This is a list of unfinished novels completed by others.

TitleOriginal authorCompleting author(s)Notes
The Assassination Bureau, LtdJack LondonRobert L. Fish[1]London wrote 20,000 words, but could not come up with a logical ending.
L'AstréeHonoré d'UrféBalthazar Baro (4th part), Pierre Boitel, sieur de Gaubertin (5th and 6th parts)D'Urfé completed three parts of this immense work (5399 pages).
Blind LoveWilkie CollinsWalter BesantCollins "left detailed plans for the last third of this novel".[2]
The BuccaneersEdith WhartonMarion Mainwaring[3][4]
The Ghost-SeerFriedrich SchillerHanns Heinz Ewers
Hornblower and the CrisisC. S. ForesterSeveral
The Knight of Sainte-HermineAlexandre DumasClaude SchoppThe nearly complete lost novel was rediscovered in 1990 by Dumas expert Schopp, who wrote three more chapters.[5]
The Last TheoremArthur C. ClarkeFrederik PohlSuffering from ill health and writer's block, Clarke asked Pohl to finish the novel. Clarke reviewed and approved the final manuscript just days before he died, but the critics' opinions were mixed.
MicroMichael CrichtonRichard Preston[6]It was based on an untitled, unfinished manuscript found on his computer.
The Mystery of Edwin DroodCharles DickensNumerousSix of 12 planned instalments (23 chapters) were published.
Poodle SpringsRaymond ChandlerRobert B. ParkerChandler wrote four chapters, consisting of 31 pages. Ed Victor, the agent for his estate, asked Parker to supply the rest.[7]
SanditonJane AustenNumerous, including Anna Austen Lefroy, Austen's niece[8]Austen finished 11 chapters.
St. IvesRobert Louis StevensonArthur Quiller-CouchQuiller-Couch wrote the final six chapters.[9]
Thrones, DominationsDorothy L. SayersJill Paton Walsh[10]
Under the HillAubrey BeardsleyJohn Glassco
The WatsonsJane AustenNumerous, including Joan Aiken

See also

References

  1. "The Assassination Bureau, Ltd". Kirkus Reviews.
  2. Blind Love. Simon & Schuster. 21 March 2014. ISBN 9781609774653.
  3. Steiner, Wendy (17 October 1993). "Finishing Off Edith Wharton". The New York Times.
  4. Siegelman, Lee (August 1995). "By Their (New) Words Shall Ye Know Them: Edith Wharton, Marion Mainwaring, and The Buccaneers". Computers and the Humanities. 29 (4): 271–283. doi:10.1007/BF01830396. JSTOR 30204504. S2CID 38423406.
  5. Crace, John (6 May 2008). "Claude Schopp: The man who gave Dumas 40 mistresses". The Guardian.
  6. Bacharach, Sondra; Tollefsen, Deborah (Summer 2015). "Co-Authorship, Multiple Authorship, and Posthumous Authorship: A Reply to Hick". The Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism. 73 (3): 331–334. doi:10.1111/jaac.12187. JSTOR 43496587. Retrieved 25 March 2023.
  7. McBain, Ed (15 October 1989). "Philip Marlowe Is Back, and in Trouble". The New York Times.
  8. "6 Books that Continue the Story of Sanditon". PBS.
  9. "St Ives, 1897". robert-louis-stevenson.org/.
  10. "Thrones, Dominations". Publishers Weekly.
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