Books by Jane Austen
Born: 12/15/1775; Died: 07/18/1817Jane Austen Biography & Notes
Jane Austen was born at the rectory in Steventon, Hampshire, in 1775, daughter to the Rev. George Austen (1731-1805) and his wife Cassandra (nee Leigh) (1739-1827). She lived in the area for most of her life and never married. She had six brothers and one older sister, Cassandra, to whom she was very close. The only undisputed portrait of Jane Austen is a coloured sketch done by Cassandra which resides in the National Portrait Gallery in London. Her brothers Frank and Charles went to sea, eventually becoming admirals. In 1783, she was educated briefly by a relative in Oxford then Southampton. In 1785-1786, she was educated at the Reading Ladies boarding school in the Abbey gatehouse in Reading, Berkshire. In general, she received an education superior to that generally given to girls of her time, and took early to writing, her first tale being begun in 1789.
Austen's life was a singularly uneventful one and, but for a disappointment in love, tranquil and happy. In 1801 the family moved to Bath, the scene of many episodes in her writings. In 1802 Austen received a marriage proposal from a wealthy young man named Harris Bigg-Wither, whom she first accepted, but then refused the next day. Having refused this offer of marriage, Austen never subsequently married. After the death of her father in 1805, Austen, her sister, and her mother lived with her brother Frank and his family for several years until they moved in 1809 to Chawton. Here her wealthy brother Edward had an estate with a cottage, which he turned over to his mother and sisters. (Their house today is open to the public.)
Austen continued to live in relative seclusion and began to suffer ill-health. It is now thought she may have suffered from Addison's disease, the cause of which was then unknown. She traveled to Winchester in 1817, to seek medical attention, but so rapid was the progress of her malady that she died there two months later and was buried in the cathedral.
Adhering to contemporary convention for female authors, Austen published her novels anonymously. Her novels achieved a measure of popular success and esteem yet her anonymity kept her out of leading literary circles. Although all her works are love stories and although her career coincided with the Romantic movement in English literature, Jane Austen was no Romantic. Passionate emotion usually carries danger in an Austen novel and the young woman who exercises rational moderation is more likely to find real happiness than one who elopes with a lover. Her artistic values had more in common with David Hume and John Locke than with her contemporaries William Wordsworth or Lord Byron. Three of Austen's favorite influences were Samuel Johnson, William Cowper and Fanny Burney.
Her posthumously published novel Northanger Abbey satirizes the Gothic novels of Ann Radcliffe, but Austen is most famous for her mature works, which took the form of socially astute comedies of manners. These, especially Emma, are often cited for their perfection of form, while modern critics continue to unearth new perspectives on Austen's keen commentary regarding the predicament of unmarried genteel English women in the early 1800s. Inheritance law and custom usually directed the bulk of a family's fortune to male heirs.
Her novels were fairly received when they were published, with Sir Walter Scott in particular praising her work:
That young lady has a talent for describing the involvements of feelings and characters of ordinary life which is to me the most wonderful I ever met with.
Austen also earned the admiration of Macaulay (who thought that in the world there were no compositions which approached nearer to perfection), Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Robert Southey, Sydney Smith, and Edward FitzGerald. Nonetheless, she was a somewhat overlooked author for several decades following her death. Interest in her work revived during the late nineteenth century. Twentieth century scholars rated her among the greatest talents in English letters, sometimes even comparing her to Shakespeare. Lionel Trilling and Edward Said were important Austen critics.
Negative views of Austen have been notable, with more demanding detractors frequently accusing her writing of being un-literary and middle-brow. Charlotte Brontë criticized the narrow scope of Austen's fiction. Mark Twain's reaction was revulsion:
Jane Austen? Why I go so far as to say that any library is a good library that does not contain a volume by Jane Austen. Even if it contains no other book.
Austen's literary strength lies in the delineation of character, especially of women, by delicate touches arising out of the most natural and everyday incidents in the life of the middle and upper classes, from which her subjects are generally taken. Her characters, though of quite ordinary types, are drawn with such firmness and precision, and with such significant detail as to retain their individuality intact through their entire development, and they are uncoloured by her own personality. Her view of life seems largely genial, with a strong dash of gentle but keen irony.
Some contemporary readers may find the world she describes, in which people's chief concern is obtaining advantageous marriages, to be unliberated and disquieting. Options were limited in this era and both women and men often married for money. Female writers worked within the similarly narrow genre of romance. Part of Austen's prominent reputation rests on how well she integrates observations on the human condition within a convincing love story. Much of the tension in her novels arises from balancing financial necessity against other concerns: love, friendship, and morals.
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8 Books In 1 Jane Austen's Complete Novels. Sense and Sensibility, Pride and Prejudice, Mansfield Park, Emma, Northanger Abbey, Persuasion, Lady Susan, and Love an by Jane Austen ( 2005) |
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Achieve Lasting Happiness Timeless Secrets to Transform Your Life by Jane Austen ( 2005) |
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Best of Jane Austen by Jane Austen ( 1996)
Titles include "Emma, Persuation, Pride and Prejudice" and "Sense and Sensibility".
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Bite-Size Jane Austen Sense & Sensibility from One of England's Greatest Writers by Jane Austen, John P. Holms, Karin Baji, Karin Baji Holms ( 1999)
A bite-sized sense and sensibility that offers Austen's thoughts and words on society, men and women, the arts and writing, business and politics, England, family matters, and on the human condition.
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Catharine and Other Writings by Jane Austen, Douglas Murray, Margaret Anne Doody ( 1993)
Fragments from the Jane Austen trove.
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Charades, &c by Jane Austen ( 1974) |
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Charades, &c Written a Hundred Years Ago by Jane Austen ( 1976) |
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Classic Women's Literature by Edith Wharton, Louisa May Alcott, Virginia Woolf, Willa Cather, Jane Austen ( 2002)
Contains selections from Jane Austen, Edith Wharton, Louisa May Alcott, Virginia Woolf, and Willa Cather.
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Collected Poems and Verse of the Austen Family by Jane Austen, David Selwyn ( 1996) |
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Collected Works of Jane Austin by Jane Austen ( 1980) |
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Complete Austen by Jane Austen ( 1995)
All six of Austen's novels are collected here.
