(Note from Wendy: This review contains spoilers from Daphne du Maurier's Rebecca.)
If
you have not read Daphne du Maurier’s Rebecca,
Susan Hill’s sequel MRS. deWINTER is going to
be of no interest whatsoever. If on the other hand, you found Rebecca
to be haunting you
might find some value in this sequel by a more modern author.
After
their home Manderly burned, and Maxim deWinter had been tried for the
death of his first wife Rebecca, he and his second wife escape to
Europe. They have made a comfortable life trying to forget the
horrors that surrounded Manderly. A death in the family causes them
to return to England and they think that they can forget the past and
start over. The problem is that beautiful, malevolent, dead Rebecca
is still haunting them and means to finally get her revenge.
It
had been awhile since I read Rebecca
and was concerned that details, names and places for example, would
have slipped my mind. Susan Hill does an excellent job of subtly
re-introducing the old characters. As in the original, the story is
told by the second Mrs. deWinter and again we never learn her name.
There is some sense to this because THE Mrs. deWinter will always be
Rebecca.
The
author captured du Maurier’s style of writing very well. The
formal, almost boring, manner in which the story is narrated becomes
hypnotizing after a few pages. For example the descriptions of places
are long and at times tedious, but they give the reader a feel for
the atmosphere, peaceful and serene or vaguely threatening.
The
main objection I had to the original was also true with this
follow-up. I know that a Gothic novel has to build drama, but at
times it was a tad overdone. When Maxim hands his wife a letter on
board the ship taking them across the Channel, we read a page and a
half of how frightened she is to open it. Her heart seemed to stop;
her breathing became labored; her skin became clammy, and her hand
shook. The contents of the letter is anti-climatic.
Maybe
a law should be passed to keep authors from messing with well-known
books. A book with an ambiguous ending stays in our memories longer;
to know more details ruins it.
I
will be reading Susan Hill again though. I discovered that she was
the author of the book, The
Woman in Black and I
loved the play. I need to know if MRS. deWINTER is
representative of her style of writing or if she just did a good job
of channeling Daphne du Maurier.
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