BUSCA

Links Patrocinados



Buscar por Título
   A | B | C | D | E | F | G | H | I | J | K | L | M | N | O | P | Q | R | S | T | U | V | W | X | Y | Z


Sequel To Pride And Prejudice
(EMMA TENNANT, JULIA BARRETT)

Publicidade
These two sequels to Jane Austen''s Pride and Prejudice,
published in the same year, are very different in both style and plot. Neither
pays much attention to the outline of the future Austen offers in the closing
chapter of Pride and Prejudice itself. In Pemberley the
tension is provided by Elizabeth''s
failure to produce an heir to Pemberley and her doubts about whether Darcy
wants one. A Christmas gathering at Pemberley brings their extended families ?
including Darcy''s heir, a remote cousin ? together in a most unhappy fashion,
creating the estrangement necessary for the plot. In Presumption
Georgiana Darcy is the chief protagonist; a dashing naval captain and an
architect of humbler station are rivals for her affection. The introduction of
Sir Geoffrey Portland, a mentor to Darcy, gives Elizabeth someone to impress, and Wickham
plumbs new depths of infamy.

Just as Pemberley is starting to get under way, everything is
resolved in a sudden flurry, as if Tennant had suddenly repented of her
temerity in attempting the work at all (or her publisher had only contracted
for 180 pages). In Presumption Barrett tries to emulate Austen''s
language and style, with mixed success (it sounds stilted in places, and the
point of view jumps around too much). It is easy to appropriate Austen''s
setting and characters, but far harder to write something as appealing. Either Pemberley
or Presumption will provide entertainment for an idle hour, but I''ll
take Georgette Heyer any day.

 



Resumos Relacionados


- Pride And Prejudice

- Pride And Prejudice

- Pride And Predjudice

- Pride And Prejudice

- Pride And Prejudice



Passei.com.br | Biografias

FACEBOOK


PUBLICIDADE




encyclopedia