From the publisher of Pride and Prejudice and Zombies comes a new tale of romance, heartbreak, and tentacled mayhem.
Sense and Sensibility and Sea Monsters expands the original text of the beloved Jane Austen novel with all-new scenes of giant lobsters, rampaging octopi, two-headed sea serpents, and other biological monstrosities.
As our story opens, the Dashwood sisters are evicted from their childhood home and sent to live on a mysterious island full of savage creatures and dark secrets. While sensible Elinor falls in love with Edward Ferrars, her romantic sister Marianne is courted by both the handsome Willoughby and the hideous man-monster Colonel Brandon.
Can the Dashwood sisters triumph over meddlesome matriarchs and unscrupulous rogues to find true love? Or will they fall prey to the tentacles that are forever snapping at their heels? This masterful portrait of Regency England blends Jane Austen's biting social commentary with ultraviolent depictions of sea monsters biting. It's survival of the fittest -- and only the swiftest swimmers will find true love!
Jane Austen, coauthor of Sense and Sensibility and Sea Monsters, is coauthor of the New York Times best seller Pride and Prejudice and Zombies, which has been translated into 17 languages and optioned to become a major motion picture. She died in 1817.
Ben H. Winters, coauthor of Sense and Sensibility and Sea Monsters, is a writer based in Brooklyn.
MY REVIEW:
This is the first of this kind of book I have read. After hearing so much about Pride and Prejudice and Zombies, I thought why not give some poor, unheralded not in vogue like vampires and zombies a chance to see if these sea monsters can also entertain. And entertain they did! I think you will either love this book and laugh as you are supposed to, OR perhaps like some of the VERY LOYAL Jane Austen fans, you may feel offended by it. I, however, thought it was delightful, funny, and very cleverly written.
In this novel that I might call a parody, the Dashwood gals are sent off to live on an island. There they find the place is crawling with sea monsters as well as the token debonair young men who undoubtedly are there to woo these sisters. Both sisters do indeed fall in love as is to be expected, but not necessarily with those who you might think...I mean, who wouldn't want to spend time with tentacle-challenged Brando? However, the handsome young men on the island do come to the sisters' rescue at one point when being attacked by a creature from the sea.
The poor dear girls are poor in this novel and looking for wealthy husbands when all they keep running into are these monsters. Poor Marianne, it seems, has caught the fancy of tentacle faced Colonel Brando, and she isn't sure if it is Willoughby who will face off against the monsters to try and protect her or not. Ellinor, meanwhile finds herself falling for Edward Ferras. Will it be possible for these ladies to find true love with the terrible tentacled treasures of the deep all around them? Will the book become too violent and REALLY anger the faithful purists of Jane Austin? The only way to find out will be for you to win one of these in my giveaway and read to see. I enjoyed the fast and funny read and it was quite a nice change from some pretty heavy things I have been reading. Kudos for the quick wit and hard to write comedic talents of Ben Winters.
Jane is my Co-Pilot:
The Fine Art of Making
Sense and Sensibility Totally Ridiculous
By Ben H. Winters,
Co-author of Sense and Sensibility and Sea Monsters
Since writing Sense and Sensibility and Sea Monsters, I've gotten a ton of feedback about how nice it is that I've made Jane Austen appealing to certain readers -- meaning readers who previously suffered a persistent allergy to The Classics. I am complimented for taking the prim and decorous Jane Austen and making her, A) really violent, and B) really funny.
The first compliment I will gladly accept. Over the decades since Sense and Sensibility first appeared, it has been noted by scholars and casual readers alike that the book is sorely lacking in shipwrecks, shark attacks, and vividly described decapitations. I believe it was the poet and critic Thomas Chatterton who admired the novel's careful plotting and social critique, but lamented the total absence of vengeful ghost pirates.
But I can't take credit for making Jane Austen funny. As is well known by passionate fans of Austen -- I have yet to meet any other kind -- the old girl has always been funny. Take for example Mr. and Mrs. Palmer, a set of secondary characters in Sense and Sensibility. The periodic appearances of the Palmers comprise what any comedy writer will recognize as a running gag. Mrs. Palmer is chatty and trivial, while Mr. Palmer (a delightful Hugh Laurie in the Ang Lee version) is gruff and unaffectionate. What Mrs. Palmer labels "droll," the reader -- along with Elinor, our sensible heroine -- recognizes as plain distaste for his wife, her friends, and everybody else in the universe. Every time those Palmers show up, we know we're in for the next variation on the same great gag. PLEASE CLICK HERE TO READ THE REST OF BEN WINTERS' ARTICLE ON THE FSB MEDIA WEBSITE.
GIVEAWAY
THANKS TO EVERYONE AT FSB
ASSOCIATES, I HAVE TWO COPIES OF THIS
IMAGINATIVE BOOK TO GIVE AWAY!
--U.S. RESIDENTS ONLY
--NO P. O. BOXES, PLEASE
--EMAIL MUST BE IN YOUR COMMENT!!
--EACH ENTRY MUST BE A SEPARATE COMMENT
TO COUNT OR ELSE IT COUNTS AS ONE
+1 MORE ENTRY: COMMENT ON HOW YOU FEEL ABOUT SOMEONE TAKING ANY CLASSIC NOVEL, NOT JUST AUSTEN'S AND CHANGING IT LIKE THIS
+1 MORE ENTRY: COMMENT ON IF YOU FOLLOW MY BLOG AND HOW?
