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Author:  P. D. James
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Product Summary

Format: Hardcover
ISBN-10: 0307959856
ISBN-13: 9780307959850
Buy.com Sku: 225181175
Publish Date: 12/6/2011
Pages:  304
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Annotation:
Grande dame of British mysteries P.D. James says that reaching her 90th year convinced her that it was time to "indulge" in a project she'd had in mind for a while: writing a sequel to Jane Austen's classic Regency romance, PRIDE AND PREJUDICE--as a murder mystery. Readers fond of Austen's heroines, as well as fans of James's mysteries, can enjoy the results in DEATH COMES TO PEMBERLEY. Gearing up for the annual fall ball, Elizabeth and Darcy's relaxing dinner with friends Jane and Bingley gets interrupted by a carriage chase that ends in the discovery of a corpse. The victim is the husband of Elizabeth's youngest sister, Lydia, launching Elizabeth and her family into a riveting investigation. James masterfully captures the milieu of Austen's Pemberley, as she brings delightful new life (albeit surrounding a confounding death) to some of the most beloved characters in English literature.
Author Bio
P. D. James
P. D. James always dreamed of being a writer as a child, but her plans were temporarily waylaid by World War II and a subsequent successful career in civil service. She joined the Red Cross at the outset of the war and married Ernest White in 1941. Though they had two daughters together, their marriage was marred by chronic mental disturbances that her husband suffered after the war, which eventually led to his death. From 1949 to 1968, James worked in a hospital in London, but never forgot her first passion. In 1962 she published her first novel, "Cover Her Face", which featured Detective Adam Dalgliesh, the cultured, sensitive protagonist for which she is best known. Other critically acclaimed novels include the bestseller "Innocent Blood" (1980) and "An Unsuitable Job for a Woman" (1972), one of the first mysteries to feature a female investigator who is portrayed as capable of leading a dangerous investigation. James remained devoted to her career in civil service, working in the police department from 1968 to 1979 and serving on a variety of literary and arts councils after her retirement.
Praise
"The style of DEATH COMES TO PEMBERLY is a loose approximation of 19th-century prose, a sort of modern equivalent, rather than a painstaking imitation. But it's more than convincing and every now and then, as a kind of homage or reminder, hits the precise, epigrammatic Austen note." - Charles McGrath 12/27/2011

"[T]his novel reflects James' sensibility and preoccupations. It is a universe of dark meanings, hidden relationships and events that are ?mired in apprehension and potential danger.' James is also intent on bringing the real world into Austen's world, mentioning Napoleon and the war with France as well as the new invention known as the water closet...." - Kenneth Turan 01/15/2012

"P. D. James is head and shoulders above the average Jane Austen imitator as a writer. There's the mouth-watering prospect that she might be able to get close enough to Austen's inimitable style to make us believe we're really at Pemberley again." - Elizabeth Kantor 02/20/2012

Read A Chapter

AUTHOR'S NOTE

I owe an apology to the shade of Jane Austen for involving her beloved Elizabeth in the trauma of a murder investigation, especially as in the fi nal chapter of Mansfield Park Miss Austen made her views plain: “Let other pens dwell on guilt and misery. I quit such odious subjects as soon as I can, impatient to restore everybody not greatly in fault themselves to tolerable comfort, and to have done with all the rest.” No doubt she would have replied to my apology by saying that, had she wished to dwell on such odious subjects, she would have written this story herself, and done it better.

P. D. James, 2011

PROLOGUE

The Bennets of Longbourn


It was generally agreed by the female residents of Meryton that Mr. and Mrs. Bennet of Longbourn had been fortunate in the disposal in marriage of four of their fi ve daughters. Meryton, a small market town in Hertfordshire, is not on the route of any tours of pleasure, having neither
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