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The Complete Illustrated Novels of Jane Austen Sense and Sensibility/Emma/Northanger Abbey by Jane Austen ( 2001)
With a sharp wit and keen eye, Jane Austen painted indelible, finely realized portraits of Georgian life, with its intricate rules of behavior, social divisions, and delightful diversions. No one bettered her in capturing the sometimes complicated mating dance that led to true love, and her compelling, intelligent heroines are unequalled in all literature--and have also translated wonderfully to film and television. At the same time, her piercing humor exposed the follies of the age and ripped apart characters vain, foolish, greedy, arrogant, and callous. Here are three of her best novels, all in one volume and beautifully illustrated with period images: Sense and Sensibility, a richly textured masterpiece about two sisters with wildly differing temperaments; Emma, with its endearing but deeply flawed protagonist; and the deliciously lighthearted Northanger Abbey. If you've read these before, re-experience the wonder anew; if not, prepare to be captivated with every page!
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The Complete Novels by Jane Austen ( 2006)
A definitive compilation of the author's seven great novels--Sense and Sensibility, Pride and Prejudice, Mansfield Park, Emma, Northanger Abbey, Persuasion, and Lady Susan--offers a vivid portrait of English middle-class life, its mores, institutions, and society around the turn of the nineteenth century. Original.
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The Complete Novels of Jane Austen by Jane Austen ( 1992)
All six of Austen's novels are collected here.
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A Concordance to the Works of Jane Austen by Jane Austen, Peter L. De Rose, S. W. McGuire ( 1982) |
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The Confession of Fitzwilliam Darcy by Jane Austen, Mary Street ( 2003) |
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Darcy's Diary by Jane Austen, Amanda Grange ( 2006) |
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Dominoes 2 700 Headwords Emma by Jane Austen, Barbara MacKay, Bill Bowler, Sue Parminter ( 2002) |
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Emma A Graphic Classic by Jane Austen, Trina Robbins ( 2002) |
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Emma by Jane Austen ( 2008)
First published in 1816, Jane Austen's EMMA is about an unconventional heroine--and one whom Austen thought no one but herself would like. Emma Woodhouse is bright, beautiful, and rich; she is also snobbish and judgmental, and she can be cruel, with a tendency to interfere in other people's lives. The novel chronicles Emma's attempts to make a match between a hapless vicar who is, in fact, enamored of Emma herself, and her friend Harriet, a poor and simple young woman in love with a farmer. Unlike many of Austen's heroines, Emma is possessed of very little good sense; her absurd machinations complicate the lives of everyone involved--and, needless to say, get nowhere. Emma, however, learns from her mistakes and gains some badly needed insight into herself as she discovers her feelings for the older, steady, aristocratic Mr. Knightley. The novel moves toward a not unexpected but perfectly satisfying conclusion, and in the process introduces Austen's usual cast of amusing, pretentious, hypocritical, and/or dim-witted characters, including the appalling, nouveau riche Mrs. Elton, and Emma's widowed father, one of the most insufferable (and delightful) neurotics in literature.
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Emma by Jane Austen ( 2008)
First published in 1816, Jane Austen's EMMA is about an unconventional heroine--and one whom Austen thought no one but herself would like. Emma Woodhouse is bright, beautiful, and rich; she is also snobbish and judgmental, and she can be cruel, with a tendency to interfere in other people's lives. The novel chronicles Emma's attempts to make a match between a hapless vicar who is, in fact, enamored of Emma herself, and her friend Harriet, a poor and simple young woman in love with a farmer. Unlike many of Austen's heroines, Emma is possessed of very little good sense; her absurd machinations complicate the lives of everyone involved--and, needless to say, get nowhere. Emma, however, learns from her mistakes and gains some badly needed insight into herself as she discovers her feelings for the older, steady, aristocratic Mr. Knightley. The novel moves toward a not unexpected but perfectly satisfying conclusion, and in the process introduces Austen's usual cast of amusing, pretentious, hypocritical, and/or dim-witted characters, including the appalling, nouveau riche Mrs. Elton, and Emma's widowed father, one of the most insufferable (and delightful) neurotics in literature.
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Favorite Jane Austen Novels Pride and Prejudice, Sense and Sensibility and Persuasion by Jane Austen ( 1997)
This box-set contains: Pride And Prejudice transforms this effervescent tale of rural romance into a witty, shrewdly observed satire of English country life that is now regarded as one of the principal treasures of English literature.Sense And Sensibility is the story of two sisters, Elinor and Marianne Dashwood, who represent sense and sensibility, respectively.Persuasion limned the plight of young women who could escape the constraints of family life only by marrying, and suggests the foolishness of women who believed they were free and not dependent on the financial and social resources of men.
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Five Letters from Jane Austen to Her Niece Fanny Knight by Jane Austen ( 1978) |
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Henry & Eliza A Novel by Jane Austen ( 1984) |
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Highlights from Novels by Jane Austen ( 1983) |
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The History of England From the Reign of Henry the 4th to the Death of Charles the 1st by Jane Austen ( 1993)
Since the first publication of her major works at the start of the nineteenth century, generations of readers have loved Jane Austen - for her quick wit and for her keen observations of the manners and mores of her society. Even before Emma, Pride and Prejudice, and Sense and Sensibility, Jane observed the English monarchs with an already keen eye and unmistakable wit in this, her History of England. When she was just sixteen years old, Jane wrote this gleeful parody of Goldsmith's four-volume History of England (which virtually every English schoolchild - Jane included - had to read). Her version is an irreverent look at a subject usually treated with deadly seriousness. The monarchs - from Henry IV to Charles I - are full of very human whims and weaknesses, both in Jane's text and in her sister Cassandra's miniature portraits, which depict the kings and queens of England as ordinary and sometimes rather disreputable-looking individuals. Produced in association with The British Library, with an introduction from A. S. Byatt and a note on the text from Austen biographer Deirdre Le Faye, this facsimile makes the spirit of the original work available for the first time to all who love Jane Austen's writing.
