Part of the Vintage Classics Austen Series- all six of Jane Austen's major novels, beautifully designed by writer and illustrator Leanne Shapton and introduced by our finest contemporary writers
Jane Austen (Author)
Jane Austen was born in Steventon rectory on 16 December 1775. Her
family later moved to Bath, then to Southampton and finally to
Chawton in Hampshire. She began writing Pride and Prejudice when
she was twenty-two years old. It was originally called First
Impressions and was initially rejected by the publishers and only
published in 1813 after much revision. She published four of her
novels in her lifetime, Sense and Sensibility (1811), Pride and
Prejudice (1813), Mansfield Park (1814) and Emma (1816). Jane
Austen died on 18th July 1817. Northanger Abbey and Persuasion were
both published posthumously in 1818.
Lynne Truss (Introducer)
Bestselling author of Eats, Shoots and Leaves and Talk to the Hand,
Lynne Truss is a journalist, arts and book reviewer, sports
columnist and a regular broadcaster for BBC's Radio 4. She's had
two plays performed at the Edinburgh Festival, including 'Hell's
Bells' in 2012. Her latest book is Get Her Off The Pitch- How
Sports Took Over My Life. Nine Lives is her fourth novel, and the
first in over ten years.
Everyone has their Austen, and this is mine. Sparer, more savage -
and also more poignant than Pride and Prejudice, this is a novel
that tells us wisely and wittily about the nature of romantic
entanglements and the follies of being human. It isn't riven with
the deep, muscular ironies of, say, Emma, but there is something
about the dry lightness of Persuasion that is deceptive. It stays
with you long after you've read it
*Nigella Lawson*
I worship all of Austen's novels, but if I have to choose one over
the others, I plump for the autumnal pleasures of Persuasion. This
is the last work Austen completed before her death in 1817, and it
is rather more tender and melancholy in tone than the novels that
preceded it. I read it once or twice a year, whenever I feel in
need of a good cry
*Zoe Heller*
A subtle and elegiac novel - more heartfelt than some of her
earlier romances and with a truly appealing heroine
*Joanna Trollope*
Female self-worth could have been invented by Jane Austen. No
wonder we still value her
*Guardian*
It is a sort of a private novel. In the heroine, Anne Elliot, we
have glimpses of Austen and what happened to her; the lost romance
and the lost youth
*Sunday Express*
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