Emma: A Modern Retelling
Emma: A Modern Retelling book cover

Emma: A Modern Retelling

Paperback – April 5, 2016

Price
$12.90
Format
Paperback
Pages
384
Publisher
Anchor
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0804172417
Dimensions
5.2 x 0.8 x 7.9 inches
Weight
11 ounces

Description

“One of the most delightful books of the year. . . . A literary jewel, just like the original.” — Star Tribune (Minneapolis) (Critics’ choice)“McCall Smith brings all the wit and deft characterization of his No. 1 Ladies’ Detective Agency series to this reimagining of Jane Austen’s classic. . . . The lessons and pleasures of her tale are timeless.” — People Magazine “With his fluent, soothing prose . . . [McCall Smith] takes Jane’s characters and invites them warmly into our world. . . . We like his Emma, a contemporary small-town girl who worries over dinner parties, pours gin and tonics and drives a Mini Cooper—much to the delight of her friend Harriet. . . . Jane Austen is incomparable, but if she were still with us, I can see her hastily tucking away her handwritten notes and extending her hand to Mr. McCall Smith.” — The Washington Post “Alexander McCall Smith and Jane Austen?. . . . A delightful match it is. . . . McCall Smith’s Emma answers many interesting questions, such as how Miss Taylor went from governess to such an important friend, how Mrs. and Miss Bates became destitute, and what sort of car Emma might drive (a Mini Cooper).” — The Philadelphia Inquirer “[A] very pleasant modern update of Emma . . . . McCall Smith’s contemporary updates of Mr. Woodhouse’s hypochondria and neuroses are particularly amusing.” — Flavorwire (Staff pick) “The Jane Austen we know is delicious enough on her own, but Austen filtered through the mind of Scottish author Alexander McCall Smithxa0 could be the best of both possible worlds. . . . Certainly unmistakable is Emma, Austen’s heroine, a born controller who believes (with unshakable certainty in both books) that other people’s happiness can be arranged for them and that she is just the one to do it. . . . This rewarding read is a fascinating pastiche of two of the most enjoyable writers in the British tradition.” — BookPage “[McCall Smith’s] latter-day Emma possesses all the youth and beauty and a good deal of the wit of Jane Austen’s heroine. . . . McCall Smith has written a delightfully droll, thoughtful novel that reflects on money’s enduring role in relationships as well as on the nature of this meddlesome heroine’s long-lived appeal.” — Kirkus Reviews “The keen sense of social realities and moral rightness that imbues McCall Smith’s novels is immediately evident when reading his Emma . . . . Surely Austen would be proud.” — Library Journal ALEXANDER McCALL SMITH is the author of the No. 1 Ladies’ Detective Agency series, the Isabel Dalhousie series, the Portuguese Irregular Verbs series, the 44 Scotland Street series, and the Corduroy Mansions series. He is professor emeritus of medical law at the University of Edinburgh in Scotland and has served with many national and international organizations concerned with bioethics. He was born in what is now known as Zimbabwe and was a law professor at the University of Botswana. He lives in Scotland. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. Chapter 5 “Dearly beloved,” began the vicar. “We are gathered together here in the sight of God and in the face of this congregationxa0.xa0.xa0.” The echoing opening of the Wedding Service, couched in the Cranmerian prose of the Book of Common Prayer, could not but move every one of the one hundred guests attending the wedding of Isabella Woodhouse to John Knightley. Emma listened to each word, and was impressed by the sheer solemnity of what she heard: “.xa0.xa0. which is an honourable estatexa0.xa0.xa0. and first miracle he wrought, in Cana of Galileexa0.xa0.xa0. and therefore is not by any to be enterprised, nor taken in hand, unadvisedly, lightly, or wantonlyxa0.xa0.xa0.” The resonant language brought home to her the significance of the occasion. This was her Isabella, her sister, taking such an irrevocable and adult step, leaving the security of her childhood home and venturing out as a married woman, as Mrs.xa0Knightley. It was hard for her to accept that this was actually happening; it was all so sudden, and so dramatic—almost an elopement, but not quite. xa0 She looked about her at the congregation almost filling the small Norman church in Highbury. The Knightley family was led by George, and was well represented by an assortment of cousins, even if somewhat distant ones; there were fewer Woodhouses—not because various relatives had been passed over, but because they were a smaller family. Then there were people from the village: Miss Bates, an unmarried woman in her fifties who occupied, on a fixed rent, a cottage in the village, and who lived a narrow life in severely reduced circumstances; James Weston, a widower whose Georgian house