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The House of Mirth/Pride and Prejudice/Death Comes for the Archbishop by Edith Wharton, Willa Cather, Jane Austen ( 1993)
Published in 1905, Edith Wharton's first novel, THE HOUSE OF MIRTH, navigates the murky waters of class-bound courtship and marriage in turn-of-the-century upper-crust Manhattan. Ironic, sharp, and tragic, the novel follows beautiful, orphaned Lily Bart in her search for a rich husband--the only route open to her if she is to survive in a ruthlessly materialistic world. Mercilessly, Wharton exposes the cruelty and indifference of a society in which such a woman has no role except to be exploited and looked down upon. Nor does she neglect to expose the vanity and delusions of poor Lily herself--qualities that undermine her considerable intelligence and charm. As always, Wharton is writing about a world she knows first-hand, and one in which she suffered her own trials. The complex and poignant tale of Lily Bart is one of her most popular and successful novels
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I, Jane Austen A Re-Creation in Rime Royal Based on the Letters of Jane Austen, Her Novels and the Comments of Her Biographers by Jane Austen, Mary Corringham ( 1971) |
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The Illustrated Letters of Jane Austen by Jane Austen ( 1996)
These letters reveal Jane Austen's thoughts and feelings, her delightful humor and sensitivity throughout her life, from young adulthood to her death. Illustrated with paintings and engravings of Regency England.
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Jane Austen Mit Einer Auswahl Von Briefen, Dokumenten Und Nachgelassenen Werken by Jane Austen, Christian Grawe ( 1988) |
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Jane Austen The Complete Novels by Jane Austen ( 2010) |
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The Jane Austen Collection by Jane Austen ( 1997)
The sources of Austen's enduring charm are her gentle irony, her complex heroines, and her acute insight into society and its sometimes hypocritcal values . . . all found in these three popular works.
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A Jane Austen Miscellany Sisters, Suitors, Families, Friends by Jane Austen, Robin Langley Sommer, Kristen Maree Cleary ( 1996) |
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The Jane Austen Sampler Sense and Sensiblilty and Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen ( 1996) |
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Jane Austen's "Sir Charles Grandison" by Jane Austen ( 1981)
Austen revered Samuel Richardson's SIR CHARLES GRANDISON, and adapted scenes from the novel for amateur dramatic performances in her family.
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Jane Austen's Charlotte Her Fragment of a Last Novel, Completed by Jane Austen, Julia Barrett ( 2000)
Completed by an author who has specialized in reconstituting Jane Austen's unfinished writings, this fragment of a novel begun before Austen's death finds final expression here, introducing a quirky cast of characters making their way in a countryside resort town.
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Jane Austen's Emma A Longman Cultural Edition by Jane Austen, Frances Ferguson ( 2006) |
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Jane Austen's Emma and Mansfield Park by Jane Austen ( 1988)
First published in 1816, Jane Austen's EMMA is about an unconventional heroine--and one whom Austen thought no one but herself would like. Emma Woodhouse is bright, beautiful, and rich; she is also snobbish and judgmental, and she can be cruel, with a tendency to interfere in other people's lives. The novel chronicles Emma's attempts to make a match between a hapless vicar who is, in fact, enamored of Emma herself, and her friend Harriet, a poor and simple young woman in love with a farmer. Unlike many of Austen's heroines, Emma is possessed of very little good sense; her absurd machinations complicate the lives of everyone involved--and, needless to say, get nowhere. Emma, however, learns from her mistakes and gains some badly needed insight into herself as she discovers her feelings for the older, steady, aristocratic Mr. Knightley. The novel moves toward a not unexpected but perfectly satisfying conclusion, and in the process introduces Austen's usual cast of amusing, pretentious, hypocritical, and/or dim-witted characters, including the appalling, nouveau riche Mrs. Elton, and Emma's widowed father, one of the most insufferable (and delightful) neurotics in literature.
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Jane Austen's Lady Susan by Jane Austen ( 1989) |
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Jane Austen's Letters by Jane Austen ( 2002)
As might be expected, Jane Austen was a sharp and witty letter-writer. Fortunately, she was also a prolific correspondent. This collection of her letters illuminates the brilliantly clever young woman who wrote some of the world's greatest novels.
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Jane Austen's Little Advice Book by Jane Austen, Pamela Norris, Cathryn Michon ( 1996)
In Jane Austen's Little Advice Book, Austen's own words are mixed with the fascinating facts of her biography and the times in which she lived, completing a lighthearted and loving look at this most enduring writer. Those who know Miss Austen's work only from screen adaptations should enjoy reading her actual, wonderful words; those who have loved her novels will enjoy rediscovering the brightest moments of her sparkling wit and vivid insight into human nature. In these charmless, graceless, loud, hurried times, we desperately long for the serene voice of good sense, good humor and good manners. Never have we needed Jane Austen more. Jane Austen's Little Advice Bookis a celebration of the woman who is perhaps now the world's most famous female author, but who was almost completely unknown in her own lifetime. It is a fitting tribute to a woman whose only byline was: "By a Lady."
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Jane Austen's Little Instruction Book by Jane Austen, Sophia Bedford-Pierce ( 1995) |
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Jane Austen's Northanger Abbey by Jane Austen ( 1997)
NORTHANGER ABBEY is about a naïve young woman whose head is full of the Gothic novels she consumes, and who begins to imagine that life may well be even stranger than fiction. Catherine Morland makes a touching, if somewhat charmingly brainless, heroine; Henry Tilney is a self-possessed and witty hero; and the plot device in which Catherine sees General Tilney as a black-hearted villain out of a Gothic romance is ingenious and engrossing. In fact, this early work is full of sustained and sparkling inventiveness, and exhibits the sharp and accurate social observations of Austen's more mature fiction.
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Jane Austen's Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen ( 2002)
Jane Austen's classic novel about the Bennett sisters and their efforts to garner economic security, for which each must procure a suitable husband. The title refers to the spirited and volatile eldest sister, Elizabeth, who rejects an offer of marriage from heir Fitzwilliam Darcy, whose seeming arrogance and pride blind her to his noble qualities. Parallel plots involve quiet sister Jane's love for stolid Charles Bingley, and the youngest, frivolous sister Lydia's elopement with one of Elizabeth's erstwhile suitors.
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Jane Austen's Sanditon by Jane Austen, Anna Austen Lefroy ( 1983) |
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Jane Austen, Her Complete Novels by Jane Austen ( 1980)
Austen's novels of marriage and money show her ability to create vivid characters and provide human insights with subtle humor.
