowing herself unreasonably miffed, she submitted to the silent chastisement that she must learn to accept the perversely quixotic turns of her new husband.
As each and every muddy mile they travelled diminished the distance betwixt Elizabeth and the awesome duty that awaited her as mistress of such a vast estate as Pemberley, she became ever more uneasy. It was not that she had only then fully comprehended what awaited her, for she had. At least as comprehensibly as it was possible.
Hitherto, there had been the excitement of the wedding, and moreover, the anticipation of connubial pleasures with Mr. Darcy that buffered her from the daunting devoir that lay ahead. In soothing her newly appreciated trepidation, her husband was of no help whatsoever. Indeed, they had no more than stepped from their matrimonial bedchamber before he had reclaimed his recently relinquished mask of reticence. And with it, that maddening hauteur. One peculiar only to him.
It was only subsequent to their engagement that he had ceased addressing her as "Miss Bennet" in lieu of her Christian name. Delightful as that transfiguration was, her previous understanding in regards to her name was usurped in the throes of passion. For in the considerable heat generated the previous evening, he had repeatedly
murmured "Lizzy" in her ear.
To her dismay, their re-emergence into company bade the Master of Pemberleyserve compunction by abandoning that much-appreciated endearment. This disappointment would have been less egregious had he not insisted upon addressing her as "Mrs. Darcy" not only to the help, but privately as well. Her alteration from Lizzy to Mrs. Darcy had been vexatiously abrupt. Therefore, Mrs. Darcy was profoundly aggrieved and sat in petulant silence much of their trip.
This lack of conversation he did nothing to mitigate.
Indeed, it was a repetition of the ride from their wedding to their London honeymoon nest the day before. She had convinced herself hitherto that his quiet could be attributed to nerves (owing to the compleat lack of reserve that night). Presently, she had not a clue.
Upon thinking of that lack of reserve and the resultant kindness done upon her person, it bade her not to think so meanly upon her husband, silent or no. If he had truly been disquieted in apprehension of their wedding-night, might not his present reticence come from unease? It occurred to her that the more firmly he seemed in his own charge, the greater was his perceived threat to it. Hence, his wall of defence. At one time, she might have been amused to think herself such a disconcertion to the arrogant Mr. Darcy. But no more.
Impetuously, she took his hand. In no manner did she want him to believe her a peril to his well-being.
The carriage, evidently unhindered by the weightiness of her ruminations, endeavoured on. Hence, she wrested her attention from them and peered out the window as they ambled down the fashionable avenues of Mayfair. There, even so fine a carriage as theirs excited few heads to turn and watch as they passed.
But once upon the road north, a legion of staring eyes could be detected through the obfuscatory yellow fog that clung persistently to the streets.Unaccustomed as she was to being the occupant of such an elegant coach, Elizabeth was a little off-put to be the object of such general scrutiny. Mr. Darcy, however, as was his habit, practised an impervious gaze just at the horizon, reflecting neither distaste nor notice of the gawking.
They broke their journey for a spare midday meal at a plain but tidy inn. This rest occasioned the innkeeper and his wife into whimpering subservience, thus enlightening Elizabeth to the extreme deference she must weather as Mr. Darcy's wife.
The brevity of their stop was in all probability ultimately a good thing, blessedly truncating as it did the publican couple's display. The next fit of veneration from a person of lesser birth than the Darcys (i.e., just about everyone) would not be so unexpected. Elizabeth promised herself that she would practise Darcy's patrician inscrutability and elude the urge to tell those servile persons they had undoubtedly mistaken her for someone else.
Whilst still partaking of their meal, Darcy apologised unnecessarily upon the austere winter dressing of his county.
Product details
- ASIN : B0023EF9O8
- Publisher : Sourcebooks Landmark
- Accessibility : Learn more
- Publication date : May 1, 2004
- Language : English
- File size : 1.5 MB
- Screen Reader : Supported
- Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
- X-Ray : Enabled
- Word Wise : Enabled
- Print length : 528 pages
- ISBN-13 : 978-1402234859
- Page Flip : Enabled
- Best Sellers Rank: #79,141 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
- #363 in Romance Literary Fiction
- #600 in Historical Regency Fiction
- #1,503 in Regency Historical Romance
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

In Ms. Berdoll's wildly successful Pride & Prejudice sequels, Mr. Darcy Takes a Wife, Darcy & Elizabeth, the Ruling Passion, and New Pleasures have over 400,000 copies in print. The Ruling Passion has been given the Independent Publisher's Gold Award 2012 for Historical fiction. Mr. Darcy Takes a Wife (2004) won FOREWORD MAGAZINE BOOK OF THE YEAR Silver Award, and Darcy & Elizabeth, winner of INDEPENDENT PUBLISHER’S BOOK AWARDS - 1st Place HISTORICAL FICTION 2007.