6 PM, EST, NOVEMBER 29
33 comments:
I have been wanting to read the vampire one and missed seeinf this one! Thanks for reviewing it!
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I think it was interesting that he talked about how Austen didn't use silly names for people like Dickens did (like Fizziwig) so it allowed him to go over the top with his sea monsters.
anjamie4 (AT) gmail dot com
I think a writer has the right to write whatever they want...it doesn't mean it will be any good but I guess it is fine.
anjamie4 (AT) gmail dot com
I follow with GCF
anjamie4 (AT) gmail dot com
I liked Winter's article. I agree that Jane Austen was already funny. He said he made it ridiculous. I love that he can look at his work that way.
lizzi0915 at aol dot com
+1 I am fine with taking classics and "spoofing" them. I actually think it very funny. What I love is that you only get the joke if you have read the original.
lizzi0915 at aol dot com
+1 I follow on Google friend connect.
lizzi0915 at aol dot com
+1 Entry - I wouldn't say I love the article, but I will agree that maybe because of these books, people that would not have read Jane Austen on their own will at least get a taste of it. A not-so great taste, but.. at least an idea-ish. Bah.
Thanks!
Morning Glow
ohmorningglow AT aol DOT com
+1 more entry: I'm alright with it. I don't love the idea of someone changing a classic like this, but I don't hate it either. I know that this sort of thing widens the audience, and at least gets people familiar with Austen when they previously might have just ignored her existance.
Thanks!
Morning Glow
ohmorningglow AT aol DOT com
+ 1 More entry: I follow you via Blogger, so.. Google Friend Connect
Thanks!
Morning Glow
ohmorningglow AT aol DOT com
+1 i follow with google reader
+1 i love when authors remake classic works of fiction in this manner, i think its fun and done in good humor and i can think of a few I would love to see written
wheresmyrain(at)yahoo(dot)com_
I find his comments about "literalizing" the metaphor of emotional rectitude interesting.
Thanks for hosting this giveaway.
jake.lsewhere[at]gmail.com
+1 I have no problem with modern writers revisiting older works and inserting new materials, as long as the new work is more or less consistent with itself.
Thanks for hosting this giveaway.
jake.lsewhere[at]gmail.com
+1 I follow via Friend Connect.
Thanks for hosting this giveaway.
jake.lsewhere[at]gmail.com
I'm a follower
linna.hsu at gmail dot com
I'm optimistic about any books that twist a little bit of classic novels. Usually, it's a lot of fun reading from different perspective. :D
linna.hsu at gmail dot com
I totally enjoyed Mr Winters' article -- it gave me a glimpse of his science fiction take on S&S!
I welcome the various versions and versions of Jane Austen's novels! What an imagination these authors have and their works challenge our imagination as readers as well.
I follow you on google friends connect!
delilah0180(at)yahoo(dot)com
I like the article and do think he will bring these books to new readers. For instance, this book is on my 15 year old son's Christmas wish list!
fourkidsrgreat(at)gmail.com
I am a google friend follower.
fourkidsrgreat(at)gmail.com
+1 I like the author and think that it definitely brings new readers to classics
+1 I am not a huge fan of changing the classics but I am willing to give them a try
+1 follower in google friend connect
Raelena
throuthehaze at gmail dot com
I've been wating to read this ever since I saw the hilarious trailer!
+1 MORE ENTRY: I follow your blog with google friend connect and in my RSS reader
jennifermorrill(at)att(dot)net
+1 MORE ENTRY: COMMENT ON HOW YOU FEEL ABOUT SOMEONE TAKING ANY CLASSIC NOVEL, NOT JUST AUSTEN'S AND CHANGING IT LIKE THIS
When I first saw P&P and Zombies I was initially offended. I got over it and I think the idea of sprucing up old novels is funny and brings new life to them.
jennifermorrill(at)att(dot)net
I think that it is interesting to hear him state that "Even more fun to play with than Austen's eloquent vocabulary is her universe of enforced emotional rectitude." That is a pretty stuffy sentence. He just brings in a technique sometimes used by students of The Classics to get through reading these books. They just let their imaginations ride away with ideas as to what this scene would have been like if it had happened this way. He gives more imaginary options.
Thank you,
Christine
womackcm@sbcglobal.net
It's a little weird to change one of The Classics like this to me. I have seen where students have equated The Classics and other assignments with some pretty unusual associations. For some students, this is the best way for them to approach an assignment.
Thank you,
Christine
womackcm@sbcglobal.net
I follow your blog through Google Connect but mainly through saving this website as one of my favorites. I try to click on it at least once per week and check it out as I feel that you have one of the better selection of books on your website.
thank you,
Christine
womackcm@sbcglobal.net
I like the review comment about how people in the original book didn't display their emotions.
amanda
catss99@yahoo.com
I follow through blogger and google friends
amanda
catss99@yahoo.com
I think changing a book like this is sort of ripping off the original author..
amanda
catss99@yahoo.com
If it gets people talking about, reading, and discussing books I am all for it!
Besides a classic can take it!
LooseEnds AT Snet DOT Net
I am a follower on Google Reader.
Thanks for the chance, LooseEnds AT Snet DOT Net
Interesting how he compares Dickens and Austen and their different styles! Please count me in. Thank you!
nfmgirl AT gmail DOT com
I follow your blog through Blogger
nfmgirl AT gmail DOT com
I love the fact that there is humor, we always need a laugh
copperllama at yahoo dot com
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