readingomnivore
Well-Known Member
PEMBERLEY IN PERIL is Arthel Cake's 2017 variant of Jane Austen's Pride and Prejudice. More precisely, it uses some of the canonical figures reasonably faithfully, develops some beyond Austen's sketches, introduces several major individuals, and changes the story line almost completely. It is available in free or inexpensive digital format.
When George Darcy discovers he could die at any time from heart disease, he determines that his son must marry and produce an heir forthwith; should Fitzwilliam Darcy die without male issue, Pemberley passes to Georgiana, leaving her in danger from unscrupulous fortune hunters including her cousin Nicholas Fitzwilliam, Viscount Maresford. Darcy Sr. approaches his Cambridge friend Thomas Bennet, wealthy London lawyer, whose second daughter Elizabeth, despite three Seasons, has turned down proposals and requests for courtship from suitable gentlemen. Committed by their parents before they even meet, Elizabeth and Darcy approach courtship and marriage tentatively, though both know they have no choice but to obey. At the same time, George Wickham stalks the edge of the ton, duping foolish Sir Colin Arthur into jewel robberies while planning his ultimate revenge against George Darcy, the man who gave him the taste for a gentleman's lifestyle, but not the money to support it. Lady Agatha Quintain, widow of Society portraitist Sir Cedric Quintain, has evidence with which she can destroy the Darcy family's reputation forever and take Pemberley, should she choose so to do.
The changes make for a unique interpretation of Austen's original. It adds interesting depth with the survival of George Darcy and family history back to his grandfather Gerald Darcy. All the major characters suffer believable Internal conflict throughout, balanced with somewhat less convincing external conflict. PEMBERLEY IN PERIL contains enough original material--Darcy and Elizabeth's forced marriage, Wickham's malevolent machinations, and Lady Agatha's long-delayed revenge--to support three separate novels. Cutting between the story lines diffuses the action while the early conclusion of the Wickham strand makes the Lady Agatha denouement a letdown. Cake's characterizing individuals by shifting point of view between them makes for realistic characters but choppy reading.
Some common sense doubts intrude on the story. The abundance and variety of fresh flowers available in late autumn through winter seem unreasonable, and a wisteria blooming in an outdoor garden in late October incredible. Wickham's intimate knowledge of Matlock House, London home of the Fitzwilliam family, remains unexplained. Cake uses Horse Guards and Household Cavalry interchangeably as Colonel Fitzwilliam's unit, though all the separate Horse Guard commands had been consolidated into other regiments before the Napoleonic Wars, while the Household Cavalry guarded the monarch and performed ceremonial duties.
Cake pays tribute to Regency ideas about family reputation, courtship, and especially 'being compromised" as guaranteeing marriage, yet many details are modern. Wickham disguises himself as a footman at a ball, but he serves bare-handed and wears a distinctive gold signet ring. Elizabeth's betrothal ring is first a Darcy family heirloom passed down from his great-grandmother, a baguette (elongated rectangle, table-cut) ruby. then it becomes a "single drop of blood" (pear-shaped?), surrounded by diamonds; her wedding band also is ruby set with diamonds, like a modern wedding ring set. Darcy's wedding gift is a diamond and pearl brooch set in platinum, though use of platinum in jewelry was rare until the twentieth century. Medical practices are closer to early twentieth than to early nineteenth century. Most objectionable are the casual sexual references. I don't want to know that Kitty misses the Wendovers' ball because of menstrual pain, or details of Elizabeth's premarital counseling from Mrs. Gardiner, or move-by-move commentary on the newlyweds' wedding night (from each's point of view), or that Elizabeth experiences her first orgasm. Way too much information!
As it stands, PEMBERLEY IN PERIL is good reading. But it could have been much more. (B+)
When George Darcy discovers he could die at any time from heart disease, he determines that his son must marry and produce an heir forthwith; should Fitzwilliam Darcy die without male issue, Pemberley passes to Georgiana, leaving her in danger from unscrupulous fortune hunters including her cousin Nicholas Fitzwilliam, Viscount Maresford. Darcy Sr. approaches his Cambridge friend Thomas Bennet, wealthy London lawyer, whose second daughter Elizabeth, despite three Seasons, has turned down proposals and requests for courtship from suitable gentlemen. Committed by their parents before they even meet, Elizabeth and Darcy approach courtship and marriage tentatively, though both know they have no choice but to obey. At the same time, George Wickham stalks the edge of the ton, duping foolish Sir Colin Arthur into jewel robberies while planning his ultimate revenge against George Darcy, the man who gave him the taste for a gentleman's lifestyle, but not the money to support it. Lady Agatha Quintain, widow of Society portraitist Sir Cedric Quintain, has evidence with which she can destroy the Darcy family's reputation forever and take Pemberley, should she choose so to do.
The changes make for a unique interpretation of Austen's original. It adds interesting depth with the survival of George Darcy and family history back to his grandfather Gerald Darcy. All the major characters suffer believable Internal conflict throughout, balanced with somewhat less convincing external conflict. PEMBERLEY IN PERIL contains enough original material--Darcy and Elizabeth's forced marriage, Wickham's malevolent machinations, and Lady Agatha's long-delayed revenge--to support three separate novels. Cutting between the story lines diffuses the action while the early conclusion of the Wickham strand makes the Lady Agatha denouement a letdown. Cake's characterizing individuals by shifting point of view between them makes for realistic characters but choppy reading.
Some common sense doubts intrude on the story. The abundance and variety of fresh flowers available in late autumn through winter seem unreasonable, and a wisteria blooming in an outdoor garden in late October incredible. Wickham's intimate knowledge of Matlock House, London home of the Fitzwilliam family, remains unexplained. Cake uses Horse Guards and Household Cavalry interchangeably as Colonel Fitzwilliam's unit, though all the separate Horse Guard commands had been consolidated into other regiments before the Napoleonic Wars, while the Household Cavalry guarded the monarch and performed ceremonial duties.
Cake pays tribute to Regency ideas about family reputation, courtship, and especially 'being compromised" as guaranteeing marriage, yet many details are modern. Wickham disguises himself as a footman at a ball, but he serves bare-handed and wears a distinctive gold signet ring. Elizabeth's betrothal ring is first a Darcy family heirloom passed down from his great-grandmother, a baguette (elongated rectangle, table-cut) ruby. then it becomes a "single drop of blood" (pear-shaped?), surrounded by diamonds; her wedding band also is ruby set with diamonds, like a modern wedding ring set. Darcy's wedding gift is a diamond and pearl brooch set in platinum, though use of platinum in jewelry was rare until the twentieth century. Medical practices are closer to early twentieth than to early nineteenth century. Most objectionable are the casual sexual references. I don't want to know that Kitty misses the Wendovers' ball because of menstrual pain, or details of Elizabeth's premarital counseling from Mrs. Gardiner, or move-by-move commentary on the newlyweds' wedding night (from each's point of view), or that Elizabeth experiences her first orgasm. Way too much information!
As it stands, PEMBERLEY IN PERIL is good reading. But it could have been much more. (B+)