of eight bedrooms was barely a mile from Hartfield, and who had always been a good friend to Mr.xa0Woodhouse; Mr.xa0Perry, an exponent of alternative medicine, regarded as a charlatan by some (but not by Mr.xa0Woodhouse), and his wife, an illustrator of educational textbooks; and a number of friends whom Isabella had known at Gresham’s: Rosie Slazenger, Timmy Cottesloe, Kitty Fairweather. Emma knew them too, although she was a few years younger; Mr.xa0Woodhouse had heard their names before and had met some of them from time to time, but could never tell which one was which. xa0 Mr.xa0Woodhouse had reconciled himself to Isabella’s choice. His attempt to marry her off had succeeded, of course, but not in the way he had imagined. He had wanted her to find a husband in order to protect her, and she had done just that, with alacrity and determination, although not alighting upon quite the sort of husband he had envisaged for her. Still, it could have been worse; and the most important consideration, he knew, was her happiness. John Knightley made her happy. She adored him, and as far as Mr.xa0Woodhouse could make out, this adoration was fully reciprocated. And he accepted that the fact that he had a tattoo was far less important than the fact that they were both happy. His tattoo, moreover, was a relatively discreet one, and not something that people would necessarily notice, although it was a pity, Mr.xa0Woodhouse felt, that the best man should choose to mention it in his speech. xa0 Immediately after the wedding she informed him that she was three months pregnant, and that she was expecting twins. Emma, who was sixteen at the time, greeted this news with delight, but proclaimed, quite spontaneously, “Not for me! I’m never going to get myself pregnant! Yuck!” xa0 She addressed this to Miss Taylor, who was surprised by the vehemence of her reaction. “But it’s a wonderful thing to have children,” she said. “You love children—I’ve seen you with those little girls in the village shop.” xa0 “Children, yes,” said Emma. “But pregnancy, no. All thatxa0.xa0.xa0.” She assumed an expression of disgust. “All that fumbling.” xa0 Miss Taylor smiled. “You shouldn’t worry about that,” she said. “That’ll take care of itself. The important thing is to meet a young man whom you love. Once that happens, and I hope it does, then everything else—fumbling, and so on—will seem quite natural.” xa0 Emma shook her head vigorously. No, Miss Taylor did not understand; how could she—at her age? “I don’t ever want to get married,” she announced. “Never. Never. Not in a thousand years.” xa0 Miss Taylor was tolerant. “Millennia come round so quickly, Emma.” She smiled again. “I’ve already experienced one in my lifetime. And you may think that of marriage now, you know, but one’s views do change.” xa0 “Mine won’t,” said Emma, with conviction. She was certain; she knew what lay ahead of her: she would continue to be pretty, clever, and rich. That did not include getting married: pretty, clever, and rich people did not have to bother with such things. xa0 “Oh well,” said Miss Taylor. “There are other lifestyles. There is a great deal to be said for being single.” And she thought: Exactly what? Not having to worry about another person; not having to accommodate a partner’s wishes; not having to tolerate the slow, gravitational decline of the flesh into middle age and beyond, into that territory of sleepless nights and infirmity; not having to listen to familiar views on the same things, time after time? Not having to have to, in short. And yet, she thought, if I had to choose between being a governess and having a manxa0.xa0.xa0. Emma, having pronounced, now looked thoughtful. “Of course, I quite see how lots of other people want to get married. I can see how it’s fine for them. In factxa0.xa0.xa0.” xa0 Miss Taylor waited. “Yes?” xa0 “It’s probably rather fun to help other people find the right person. Yes, I think it must be.” An idea had entered her mind. It was unbidden, but it excited her, and had to be expressed. “You, for example, Miss Taylorxa0.xa0.xa0. What about you and James Weston?” xa0 This was not an area into which Miss Taylor felt they should stray. She was, after all, Emma’s governess, and there were boundaries to be observed, no matter how easy and familiar their relationship had been. “Leave me out of it,” she said sharply. “ Cadit quaestio .” xa0 “ Cadit quaestio ,” muttered Emma, under her breath. “ Sed quaestio manet .” She had asked her Latin teacher at school for a suitable rebuttal to cadit quaestio , and she had said that one might retort: But the question still remains, and that could be rendered sed quaestio manet . That was to put it simply, she explained. Simpliciter . Emma loved Latin because it gave her a sort of power. At school she had tossed a Latin phrase at a boy who had been staring at her in a disconcerting way, and he had been crushed—there was only one word for it: crushed . Read more

