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Pride and Prej spin offs

40 replies

FuzzyPuffling · 28/09/2023 20:32

I love love loved "The Other Bennet Sister" (Janice Hadlow) telling Mary's story, and am currently reading "Charlotte" (Helen Moffett) about Charlotte Lucas (Collins) story.

"Longbourn" is on my radar but are there any other P & P spin offs that you'd recommend?

OP posts:
Tadpolle · 08/10/2023 09:06

Sophie Irwin has got 2 novels - A Lady's Guide to Fortune Hunting is a very enjoyable rerun of P&P, very well done and gets you cheering the protagonist along. She's got A Lady's Guide to Scandal as well that v enjoyable too. At my book club I called them post Bridgerton Austen redo's. Other people complained not enough sex in them though.

MorrisWallpaper · 08/10/2023 09:14

MsAmerica · 29/09/2023 01:28

I now can't bear the idea of Austen "spin-offs" but I did once enjoy Joan Aikin's completion of Sanditon, and I read a few pages of her Jane Fairfax, which seemed remarkably deft.

https://us.macmillan.com/books/9781250235862/janefairfax

Joan Aiken’s sequel to Mansfield Park, Mansfield Revisited, is extremely well done.

Candleabra · 08/10/2023 09:18

Death comes to pemberley is one of the worst booked I’ve ever read. I don’t usually like spin offs but looked forward to this as I love PD James. What a disappointment.

BlazingWorld · 08/10/2023 09:19

I do not recommend it (I haven’t read it!) but I once saw in an actual bookshop a book called Mr Darcy: Vampyre, and it made me laugh a lot. Surely Mr Darcy was in the sun at various points during the actual book, you’d think that would make it difficult for him to be a vampire, sorry Vampyre.
https://www.amazon.co.uk/Mr-Darcy-Vampyre-Amanda-Grange/dp/140223998X

edited to add - I see from the blurb it’s just sunset and sunrise he can’t be out in, helpfully.

AutumnCrow · 08/10/2023 11:03

Candleabra · 08/10/2023 09:18

Death comes to pemberley is one of the worst booked I’ve ever read. I don’t usually like spin offs but looked forward to this as I love PD James. What a disappointment.

It was terrible, wasn't it? Like she's knocked it up over a desultory wet weekend to fulfill a contractual obligation. It seemed like such an odd piece of work to put out at the end of a stellar career, mastering neither chosen style nor plotting nor atmosphere; although it received some generous reviews in the US, I believe.

highlandcoo · 08/10/2023 11:44

The reviews for Death Comes to Pemberley were beyond belief.

The Sunday Times: "An exhilarating tribute to the inexhaustible vitality of James's imagination"

The Telegraph: "A sparkling curio that will appeal to to both Janeites and Jamesites "

And most unbelievably: "A wonderful treat" - Melvyn Bragg you should hang your head in shame.

It was the biggest load of rubbish I think I've ever read.

Candleabra · 08/10/2023 11:50

@AutumnCrow completely agree. I actually wondered if she’d written it at all. It was a shame, and an opportunity lost. I was looking forward to reading it.

JoanOgden · 08/10/2023 22:02

MorrisWallpaper · 08/10/2023 09:14

Joan Aiken’s sequel to Mansfield Park, Mansfield Revisited, is extremely well done.

Agree! She also wrote a v good Emma one called Jane Fairfax and a P&P one called Lady Catherine's Necklace which was quite enjoyable though not as good as the others.

Agree The Other Bennet Sister, while well written, would have benefited from some judicious cuts.

MargotBamborough · 08/10/2023 22:08

Here's Looking At You, by Mhairi McFarlane.

LydiaGwilt · 10/10/2023 19:36

Also 'Eliza's Story' told by Willoughby's illegitimate daughter (from 'Sense and Sensibility') and 'The Youngest Miss Ward' (about the youngest sister of Lady Bertram in 'Mansfield Park') both by Joan Aiken are both very good reads in their own right, as well as spin-offs from Austen stories.

MorrisWallpaper · 10/10/2023 22:14

LydiaGwilt · 10/10/2023 19:36

Also 'Eliza's Story' told by Willoughby's illegitimate daughter (from 'Sense and Sensibility') and 'The Youngest Miss Ward' (about the youngest sister of Lady Bertram in 'Mansfield Park') both by Joan Aiken are both very good reads in their own right, as well as spin-offs from Austen stories.

I’ve never read either, but must look them up. I just found my copy of Joan Aiken’s Deception, which only connects with Austen in that it’s set in 1815 and begins at the Abbey School JA briefly attended, but is mostly about an orphan replacing her double who wants to go to India as a missionary, and gets her identical novel-writing schoolmate to pretend to be her in her large family in Northumbria.

KatyN · 10/10/2023 22:18

@LadyBeth is that not s&s? I love the idea that marianne's fall might have been engineered!

In a similar ilk, does that make wild Sargasso Sea fan fiction???

horseyhorseydonotstop · 10/10/2023 22:21

The Longbourn Letters by Rose Servitova - she has also written a completion of The Watsons and A Season at Sanditon.

applepinkierainbow · 10/10/2023 22:42

I really enjoy the retellings in different times/places and listen to them rather than read as they don't require too much concentration. My favourite is Unmarriageable: Pride and Prejudice in Pakistan by Soniah Kamal which I found really witty and I loved guessing who was who as each character was introduced.

LadyBeth · 11/10/2023 11:52

cathyandclaire · 07/10/2023 06:54

@LadyBeth I think the mole hole book is Just Like Heaven by Julia Quinn. It's one of her Bridgerton adjacent books. It stuck in my mind too!

That's it, thank you!! No idea why that scene stuck in my head!

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