ABOUT AUTHOR LINDA BERDOLL
My fascination – nay – obsession with all things Austen began inauspiciously enough. To quote Mr. Darcy, “I was in the middle before I knew I had begun.”
“It is a truth universally acknowledged...”
I never imagined the A&E Pride & Prejudice mini-series could have moved me so profoundly. Although it renewed my interest in all of Jane Austen’s novels, it was Darcy & Elizabeth who sent me headlong into an obsession that has not yet run its course. (Granted, my interest might not have been so keen had the role of Mr. Darcy not been so well cast.) My path to Jane Austen fandom in general and Pride & Prejudice specifically began like hordes of others. I was swept away by A&E’s production of the mini-series. Darcy & Elizabeth’s story transfixed me. I simply could not bear to have it end. (I really, really could not bear for it to end.) In my quest for more, I dug out my hardback copy of P&P and read and re-read it. I reread Austen's other novels and several biographies. This little foray into all that was Austen was fulfilling in many ways. I learnt what any Jane Austen enthusiast worth their salt knows. Jane was not some humourless spinster.
Her cunning prose and societal insight announced itself early on. In what is described as her Juvenilia her heroine warns a friend prone to histrionics, decrying fainting fits – “Run mad if you must, but do not swoon.”
Her letters to her sister Cassandra were filled with local bits of news, some related with more than a little cheek. In one letter to her sister, Jane tells of a pregnant neighbor taken to the straw. “Mrs. Hall was brought to bed yesterday of a dead child some weeks before she expected, owing to a fright,” writes Jane. “I suppose she happened to look unawares upon her husband.” (Who would have guessed Miss Austen was that irreverent?)
For all that, my appetite for Pride & Prejudice remained unsated.
I fantasized about what might have really come to pass behind Pemberley’s portieres. Was she so inclined, Austen certainly could not enlighten us – and not just because she is long dead. As a well-brought up maiden, she could not have presumed to know what passed between a married couple. (For that matter, if one looks carefully Austen’s novels, they do not contain a conversation solely between menfolk either.) Indeed, Jane Austen’s novels concluded with the wedding ceremony. Although Jane Austen is very nearly perfection, she is burdened by a single criticism. In ending P&P with the Darcys on the cusp of what undoubtedly would be a marriage of unrivaled passion, she has left many of her readers with a case of literary coitus interruptus.
(It is a sad commentary on my character that Austen’s gifts as a writer took a backseat to Colin Firth’s incomparable portrayal of the smoldering Mr. Darcy.)
Like countless others, I continued to moon about the Darcys. I was embarrassed by my lately-come fanaticism, but unable to shake it. While the internet was rife with fan fiction, a computer dunce, I was completely oblivious. So, to fill my need to learn what might have become of the Darcys, I eventually quit my explicit day-dreaming and began to fill page after page of legal-size yellow tablets with purple prose. Pen and paper soon deemed too slow, I continued to muse in the glow of my computer screen. Honing my limited fictional skills, I was content in the certainty that my words would never see the light of day. Indeed, that freedom unleashed my heretofore dormant imagination. Perhaps I was not the first sequelist, but none were more brazen.
The whole enterprise was a lark – pages locked in a drawer to one day embarrass my children. My husband, a most reticent man, expressed his admiration for my accomplishment by insisting that I publish the book. Reluctant to expose myself in that fashion, I agreed only because I was certain that no one would buy it. We published Mr. Darcy Takes a wife as The Bar Sinister - a title that I thought as brilliant at the time. While I cowered in the car, my own dear Mr. Darcy went from bookstore to bookstore with The Bar Sinister in hand, asking to speak to the manager. Perhaps it was due as much to his quiet manner as the merit of my book, but every single one agreed to place The Bar Sinister on their shelves. Emboldened, we began selling them one by one via our own no-frills website. We soon began getting large orders from distributers, fulfilling them out of our garage.
In the year 2000, selling a book on Amazon meant a book was open for appraisal by anonymous reviewers. Hence, it was the ultimate test of my mettle – a trait I had already exposed to be dolefully lacking. I knew some might believe a sequel to Pride & Prejudice with The Bar Sinister’s explicitness of questionable merit. I was unprepared for a hue and cry that could be heard on several continents. The level of vitriol was quite off-putting. But I came to understand that amongst Jane Austen followers there is an element that could only be described as “lunatic fringe.” Although I received no outright death threats, some reviews were ominous enough for me to consider checking the ignition of my car for incendiary devices.