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Juvenilia by Jane Austen ( 2002) |
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The Juvenilia of Jane Austen and Charlotte Bronte by Charlotte Bronte, Jane Austen ( 1986)
Early stories tell of postponed weddings, shallow friends, a reluctant bride, and a duke's tragic decline.
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Lady Susan by Jane Austen ( 2008)
This epistolary novel recounts the adventures of the beautiful, widowed, and utterly self-serving femme fatale Lady Susan, who manages to capture the heart of every man who comes her way, including the husband of one friend and the fiancé of another. Meanwhile, she attempts to marry her innocent young daughter off to a man she doesn't love--for money, of course. Austen left this wicked novel unfinished, but appended an epilogue detailing the fates of all the characters.
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Lady Susan ; The Watsons ; Sanditon by Margaret Drabble, Jane Austen ( 1975)
LADY SUSAN, Austen's one epistolary novel, recounts the adventures of the beautiful, widowed, and utterly self-serving femme fatale Lady Susan, who manages to capture the heart of every man who comes her way, including the husband of one friend and the fiancé of another. Meanwhile, she attempts to marry her innocent young daughter off to a man she doesn't love--for money, of course. Austen left this wicked novel unfinished, but appended an epilogue detailing the fates of all the characters. THE WATSONS is a fragment about a young woman named Emma Watson (no relation to the Emma of the novel of that name) who is cursed with three flighty sisters whose efforts to make good marriages provide the comic plot. This minor work includes all Jane Austen's favorite satirical themes but was left unfinished with no explanation. Austen's third unfinished novel, SANDITON, is worth reading for its satirical look at pomposity, hypocrisy, and the intricacies of courtship in early 19th-century England. Austen was writing this novel during her last months, when she was seriously ill with Addison's disease; an odd but endearing characteristic of SANDITON is her satirical treatment of hypochondria.
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Lady Susan and the Watsons by Jane Austen ( 1987) |
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Letters Of Love And Sensibility by Jane Austen ( 2004) |
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Love And Friendship And Other Early Works by Jane Austen ( 2005) |
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Love and Friendship by Jane Austen ( 2004)
These early works of Jane Austen, three sharp and amusing stories, point to her later masterpieces. Stories include: "The Three Sisters," "A Collection of Letters," and the title story, written when Austen was 15 or 16.
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Love and Friendship [sic] and Other Early Works by Jane Austen ( 1978) |
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Love and Friendship and Other Early Works by Jane Austen, Sarah S. G. Frantz ( 2005) |
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Love and Friendship and Other Early Works by Jane Austen, Harriet Bell ( 1981)
Writings revealing Austen's precocious literary skill include Lesley Castle, The History of England, A Collection of Letters, and The Three Sisters.
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Mansfield Letters by Jane Austen, Paula Atchia ( 1996) |
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Mansfield Park Authoritative Text, Contexts, Criticism by Jane Austen ( 2001) |
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Mansfield Park A Comedy in Three Acts by Jane Austen, Constance Cox ( 1977) |
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Mansfield Park A Dramatization by Jane Austen, Willis Hall, Ewan Anderson ( 1994) |
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The Manuscript Chapters of Persuasion by Jane Austen ( 1985) |
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Maxnotes Pride & Prejudice by Jane Austen ( 1996) |
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Mrs. Darcy's Dilemma A Sequel to Jane Austen's Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen, Diana Birchall ( 2008) |
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Mrs. Goddard, Mistress of a School by Jane Austen, Joan Austen-Leigh ( 1993) |
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My Dear Cassandra The Letters of Jane Austen by Jane Austen, Penelope Hughes-Hallett ( 1991) |
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Northanger Abbey by Jane Austen ( 1986)
Six weeks of shopping, taking tea with the most fashionable ladies and dancing with the most handsome gentlemen is what awaits young Catherine Morland when she makes her entree into the leisure society at Bath. But, oh, the thrill of an unexpected invitation from the mysterious Tilney family to stay at their home-a veritable abbey.
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Northanger Abbey by Jane Austen, Marilyn Butler ( 2003)
NORTHANGER ABBEY is about a naïve young woman whose head is full of the Gothic novels she consumes, and who begins to imagine that life may well be even stranger than fiction. Catherine Morland makes a touching, if somewhat charmingly brainless, heroine; Henry Tilney is a self-possessed and witty hero; and the plot device in which Catherine sees General Tilney as a black-hearted villain out of a Gothic romance is ingenious and engrossing. In fact, this early work is full of sustained and sparkling inventiveness, and exhibits the sharp and accurate social observations of Austen's more mature fiction.
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Northanger Abbey and Persuasion by Jane Austen ( 1988)
Northanger Abbey has long been a popular member of the Jane Austen canon of novels, with its combination of literary burlesque, satirizing the prevailing taste for Gothic action, and the story of Catherine Morland's adventures as she captures the heart of Henry Tilney. Persuasion, the last completed novel Jane Austen wrote, was finished in 1816, the year before her death, and published posthumously in 1817. It features a heroine, Anne Elliot, older and wiser than her predecessors in earlier books, and its tone is more intimate and sober as Jane Austen unfolds a simple love-story with depth and subtlety.
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Northanger Abbey, Persuasion Emma by Jane Austen ( 1989) |
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The Novels of Jane Austen by Jane Austen, R.W. Chapman ( 1988)
Jane Austen's beloved novel concerns two sisters, Elinor the practical and Marianne the romantic, who are forced to leave their home with their mother and younger sister and live in reduced circumstances in the West of England. The girls must rely on marrying well if they are to survive in the world, and the way in which this goal is eventually accomplished provides the plot of this delightful novel, the first of Jane Austen's to be published.
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Orgullo Y Prejuicio / Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen ( 2002) |
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Orgullo Y Prejuicio / Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen ( 2003) |
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Orgullo Y Prejuicio / Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen ( 2005) |
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Orgullo Y Prejuicio/ Pride And Prejudice by Jane Austen ( 2006) |
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Our Own Particular Jane by Jane Austen, Joan Mason Hurley ( 1975) |
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Pemberley by Jane Austen, Tennant ( 1993)
The further adventures of Elizabeth Bennett and Fitzwilliam Darcy after their marriage--which turns out to have a few problems.
