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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
18 of 20 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Simply Wonderful!,
By
This review is from: Pride and Prescience: Or, A Truth Universally Acknowledged (Hardcover)
For lovers of Jane Austen's PRIDE & PREJUDICE, Carrie Bebris's brilliant sequel appears to pick up precisely where Austen left off, with the first days of married life for Mr. and Mrs. Darcy. The style, grammar and characters are so thoroughly consistent with Austen's masterpiece that they seem to blend into one. You cannot imagine Elizabeth and Darcy NOT behaving as they do in this wonderful novel. Their witty verbal sparring and Elizabeth's no-nonsense observations of the other characters are fresh, engaging and authentic. For those who think that drawing room comedies are gentle and lack action, Bebris has provided an antidote: PRIDE AND PRESCIENCE features a woman going mad, a spooked horse, a terrible carriage accident, arson and murder. It's hard to imagine the characters have time to change their gowns for tea, with all that going on. Yet the plotting is strong and sure, and each incident appears both surprising and inevitable. Bebris's own new characters are intriguing and well drawn. They blend beautifully with the Darcys, et al from Austen's classic. I picked up this book the night I got it and have been unable to resist it since. A lovely, swift and absorbing read, featuring characters you already know if you know the original P&P. If you don't know them, reading Bebris BEFORE reading Austen's original will whet your appetite for the original itself. This book gets my highest recommendation. You'll love it.
11 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
A 3.5 on the sequel scale...,
By Anonymouse (San Jose, CA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Pride and Prescience: Or, A Truth Universally Acknowledged (Hardcover)
..which means that it's not bad, I don't regret purchasing it, I'd probably buy the next installment, but I have some reservations.
My cons: 1. I really didn't like the fact that Darcy and Lizzy had to postpone going to Pemberley for the sake of Caroline Bingley. Jane and Bingley would have been obligated, but not the Darcys. 2. The whole subject of the occult ~ Austen's original characters didn't seem the type to be interested. 3. Caroline's fiance - I doubt if she would have considered marrying an American and even if she had,(given the importance of family, connections, etc. at the time) someone would have nosied about for his true background. My pros: 1. The language was not Jane Austen (of course not) and some 21st c. expressions came through but I liked it. The tendency of other sequel authors is to compose wordy sentences to mimic Ms. Austen. Thank goodness Ms. Bebris didn't do this. 2. The witty scenes between Lizzy and Darcy. 3. There was nothing offensive. I know that this doesn't sound like much of a compliment, but it is. ;) The characters were recognizable and obviously much effort was made to stay true to the original personalities. 4. The quality of the book itself was good; hardbound, no typos that I could tell.
14 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
Irritating sequel,
By Woodbuckley (Australia) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Pride and Prescience: Or, A Truth Universally Acknowledged (Hardcover)
I must admit to being an eager consumer of sequels to Jane Austen's novels. Dreadful I know, but I am almost helpless with curiosity when I see a fresh addition to this very long and seeminlgy endless list of the imaginings of others regarding our favourite characters and stories from Austen.'Pride and Prejudice' I suspect to be the most popular in this regard, and so when I saw this one and read its premise I was intrigued. A new slant on the whole matter! We have had Miss Austen as detective in Stephanie Barron's series and now Darcy and Elizabeth! Alas all my anticipation did not meet a happy eventuality. I found this made a good start with the opening scenes of the wedding and re-introducing the characters, but ... The whole thing upended itself with the arrival in London and Caroline Bingley's engagement to the mysterious American gentleman. It definitely became Gothic suspense and this is a genre that does not sit well with Austen, especially if one considers her gentle, sharp parodying of it in 'Northanger Abbey'. The resolution made my eyebrows shoot up with annoyance - the supernatural! All the good things in it were subsumed by this and it became silly. Very sad.
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