"In Quain’s witty debut...hard-earned character development and dynamic relationships are keenly explored. Quain uses the source material’s infrastructure to establish the narrative’s stakes and emotional gravity while skillfully setting it apart from its Austenian roots." Publishers Weekly
"[Georgie's] reckoning with her own racial and class privilege is refreshing, and her complicated but loving relationship with her brother is a shining point...for fans of boarding school dramas and rom-coms, this fits the bill." School Library Journal
“Move over, Lizzie Bennet—Georgiana Darcy’s about to steal your heart!” —Ashley Poston, bestselling author of Geekerella
“An incredible debut and hilariously heartwarming addition to the Pride & Prejudice canon.” Jennifer Dugan, author of Hot Dog Girl
“A heroine in possession of her own side of the story must be in want of an iconic, fresh and funny retelling...Accomplished has bewitched us.” —Emily Wibberley and Austin Siegemund-Broka, authors of If I’m Being Honest
“Accomplished is what I imagine it would look like if all my favorite Austen heroines united together and raised some hell in 2022.” Erin Hahn, author of Never Saw You Coming
"Sharp, funny, and full of heart…I officially have a new favorite Darcy." Nina Moreno, author of Don't Date Rosa Santos
“A masterpiece of a debut. I was hooked from the first line and laughed all the way to the happily-ever-after. You’ve never read Austen like this!” Tiffany Schmidt, author of the Bookish Boyfriends series and I’m Dreaming of a Wyatt Christmas
“Hilarious and poignant, readers will come for the clever wit and romance of an Austen retelling and stay for a timeless and utterly relatable coming-of-age story.” –Jennifer Iacopelli, author of Break the Fall
“[A] clever and heartfelt spin on Pride & Prejudice, which gives Georgie Darcy a chance to shine and have a happily ever after in her own right!” –Kristina Forest, author of I Wanna Be Where You Are
“A delightful gem of a book...In between all the winks to P&P, Accomplished also offers a smart rumination on privilege; a nod to fanfics and author life; and, a swoony slow burn romance. Highly recommended for P&P fans looking for a fresh (hilarious) take on the original and for YA contemporary readers who want to romp in a world that feels both familiar and original all at once.” Jamie Pacton, Author of Lucky Girl and The Life and (Medieval) Times of Kit Sweetly
"Move over Fitzwilliam, there’s a new Darcy in town! Wholly original, fiercely feminist, and with a romance that’s totally fic-worthy, Accomplished is the Pride & Prejudice retelling you’ve been waiting for. Georgie Darcy has something to say — and you’ll hang on her every word.” —Stephanie Kate Strohm, author of Love a la Mode and Prince in Disguise
"Georgie is a character you can root for. She's smart, funny and real. Quain's writing is perfect for fans of the OG Jane Austen, but also Emery Lord, Sarah Dessen, and Emma Mills...Highly recommend." Rachel Simon, youth services librarian, Newton Free Library (Newton, MA)
2022-04-27
Georgiana Darcy from Pride and Prejudice is here reimagined as a contemporary American heiress looking for her own source of pride.
Sixteen-year-old Georgie starts her junior year at swanky boarding school Pemberley Academy isolated and ostracized after last year’s scandal in which her brother, Fitzwilliam, caught her bad-boy boyfriend, Wickham, dealing Adderall from her dorm room. Now Fitz, 19, has transferred from Caltech back to New York to attend the local state university campus and keep an eye on her. Their father is dead, and their mother took off, handing over legal guardianship of Georgie to emancipated minor Fitz three years ago. Embarrassed, lonely, and struggling to believe herself a suitable representative of the Darcy name, Georgie embarks on an ill-conceived plan to use her family’s considerable funds to attract a girlfriend for Fitz and make herself some friends. Her schemes backfire—and Wickham is still lurking. Quain’s debut follows in the footsteps of many Austen remixes but adheres only loosely to the original’s plot in which Georgiana is a minor character. Unfortunately, the pieces don’t all mesh, especially the emotional notes: Though now overprotective, Fitz supposedly ignored Georgie the previous year, and that element plus their mother’s abandonment are treated a touch too lightly. Wickham also gets dealt with too easily. Georgie’s cluelessness about the depths of her financial privilege grates despite a mitigating lecture from Fitz. Main characters are White.
A take on a classic that doesn’t quite gel. (Fiction. 12-16)