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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
Worth reading but not great,
By A Customer
This review is from: Emma Watson: The Watsons Completed (Hardcover)
For a diehard Austen fan, any sequel or attempt is of interest. I found this book to have a much darker tone than all of Austen's work. Aiken takes the story on a path of brooding, sickness and poverty. The characters are drawn with a much heavier hand and seem to be generally bitter and unhappy in a very 20th century way. Worth reading, but if you read Austen to visit a happier, simpler era, this is not the way to go.
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
Falls apart halfway through - Try John Coates,
By
This review is from: Emma Watson: The Watsons Completed (Hardcover)
I don't expect Aiken to fool me into thinking that this is Austen's work, but I do expect a competent novel. This was initially promising, but it begins to descend into melodrama. The ending is very perfunctory; the heroine finds her "true love" with almost magically with little development of their relationship. What is there is quite good, it is just not substantial enough for me to believe that the moment Emma catches sight of him, she knows that they are going to be married.
After reading this and Lady Catherine's Necklace (A Jane Austen entertainment), Aiken's sequel to Pride and Prejudice, it appears to me that the author is rather bored with romances - I strongly recommend that she try writing something else. It is possible to write a historical novel of this period without leeching off of Austen. I strongly recommend John Coates' finishing of this fragment, The Watsons;: Jane Austen's fragment continued and completed by John Coates.
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
Unappealing,
By HL (CA) - See all my reviews
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Emma Watson: The Watsons Completed (Hardcover)
Joan Aiken's attempt to re-write Jane Austen's unfinished early piece, "The Watsons", is far inferior to her take on "Emma" from Jane Fairfax's point of view (in a novel named after its heroine, "Jane Faifax"), and it does not have the saving grace of "Jane Fairfax" by a semi-entertaining story with fairly believable characters.Emma Watson, aged 19, is returned to her impoverished family, of 3 sisters and 2 brothers. One brother, Robert, is rich and affluent, but disagreeable, and is married to an equally disagreeable woman. Another brother, Sam, is good-natured, and a budding surgeon. Elizabeth, the eldest sister, is kind and hard-working, and is suffering from a disappointed love of many years ago (rather like Anne Elliot of "Persuasion"). But the other two sisters, Penelope and Margaret, are pretentious and scheming. Emma's gracefulness draw the attention of a wealthy peer, Lord Osborne, and his former tutor, the gentlemanlike Mr. Howard, who is loved by Lady Osborne, Osborne's elegant mother. Aiken keeps true to some of Austen's intentions in her characterization. She does not attempt to reform any sister, as Joan Coates' completion ("The Watsons") did Penelope. However, in all other respects she changes both plot and characters. For example, the would-be triangle between Howard, Osborne and Emma is reduced to nothing. Neither of the men is particularly appealing, and both are weak-spirited and/or weak-minded. The relationship between Emma and her final choice is so negligible that it is barely developed in several pages. The same can be said for Elizabeth's relationship with her own destined spouse. While the prose is the usual Aiken well-written fare, events crowd quickly one upon the other, with too many characters introduced in the first section of the book, and then so many events occurring with long spaces of time narrated briefly. Consequently, the book is teeming with incidents none of which leaves and impression on the readers, or supplies them with any growing attachment to any of the characters. Indeed, some of the events are downright unnecessary and unpleasant. In summary, this book is unsatisfying, and I would not recommend it. If you wish to read a super completion of The Watsons, read Coates' completion. It is not 100% true to the fragment, but it's a good story-unlike Aiken's effort.
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