Community Reviews

Rating(4 / 5.0, 100 votes)
5 stars
35(35%)
4 stars
33(33%)
3 stars
32(32%)
2 stars
0(0%)
1 stars
0(0%)
100 reviews
April 16,2025
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"L'abbazia di Northanger": https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
"Ragione e sentimento": https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
"Orgoglio e pregiudizio": https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
"Mansfield Park": https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
"Emma": https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
"Persuasione": https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
April 16,2025
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I read most of Jane's novels every year. Steer clear of the Lady Susan novel. It's actually the first "novel" that Jane wrote, but it's written as if it's two women corresponding about their trashy lives. But the other novels are swell. :) I love Sense and Sensibility,Emma, and Pride and Prejudice in that order. Mansfield Park and Persuasion are also kinda fun (although it's been a while since I've read them...). :)
April 16,2025
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Quoi de plus agréable à lire que les 6 grands romans de Jane Austen ?

J'ai beaucoup apprécié les illustrations mais pas toujours les traductions utilisées (celle de Raison et Sentiments est très mauvaise pour être honnête, la traductrice ayant prit la liberté de changer complètement certains passages de l'histoire).
April 16,2025
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I have finished Mansfield Park. I do love a good book,! I always get in a mood to read all Jane Austen and this did not disappoint! I like to hear all the descriptions of the gardens and homes. I enjoy the character descriptions. The pictures and stories she creates.
April 16,2025
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Replace those mismatched paperbacks…

…with this unique old-world copy.

Yes, even today they are producing complete Austin novel books. But they cannot compare to the Modern Library Giant version. Most nowadays most of the copies of this book have that Mylar dust jacket to protect what is left of the original dust jacket.

The books you can replace and conserve space in the library are:
Sense and Sensibility
Pride and Prejudice
Mansfield Park
Emma
Northanger Abbey
Persuasion

Of course, if you are buying a complete Novels book you already know what is in it. This book is the Novel with nothing more or less.

April 16,2025
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In England, Jane is considered the 'Bard of Bath," mostly because her insights into human nature are nearly as acute as Shakespeare's. I bought a collected works because I love all of them and why the heck not?!?!?! This edition is awesome.

Here's a rundown on what I think:

Pride and Prejudice--SOOOOOO deserves its popularity and acclaim. Darcy and Eliabeth are the best. Jane's wit at it's greatest in her novels.

Sense and Sensibility--I personally find the Dashwood girls kind of boring and single faceted.

Northanger Abbey--I think this poor novel gets slighted by many critics. The writing is awesome and the characters are believable as humans.
April 16,2025
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Some of these were rereads, some not. Mansfield Park and Emma are my favourites of hers but they all are wonderful reads. I might be the first person to compare Jane Austen’s writing to a track and field innovation but having read many other books from her period I feel like she did for the novel what the Fosbury flop did for high jumping; it literally changed the game. Jane Eyre and Middlemarch owe obvious debts to her and they built magnificently on the foundation laid by Ms. Austen but the didn’t revolutionize the genre the way she did.
April 16,2025
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I love these books, and love to read them over and over again. I recommend buying the books separately, because such a nice hard bound book doesn't lend itself well to reading late at night under the blanket with a flashlight.
April 16,2025
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Attraverso i suoi romanzi, la Austen ci parla dell'aristocrazia inglese di inizio '800, una realtà decisamente lontana, e non solo in ottica temporale, dalla nostra. E non è difficile scorgervi una punta di ironia, soprattutto nel modo, quasi "esagerato", di descrivere il trasporto emotivo dei personaggi nelle varie relazioni amorose e non.
Ragione e Sentimento ****
Orgoglio e Pregiudizio ****
Mansfield Park ***
Emma*** all'inizio ammetto che non mi ha preso molto, ma poi è andato solo a migliorare! si è creato un legame di amore/odio con Emma, con la sua incapacità di restare al di fuori delle vicende altrui! Tre stelline, ma solo perché non mi ha coinvolto quanto Orgoglio e Pregiudizio;
Persuasione **** piacevole lettura, una Austen meno "accanita" ma nessuna delusione!
L'Abbazia di Northanger **** che dire, la Austen è la Austen!
April 16,2025
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****************************

POSSIBLE SPOILERS

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TITLE: The Complete Novels of Jane Austen
AUTHOR: Jane Austen
EDITION: Chartwell Classics
FORMAT: Hardcover
ISBN-13: 978-0785834212
__________________________
Notes on the Physical Book

The physical hardcover book is quite large, fat and heavy with a pretty dust jacket. The paper is bright white and of good quality. The text is standard sized, similar in size to the Oxford World's Classics series. The book includes an introduction by Jennifer C. Garlen, a section on the life and times of Jane Austen, reviews and notices, and a section of suggested reading.


Sense & Sensibility [3 stars]

Jane Austen originally published this novel, in 1811, anonymously - "By A Lady" appeared on the title page in place of the author's name. Sense and Sensibility is the coming of age story of Elinor and Marianne Dashwood; two sisters with different personalities (one sensible and one emotional) who each experience romance and heartbreak.

Personally, I found the main characters and the majority of the secondary characters to be overly nice and for the most part terribly bland and more similar than different. The majority of the men also appear overly spineless since they can't seem to do anything without mommy's permission or they might loose their inheritance [this is ridiculous - go find something useful to do and make your own fortune!] Despite all the courting drama and descriptions of hysterics in the novel, I found that the story lacked passion. It was all very proper and civilized... and bland. I also couldn't help the mental image of everyone going about their business with huge, florescent price tags stuck to their shirts.

