![The Darcys & the Bingleys: Pride and Prejudice continues (The Pride & Prejudice Continues Book 1) by [Altman, Marsha]](https://images-na.ssl-images-amazon.com/images/I/51z%2BrZjhWkL.jpg)
The Darcys & the Bingleys: Pride and
Prejudice Continues by Marsha Altman
Reviewed by Gerti
No,
I never expect that people writing novels based on the stories of
famed English novelist Jane Austen will be as good as she was. That
would be nearly impossible to achieve. But I do think at the very
least that those who write about Austen’s characters – that
panoply of creatures she invented in another century who have so
captured the imaginations of fans worldwide – should remain true to
the traits they had while Austen’s creations. To use an example
from her works, to write a novel in which Mr. Darcy acts like Mr.
Wickham would be wrong. It makes sense to everyone – Peter Pan does
not act like Captain Hook, etc.
And
I’m telling you that as an introduction because that’s why I did
not originally like Marsha Altman’s novel, “The Darcys & the
Bingleys: Pride and Prejudice Continues – A Tale of Two Gentlemen’s
Marriages to Two Most Devoted Sisters”. I put it down several
times, especially when Altman describes how Darcy and Bingley, two
pretty decent fellows as far as Austen is concerned, spend their time
giggling like school girls over the “Kama Sutra”. Apparently,
Altman’s premise is that gentlemen would be so ignorant of sexual
matters at the turn of the 19th
century that they would have to resort to the salacious contents of
that infamous sexual manual from the Indian Subcontinent.
Having
Elizabeth and Jane equally sex-crazed is a step too far. The Lizzy
Bennet fans know from “Pride and Prejudice” becomes virtually
indistinguishable from her hormone-addled sister, Lydia, famous from
the original novel for running away with a soldier, unconcerned about
whether they get married or not. It really is such a departure from
Austen’s version of the true nature of these characters that I
cringe.
The
cover blurb calls this business with the Kama Sutra “hilarious and
sweet”. I find it to be neither. It’s actually awkward and
ill-conceived, nearly uncomfortable to read, and borderline
distasteful. Far better is the book’s handling of the courtship of
Caroline Bingley, who despite being wooed by a fake Lord in search of
her fortune, finally ends up with a shy but intelligent fellow who
truly loves her. There is even some suspense in this part of the
book, as a very pregnant Elizabeth and her father do some sleuthing
in Scotland.
I
don’t like the book and don’t recommend it. But I think if you’re
a true Austen fan, and read a few of the “new books” about her
characters every year, you can’t avoid it. But be advised – it’s
like wanting to read “Romeo and Juliet” and picking up “The
Adventures of Don Juan” instead. Austen purists won’t be happy
with what Altman has done, but she has turned this into a franchise –
10 books now and counting (on Amazon) about the Darcy and Bingley
families, of which this book is the first in the series. So I say,
enjoy it if you will, but I’ll move on to other authors who treat
Austen’s creatures in a more respectful manner.
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