Pride and Prejudice and the City
by Rachael Lippincott
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Pub Date Aug 30 2023 | Archive Date Jul 14 2023
Simon & Schuster (Australia) | Simon & Schuster Children's UK
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Description
What if you found a once-in-a-lifetime love…just not in your lifetime?
Seventeen-year-old Audrey Cameron has lost her spark. After an embarrassing run-in with her ex-boyfriend, she’s told that she needs to get back out there and take risks. What she doesn't expect is to be transported to Regency England!
Lucy Sinclair has her own problems – stifled by her father and trying to avoid an unwanted marriage proposal – when Audrey lands into her life, claiming to be from two hundred years in the future, it's a welcome distraction.
While the girls try to understand what’s happening and how to send Audrey home, their sparks make a comeback in a most unexpected way - instead of falling for their suitors and the happily-ever-afters everyone expects of them, they fall for each other.
Can their love story survive impossible circumstances?
A swoony time-travelling YA romance set in the regency era about finding your spark
Available Editions
EDITION | Paperback |
ISBN | 9781398529274 |
PRICE | A$19.99 (AUD) |
PAGES | 384 |
Available on NetGalley
Featured Reviews
Audrey settles into her corner behind the till in her dad's small corner store. At 17, she is still in high school, but has helped out in the store ever since she can remember. The city of Pittsburgh has changed around the store, but it remains the same as ever, with its loyal customers and a history she is part of.
Working in the store after high school seems a safe bet for Audrey. She had planned to attend Art School, but those plans fell apart when a relationship did. Two rejections from the two most important things in her life has left her smarting, uncertain about going out in the world after high school, and definitely wary of falling in love again.
The shop has many special customers and one of these is Mr Montgomery. He is almost part of the shop, coming in every day for coffee and a newspaper. Her father never charges him for them - never has. This elderly gentleman has seen Audrey grow up, and he tries to give her advice about her art and her heart. She won't hear of it, until he makes her listen... She wakes up in a field in 1812.
Lucy can't believe her eyes. The girl lying on the ground in front of her is wearing trousers! The cloth is strange and Lucy can actually see the girl's skin showing on her body!
She helps her up and takes her back to her house. Luckily her strict father is away for the next few weeks, and she and her house maid Martha can find out where this strange girl is from. But the answer she seeks is preposterous. The year of 2023?!
Audrey quickly proves who she is, and all doubt is left behind as she speaks so strangely, is very confident and outspoken and doesn't seem to have any etiquette training at all. Lucy is perplexed but fascinated at the same time in this stranger. While her father is away, Lucy and Audrey get to know each other. Lucy teaches Audrey all she needs to get by in Regency England, and Audrey slowly draws Lucy's real personality out.
Lucy has been brought up by her father since her mother died. Her parent's had a loveless marriage, and Lucy's mother had wished for more for her only child. But Lucy's father sees her only as a pawn to increase his wealth and standing in the county and business community. Lucy must marry a man much older and richer to cement her father's aspirations.
Together, the girls begin to work out why Audrey has been thrown back in time, all the while becoming their true selves around each other. Does Audrey have to find love to return home to 2023? Can Lucy marry a man she doesn't love? Can Audrey find her love of drawing again? Can Lucy admit the feelings she has for a girl?
As a huge fan of Pride and Prejudice, just the title of this YA novel was enough to dive in. It is told in two points of view. Audrey is 17, and lives in Pittsburgh USA in 2023. Lucy lives on her wealthy father's estate in 1812.
Thrown together when Audrey travels back in time, the contrast between them is captivating. Both dealing with uncertain futures, it was wonderful to watch them unfurl on the page - slowly becoming themselves again after past hurts. Their growing attraction is almost painful to watch as they doubt themselves, then each other, and right before I just about couldn't stand it a page longer, the plot shifts and I'm gripped again.
One of the best romance novels I've read in ages, with a fantastical time twist, finishing with a glimpse of their future together.
(Thank you Net Galley for my ARC of Pride and Prejudice and the City)
i read this in three hours!!!
if you like fluffy romances, time travel, books set in regency England and/or wonderful queer representation, get this book on your TBR right now!
thank you to Simon and Schuster & Netgalley for the early reading copy of this! this book was an absolute gem and i enjoyed every minute of it! i was so fascinated by the magical realism aspect of this story and i’m glad we got an explanation to the time travel in the end.
i LOVED the characters, especially Lucy! being able to read about both of the main characters coming to terms with their sexualities was amazing.
this is just a really happy story that i really, really enjoyed.
When Audrey Cameron loses her spark and passion for art, an old friend decides to help her out--by sending her 200 years into the past right into Lucy Sinclair’s (massive) backyard. Now the two have to find out just how Audrey’s supposed to get back home, all while realising that maybe the person they’re falling in love with is each other.
‘For another tiny, brief moment, her gaze flies past him to meet mine, and the room slows, all the voices and the faces and the music a blurry and distant hum.’
A very cute and entertaining read about a modern century girl being transported into 1812 London in an attempt to find her passion for art and life again. I enjoyed this book and was super excited for the ARC, considering it’s from Rachael Lippincott, an author whose books are pretty much an instant buy for me.
Audrey and Lucy had an amusing dynamic and you have all of the period-piece typical tropes in here--dance lessons and balls, in the rain confessions, the sapphic yearning that comes with helping each other undress, watching the other dance across the room, sitting together in a carriage so close yet so far. It was fun seeing how Audrey navigated the 1812 world and how Lucy reacted to a lot of Audrey’s modern slang and behaviours. The two both have their own coming of ages and their realisations about their sexuality, and it’s so heartwarming to see how they were both learning to accept their feelings and fight for each other, even in 1812.
I think my only problem was that I put too much expectation into the time travel aspect, so I guess I was a bit let down by how it was resolved--but happy nonetheless, and that was definitely just a personal issue.
Overall, definitely a sweet sapphic historical romance with a time travel twist.
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Children's Fiction, Children's Nonfiction, LGBTQIAP+