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    The Watsons and Emma Watson: Jane Austen's Unfinished Novel Completed by Joan Aiken

    The Watsons and Emma Watson: Jane Austen's Unfinished Novel Completed by Joan AikenAuthor: Jane Austen
    Publisher: Sourcebooks Landmark
    Category: Book

    List Price: $14.95
    Buy New: $2.00
    as of 2/10/2010 03:48 EST details
    You Save: $12.95 (87%)



    New (23) Used (19) from $1.60

    Seller: Ardentine Bookseller
    Rating: 2.0 out of 5 stars 5 reviews
    Sales Rank: 546584

    Media: Paperback
    Pages: 304
    Number Of Items: 1
    Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.8
    Dimensions (in): 7.7 x 5.7 x 0.8

    ISBN: 1402212291
    Dewey Decimal Number: 823.914
    EAN: 9781402212291
    ASIN: 1402212291

    Publication Date: March 1, 2008
    Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

    Features:
      • ISBN13: 9781402212291
      • Condition: NEW
      • Notes: Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark.

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      • Kindle Edition - The Watsons and Emma Watson

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    Editorial Reviews:

    Product Description
    Jane Austen wrote the untitled fragment that was later called The Watsons in 1803-5, and it was published posthumously in 1871. Joan Aiken, well known for her Jane Austen sequels and children's books, finishes the fragment, introducing a new hero and seamlessly continuing where Jane Austen left off to a satisfying ending for all Austen fans.

    Emma Watson returns home after 14 years spent with a beloved aunt, whose re-marriage has caused a significant change in Emma's circumstances. Used to a life of ease, warmth and intelligence, Emma is thrust back into a home where, with one exception, her sisters are petty and jealous, if not vulgar, her father is ill and weak, and her brothers are not men of fine minds. This is a poignant exploration of a young lady's endurance in the face of reduced circumstances, and in true Jane Austen fashion, there is an admirable hero to make all right in the end.



    Customer Reviews:
    2 out of 5 stars Horrible ending.....   January 31, 2010
    Arianna Hoffman (Charlotte, NC USA)
    I have read the other reviews and every one has a good point. The beginning of Emma Watson I thought was very good. It connect well with The Watson, even thou the author has change some of Jane Austen details in her characters. The language was good and was full of period details and information . I also LOVED the fact that Joan Aiken made an attempt to change the fate of her main heroine from what Jane Austen intended and got her married with someone very different from the other male heroes in Jane Austen novels.

    I really enjoyed the reading all the way to the last 4 or 5 chapters when everything start to go wrong.

    IT'S ALMOST LIKE THE AUTHOR GOT TIRED OF WRITING, RUN OUT OF IDEAS AND DECIDED TO END THE BOOK.

    She start to copy scenes from Pride and Prejudice, Persuasion, Emma, and Sense and Sensibility (witch a reader can identify with no difficulty), and she brought all of her characters to a nice but very abrupt conclusion without developing more details around their circumstances.
    But the worst part was the fact that she NEVER develop a love story for Emma Watson. I was so looking forward for this love story (specially since the hero is more someone I would fall in love with ) that the disappointment of its nonexistence ruined the hole book. She married the heroine with only few words exchanged between her and her future husband, literarily. I believe not even in real life of Jane Austen's time people would not marry without a more knowledge of each other, specially a Jane Austen character!
    And this was her trade mark in her novels. Her heroines have always took their time in study the character of the man they felled in love with struggling between the requirements of their social status and the choice of their heart (English is not my first language and I don't know if I express myself very clear here, but I hope you get the point).


    Overall what a petty, she started so well.......



    1 out of 5 stars A Flawed Execution   August 22, 2009
    lorack (Livermore, CA)
    4 out of 4 found this review helpful

    This completion of Jane Austen's fragment "The Watsons" was terribly disappointing. When I turned the page that marked the end of Austen's work and the beginning of Aiken's and read the first few lines, I was almost stunned at how poorly Aiken could have understood the personalities of both Elizabeth and Emma as Austen had created them. The stories do not mesh. Aiken merely uses the situation and names of Austen's characters to create a story truly of her own making. There is no apparent attempt to respect Jane Austen's style, her methods of building characters, or even to respect the confines of events/places to those that Austen would have used in any of her other works. Even the prejudices of the times in which Austen lived are not respected by Aiken, and in the end I'm not sure that Elizabeth, Emma, or any of her sisters would remotely resemble a "lady/gentleman's daughter" of the early 1800's. Besides being disappointed, after reading Aiken's version of The Watsons I felt a bit contaminated - almost as if I had introduced something flawed into my pleasure and respect for one of the best writers that ever lived (Jane Austen, of course). If you are a fan of Austen, I advise you to run, don't walk, away from this completion story. Stick to "The Younger Sister" by Catherine Hubback (for free on google books), or even the completion of The Watsons by Edith and Francis Brown.