Fortunately, the wail of horrified Janeites was soon drowned out by those who loved the Darcys and my version of their passionate story.
With the demand for the book increasing day by day, we sold the rights to Sourcebooks who resurrected the working title, Mr. Darcy Takes a Wife and endowed it with a beautiful cover. A national presence allowed professional reviewers a chance to weigh in. Most of them were surprisingly generous. Booklist, Library Journal –even the Chicago Tribune all gave good notices. While One Canadian newspaper reviewer generally liked it, she suggested that Mr. Darcy’s penis was actually another character in the book. I would have taken offense, but one could argue the point.
I am told there are thousands upon thousands of Jane Austen sequels, furtherings and retellings now. Most stay true to her vision. Others sport zombies, Dracula and at least one containing “love that dares not speak its name”. In comparison, MDTAW’s seething passion is positively sedate. To my complete surprise and untold gratitude, Mr. Darcy Takes a Wife has sold nearly 400,000 copies and has been printed in four languages. I have written four successive sequels (MDTAW 2004, Darcy & Elizabeth 2006, the Ruling Passion 2011, and New Pleasures 2016) and am writing a fifth. As a work in progress, it is lovingly referred to as Mr. Darcy Takes His Wife Some More.
When I recall the early groundswell of vituperation I once weathered, I am reminded of the story of a man who, upon being found guilty of some infraction, was swept up by a mob of citizenry. He was tarred and feathered and run out of town on a rail. Afterwards, he was asked by a reporter how he felt about event. He replied, “If it wasn’t for the honor of the thing, I’d just as soon walked.”
All in all, I’m glad I went along for the ride. I’ve met so many wonderful people that it hard to recall the early days of eager dread as I awaited the overnight Amazon reviews to load. I still care about my readers’ opinions, but I am proud to say I can now read unkind reviews without falling into a fainting fit. However, my dearest friends would probably agree that I’d run mad long before.
Linda Berdoll
Linda is married to her High School sweetheart, the mother of two handsome sons and unrepentant spoiler of five grandchildren.
~~~~~~
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Top reviews from the United States
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- Reviewed in the United States on June 2, 2015Format: KindleVerified PurchaseThis is my second read. And yet it did not diminish the fact that I like it and better. I was reading this book during a long trip .An 8 hour trip but got lost along the way became 9 and half hour. This book is a bit raunchy and loaded with sex but I prefer the warm blooded Mr Darcy than a boring one. More fun to read. There is a lot of criticism regarding love life of Mr Darcy and Elizabeth but they seem to be true to themselves behind closed doors. Just because he is a gentleman does not mean he is not capable of or immune to passionate love life . Mr Darcy reminds me of calm river that runs deep. A lot of purist readers and fans of Jane Austin writing out there I can see , but it's alright to criticize Ms Berdoll ( I am sure she is having a great time with the massive responses - laughing all the way to the bank . ) The massive and varying responses to the book is the testament to its success . I do say that such an extensive and very interesting narrative of Elizabeth and Darcy after they got married is hard to match . Usually after the married the fun of the story sizzle but not this book . If one anticipate a long car or bus trip about 10 hours , I suggest take this book . It made such a trip so much pleasant . And that is what I did and I am glad I have my kindle. This book is the best love affair between Elizabeth and Mr Darcy . It is like watching a big epic or big movie saga. And to those Jane Austin purist , I can understand , the language and everything seems wrong to them but this is just a variant to the classic . Along the way tragedy happen even to the most happily married couple. The scene and narrative is so poignant ( the death of their son during childbirth .) I may not have experience such tragedy but I witnessed ( so many time in my carrier in health care ) how tragedy struck even to the most powerful couple and it made me wonder how it can happen. Mr Bingly just did not get it but his friend Mr Darcy taught him some valuable lesson and the same thing with readers like me. I made the same mistake I recall but Mr Darcy ( or Linda Berdoll) had explained it best and that is - just because one tragedy happen after the other does not diminish the sorrow a person who experienced it . To express sincere empathy is not an easy task but one one can only give silent respect to those who are grieving . So as fiction as this story is about , a lesson is learn . Of course not everything is sad .. Critics should just lighten up . There is a place and time to criticize different books true classics or otherwise. But this is one happy reader. This book is a true diversion. Just like in the hospitals where I work .Behind the scene and in the confine of their lounge , Medical Resident don't read text to divert themselves but they might want to know the story of the kardashian as written on the gossip magazine . Anything but serious medical text !
