readingomnivore
Well-Known Member
PEMBERLEY PARK: THE TWELVE DAYS OF CHRISTMAS is Georgina Young-Ellis's 2017 holiday sequel to Jane Austen's Pride and Prejudice, incorporating Henry and Mary Crawford from Mansfield Park. It is available in free or inexpensive digital format. Following the traditional Anglican church calendar, Christmastide begins 25 December and extends through 5 January, Twelfth Night.
Elizabeth Bennet and Fitzwilliam Darcy are celebrating their first Christmas at Pemberley with a family house party: Mr. and Mrs. Bennet and unmarried daughter Kitty, Jane and Charles Bingley with three-month-old son Jonathan, heavily pregnant Mary and husband Colonel Richard Fitzwilliam, Georgiana and fiance Frederick Beaumont, Mr. and Mrs. Collins and one-year-old son William. Kitty's plea adds the Crawford siblings, whom she'd met through the Gardiners, while Jane's compassion adds Caroline Bingley. Lydia shows up uninvited, driven to leave Wickham by his gambling, drinking, and womanizing. The bad situation becomes worse when Lady Catherine de Bourgh, incensed that the Collinses had been invited to Christmas at Pemberley when she had not, arrives unannounced. The Crawfords, intent on causing trouble, divide to conquer. Henry ignores Kitty to focus on Georgiana, while Mary beguiles Frederick. Matters get chaotic before peace returns.
Where to begin? PEMBERLEY PARK: THE TWELVE DAYS OF CHRISTMAS is thoroughly modern, not Regency, in attitudes, behavior, customs, manners, writing style, slang, and all. Plot situations ripe for development are passed over for discussing who's to play for impromptu dancing and the permutations in couples for each dance. Obstetric details are not necessary. Lack of foreshadowing makes the surprise ending an add-on rather than a logical outcome of prior action.
~~~POSIBLE SPOILERS~~~
Most of the characters are consistent with Austen's originals, only with the Crawfords, Lydia, Mrs. Bennet, Lady Catherine, Collins, and Caroline Bingley a bit exaggerated. Darcy is changed. In Austen so suspicious of people's motives and intensely private, the Young-Ellis Darcy accepts the unknown Crawfords and remains oblivious to their machinations. Her Elizabeth is contradictory. Elizabeth is weak enough, against her better judgment, to accept Kitty's persuasion without even asking her aunt about the Crawfords, and Jane's guilt-trip over the ever-vicious Caroline. Elizabeth does, however, frankly inform Lady Catherine that she needs no help with managing her servants; she warns Lydia that she deserves her current situation and will no longer receive any financial support; she tells her mother, if she doesn't stop criticizing Lydia's treatment, to leave with her daughter. Only Mary Crawford's already packing to go prevents the furious Elizabeth from ejecting the woman from Pemberley. Brava, Lizzy!
PEMBERLEY PARK: THE TWELVE DAYS OF CHRISTMAS isn't a bad story, though it does not live up to its best possibilities. It's just not very Austen. (C+)
Elizabeth Bennet and Fitzwilliam Darcy are celebrating their first Christmas at Pemberley with a family house party: Mr. and Mrs. Bennet and unmarried daughter Kitty, Jane and Charles Bingley with three-month-old son Jonathan, heavily pregnant Mary and husband Colonel Richard Fitzwilliam, Georgiana and fiance Frederick Beaumont, Mr. and Mrs. Collins and one-year-old son William. Kitty's plea adds the Crawford siblings, whom she'd met through the Gardiners, while Jane's compassion adds Caroline Bingley. Lydia shows up uninvited, driven to leave Wickham by his gambling, drinking, and womanizing. The bad situation becomes worse when Lady Catherine de Bourgh, incensed that the Collinses had been invited to Christmas at Pemberley when she had not, arrives unannounced. The Crawfords, intent on causing trouble, divide to conquer. Henry ignores Kitty to focus on Georgiana, while Mary beguiles Frederick. Matters get chaotic before peace returns.
Where to begin? PEMBERLEY PARK: THE TWELVE DAYS OF CHRISTMAS is thoroughly modern, not Regency, in attitudes, behavior, customs, manners, writing style, slang, and all. Plot situations ripe for development are passed over for discussing who's to play for impromptu dancing and the permutations in couples for each dance. Obstetric details are not necessary. Lack of foreshadowing makes the surprise ending an add-on rather than a logical outcome of prior action.
~~~POSIBLE SPOILERS~~~
Most of the characters are consistent with Austen's originals, only with the Crawfords, Lydia, Mrs. Bennet, Lady Catherine, Collins, and Caroline Bingley a bit exaggerated. Darcy is changed. In Austen so suspicious of people's motives and intensely private, the Young-Ellis Darcy accepts the unknown Crawfords and remains oblivious to their machinations. Her Elizabeth is contradictory. Elizabeth is weak enough, against her better judgment, to accept Kitty's persuasion without even asking her aunt about the Crawfords, and Jane's guilt-trip over the ever-vicious Caroline. Elizabeth does, however, frankly inform Lady Catherine that she needs no help with managing her servants; she warns Lydia that she deserves her current situation and will no longer receive any financial support; she tells her mother, if she doesn't stop criticizing Lydia's treatment, to leave with her daughter. Only Mary Crawford's already packing to go prevents the furious Elizabeth from ejecting the woman from Pemberley. Brava, Lizzy!
PEMBERLEY PARK: THE TWELVE DAYS OF CHRISTMAS isn't a bad story, though it does not live up to its best possibilities. It's just not very Austen. (C+)