The trend for Pride And Prejudice spin-off novels has
seen some literary low points (Pride And
Prejudice And Zombies anyone?) but Jane Austen can stop spinning in her
grave for just a moment because the latest re-imagining of her much-loved
classic is impressive enough to be worthy of her.
Longbourn by Jo Baker (Doubleday) takes us below stairs Downton Abbey-style and reveals the untold story of the servants in
the Bennet household.
It is washday when
the tale begins, a dismal prospect for housemaid Sarah whose chilblains flare
and crack as she tackles other people’s dirty linen, scrubbing away at the
stained petticoats of the five Bennet daughters with fellow housemaid Polly.
Together with Mrs
Hill, the cook and housekeeper, and her aged husband, they make up Longbourn’s
second family, a tight-knit group bound by long days of drudgery.
In Austen’s
original the servants are lightly mentioned. Here it is the Bennets who are
almost incidental. There are balls and dinners aplenty, Elizabeth and Mr Darcy
fall in love, Lydia absconds with Wickham but these events are felt as ripples
down in the kitchen where the servants have their own hopes, dreams and
tragedies to occupy them.
Spirited Sarah is
an orphan, plucked from the workhouse for a life in service. Her future seems
to have no hope of happiness. Then suddenly a new servant joins the household,
James the mysterious footman. As she empties chamber pots, scours pans and
curls the hair of the Bennet girls, Sarah finds herself increasingly fascinated
by him.
Meanwhile young,
innocent Polly is easy prey for the ghastly Mr Wickham. And Mr and Mrs Hill
struggle with their own well-buried secrets.
Carefully crafted
to dovetail with the original, Longbourn
is still very much its own book. Baker’s prose shines. She shares Austen’s keen
powers of observation, her attention to detail and ability to evoke characters,
to shape a story. But her style is far from imitative. This book is all grit
rather than social satire and it takes us places Austen never did – not only
below stairs but also into battle.
Baker is a UK
novelist whose own family a few generations back were in service. Her previous
books have had low-key releases but this one sparked a bidding war and a movie
is already planned. As a novel it would have worked without the Austen
connection – houses all over England in that era had the same sort of set up.
But without the presence of the Bennets, hapless William Collins and Mr Darcy
striding about haughtily, to give it literary celebrity status, it surely
wouldn’t have created such a splash.
I think Longbourn will please most Pride And Prejudice fans. It adds to the
story rather than parasitically feeding on it and the different perspective
makes it worthy of a retelling. Even those who don’t know the much-loved
original, or read it so long ago they barely recall its plot and characters,
will find this version independent enough to be completely engaging.
About the reviewer.
Nicky Pellegrino, an Auckland-based author of popular fiction, is also the Books Editor of the Herald on Sunday where the above review was first published on Sunday 22 September 2013.
About the reviewer.
Nicky Pellegrino, an Auckland-based author of popular fiction, is also the Books Editor of the Herald on Sunday where the above review was first published on Sunday 22 September 2013.
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