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Jane Austen

British · b. 1775

6 books reviewed Avg rating 4.7 / 5Top rating 4.9 / 5

English novelist whose six major works, including Pride and Prejudice and Emma, established the social comedy of manners as a vehicle for serious moral and psychological insight.

Jane Austen published six complete novels between 1811 and 1818, all anonymously and under considerable social constraint, and her reputation has only grown in the two centuries since. Pride and Prejudice, Emma, and Sense and Sensibility are among the most widely read novels in the English language, not as period documents but as living works that readers continue to find psychologically acute and genuinely funny. Austen’s genius was to take the narrow world available to women of her class and extract from it a complete moral comedy — her subjects are self-deception, social performance, the limits of intelligence, and the question of what constitutes a good life.

Elizabeth Bennet in Pride and Prejudice is one of fiction’s great heroines precisely because she is smart enough to see most things clearly and still wrong about the things that matter most. Emma Woodhouse in Emma is the bolder creation: a protagonist who is charming, confident, wrong in ways she cannot acknowledge, and entirely real. Sense and Sensibility, the earliest of the three, is structurally the most schematic, but even there Austen’s intelligence subverts what might have been a simple contrast between reason and feeling.

The criticism sometimes made — that Austen is parochial, that her world excludes race, empire, and most of human suffering — is worth engaging seriously, as scholars like Claudia Johnson and Edward Said have shown. But Austen knew exactly what she was doing, and what she did within her chosen limits is without parallel in English prose fiction.

6 Books Reviewed

Pride and Prejudice book cover

Pride and Prejudice

by Jane Austen

4.9

Elizabeth Bennet and Fitzwilliam Darcy clash on every point of pride and principle — and fall irrevocably in love. Austen's most beloved novel is a razor-sharp comedy of manners and one of the great love stories in the English language.

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Persuasion book cover

Persuasion

by Jane Austen

4.8

Anne Elliot, at 27, is considered past her prime — but the man she loved and lost eight years ago has returned. Austen's final completed novel is her most emotionally mature, trading wit for a quieter, more aching register.

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Emma book cover

Emma

by Jane Austen

4.7

Emma Woodhouse is handsome, clever, and rich — and catastrophically wrong about almost everyone's romantic situation. Austen's most technically accomplished novel features an unreliable protagonist and one of literature's great comic ironies.

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Sense and Sensibility book cover

Sense and Sensibility

by Jane Austen

4.6

The Dashwood sisters — sensible Elinor and passionate Marianne — navigate love, loss, and limited options in Regency England. Austen's debut novel introduces her central theme: the tension between feeling and social propriety.

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Mansfield Park book cover

Mansfield Park

by Jane Austen

4.5

Fanny Price is brought from poverty to Mansfield Park, her wealthy cousins' estate, where she watches and witnesses while others perform and transgress. Austen's most morally serious novel — quieter, deeper, and more uncomfortable than her others.

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Northanger Abbey book cover

Northanger Abbey

by Jane Austen

4.5

Catherine Morland, a thoroughly unromantic heroine raised on gothic novels, visits Bath and then a genuine abbey and finds — to her disappointment and then relief — that real life obeys very different rules from fiction. Austen's earliest and most playful novel is a literary parody of the gothic tradition that also manages to be a sincere coming-of-age story.

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