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Penguin Complete Novels of Jane Austen by Jane Austen ( 1995)
All six of Austen's novels are collected here.
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Persuasion Authoritative Text Backgrounds and Contexts Criticism by Jane Austen ( 1995)
Austen's last novel is the crowning achievement of her matchless career. Her heroine, Anne Elliot, a woman of integrity, breeding and great depth of emotion, stands in stark contrast to the brutality and hypocrisy of Regency England. Includes a new Introduction by Margaret Drabble, famed novelist and editor of The Oxford Companion to the English Language.
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Persuasion With a Memoir of Jane Austen by Jane Austen, J.E. Austen-Leigh ( 1967)
Austen's last novel is the crowning achievement of her matchless career. Her heroine, Anne Elliot, a woman of integrity, breeding and great depth of emotion, stands in stark contrast to the brutality and hypocrisy of Regency England. Includes a new Introduction by Margaret Drabble, famed novelist and editor of The Oxford Companion to the English Language.
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Plan of a Novel According to Hints Form Various Quarters by Jane Austen ( 1976) |
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Plan of a Novel According to Hints from Various Quarters by Jane Austen ( 1975) |
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Poetry 4e + Bedford Glossary of Critical And Literary Terms 2e + Emma And the Tempest by William Shakespeare, Michael Meyer, Jane Austen, James Phelan ( 2003) |
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The Poetry of Jane Austen and the Austen Family by Jane Austen Society of North America ( 1997)
As in many households in the late eighteenth century, writing verses was a pastime with the Austen family, and the composition of ingenious riddles and charades provided a source of lively entertainment. This volume of verses by Jane Austen and her family contains all the known poems by Jane herself as well as a selection of work by her mother, her sister Cassandra, four of her brothers, her uncle James, her nieces Anna and Fanny, her nephew James Edward and other relatives. David Selwyn provides an introduction and full explanatory notes; his transcriptions, taken from autograph manuscripts or from the earliest copies, are precise in terms of spelling punctuation and layout.
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Pride & Prejudice by Jane Austen ( 2007) |
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Pride & Prejudice Sense & Sensibility by Jane Austen ( 1996)
PRIDE AND PREJUDICE is Jane Austen's classic novel about the Bennett sisters and their efforts to garner economic security, for which each must procure a suitable husband. The title refers to the spirited and volatile eldest sister, Elizabeth, who rejects an offer of marriage from heir Fitzwilliam Darcy, whose seeming arrogance and pride blind her to his noble qualities. Parallel plots involve quiet sister Jane's love for stolid Charles Bingley, and the youngest, frivolous sister Lydia's elopement with one of Elizabeth's erstwhile suitors. SENSE AND SENSIBILITY concerns two sisters, Elinor the practical and Marianne the romantic, who are forced to leave their home with their mother and younger sister and live in reduced circumstances in the West of England. The girls must rely on marrying well if they are to survive in the world, and the way in which this goal is eventually accomplished provides the plot of this delightful novel, the first of Jane Austen's to be published.
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Pride And Prejudice by Jane Austen ( 1997) |
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Pride And Prejudice by Jane Austen ( 2005) |
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Pride And Prejudice by Jane Austen ( 2005)
In early nineteenth-century England, a spirited young woman copes with the suit of a snobbish gentleman, as well as the romantic entanglements of her four sisters. Book available.
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Pride And Prejudice by Jane Austen ( 2005)
In early nineteenth-century England, a spirited young woman copes with the suit of a snobbish gentleman, as well as the romantic entanglements of her four sisters. Book available.
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Pride And Prejudice by Jane Austen ( 2005) |
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Pride And Prejudice by Jane Austen ( 2005) |
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Pride And Prejudice by Jane Austen ( 2005) |
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Pride And Prejudice by Jane Austen ( 2006)
A story of Lizzy Bennet (one of literature's engaging heroines), proud Mr Darcy, of true love, families, villains and heroes and of course, pride and prejudice. This work offers a classic romantic comedy.
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Pride And Prejudice by Jane Austen ( 2002) |
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Pride And Prejudice by Jane Austen ( 2006) |
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Pride And Prejudice by Jane Austen ( 2005)
In early nineteenth-century England, a spirited young woman copes with the suit of a snobbish gentleman, as well as the romantic entanglements of her four sisters. Read by Irene Sutcliffe. Book available.
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Pride And Prejudice by Jane Austen ( 2006) |
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Pride And Prejudice by Jane Austen ( 2004)
It's hard to believe that Jane Austen wrote the sophisticated and acerbic PRIDE AND PREJUDICE when she was only 21 years old, in 1797. Originally entitled FIRST IMPRESSIONS, the novel was rejected, revised, retitled, and finally published--anonymously--in 1813, only four years before Austen's untimely death. In PRIDE AND PREJUDICE, Austen calls on her sharp observations of vanity, venality, pomposity, and downright nuttiness in a story about a respectable but far from wealthy family full of daughters--girls who desperately need to find husbands if they are to have any kind of economic security. The eldest of the Bennett family, Elizabeth, is a bright, opinionated, and complacent young woman whose reaction to an offer of marriage from her wealthy but impossibly arrogant suitor, Fitzwilliam Darcy, is revulsion. But in the course of the story both Elizabeth and Darcy learn important lessons about their own folly and blindness, and about the dangers of superficial judgements. As the two perform their elaborate courtship dance, Austen surrounds them with some of her most uproariously clueless characters--from the wacky Mrs. Bennett to the wonderfully unctuous Mr. Collins, another of Elizabeth's admirers. PRIDE AND PREJUDICE is, of course, a highly satisfying and offbeat love story, but it is also an unparalleled examination of human nature at both its best and its hilarious worst.
