Better Than Starbucks discussion
Are you a fan of sequels to classics or books using other author's characters?
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Jun 02, 2013 10:19AM
I usually steer clear of both these genres - the idea of a sequel to Pride and Prejudice or Jane Eyre for instance does not sit well with me. I did however enjoy the Laurie R. King Mary Russell books in which the heroine becomes an assistant and eventually wife to Sherlock Holmes (sounds awful but it really isn't)
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It depends on the book/author, really. I do like to read books that use other author's characters, just to see what angle they take. I liked Jean Burnett's The Bad Miss Bennet: A Novel because she did try to make it sound like the Regency period. I'm not sure I'm going to like the sci-fi-fantasy version of J.A's novels though (Sense and Sensibility and Seamonsters, for instance).
I don't think I am. Not because I've tried one or two and disliked the result but because, for some reason or another, I just avoid picking them up when I go shopping :S Especially the 'such and such and.... MONSTERS' sort of thing - oh well, lots of other books to choose from ;)
The only one I will rather hang-doggedly admit to liking was "Scarlett" the sequel- by -another- author for Gone With the Wind. It's been decades, tho.
Oh! How could I forget an amazing pre-quel book (do they count?) The Wide Sargasso Sea---incredible pre-Jane Eyre.And Grendel by John Gardner.
Best of all-- I won't top this one: "Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead" by Tom Stoppard.
I also enjoyed Gardner's Grendel. However I'm glad I read Seamus Heaney's new translation of Beowulf first.http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AaB0tr...
I can't say I have really experienced this genre. I'm nervous of trying it out, as the Classics are Classics for a reason. I'm worried that a book written as a prequel or a sequel by another author couldn't capture the original essence of the first author. :/ I do, however, have a few of them on my shelves. For example, I own copies of "Rhett Butler's People" by Donald McCaig, "Scarlett" by Alexandra Ripley, and "Before Green Gables" by Budge Wilson. None of these have I really tried, though.



