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Emma Brown (Paperback)

by Clare Boylan (Author) "We all seek an ideal in life..." (more)
Key Phrases: Miss Wilcox, Fuchsia Lodge, Misses Wilcox (more...)
3.8 out of 5 stars See all reviews (17 customer reviews)


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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly
When Charlotte Brontë died in 1855, she left behind a 20-page manuscript, which Irish novelist Boylan (Holy Pictures, etc.) uses as the first two chapters of her own sprawling novel. The result is a deeply satisfying Victorian mystery, at once cozy, witty, didactic and melodramatic. A young girl named Matilda Fitzgibbon is deposited at a ladies' school run by the "fantastic, affected and pretentious" Wilcox sisters. But Matilda is a "pseudo-heiress," unrelated to the elegant (and now vanished) gentleman who enrolled her. Spurned by the Wilcoxes, Matilda is taken in by motherly Isabel Chalfont, a childless widow whose comfortable station and "middling" temperament conceal a passionate romantic history. But Matilda proves to be "no ordinary child"â€"secretive and prone to fainting spells, she claims to have no memory of her past, other than having been "sold like a farmyard creature." When she runs away, stealing the money still due the Wilcoxes, Mrs. Chalfont turns to her enigmatic friend Mr. Ellin, who tries to determine what happened. Searches through London's dirty streets reveal nothing. Meanwhile, Matildaâ€"who realizes that her name is actually Emmaâ€"faces hunger, homelessness and conscription into child prostitution, as she searches for the mother who gave her up. Boylan's evocation of Victorian London is bleak but enthralling, and her characters turn Brontë's sharp sketches into nuanced creations. The plot is feverish and overly dependent on coincidence, and there are a few anachronisms, but who'll complain? Brontë purists, maybeâ€"but other readers will embrace this as a treasure unearthed.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

From Booklist
Before she died in 1855, Charlotte Bronte completed two chapters of a new novel with the working title Emma. Boylan has constructed her own novel from this tantalizing fragment, in which a girl is deposited at a provincial boarding school under a cloud of mystery. The melodramatic plot revolves around the girl's search for her true identity. Boylan makes use of the characters introduced by Bronte and attempts to borrow her "voice" by using lines from her letters. She also plunges her heroine into a Dickensian foray into London's slums on the assumption that Charlotte would have wanted to use her own impressions of London as material for her fiction. Whether this novel is anything like the one Charlotte would have written is beside the point; Boylan's work succeeds on its own as a compelling tale. Though rather tame compared to Sarah Waters' Fingersmith (2002) and Michel Faber's The Crimson Petal and the White (2002), it should appeal to readers fascinated by Victorian England and its underside. Mary Ellen Quinn
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

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Product Details

  • Paperback: 464 pages
  • Publisher: Penguin (Non-Classics) (May 31, 2005)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0143034839
  • ISBN-13: 978-0143034834
  • Product Dimensions: 7.5 x 5.1 x 1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 11.2 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 3.8 out of 5 stars See all reviews (17 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #43,305 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

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Customer Reviews

17 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
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14 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The mystery of "Emma Pilgrim.", June 22, 2004
By G. Merritt (Boulder, CO) - See all my reviews
(TOP 50 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)      
The first two chapters of this novel are the work of Charlotte Bronte (JANE EYRE). When Bronte died in 1855, she left behind a 20-page manuscript written after VILLETTE and before her marriage. It was her last piece of fiction (p. 436). In EMMA BROWN, Clare Boylan has used Bront's fragment of a story as the starting point of her own Victorian novel, which tells the mysterious story of a young girl (Matilda Fitzgibbon), abandoned at a boarding school (Fuschia Lodge), and later entrusted to Boylan's narrator (Isabel Chalfont), before she returns to London's dirty, Dickensian streets (where she discovers her real name, Emma Brown) in search for her true identity and the mother who sold her to a gentleman for a guinea (p. 292). Matilda proves to be "no ordinary child." She is melodramatic and smart beyond her years, and when questioned about her past, says only, " I was sold like a farmyard creature. No one wants me. Only God may help me now" (p. 52). At the heart of Boylan's mystery, there is a startling secret about Victorian society.