- Reviewed in the United States on January 3, 2015Format: KindleVerified PurchaseI preface this review by stating that I've avoided reading this book for a long time, having scanned through the reviews on numerous occasions. It is extremely rare for me to purchase a book with so little as three stars average, particularly when so many complained that it was extraordinarily trashy, poorly written, and difficult to comprehend with so many strange words and not entirely true to Austen's universe. Yet, having seen the book referenced on numerous occasions, and considering myself a JAFF enthusiast, I decided that it was time I decided for myself.
Having read the novel now, I agree that the complaints as listed by other readers are all legitimate, but I believe are too shallow an analysis for such an epic work. I won't elaborate on them - they are amply documented in the 1 and 2 star reviews, and I confess are the reason I withheld the fifth star on my own review. What I didn't expect was such an intricate plot, with so many themes seamlessly woven together that the result is a masterpiece in it's own right. The theme of fidelity in marriage (perceived or not) juxtaposed by infidelity and it's consequences was the overarching theme I found in my first read - every character was touched by the ripples stemming from events even decades old, a legacy that overshadows subsequent generations in surprising and complex ways.
Although Elizabeth and Darcy do share an extremely amorous love life, one must take note that all they do, they do within the confines of their marital vows while those around them are not always so true. While Darcy and Elizabeth were definitely *cough* "experimental" in their expressions of physical love, the telling of it was not gratuitous or explicit. It was FAR from the "soft-core porn" I see attributed in other reviews. Sadly, the impacts of the less than stellar behavior on the part of those around them does cast some pretty long shadows in the plot. There are other dark themes of evil beyond the sexual as well - revenge, greed, hatred, murder, war, disease, death, jealousy, unrequited love and more, yet there is a fair amount of Austenesque ridiculousness to offset these things as well. Mr Collins' death by drowning while under pursuit of a swarm of bees was just such a passage.
While I do wish it had been written in a style a bit less cumbersome, I must applaud the work as a whole. It was riveting and deep, and left much room for contemplation.
Top reviews from other countries
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LiviaReviewed in Italy on March 3, 20135.0 out of 5 stars Amore per i classici romantici
Ero curiosa di vedere come potesse essere riscritta la storia d'amore tra Elizabeth e Darcy e ddevo dire che mi sono fatta prendere molto.
vidyadharReviewed in India on March 4, 20164.0 out of 5 stars Four Stars
Good Novel
Amazon CustomerReviewed in Australia on September 22, 20205.0 out of 5 stars Part 2 of Pride and Prejudice
Format: KindleVerified PurchaseIt was well written. Kept me in suspense and I loved how the events of each chapter where told in detailed. Great writer
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Austin好きReviewed in Japan on March 27, 20064.0 out of 5 stars ひとつの作品として十分成り立っている
この作品の評価が分かれる理由はいくつか思い当たる。
だがある一定のP+Pファンの期待に沿おうとしていたというだけではなく、
在る意味十分ひとつの作品として成り立っていて楽しめると思う。
原作でダーシーが大きく成長したように、作品中で後半ダーシーは精神的に、
また別な要素も含めて確実に成長している。
最低の評価が下されがちな理由は、2部から構成されていてその前半が
いわゆるエリザベスとダーシーのラブラブな性描写が多々見られる点と
英語が難解な為その描写のみにとらわれがちになってしまうこと。
(そこでよく読むのをやめてしまう人もいるだろう。)
しかし、後半のストーリー性とそこでのダーシーの精神的な成長を理解する為、
さらに作品を非常に明るく楽しく読むため(これが大事?)には、前半の
ラブラブ要素が必要な事も理解できる。
またそのラブラブな性描写の部分でもよく読めるとある一定の配慮があるともいえる。
ただし作者が作者なので登場人物がアメリカ的になってしまっている+ある一定の単語を使うくせがある等、
どうしても原作と結びつけて読もうとする人にはつらい部分があるのも理解できる。
でも「娯楽作品」としては十分、成り立っていて面白い。
あまりの人気に今年続編が発売されたが、そちらの評価はこの本とは違いアメリカでも評価が低いようだ。
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Lilith FredonReviewed in France on June 7, 20055.0 out of 5 stars Incontournable!
Voici une suite qui mérite d'être lue! Si le style est ici bien différent de celui de J. Austen, le plaisir reste entier. Suivre les tribulations, humoristiques ou tristes d'ailleurs, d'Elizabeth et Fiztwilliam est un véritable régal, car il est bien vrai qu'à la fin de la lecture d'Orgueil et Préjugé, on a envie de savoir ce qu'il est advenu des protagonistes. Des moments absoluments hilarants, d'autres beaucoup plus tristes, une écriture pleine de verve et d'esprit, voilà un livre qu'il faut lire absolument!































