New Books In Historical Fiction

Pamela Mingle, “The Pursuit of Mary Bennet” (William Morrow, 2013)

Informações:

Sinopsis

It seems fair to say that a large proportion of the English-speaking reading public has encountered Jane Austen’s classic novel Pride and Prejudice, either on the page or in one of the many adaptations for stage, screen, and television. At the same time, the number of avid Austen readers who remember much about Mary, the third of the five Bennet sisters, is almost certainly small. Mary rates so little time on the page that scholars have questioned the need for her existence: could Austen not have made her point with three daughters, or at most four? Mary is the sister in the middle–solemn and unattractive, liable to put her foot in her mouth at any moment, more enthusiastic than skilled at the piano. She is, in modern terms, the perfect subject for a makeover–which she receives to great effect in The Pursuit of Mary Bennet (William Morrow, 2013). Three years after the events in Pride and Prejudice, Mary is dwindling into spinsterhood, in her own mind and that of her mother–a grim futur