
It has always been a source of great frustration to Janeites that Jane Austen abandoned The Watsons after only seventeen and a half thousand words. It is, as Margaret Drabble says, a "tantalising, delightful and highly accomplished fragment, which must surely have proved the equal of her other six novels had she finished it." In Emma Watson, Joan Aiken at long last completes The Watsons. Nineteen-year-old Emma, adopted by her aunt after the death of her mother, has rejoined her ailing father and her favorite sister, Elizabeth. Her stuffy brother Robert is living in Croydon with his grasping wife; her shrewish sister Penelope looks to have made a good match; her brother Sam is trying to make his way as a doctor; and Emma's immediate elder, Margaret, fancies herself in love with Tom Musgrave. Austen characters all, yet Joan Aiken, with consummate skill, makes them her own.
Another of Aiken's playful yet hearty romantic fancies, with a cast lifted (respectfully) from the luminously peopled novels of Jane Austen.
Aiken's previous novel, Eliza's Daughter (1994), focused on an offstage figure from Sense and Sensibility who confronts the former, now unhappy, Dashwood sisters. Aiken has wisely jettisoned attempts at irony and witty pyrotechnics; still, her cast members here, borrowed from Austen, take some entertaining turns. In Austen's bleak and sketchy The Watsons, probably begun in 1804 and never finished, Elizabeth Watson confides to sister Emma, with whom she has been reunited after Emma's 14 years with kind Aunt Maria, grim thoughts on their single state: "You know we must marry . . . it is very bad to grow old and be poor and laughed at." But that seems to be the fate of these young women, now in their 20s, for their father, a gentle clergyman, is quite poor. The soon-to-be family head is pompous, unsympathetic brother Robert, married to horrid Jane, "callow" and unhelpful. Their sisters Penelope and Margaret are generally unpleasant. Aiken picks up Austen's tale and carries it imaginatively along. Penelope marries nice, elderly Dr. Harding, and buys, renovates, and moves into a grand, if decaying mansion. But heartaches abound: Elizabeth's former suitor marries another; kind brother Sam is refused marriage to pleasant Mary Edwards, pledged to dim Lord Osborne. Emma is not attracted to curate Adam, because he's tethered to the dowager Lady Osborne. And dear Aunt Maria has vanished after having borne up under the weight of a miserable marriage for many years. Before the close, when lovers will traipse off hand in hand, there will be reversals and upheavals; a fatal accident; a destructive theft and elopement; disclosure of an old scandal; a rescue; and even a rousing horse race.
As always, for those attuned to Austen, and to Aiken's imaginative, respectful variations, simply charming.
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December 05, 2008:
If you feel you MUST know what happens in Jane Austen's unfinished novel, The Watsons, then give this a try from your local library. To invest money will bring disappointment, and perhaps even anger. The writing style, the contrived plot, the affected language, the one dimensional characters---actually just about everything, is geared to the intelligence of fourth graders, written like a fifth grader who has read too many trashy romance novels. Please give me Danielle Steele before givng me another Joan Aiken. "Our Jane" did not deserve this.
If you do want a good Austen related story, try the Pamela Aiden trilogy, which parallels "Pride and Prejudice" from Mr. Darcy's point of view. Truly well done, with an admirable effort to blend with but not duplicate Austen's writing style. The first one is called "An Assembly Such as This." Now these 3 books ARE worth buying if you are a true afficiando of Austen.
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August 29, 2008: Being a Jane Austen fan I was wary about reading a book based on her uncompleted story about The Watsons, knowing that I would not be reading that of which Miss Jane Austen wrote. This is why I was surprised at how much I loved this book once I had completed it. It was a lovely book and I could not bring myself to put it down. I really enjoyed the story and I found it very easy to follow. I recommend this book to any Jane Austen fan. Job well done Joan Aiken!