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Pride And Prejudice by Jane Austen, Vivien Jones ( 2005)
It's hard to believe that Jane Austen wrote the sophisticated and acerbic PRIDE AND PREJUDICE when she was only 21 years old, in 1797. Originally entitled FIRST IMPRESSIONS, the novel was rejected, revised, retitled, and finally published--anonymously--in 1813, only four years before Austen's untimely death. In PRIDE AND PREJUDICE, Austen calls on her sharp observations of vanity, venality, pomposity, and downright nuttiness in a story about a respectable but far from wealthy family full of daughters--girls who desperately need to find husbands if they are to have any kind of economic security. The eldest of the Bennett family, Elizabeth, is a bright, opinionated, and complacent young woman whose reaction to an offer of marriage from her wealthy but impossibly arrogant suitor, Fitzwilliam Darcy, is revulsion. But in the course of the story both Elizabeth and Darcy learn important lessons about their own folly and blindness, and about the dangers of superficial judgements. As the two perform their elaborate courtship dance, Austen surrounds them with some of her most uproariously clueless characters--from the wacky Mrs. Bennett to the wonderfully unctuous Mr. Collins, another of Elizabeth's admirers. PRIDE AND PREJUDICE is, of course, a highly satisfying and offbeat love story, but it is also an unparalleled examination of human nature at both its best and its hilarious worst.
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Pride And Prejudice by Jane Austen ( 1999)
It's hard to believe that Jane Austen wrote the sophisticated and acerbic PRIDE AND PREJUDICE when she was only 21 years old, in 1797. Originally entitled FIRST IMPRESSIONS, the novel was rejected, revised, retitled, and finally published--anonymously--in 1813, only four years before Austen's untimely death. In PRIDE AND PREJUDICE, Austen calls on her sharp observations of vanity, venality, pomposity, and downright nuttiness in a story about a respectable but far from wealthy family full of daughters--girls who desperately need to find husbands if they are to have any kind of economic security. The eldest of the Bennett family, Elizabeth, is a bright, opinionated, and complacent young woman whose reaction to an offer of marriage from her wealthy but impossibly arrogant suitor, Fitzwilliam Darcy, is revulsion. But in the course of the story both Elizabeth and Darcy learn important lessons about their own folly and blindness, and about the dangers of superficial judgements. As the two perform their elaborate courtship dance, Austen surrounds them with some of her most uproariously clueless characters--from the wacky Mrs. Bennett to the wonderfully unctuous Mr. Collins, another of Elizabeth's admirers. PRIDE AND PREJUDICE is, of course, a highly satisfying and offbeat love story, but it is also an unparalleled examination of human nature at both its best and its hilarious worst.
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Pride And Prejudice by Jane Austen ( 2004) |
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Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen, Diana Stewart ( 1981)
In late eighteenth-century England, a spirited young woman copes with the suit of a snobbish gentleman as well as the romantic entanglements of three of her four sisters.
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Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen, E. M. Attwood ( 2000)
It's hard to believe that Jane Austen wrote the sophisticated and acerbic PRIDE AND PREJUDICE when she was only 21 years old, in 1797. Originally entitled FIRST IMPRESSIONS, the novel was rejected, revised, retitled, and finally published--anonymously--in 1813, only four years before Austen's untimely death. In PRIDE AND PREJUDICE, Austen calls on her sharp observations of vanity, venality, pomposity, and downright nuttiness in a story about a respectable but far from wealthy family full of daughters--girls who desperately need to find husbands if they are to have any kind of economic security. The eldest of the Bennett family, Elizabeth, is a bright, opinionated, and complacent young woman whose reaction to an offer of marriage from her wealthy but impossibly arrogant suitor, Fitzwilliam Darcy, is revulsion. But in the course of the story both Elizabeth and Darcy learn important lessons about their own folly and blindness, and about the dangers of superficial judgements. As the two perform their elaborate courtship dance, Austen surrounds them with some of her most uproariously clueless characters--from the wacky Mrs. Bennett to the wonderfully unctuous Mr. Collins, another of Elizabeth's admirers. PRIDE AND PREJUDICE is, of course, a highly satisfying and offbeat love story, but it is also an unparalleled examination of human nature at both its best and its hilarious worst.
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Pride and Prejudice With Connections by Jane Austen ( 2000)
It's hard to believe that Jane Austen wrote the sophisticated and acerbic PRIDE AND PREJUDICE when she was only 21 years old, in 1797. Originally entitled FIRST IMPRESSIONS, the novel was rejected, revised, retitled, and finally published--anonymously--in 1813, only four years before Austen's untimely death. In PRIDE AND PREJUDICE, Austen calls on her sharp observations of vanity, venality, pomposity, and downright nuttiness in a story about a respectable but far from wealthy family full of daughters--girls who desperately need to find husbands if they are to have any kind of economic security. The eldest of the Bennett family, Elizabeth, is a bright, opinionated, and complacent young woman whose reaction to an offer of marriage from her wealthy but impossibly arrogant suitor, Fitzwilliam Darcy, is revulsion. But in the course of the story both Elizabeth and Darcy learn important lessons about their own folly and blindness, and about the dangers of superficial judgements. As the two perform their elaborate courtship dance, Austen surrounds them with some of her most uproariously clueless characters--from the wacky Mrs. Bennett to the wonderfully unctuous Mr. Collins, another of Elizabeth's admirers. PRIDE AND PREJUDICE is, of course, a highly satisfying and offbeat love story, but it is also an unparalleled examination of human nature at both its best and its hilarious worst.
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Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen ( )
In one of the most popular novels in English literature, excitement begins to fizz in the Bennett household when young and eligible Mr. Charles Bingley rents the house nearby, and brings along his haughty and even wealthier friend, Mr. Fitzwilliam Darcy. While Mr. Darcy irks the vivacious Elizabeth, the second of the five Bennett girls, Elizabeth annoys Mr. Darcy. Filled with witticisms, clever repartees, and delicate quadrilles of flirtation and intrigue, their romantic clash can't help but suggest that the two are meant for each other.
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Pride and Prejudice A Play by Jane Austen, Constance Cox ( 1972) |
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Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen ( )
"His perfect indifference, and your pointed dislike, make it so delightfully absurd!"
