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A Visit to Highbury/Another View of Emma

A Visit to Highbury/Another View of Emma
By Joan Austen-Leigh

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Product Description

The great-great-grandniece of Jane Austen offers a delightful and refreshing visit with some of the classic characters from Austen's famous novel Emma, giving a parallel view of Highbury through the eyes of the local schoolmistress.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #877464 in Books
  • Published on: 1995-03
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Hardcover
  • 182 pages

Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly
The Austen connection is tenuous but real: Austen-Leigh is the great-granddaughter of Jane Austen's nephew. Here she offers a retelling of Emma that's at once playful and respectful. By adopting the point of view of Mary Goddard, headmistress of the school where the ingenuous Harriet Smith is a parlor boarder, the modern-day author is able-with a minimum of intrusion-to observe much of the romantic goings-on of Highbury's young singles. Like Jane Austen's own early novel, Lady Susan, this tale proceeds through an exchange of letters, between Mary Goddard and her much younger sister, Charlotte Pinkney, currently on her second marriage-to an overly reserved and unaccountably stingy husband. Mrs. Goddard regales her unhappy sister with a chronicle of the romantic mishaps well known to Emma fans. Then Mrs. Pinkney recounts the small events of her own life, her thawing relations with her new husband and an amusing trip to Bath, during which she meets Mr. Elton and his odious bride-to-be. As the narrative wends its way to its buoyant conclusion, alert readers can amuse themselves by picking up the author's numerous sly references to the world of 19th-century writers and literature. Though the tone does not ring true in scattered moments, for the most part this novel adds a pleasing postscript to Austen's brilliant original.
Copyright 1995 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Library Journal
Sequels to Jane Austen's novels have become quite popular of late, notably two works based on Pride and Prejudice: Emma Tennant's Pemberley (LJ 11/1/93) and Julia Barrett's Presumption (LJ 9/15/93). In her novel Emma, Jane Austen created a lively, independent-minded young heroine who lived in the village of Highbury. Now a descendant of Austen's nephew has written a companion novel that tells a parallel story through the correspondence of Mary Goddard, the headmistress of a local school, and her London-based sister, Charlotte Pinkney. Old and new characters spring to life through the use of the lively repartee fundamental to regency romances. Charlotte is especially engaging with her sharp eye and even sharper tongue. Both sisters help two younger women find true love, and, in the course of this matchmaking, Charlotte finds that her own marriage of convenience has some spark after all. Recommended for fiction collections.
--Patricia Altner, Information Seekers, Bowie, Md.
Copyright 1995 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Booklist
Jane Austen's great-great-great niece has written a charming spin-off of her forebear's classic Emma. Extremely careful to leave characters and events unaltered, Austen-Leigh uses a fairly minor character, Mrs. Goddard of Highbury, as the focus of her new story. Mrs. Goddard's correspondence with Mrs. Pinkney, her newly remarried, London-based sister, forms the substance of the entire novel. Through their letters, these ladies comment on events in Highbury and shared acquaintances who travel from London to Highbury. The author does a fine job of developing characters and charting romances through the chatty epistles of the two long-separated sisters. Denise Perry Donavin


Customer Reviews

Refreshing and delightful!5
The book is absolutely delightful! The vivacity of Mrs. Pinkney is reminiscent of another Austenian character, namely Elizabeth Bennet. Without altering or modifying any part of the original novel, the author offered a parallel storyline along that of Austen's Emma. A true treat for any Austen fans. If one enjoys this book, one must also search out Jane Dawkins's "Letters from Pemberly: Continuation of Pride and Prejudice."

The most delightful Austen augmentation that I have ever read!5
This is not a sequel to Emma, but an account of events during the same period according to Mrs. Goddard, the headmistress of the school where Harriet Smith has been brought up. The story consists of letters between Mrs. Goddard and her unhappily remarried sister. The story is mainly focused on the sister's life, with the events of Emma being recounted by Mrs. Goddard in her letters.

This is, I think, wise. By choosing a background character, one who is of a lower class than Emma, and using the letter format, Austen-Leigh has avoided most problems with the reader's preconceptions.

The story itself it quite entertaining. It is not the type of story that Jane Austen herself told, being about middle-aged, non-gentry, but it has a spirit and worldview that I imagine that she would share.

The best part is - there's a sequel!

Delightfully readable, a little treasure of a novel4
Joan Austen Leigh has written a refreshing spin-off of the classic novel, EMMA. This book was about how love can affect the young and the "mature" in completely different--or similar--ways. Mrs. Pinkney's tale of the trials of marriage was very captivating. The ending was very rewarding. All in all, "A Visit..." is very charming, and perfectly suited to be read with your Sunday afternoon tea.