I'm not quite sure why this is such a lauded classic, unless whole generations of impressionable girls were forced to read this and then inflicted it on their own children.

Pride & Prejudice [4 stars]

I enjoyed Pride and Prejudice more than Sense and Sensibility. The characters were more rounded/flawed, with more variety; the pacing a bit faster. This is a novel that revolves around relationships - not just romantic relationships, but those of friends, family and other acquantances. The novel also provides something of a social commentary in terms of the limits imposed on women inheriting property and class structure. There is also a great deal of humour in this novel that I missed on the first read. I do find the female obsession with marriage and marrying someone with lots of money rather irritating, but then that's what was required in that time period if you didn't want to end up destitute or dependant on some other relative. Context (social structure, society, time period etc) really is important with books like this, otherwise all the characters come off as shallow and the plot insipid. The book is not too long winded with some delightfully pithy clauses.

An interesting thing I noticed on the second read was that the reader initially only learns about Mr Darcy through the observations and dialogues of other people, so the reader essentially aquires the same prejudices against him that Elizabeth Bennet has.

NOTE: This is not a historical fiction novel. Jane Austen was writing novels about contemporary life (to her), especially the problems facing young women in her own social class (the country gentry).

Mansfield Park [1 star]

All Austen's novels are social commentaries in one way or another, and one could mine Mansfield Park for all sorts of things such as the marriage market, child abuse, child rearing practises (or lack therof), morality, family dynamics etc. But I found this novel to be rather dull, long-winded and superficial, with nothing substantial happening until the last third of the book. I can't say I was terribly impressed with the very convenient ending either. The majority of the characters were also rather flat, lacking depth, and essentially forgetable. Mrs Norris is terrifyingly devious and manipulative, and would have made a better villain assuming there was someone stronger (or at least more vocal) than Fanny to use as her favourite target. But Austen didn't write that book. She wrote the tedious Mansfield Park instead. Karma is a bitch, but it still doesn't make up for slogging through 400 pages.


Emma [2 stars]

This novel has a tedious beginning, but does pick up pace eventually. There is also too much "tell" and not enough "show". I can't say I was terribly impressed with this novel, but it was better than Mansfield Park. In someone else's hands, this might have been a comedy along the lines of Shakespeare's Much Ado About Nothing. But it's not. The plot was superficial and the main character highly annoying. The setting is too idyllic - the worst thing that happens is a bit of snow and a breeze [I'm beginning to wonder if a digression into the Paris sewer system would be preferable?]. Everyone is in perfect health except for the occasional sniffles.

Emma is a snobbish, entitled, arrogant, bored, callous, hypocritical, immature, know-it-all, busybody who has decided to play match-maker for all and sundry. And she somehow comes out of the whole affair with no consequences to herself. Miss Bates could have used less ink time - a lot of irrelevant babbling just doesn't do anything for me. Then again, a whole many pages could have been burned since the characters did nothing but babble about the proverbial weather or how "pleasant" and "agreeable" so-an-so was. All the characters are "agreeable"! Heaven forbid we have someone that is NOT agreeable and charming and nice!!! I'm assuming Mr Woodhouse has issues (agoraphobia and hypochondria comes to mind), if not, he is just plain silly. Mr Knightley is the only redeeming aspect of this book, until one of those very convenient WTF moments. Come to think of it, I liked Mr John Knightley a great deal as well. He didn't waste any words! I also have the impression Austen got bored of her own novels and just ended them in the most expedient manner possible to get a happily ever after.

NOTE: If this is supposed to be a social commentary of some sort, it is extremely narrow in focus (wealthy landed gentry) and highly idealized.


Northanger Abbey [3 stars]

This is the first of Jane Austen's novels to be completed, but it wasn't published until after her death, due to publisher vagaries. This is a coming of age story that is not as long, or as tedious, as some of Austen's other novels, but this one still has that chopped off, summarised in a few paragraphs, ending. Northanger Abbey is something of a parody of Gothic fiction, which (no doubt) the reader will get more out of, if they have previous read Gothic fiction.


Persuasion [3.5 stars]

Persuasion was completed 6 months before Austen's death, and published posthumously. This novel deals with old love rekindled and given a second chance, along with some scheming shenanigans by other interfering busy-bodies. This book is fairly short compared to the other novels and thus has less frivolous, long-winded descriptions of the furniture, the weather, clothing, the monetary worth of everyone and sundry, and how "agreeable" everyone is. This novel also has some "action" that does not involve tea parties. I enjoyed this book more than the others (except Pride and Prejudice).


Lady Susan [4 stars]

Lady Susan is a short epistolary novel, which was completed in 1794 but not published until 1871. The narrative follows the schemes of the charming, manipulative and unscrupulous seductress widow, Lady Susan. The letters follow the various attempts of Lady Susan to marry off the daughter she detests and find herself a new, wealthy husband. This is a fairly entertaining and rather amusing novel that has the benefit of skipping all the "boring bits" and dealing with the action and thoughts of Lady Susan and her relations. Too bad Austen didn't write more epistolary novels.


April 16,2025
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I read most of these in high school. I had a great English teacher who loved Jane Austen. It is fun to try to sort out the characters that belong to each book- from memory as I go. I'm devouring them as quickly as my 4 children will allow me to do so.
April 16,2025
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Ho letto tutto, tranne "L'Abbazia di Northanger. Brillante, ironica, sorprendentemente attuale, adoro Jane Austen!
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