Pride and Prejudice has delighted generations of readers with its unforgettable cast of characters, carefully choreographed plot, and a hugely entertaining view of the world and its absurdities. With the arrival of eligible young men in their neighbourhood, the lives of Mr and Mrs Bennet and their five daughters are turned inside out and upside down. Pride encounters prejudice, upward-mobility confronts social disdain, and quick-wittedness challenges sagacity, as misconceptions and hasty judgements lead to heartache and scandal, but eventually to true understanding, self-knowledge, and love. In this supremely satisfying story, Jane Austen balances comedy with seriousness, and witty observation with profound insight. If Elizabeth Bennet returns again and again to her letter from Mr Darcy, readers of the novel are drawn even more irresistibly by its captivating wisdom. |
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Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen, Fern Siegel ( 2005)
It's hard to believe that Jane Austen wrote the sophisticated and acerbic PRIDE AND PREJUDICE when she was only 21 years old, in 1797. Originally entitled FIRST IMPRESSIONS, the novel was rejected, revised, retitled, and finally published--anonymously--in 1813, only four years before Austen's untimely death. In PRIDE AND PREJUDICE, Austen calls on her sharp observations of vanity, venality, pomposity, and downright nuttiness in a story about a respectable but far from wealthy family full of daughters--girls who desperately need to find husbands if they are to have any kind of economic security. The eldest of the Bennett family, Elizabeth, is a bright, opinionated, and complacent young woman whose reaction to an offer of marriage from her wealthy but impossibly arrogant suitor, Fitzwilliam Darcy, is revulsion. But in the course of the story both Elizabeth and Darcy learn important lessons about their own folly and blindness, and about the dangers of superficial judgements. As the two perform their elaborate courtship dance, Austen surrounds them with some of her most uproariously clueless characters--from the wacky Mrs. Bennett to the wonderfully unctuous Mr. Collins, another of Elizabeth's admirers. PRIDE AND PREJUDICE is, of course, a highly satisfying and offbeat love story, but it is also an unparalleled examination of human nature at both its best and its hilarious worst.
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Pride and Prejudice With Reader's Guide by Jane Austen ( 1989)
It's hard to believe that Jane Austen wrote the sophisticated and acerbic PRIDE AND PREJUDICE when she was only 21 years old, in 1797. Originally entitled FIRST IMPRESSIONS, the novel was rejected, revised, retitled, and finally published--anonymously--in 1813, only four years before Austen's untimely death. In PRIDE AND PREJUDICE, Austen calls on her sharp observations of vanity, venality, pomposity, and downright nuttiness in a story about a respectable but far from wealthy family full of daughters--girls who desperately need to find husbands if they are to have any kind of economic security. The eldest of the Bennett family, Elizabeth, is a bright, opinionated, and complacent young woman whose reaction to an offer of marriage from her wealthy but impossibly arrogant suitor, Fitzwilliam Darcy, is revulsion. But in the course of the story both Elizabeth and Darcy learn important lessons about their own folly and blindness, and about the dangers of superficial judgements. As the two perform their elaborate courtship dance, Austen surrounds them with some of her most uproariously clueless characters--from the wacky Mrs. Bennett to the wonderfully unctuous Mr. Collins, another of Elizabeth's admirers. PRIDE AND PREJUDICE is, of course, a highly satisfying and offbeat love story, but it is also an unparalleled examination of human nature at both its best and its hilarious worst.
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Pride and Prejuidce by Jane Austen ( 1998)
It's hard to believe that Jane Austen wrote the sophisticated and acerbic PRIDE AND PREJUDICE when she was only 21 years old, in 1797. Originally entitled FIRST IMPRESSIONS, the novel was rejected, revised, retitled, and finally published--anonymously--in 1813, only four years before Austen's untimely death. In PRIDE AND PREJUDICE, Austen calls on her sharp observations of vanity, venality, pomposity, and downright nuttiness in a story about a respectable but far from wealthy family full of daughters--girls who desperately need to find husbands if they are to have any kind of economic security. The eldest of the Bennett family, Elizabeth, is a bright, opinionated, and complacent young woman whose reaction to an offer of marriage from her wealthy but impossibly arrogant suitor, Fitzwilliam Darcy, is revulsion. But in the course of the story both Elizabeth and Darcy learn important lessons about their own folly and blindness, and about the dangers of superficial judgements. As the two perform their elaborate courtship dance, Austen surrounds them with some of her most uproariously clueless characters--from the wacky Mrs. Bennett to the wonderfully unctuous Mr. Collins, another of Elizabeth's admirers. PRIDE AND PREJUDICE is, of course, a highly satisfying and offbeat love story, but it is also an unparalleled examination of human nature at both its best and its hilarious worst.
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Sanditon Jane Austen's Last Completed Novel by Jane Austen, Anne Telscombe, Another Lady ( 1998)
Out of print for more than 20 years, this novel--an 11-chapter fragment at Austen's death completed with seamless artistry by an Austen aficionado and novelist--is a wonderful addition to Austen's beloved books.
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Sanditon by Jane Austen ( 1987)
Jane Austen's minor unfinished novel, SANDITON, is worth reading for its satirical look at pomposity, hypocrisy, and the intricacies of courtship in early 19th-century England. Austen was writing this novel during her last months, when she was seriously ill with Addison's disease; an odd but endearing characteristic of SANDITON is her satirical treatment of hypochondria.
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Sanditon and Other Stories by Jane Austen ( 1996)
When the English-speaking world fell in love with Jane Austen's six great novels, hungering for more, the hunt began, of course, for any unpublished manuscripts she may have left behind. Treasure was found, and all of it is in this volume that rounds out the Everyman's Library edition of Jane Austen. Sanditon is the novel she was working on in the last year of her life. Its subject matter astonishes: here is Austen observing the birth pangs of the culture of commerce. The setting is a seaside town that is being promoted as a resort. The country-bred heroine, the handsome baronet who models himself after irresistible seducers he has met in novels, the family of hypochondriacs, the mysterious West Indian heiress, and others, play out their satirical or romantic or melodramatic roles against a background hum of real-estate development: modern times loom. The Watsons, begun in 1804 but never completed, tells the story of a young woman, Emma Watson, who was raised by a rich aunt and is suddenly shipped back to the comparative poverty and social clumsiness of her own family: girls explicitly on the hunt for husbands. What husbands they find we will never know. But we can check our hopes that the appealing Emma will make the right choice (she is, incidentally, the only Austen heroine ever courted by a lord) against the author's plans for her, as recollected by Jane Austen's sister, Cassandra. Lady Susan, written before Pride and Prejudice, is a complete epistolary novel. It is Jane Austen's only novel whose protagonist is a villainess, and a denizen of sophisticated London society. The alluring Lady Susan subtly, single-mindedly, and ruthlessly pursues her own fortunes. She bullies her shyyoung daughter. She dissembles, she maneuvers, she manipulates. She makes the reader both pray for her comeuppance and regret that (as a modern novelist quoted in the preface remarks) Austen never again wrote a novel with a scheming widow for its heroine.
