Top 10: novels retold from another character’s point of view
This month is all about parallel novels: familiar stories from new perspectives. Canonical novels and plays are subverted when minor characters take centre stage. Read on for ten of the best reimagined classics.
- James by Percival Everett The life of enslaved Jim while he is on the run, from Adventures of Huckleberry Finn (Mark Twain).
- Julia by Sandra Newman Winston Smith’s squeeze in 1984 (George Orwell) gains agency.
- Fair Rosaline by Natasha Solomons Rosaline came before Juliet (Romeo & Juliet, William Shakespeare).
- The Wide Sargasso Sea by Jean Rees Antoinette sheds her madwoman-in-the-attic persona of Jane Eyre (Charlotte Brontë).
- The Other Bennet Sister by Janice Hadlow Mary, the bookish middle daughter in Pride & Prejudice (Jane Austen) gets a life.
- The Song of Achilles by Madeleine Miller The Trojan War and Achilles through the eyes of Patroclus (The Iliad, Homer).
- March by Geraldine Brooks The American Civil War experiences of Mr March, father of Meg, Jo, Beth and Amy (Little Women, Louisa May Alcott).
- Foe by J M Coetzee Friday gets a voice (Robinson Crusoe, Daniel Defoe).
- The Silence of the Girls by Pat Barker The cost of war to women, as experienced by former queen Briseis, now concubine of Achilles (The Iliad, Homer)
- Lady MacBeth by Ava Reid Lady MacBeth casts off the role of villainess (MacBeth, William Shakespeare).
Bubbling under…
- Ophelia by Lisa Klein Ophelia doesn’t drown (Hamlet, William Shakespeare).
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