    3 out of 5 stars I wouldn't have attempted it   May 27, 2008
    v. m. hollingsworth (new york, new york)
    1 out of 1 found this review helpful

    While I can't say that I was particularly impressed with Joan Aiken's completion of Jane Austen's novel, I doubt anyone would be able to do the job to the satisfaction of Jane Austen fans. I thought Joan A's Emma was much more outspoken that the Emma created by Jane Austen. In fact, Joan Aiken's Emma didn't feel like a traditional Jane Austen heroine at all. I did think Ms. Aiken presented some of the more unfavorable characters (like Penelope and Margaret) well. I gave the completed version 3 stars mostly because Ms. Aiken made the attempt though I won't be keeping this on a shelf for re-reading in the future as I have with all of Jane Austen's completed works.


    1 out of 5 stars a terrible ending for Jane Austen's work   May 17, 2008
    Liz (Mass)
    6 out of 7 found this review helpful

    As a huge Jane Austen fan, I was very excited to read a new novel. I was, however, severely disappointed.

    The Emma Watson of Joan Aiken's book bears little resemblance to Austen's character. Aiken also changes details from the Watsons to her book. for example, Austen describes Mrs. Blake as a widow, but Aiken has her naval husband visiting her. And the introduction of a new love interest for Emma comes out of nowhere, even though Austen clearly set up Tom Musgrove and Lord Osborn as the protagonists for her hand.

    All in all, this book left a very bad taste in my mouth. Don't bother!



    4 out of 5 stars A Satisfying Read   April 9, 2008
    LadyJane (Pemberley)
    10 out of 11 found this review helpful

    The Watsons and Emma Watson I confess: I had not read The Watsons before reading this edition and Aiken's take on it. It felt very odd to be reading something of Jane Austen's that was not as dear and familiar to me as the six completed novels are.

    The Watsons begins with Emma Watson, newly returned to her family home, after living with a beloved aunt for 14 years, and being taken by her eldest sister Elizabeth to a nearby village, where she will stay the night with the Edwards family and attend her first ball. Emma's family is rather poor, her father is often ill, and she doesn't really know any of them, brothers Robert and Sam or sisters Elizabeth, Penelope, and Margaret. After the death of her mother, Emma had been sent to live with an aunt, who taught her fine manners and appreciation for nicer things.

    As they travel to the ball, Elizabeth tells Emma about their sisters and some of the people she will undoubtedly be meeting at the ball, including the dashing and (possibly) dangerous Tom Musgrave who is "a young man of very good fortune, quite independent, and remarkably agreeable, a universal favourite wherever he goes. Most of the girls hereabouts are in love with him, or have been" (2). Apparently their sister Penelope was hoping he would look her way, but she's a bit troublesome (having encouraged Elizabeth's love to marry elsewhere in the past). Elizabeth hopes Tom dances with Emma, but does not want Emma to fall for him. Also mentioned are the Edwards, whose daughter Sam Watson is hoping to marry, but who might prefer a Captain Hunter; Lord Osborne, his mother, Lady Osborne, his sister, Miss Osborne, and their party, which Emma later learns includes a Mr. Howard, former tutor to Lord Osborne and a clergyman, his sister, Mrs. Blake, and one of her sons, Charles, who is about ten.

    At the ball, Emma meets many people, dances, and is admired by the gentlemen. At one point, she shows kindness by dancing with little Charles Blake, when Miss Osborne, who had promised to dance with him goes off with another partner. Emma instantly wins the gratitude of Mrs. Blake, her brother, and the attention of Lord Osborne and Tom Musgrave.

    Much of the rest of The Watsons entails Emma's interactions with these characters and her family. Her eldest brother Robert, who is quite stuffy, and his wife Jane (who reminds one of a cross between Fanny Ferrars from S&S and Mrs. Elton from Emma), come for a visit, bringing another sister, Margaret, who appears friendly but is really very petty, dislikes Emma's fine manners (though Emma does not put on airs), and hopes Tom Musgrave will fall in love with her.

    The novel fragment ends with Robert and Jane wanting Emma to come for a visit, but Emma would rather stay with her poor father, who is nearing his end.

    The Watsons, obviously, cuts off very abruptly, but fortunately for us, Emma Watson by Joan Aiken begins where Jane Austen left off and imagines the fates of Jane's characters. There are many twists and turns, loves and deaths. Emma begins to know her siblings better (which is not always a good thing). Emma becomes friends with Mrs. Blake and has a bit of a crush on Mr. Howard, who might become engaged to Lady Osborne. Her trying sister Penelope shows up married to an older man named Dr. Harding, who is rich, and buys a big local house, which first must be remodeled. This leads to Emma meeting a Captain Fremantle, with whom she feels an instant connection. Tragedy strikes when Emma's father dies. Emma and Elizabeth, who have no income, are to be parceled off to live with their siblings.

    The story ends tidily with reunions, marriages, and just rewards. I was quite glad to read it after reading The Watsons because that fragment had no ending. Really, one hardly gets into the story before it abruptly stops. If I hadn't been able to read Emma Watson I would have been quite unsatisified. Aiken did an excellent job of taking Jane Austen's characters and developing them more fully, as characters are often developed in full-length novels. I did not like every twist and turn Aiken introduced, but I was happy with Emma's ending. She deserved nothing less.


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