ABSTRACT

This book offers to delineate a key phenomenon in contemporary Anglophone fiction: novel expansion, when the plot and characters from a finished novel are retrieved to be developed in new adventures set before, after or during the narrative time of the source-text. If autographic and allographic sequels are almost as old as literature, prequels – that imagine the anteriority of a narrative – and coquels – that develop secondary characters in the same story time as the source-text – are more recent. The overall trend for novel expansion spread in the mid-1980s and 1990s and has since shown no sign of abating.

This volume is organised following three types of relationships to the source-texts even if these occasionally combine to produce a more complex structure. This book comprises 11 essays, preceded by an introduction, that examine narrative strategies, aesthetic, ethical and political tendencies underlying these novel expansions. Following the overview provided in the introduction, the reader will find case studies of prequels, coquels and sequels before a final chapter that encompasses them all and more.

chapter |24 pages

Introduction

Narrative Expansions – The Story So Far…

part I|2 pages

Prequels

chapter 1|13 pages

Prequel Ontology and Temporality

The Thresholds of John Updike’s Gertrude and Claudius 1

chapter 2|12 pages

Wide Sargasso Sea as a Prequel to Jane Eyre

From Visualising to Iconicising the Female Other

chapter 3|10 pages

Literary Filiations and Textual Archeology

Caryl Phillips’s The Lost Child

part II|2 pages

Coquels

chapter 4|16 pages

A Coquel Set ‘far away, where the fighting was’

On Geraldine Brooks’ March and Louisa May Alcott’s Little Women

chapter 6|15 pages

Sensibly Organized

Filling in Gaps with Harry Potter and the Methods of Rationality

part III|2 pages

Sequels

chapter 7|17 pages

The Neighborly Mr. Ripley

Patricia Highsmith’s Suburban Sequels

chapter 9|21 pages

Messy Multiplicity

Strategies for Serialisation in New Adult Fiction

part IV|2 pages

Prequels, Coquels, Sequels and Beyond

chapter 11|18 pages

Uncanny Repetitions

The Generative Power of the “Reader, I Married Him” Mantra in Tracy Chevalier’s Anthology of Short Stories