It doesn't matter whether this is the novel Bronte ever actually intended to write. Boylan's novel will nevertheless appeal to readers (like me) who enjoy reading Victorian literature. (And, oh, how I love reading Victorian novels!) With compelling parallels to Dicken's character sketches and Michel Faber's more recent, THE CRIMSON PETAL AND THE WHITE (2002), EMMA BROWN is really a novel about the underside of nineteenth-century England: homelessness and child prostitution in Victorian London. The result is a satisfying novel with all the pathos of Bronte, Dickens, or Hardy. Emma is a strange girl, with the ability not only to steal wallets, but to steal hearts as well (p. 215).

G. Merritt
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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Clare Boylan has written a real page-turner, May 1, 2004
By Bookreporter.com (New York, New York) - See all my reviews
"Reader, I married him." Few sentences in English literature are more resonant for women. Millions of us have been inspired by the story of Jane Eyre and Mr. Rochester: a triumph of brains and character over money, looks or superficial charm. When Brontë-phile and author Clare Boylan became aware that Charlotte's last piece of fiction was a twenty-page fragment originally entitled EMMA (curious, considering that Miss Austen's novel of the same name had been published in 1816), she decided that it deserved completion. This book is the result.

Happily, EMMA BROWN is not simply a pastiche. Yes, it borrows elements from all of Brontë's novels --- the governess who falls in love above her station from JANE EYRE, the ambiguous ending from VILLETTE, the blossoming of social conscience from SHIRLEY. There is also more than a touch of Wilkie Collins-style mystery and Dickensian melodrama. But the book has a rousing pace and beating heart all its own. The plot rockets right along, moving from high society to low, from the mean streets of London to the calmer splendors of village life. Above all, it is propelled by the tension among three intriguing figures whose secrets are gradually revealed --- a young girl known first as Matilda Fitzgibbon, then as Emma Brown, who is presented as an heiress at the local school for young ladies; our narrator, Mrs. Chalfont, a widow who adopts Emma when she proves to be neither rich nor well connected; and Mr. Ellin, an enigmatic local bachelor who joins forces with Mrs. Chalfont to find Emma's true identity (and, in the process, his own). This is a real page-turner, with dizzy switches between past and present, one subplot and another. I couldn't wait to see what happened next.

One of the many pleasures of EMMA BROWN is the style: rich, but never dense or slow. Boylan writes easily and well in the leisurely, philosophizing narrative voice so typical of the eighteenth- and nineteenth-century novel. The characters' inner conflicts and musings are expressed less directly than in contemporary fiction, mediated by moral observations, sharp social commentary and the contemplation of nature.

Boylan is witty, too. Speaking of her late husband, Mrs. Chalfont says, "It was not the quality of marriage that dismayed me, but the quantity of it. Confined in close proximity to the plump and whiskery personage who considered me as much his property and as much for his usage as if I were his pipe or slippers, I had need to remind myself that this shackling was not for a week or a year, nor for the number of years to which a criminal might be sentenced to bondage, but until one of us ran out of breath."

This jaundiced view of matrimony makes it clear that female dependence and independence is a central theme of EMMA BROWN, one of the qualities that raises the book above mere imitation and gives it a moral and psychological center. The seeds of feminism are certainly present in Brontë --- that's why she is so well loved --- but Boylan takes the idea further, giving explicit value to the autonomous, educated woman who possesses both courage and self-conviction. The female characters in EMMA BROWN are emphatically more interesting than the males, yet it is Mr. Ellin, meditating on his own clouded history and Emma's, who brings out a second theme: "We have most of us mislaid our past, although some of us have done so on purpose."

In this pre-Freudian era, people were pretty much on their own in finding the roots of their unhappiness and attempting to reconcile their former and present selves. The main characters in EMMA BROWN are spiritual-psychological detectives. Although the ending is not walk-into-the-sunset happy, they all discover something important about themselves.

In any historical novel, particularly a recreation, there is a temptation to show off your research. For the most part Boylan wears her knowledge lightly; at times, though, details feel dragged in. When Emma befriends a homeless waif named Jenny Drew, who carries around dead babies in lieu of dolls and earns her living by collecting and selling dog feces, you suspect that these facts were found in a monograph on the misery of London's poor. And perhaps the attitudes in EMMA BROWN (including a proto-animal rights sensibility) are a little too p.c. to be true. You can't quite forget that a modern woman wrote this book.

But so what? Boylan isn't trying to copy JANE EYRE; she's using the conventions of a Victorian literary form, combined with the insights and convictions of our own age, to bring the author's voice back to life. Brontë was a radical soul born at a time when strong, passionate women had to hide themselves; EMMA BROWN shows them struggling to emerge. I think Charlotte would have liked that.