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The Sayings of Jane Austen by Jane Austen, Maggie McKernan ( 1993) |
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Selected Letters by Jane Austen, Vivien Jones ( 2004) |
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Selected Letters, 1796-1817 by Jane Austen ( 1985)
Shares letters written by the nineteenth-century British novelist to her sister and friends describing births, deaths, scandals, and family experiences.
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Sense & Sensibility by Jane Austen ( 2006) |
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Sense And Sensibility by Jane Austen ( 2005) |
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Sense And Sensibility by Jane Austen ( 2006)
In nineteenth-century England, sisters Elinor and Marianne are drawn into unhappy romances despite the cool judgment of the one and the emotional intensity of the other. Book available.
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Sense And Sensibility by Jane Austen ( 2004) |
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Sense And Sensibility by Jane Austen ( 2005) |
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Sense And Sensibility by Jane Austen ( 2002) |
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Sense And Sensibility by Jane Austen ( 2005) |
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Sense and Sensibility by Jane Austen ( 2001)
In nineteenth-century England, two sisters are drawn into unhappy romances despite the cool judgement of one and the emotional intensity of the other.
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The Sense and Sensibility Screenplay & Diaries Bringing Jane Austen's Novel to Film by Jane Austen, Emma Thompson ( 1996)
The beautiful hardcover now in paperback, with the Academy Award-winning script, Thompson's own diaries, 91 photos, 36 in color.
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Sense and Sensibility and Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen ( 1994)
The study of Jane Austen has been transformed in the last twenty years by readings which have grounded her work in contemporary politics and by feminist critique which has questioned her construction of subject positions for women readers.
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Shades from Jane Austen by Jane Austen, Peggy Hickman, Honoria Diana Marsh ( 1975) |
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Signature Classics Emma by Jane Austen ( 2000)
First published in 1816, EMMA is about an unconventional heroine who possesses beauty, power, confidence, and wealth. She is also opinionated and judgmental, scheming and cunning. She attempts to match an orphaned young woman, Harriet Smith, with someone of a higher-born class, instead of the farmer Harriet prefers. The novel follows the two women as they weave in and out of love relationships that mirror the social climb. Denied any other way to advance, the women in Austen's novels must marry to get ahead.
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Sparknotes Emma by Jane Austen ( 2003) |
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Sparknotes Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen ( 2003) |
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Story And Its Writer 6e Compact + Emma by Ann Charters, Jane Austen, Alaister M. Duckworth ( 2006) |
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A Study Guide to Jane Austen's Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen, Sheila Allen, Roger Rees, Francia Dimase ( 1994)
Of all Jane Austen's books, Pride and Prejudice has earned a special place in the hearts of the reading public as her best-loved and most intimately known novel. From its famous opening sentence the story of the Bennet family and of the novel's two protagonists, Elizabeth and Darcy, told with a wit that its author feared might prove 'rather too light and bright, and sparkling', delights its most familiar readers as thoroughly as it does those who encounter it for the first time. Jane Austen's artistry is apparent, too, in the delineation of the minor characters: the ill-matched Mr. and Mrs. Bennet, Charles Bingley and his sisters, and above all the fatuous Mr. Collins, whose proposal to Elizabeth Bennet is one of the finest comic passages in English literature. And while she entertains us, Jane Austen teaches us the wisdom of balance, the folly of 'pride' and 'prejudice'.
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Three Evening Prayers by Jane Austen ( 1977) |
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Three Novels Sense & Sensibility, Pride & Prejudice, Persuasion by Jane Austen ( 1996)
SENSE AND SENSIBILITY concerns two sisters, Elinor the practical and Marianne the romantic, who are forced to leave their home with their mother and younger sister and live in reduced circumstances in the West of England. The girls must rely on marrying well if they are to survive in the world, and the way in which this goal is eventually accomplished provides the plot of this delightful novel, the first of Jane Austen's to be published. Her last and most melancholy novel was posthumously published in 1818. In PERSUASION, Austen presents men and women as moral equals, inverting the conventional roles of hero and heroine, and creates a strong, mature, and independent heroine, Anne Elliot, who spurns the binding reins of paternal authority. She heeded the advice of a friend by breaking off an engagement eight years earlier to Frederick Wentworth, a naval officer who had not yet risen in his profession and was deemed unworthy of her. Anne has always remained in love with him, and has regretted her susceptibility to persuasion; now that Wentworth has become wealthy, the two are able to marry, but only after a series of painful misunderstandings. PRIDE AND PREJUDICE is Jane Austen's classic novel about the Bennett sisters and their efforts to garner economic security, for which each must procure a suitable husband. The title refers to the spirited and volatile eldest sister, Elizabeth, who rejects an offer of marriage from heir Fitzwilliam Darcy, whose seeming arrogance and pride blind her to his noble qualities. Parallel plots involve quiet sister Jane's love for stolid Charles Bingley, and the youngest, frivolous sister Lydia's elopement with one of Elizabeth's erstwhile suitors.
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Two Chapters of Persuasion Printed from Jane Austen's Autograph by Jane Austen ( 1977) |
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Two Chapters of Persuasion Printed from Jane Austen's Autograph by Jane Austen ( 1976) |
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Two Gothic Classics by Women The Italian and Northanger Abbey by ( 1995)
In The Italian, the beautiful Ellena and her lover, Vivaldi, are tormented and chased by a mysterious cowled figure, while in Austen's Northanger Abbey, Catherine Morland plots to expose her dashing host's mysterious past. Original.
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Volume the First by Jane Austen, R.W. Chapman ( 1984) |
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The Watsons by Jane Austen ( 1985)
THE WATSONS is a fragment about a young woman named Emma Watson (no relation to the Emma of the novel of that name) who is cursed with three flighty sisters whose efforts to make good marriages provide the comic plot. This minor work includes all Jane Austen's favorite satirical themes but was left unfinished with no explanation.
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The Wit and Wisdom of Jane Austen by Jane Austen ( 1999) |
























































