Reader Ratings: 1490
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P. D. James combines her two lifelong loves, Jane Austen and murder mysteries, in this pitch-perfect sequel to Pride and Prejudice, which finds a guest shockingly murdered on the Darcys' estate. One of the biggest hardcover bestsellers of the 2011 holiday season. Elizabeth and Darcy have been happily married for six years, and life is delightful: Jane and Bingley live nearby, Mr. Bennet visits frequently, Darcy's sister Georgiana has favorable marriage... more
Published: January 8, 2013 by Vintage
Genre: Mystery, Thriller & Suspense, History. Fiction. 320 pages
If the novel has a weakness, oddly, it’s the mystery, which by Ms. James’s standards is pretty tame and uncomplicated.
Full ReviewIf you appreciate mysteries as well as the Mighty Jane, this pleasant entertainment will do nicely.
Full ReviewNo informative clues are dribbled into the narrative for the reader to work out, so when the truth comes out it is completely new – well most of it.
Full ReviewThe subsequent investigation is what concerns the rest of the novel and is unfortunately a bit predictable and dull.
Full ReviewIt is a solidly entertaining period mystery and a major treat for any fan of Jane Austen.
Full ReviewThe dialogue, overall, lacks Austen’s light touch – and is often stilted without capturing the formality of the period.
Full ReviewI can't say that I'm propelled through the plot by a desire to see where the story ends.
Full ReviewCountless authors writing in a plethora of genres have tried to re-create Austen's Pride and Prejudice, but James' new novel is incomparably perfect.
Full ReviewElizabeth Bennet relegated to being a secondary figure isn't likely to register as excessively pleasing.
Full ReviewJames is having fun in her own intelligent, literate way, and this novel is an invitation to her readers to join in the revels.
Full ReviewJames’s biggest obstacle, aside from the molasses-paced world of Austen, is an inability to establish an effective narrative focus.
Full ReviewThe greatest pleasure of this novel is its unforced, effortless, effective voice.
Full ReviewStylistically, the modern contributor does not overwork the dry, understated manner of her co-author.
Full ReviewTrue Janites should avoid this book like the plague.
Full ReviewSix years of marriage had changed Elizabeth beyond recognition, Darcy was a pale, ineffectual figure and Colonel Fitzwilliam was no longer the likeable character he is in Pride and Prejudice.
Full Review... the ending still seems rushed, even cliched with the solution laid out in a death-bed confession.
Full ReviewEven the revelation of who committed the murder was cliché and left the reader feeling that this was all a waste of time.
Full ReviewThe result is a very enjoyable experience, and it is to be hoped that there will be more murders committed in the vicinity of Pemberley.
Full ReviewThe murder story allows only flashes of Austenian wit, and Lizzy is sadly eclipsed by Darcy.
Full ReviewCombined, the Austen and mystery elements do not play out to their potential.
Full ReviewWatching a master at work is engaging, especially when she tries something audacious and remarkable... It doesn’t have to be completely successful to be worth the attempt.
Full ReviewThe result, therefore, is a book that is dreadfully dull.
Full ReviewBravo for P.D. James for her attempt but in the end it wasn’t the best “sequel” I’ve ever read.
Full ReviewThis is an enjoyable enough read for Austen fans... I just wish there had been a little more desperado and a little less devotion.
Full ReviewDeath Comes to Pemberley reads like a tender squeeze of affection from one national literary treasure to another.
Full ReviewDeath Comes to Pemberly won’t be universally loved by Jane Austen’s fans, but for those of us willing to bend a little, it provides one heck of an escape...
Full ReviewNonetheless, Ms. James has done an impressive job in combining her crime-novelist technique with Jane Austen's sweetly acidic sensibility.
Full ReviewDeath Comes to Pemberley is more a spin-off than a sequel... Because it doesn't try to continue Austen's story, it's more successful than many other attempts.
Full ReviewAlthough there was an investigation and subsequent trial, the actual unraveling of the mystery was a disappointment.
Full Review“Death Comes to Pemberley” was worth reading, but it may disappoint Austen fans and also not be quite up to the greatness of some of James’ other mysteries.
Full ReviewJaneites and mystery fans in general should find this delightful novel quite satisfying.
Full ReviewYou get the feeling that this is what Austen might have composed had she written a sequel to her story of Elizabeth and Darcy.
Full ReviewP.D. James has delivered a worthy homage to one of the greatest novels ever written.
Full ReviewDarcy and Wickham are both given histories and inner lives... they become more rounded as a result.
Full ReviewSimple, straight forward, not much mystery to it.
Full ReviewFans of James will be pleased to learn she has not lost her deft skill even at 91, while Janeites will appreciate James’ evident knowledge of and appreciation for Austen’s original works.
Full ReviewDEATH COMES TO PEMBERLEY is a solidly-plotted mystery, developed within the constraints of the time in which it is set.
Full ReviewP.D. James captures the cadences and storytelling quirks of Austen, paying homage to the original author while adding her own touches as she signals the impending disasters in her mystery.
Full ReviewAn author with a distinctive voice, she has, in this story, assumed the voice of Jane Austen - with its gentle and elegant irony.
Full ReviewIt’s tough tacking a murder mystery onto an Austen sequel, and in trying to include both elements, she doesn’t quite hit the mark on either.
Full ReviewIt remained dull and lifeless throughout its entirety.
Full Review