What to Read First: A Reader's Guide to Unfamiliar Literature
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A Good Place To Start

TitleVotes 
Pride and Prejudice 11
Persuasion 2
Sense and Sensibility 1
Emma 1

A Bad Place To Start

TitleVotes 
Mansfield Park 3
Sanditon* 1
Persuasion 1

Genres

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Categorization is odious. There is tremendous overlap among genres. These pigeonholes are offered only as a convenience.

Jane Austen

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Please consider recommending where to begin reading this author, or where not to. A few words about your experiences reading this author and why you make the recommendations you do will be helpful to other users. If you are the author or have studied this author extensively, please say so.

vitawallace January 27th, 2006 10:33 PM PST

*Sanditon was finished by "another lady." I must admit I love it, even if it's not all by Jane Austen. Pride and Prejudice is where I started with her novels, and I loved them from the start, so that's a good place. However, one of my favorites is Persuasion.

jill smolowe January 28th, 2006 07:30 AM PST

Pride and Prejudice...First...Last...and for revisitation many times in between

aristophanes January 29th, 2006 04:50 AM PST

I have to concur: Pride and Prejudice is the best place to start with Austen. It's a remarkable and delightful book.

lilyblank January 29th, 2006 11:34 AM PST

I am an avid Jane Austin fan and have read each one of her books many times. I concur that Pride & Prejudice is a great start. My favorites are that, Emma & Persuasion. I'm not as big a fan of Northanger Abbey or Sense & Sensibility. Have also read her letters.

Hesperus Press March 16th, 2007 09:19 AM PST

While 'Pride and Prejudice' is the obvious choice for those making their first foray into the world of Jane Austen, it's such a shame that major works such as 'P&P', 'Emma' and 'Sense and Sensibility' have for so long eclipsed many of Austen's charming shorter works. Hesperus Press is trying to redress the balance by reprinting some of her lesser known short stories and novellas, and we would urge fans of Austen, or newcomers who may want a shorter work to begin with, to try the following:

'Lady Susan': an early work inspired by 'Les Liaisons Dangereuses'; set in decadent high society London and with a sparklingly wicked heroine, it reveals all the caustic wit and brilliant social satire of her later novels.

'The Watsons': although never finished, 'The Watsons' is a delightful and exquisitely drawn portrait of family life. Taking marriage as her central concern, Jane Austen captures in miniature the well-known, and well-loved, themes of her more famous novels.

'Love and Friendship': a delicious romp through the highs and lows of a young girl's lot in life and another precursor of Austen's later works of genius.

'Lesley Castle': an inspired epistolary novella, presenting a series of outrageously superficial characters and brilliantly showcasing Austen's comic genius.

Fuller descriptions of each of these works can be found through the links on the right; please do join Hesperus Press in celebrating these neglected gems!

emac52 May 3rd, 2007 09:54 AM PST

The great thing about Jane Austen's novels - they can be read over and over again. And for me at least, I always seem to notice something new each time that I revisit them. My favourites are Emma, Pride & Prejudice and Persuasion. And no matter how many times I've read them, whenever I start to re-read them, I still worry that Emma won't find her Knightly, Lizzie will be left without Darcy and Wentworth won't pursue Anne ;0)

Biography

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From: www.jasa.net.au

Jane Austen was a major English novelist, whose brilliantly witty, elegantly structured satirical fiction marks the transition in English literature from 18th century neo-classicism to 19th century romanticism.

Jane Austen was born on 16 December, 1775, at the rectory in the village of Steventon, near Basingstoke, in Hampshire. The seventh of eight children of the Reverend George Austen and his wife, Cassandra, she was educated mainly at home and never lived apart from her family. She had a happy childhood amongst all her brothers and the other boys who lodged with the family and whom Mr Austen tutored. From her older sister, Cassandra, she was inseparable. To amuse themselves, the children wrote and performed plays and charades, and even as a little girl Jane was encouraged to write. The reading that she did of the books in her father's extensive library provided material for the short satirical sketches she wrote as a girl.

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