Features & Highlights

  • The best-selling author of the No. 1 Ladies’ Detective Agency series deftly escorts Jane Austen’s beloved, meddlesome heroine into the twenty-first century in this delightfully inventive retelling.
  • The summer after university, Emma Woodhouse returns home to live with her widowed father and launch her interior design business. Apart from cultivating grand career plans and managing her father’s hypochondria, Emma busies herself with the two things she does best: matchmaking and offering advice on everything from texting etiquette to first date destinations. Happily, this summer presents abundant opportunities for both, as old and new friends are drawn into the sphere of Emma’s counsel: George Knightley, her principled brother-in-law; Frank Churchill, the attractive stepson of her former governess; Harriet Smith, a naïve but enchanting young teacher’s assistant at the local language school; and the perfect (and perfectly vexing) Jane Fairfax. Carriages have been replaced by Mini Coopers and cups of tea by cappuccinos, but Alexander McCall Smith’s sparkling satire and cozy sensibility are the perfect match for Jane Austen’s beloved tale.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(930)
★★★★
20%
(620)
★★★
15%
(465)
★★
7%
(217)
28%
(869)

Most Helpful Reviews

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Not as great as I’d hoped it would be

I am a huge fan of this author, especially his number one ladies Detective agency series. The writing in this modern retelling was beautifully crafted, but the character development was not complete in my opinion. The ending wrapped up rather quick and I just didn’t feel the chemistry between Emma and her ultimate love
9 people found this helpful
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I don't know why he bothered

This was so disappointing. AMS's Emma is a truly appalling heroine. One of my favorite devices in fiction shows a moral journey in which a flawed, or even despicable hero is redeemed by the novel's end (brilliantly done by William Boyd in his A Good Man in Africa), but Emma does not undergo such a transformation. AMS is an attorney who is an expert in medical ethics, and his interest in ethical questions underlies many of his novels. He often has his characters ponder moral questions, explaining his characters thoughts and motives from an omniscient 3rd person point of view.
JA excels in illustrating her characters' moral and psychological realities not by telling us, as AMS does, but by allowing dialogue and behavior to exhibit this. For example, Darcy's haughty aunt is first introduced to the Bennet girls through the pedantic, intrusive, over-sharing recollections of their cousin, Mr. Collins, who is overwhelmed at her condescension to him. Elizabeth soon gets to experience the wonders of Lady Catherine de Burgh for herself on a visit to see her friend Charlotte Collins, nee Lucas. In just one scene, Lady Catherine's character is painted. As they approach Rosings for the first time, Mr Collin's reassures Elizabeth not to needlessly concern herself about her appearance, as Lady Catherine likes to see the distinctions in dress of social rank preserved. Lady Catherine then dictates to, interrupts, and rudely pries into her guests' circumstances. She interrupts Elizabeth's piano playing, reminds Elizabeth to practise the piano diligently, even condescending so far as to invite Elizabeth to practise on the governess' piano at Rosings, noting that her presence in "that part of the house", would be no imposition, which embarrasses Darcy. Any time that Elizabeth is in quiet conversation with Darcy or his cousin, Lady Catherine interupts, once exclaiming that she must have her share of any conversation involving music, due to her superior taste, and notes that her daughter "would have been a great proficient musically, if she had ever learned". Austen is an astute judge of character, even 200 years later, her characters seem as real as people one knows.
While I enjoy many of his novels (Bertie's engulfing mother is a particularly wonderfully ridiculous creation), in general, he is a genre writer. One suspects he might well be quite capable of writing serious fiction, but is really just having fun. But Emma fails on any level. I kept patiently hoping it would get better. I don't know why he bothered.
7 people found this helpful
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i so wanted to like this rendering of jane austen's classic story

i so wanted to like this rendering of jane austen's classic story, but unfortunately it is practically unreadable. i've read other works by this author and have not had a negative experience until this book. he's made the heroine unpleasant and hard to root for or relate to. so disappointing.
3 people found this helpful
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Perfect Modernization

I’ve read many of these modern retellings of Austen and Shakespeare, and this is my favorite. Perfect marriage of source material and modern novelist in A. McCall Smith. He has the rare talent for making us feel the high stakes of our everyday behavior. I just loved it.
2 people found this helpful
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A disappointment

I love Jane Austen and really like Alexander McCall Smith so I thought this would be a great book. All I can say is ugh. What a disappointment.
1 people found this helpful
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terrible

I don't often write reviews, but this book has provoked me enough to warrant one. Smith's Emma is profoundly unlikeable- conniving, disrespectful, and truly mean- spirited. Her voice in this book is also stiff and not at all witty, unrecognizable. I've read and enjoyed Jane Austen for many years, and I find it difficult to understand why anyone would meddle with someone else's story and characters to this extent, and to this bad and boring end. I'd add that the sexual content makes it inappropriate for younger readers, another shame.
1 people found this helpful
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Noisy Emma

Too lengthy, but retelling in modern time was very interesting.
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A complete waste of time!

This was one of the most boring books I have ever read. I kept putting it away because I could not stand ANY of the characters, especially Emma! What a self-serving, self-involved, entitled, nosy person. No character development for any of the people in this book and I found that I just wanted to strangle all of them to put them out of their misery. I did read the whole book but regretted it the whole time. I just kept thinking that there had to be some redeeming quality to it, but no, there wasn't. Don't waste your time! Read Jane Austen instead. I like Alexander McCall Smith books but this one was really a FLOP!
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Five Stars

Good book!
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Five Stars

A-OK