May 6, 2025

Reimagining the Romantic Comedy

Angourie Rice and Kate Rice on Pride and Prejudice and the inspiration behind their debut romantic comedy.

Reimagining the Romantic Comedy

Angourie Rice and Kate Rice on Pride and Prejudice and the inspiration behind their debut romantic comedy.

As mother and daughter, we’ve done a lot together: first days of school, dance concerts, family vacations. And also days on set, movie premieres and film festivals. But in August of 2020, six months into Melbourne’s covid-19 lockdown, we decided to do something we’d done separately, but never together: write.

Over the next four months, we formulated our grand plan: to write an updated version of Pride and Prejudice for young readers. That summer, we retreated to our lovely beach house to write our first novel, Stuck Up and Stupid. Elizabeth Bennett became Lily, an eighteen-year-old high school graduate who is trying to enjoy her last summer before she decides what to do with her life. The small English village in Hertfordshire became Pippi Beach, a sunny, sandy, idyllic place where you can leave your worries (and your shoes) behind. And Mr Darcy became Dorian Khan, a Hollywood movie star who arrives at Pippi looking for a reclusive summer vacation, only to find himself entangled in local parties and beach games, and he can’t get local girl Lily out of his head.

Pride and Prejudice is the blueprint for the modern romantic comedy. In Stuck Up and Stupid, we wanted to capture all that has made Pride and Prejudice so timeless: embarrassing families, nosy neighbours, close-knit female friendships, awkward encounters with your crush, and the courage it takes to admit you were wrong.We also wanted to explore the idea of legacy. What is different, two hundred years later, and what is the same? Are we destined to repeat the mistakes of our mothers, our grandmothers, and our ancestors even further back? We wanted to show family history repeating itself, while also showing what has changed since 1819, and what we can hope for in the future. These days, women have much more agency, the bad guys get away with much less, and the right man won’t save you: you have to do it yourself.

Stuck Up and Stupid is a story about mothers, daughters, sisters, cousins, best friends, crushes, and first love. We hope you love our Lily, Dorian, and Pippi Beach

– Angourie Rice and Kate Rice

"The Last Mrs. Parrish is a deliciously devious domestic thriller that pulls you in with glamour and keeps you hooked with mind games."

📷+💬: @sweettreats_and_bookreads
"No matter how great a work of art is, it comes to an end. In fact, in order to be great, it must end. But life never comes to an end. When one thread is knotted, even when another is broken, it continues weaving together to an everlasting music, so that the whole of it can only be seen from the height of infinity.” 

We're still charmed by @Juhea_Writes's stunning writing in City of Night Birds. 🦢✨
From servo to donga, our Summer YA authors, @angourierice & @katericewriter, are serving up some Aussie slang! If you feel inspired to chuck a sickie, we promise not to tell. 💙
"I love a morally gray situation in books. It makes me think about the human experience and how we all respond to things differently/make decisions based on our lived experiences." 

📷+💬: @bookedwithbecca
"I want to ask for forgiveness, and I need you to understand how I perceived the world we grew up in, our world of wars and betrayals and pencils."

Enter the world of pencils by picking up a copy of The Phoenix Pencil Company by @AllisonKingWrites at the link in our bio. ✏️✨

📷: @bookclubgirl
#ad Book club, but make it scenic 🏞️ 

Reese’s Book Club and World of @Hyatt have collaborated to help you turn the page on a new reading experience: Camp Unwritten. It's time to take book club to the great outdoors this summer with Under Canvas. Head to our IG story to book custom trips with a few of our Reese’s Book Club authors. We can't wait to see you there!
Warning: reading The Phoenix Pencil Company may cause excessive smiling and giddiness. 💙

Read at your own risk, at our link in bio.
"The whole book is literally an ode to growth and found family, bringing together Alice and her mom, friends, Hayden, and everyone she meets on Little Crescent." 🍕✨

📷+💬: @analysesanonymous
We're here for all love stories! 💙📖

📹: @robbyreads
Weekend brunch with Society of Lies 💙

📷: @roostercalls