Old Friends and New Fancies by Sybil Brinton
Reviewed by Gerti
What
an odd duck this book is! According to the cover blurb, “Old
friends and New Fancies” is the first ever Jane Austen sequel, and
perhaps among the earliest fan fiction ever! Little is known of
author Sybil Brinton except that she penned this love letter to
Austen’s fiction back in 1913. It’s a wonderful read, because the
language she uses is more similar to that of Austen’s day than what
fan fiction writers put out today, so it’s almost like finding
another, final Austen novel that ties all her plots together! The
only thing Brinton fails at, is that she doesn’t have Austen’s
sharp wit, but it is a small failing indeed when there is so much
other fun to be had! It’s like riding in a literary time machine!
Brinton
is gifted at finding connections between the various characters in
Austen’s novels (excluding juvenilia, “Lady Susan” and
“Sanditon”.) She starts with JA’s most popular work, “Pride
and Prejudice”, and does the usual thing, with Georgiana Darcy
engaged to Colonel Fitzwilliam. She then breaks that couple up and
allows them to find new fancies, much as the title says. Fitzwilliam
finds himself falling in love with Mary Crawford, one of the pair of
sophisticated siblings who appear in “Mansfield Park” to play
with the hearts of the Bertram family. Georgiana also forms a
connection to Mansfield, when she finds herself proposed to by a
sailor named William Price, the brother of goody-two-shoes Fanny
Price, the heroine of that novel. Trouble occurs when Sir Walter
Eliot of “Persuasion” fame also sets his cap at Mary Crawford,
and a younger Bennet sister likewise expects an offer of marriage
from handsome Mr. Price.
Do
you feel your heart beating faster already? Yes, for true Austen
fans, this novel is a delightful mashup of Austen’s best and worst
characters, with trouble-making Mrs. Jennings (from “Sense and
Sensibility”) killing Kitty’s chances at romance, and Lucy
Ferrars (once Steele, from the same novel) poisoning Lady Catherine
de Bourgh’s mind against poor Mary Crawford. Heroes, villians and
classic characters all dance around for the enjoyment of Austen fans,
and I couldn’t get enough of it, even though Brinton’s book
weighs in at 377 pages.
Sad
notes for me: Colonel Brandon is dead by the start of the book, so we
don’t get to hear from him (and I always found his character so
appealing!) Mary Bennet is also excluded (although she’d be the
perfect bride for a curate) as is Mrs. Bennet, whose “spasms and
flutterings” add so much humor to “P & P”. But Emma
Woodhouse is here, now Mrs. Knightley of course, and she’s still
matchmaking despite learning her lesson in the book that shares her
name. And while little is seen of Catherine Morland from “Northanger
Abbey”, her brother and greedy friend Isabella Thorpe play a role
here, too. And I’ll just give you this spoiler – Isabella gets
the groom she deserves in the end! In short, this book is a must read
for all Austen fans. I’ve just finished and can’t wait to read it
again!