--- Reviewed by Kathy Weissman

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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Bronte lives!, April 29, 2004
By Lynn Harnett (Marathon, FL USA) - See all my reviews
(TOP 500 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)      
The first two chapters are Bronte's, the last fiction before her death in 1855. Acclaimed Irish writer Boylan continues this sketch, remaining true to Bronte's interests and style in developing a romantic mystery of identity and Victorian social issues.

Bronte's narrator, Isabel Chalfont, a youngish widow, takes in a young girl called Matilda Fitzgibbon. Her purported father had delivered the child, along with a trunk of sumptuous clothing, to the fledgling, struggling, Wilcox School. But her fees went unpaid, her father's address proved fictitious and the man himself had disappeared.

Petted as a wealthy prize, the child is reviled when proved poor. Introverted and miserable, her memory clouded, she nevertheless arouses maternal feelings in the childless Isabel. But shortly after remembering her real name - Emma - the girl runs off to find the mother who sold her, and efforts to discover her origins and whereabouts meet little success.

Boylan branches out to tell the story from several perspectives. Chief among them are Isabel, Emma, and Mr. Ellin, a man of indolent habits with hidden depths and a secret past, the one who brought Emma to Isabel and now undertakes to find her "father."

Emma, alone and soon robbed, finds herself among the lowest of the low in heartless London - but not so low she can't take on another girl, even younger and less fortunate than herself. Together they face hunger, homelessness and the work available to children, including prostitution.

Each character's present is illuminated by their past - unjust treatment and romantic reversals deform or temper character - and the plot comes together in a proper Victorian tangle. Boylan's writing ("Holy Pictures," "Beloved Stranger") is always choice and atmospheric, and the Bronte connection gives her free reign to incorporate melodrama, romance and unsavory Victorian attitudes towards class, parental rights, poverty and the ownership of children and women.

A sweeping, involving, Bronte-esque novel.

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Most Recent Customer Reviews

4.0 out of 5 stars If you loved Jane Eyre, you'll enjoy this novel!
I just finished reading Emma Brown and thoroughly enjoyed it! I am a huge Jane Eyre fan (I force it on my 12th grade Brit Lit students every year! Read more
Published 1 month ago by S. Davis

1.0 out of 5 stars NOT Charlotte Bronte
This book is not something that Charlotte Bronte would want to be associated with, I'm sure. There are far too many coincidences in the story, among other problems. Read more
Published 6 months ago by Emily Olsen

5.0 out of 5 stars A Great and Twisting Odyssey
I love the Victorian era and this book provides a wonderful glimpse into its underside. The intricate plot keeps both readers and main characters discovering and learning... Read more
Published 23 months ago by A Reviewer

4.0 out of 5 stars Read it as Boylan, not Borrowed Bronte
I like the novels of Clare Boylan ("Holy Pictures"--her first novel was a bit overstuffed and almost crazed in its scope, but it was memorable and a page-turner nontheless. Read more
Published on October 31, 2006 by Joanna Daneman

4.0 out of 5 stars A Great Read!
I would absolutely recommend this novel to those who can appreciate Victorian literature. I was an English major in college and find myself incredibly bored by most contemporary... Read more
Published on December 5, 2005 by KAK

3.0 out of 5 stars My expectations were high, but "Emma Brown" falls short!!
Charlotte Bronte began writing what would have been her last novel, "Emma," soon after "Villette" was published in 1853, and before she married her father's curate, Arthur Bell... Read more
Published on August 1, 2005 by Jana L. Perskie

2.0 out of 5 stars Not at all what I expected
While the writing was acceptable, I felt that the juxtaposition of the classes in this novel was very forced. The differnce between the classes is too obvious. Read more
Published on June 26, 2005 by Amanda Daddona

4.0 out of 5 stars Like discovering a long lost Bronte
Based on 20 pages of an unfinished Charlotte Bronte manuscript, you forget that it was written in 2004 and are quickly enjoying what feels like a long lost Bronte! Ms. Read more
Published on February 17, 2005 by Diane K. Danielson

5.0 out of 5 stars Total fun!
It's nearly impossible to recreate another author's writing style. In fact, Clare Boylan undoubtedly took this project on knowing that it could possibly subject her to all manner... Read more
Published on January 17, 2005 by Ann

4.0 out of 5 stars Finishing what Charlotte Brontë started
This is a new Victorian novel, starting with 2 chapters that were written by Charlotte Brontë. Clare Boylan did a good job, finishing what Brontë started. Read more
Published on December 12, 2004 by Jenny

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