Saturday, October 17, 2009

A Few Works by Austen

In the last couple weeks I've plowed through three different Jane Austen novels. Rather than post three times, I thought I'd just do a mini review on each of them and give you three for the price of one. Woohoo!

Emma. I'd give this one a solid A. The story is of a young gentlewoman who tries her hand at matchmaking with somewhat disastrous results. Things all end up for the best, of course, but the journey is full of mixups and general mayhem that make for an entertaining read.

Mansfield Park. This earns a B in my book. Its very different from other Austen novels--the tone is more serious and there's a real sense of social commentary that I find absent from a lot of her others. (Well, the others do have social commentary but its carried off in a much lighter manner.) The story is about Fanny Price--a young girl sent to live with her wealthier cousins. Thrown into a world with morals much unlike her own, Fanny must stand fast against the onslaught of the negatives that wealth can bring.

Northanger Abbey is also a B book, though its much different from Mansfield Park. The writing style is different than any other Austen book I have read--even just her approach to telling the story--but its still a good time all around. And short! On another site I read that scholars have called this book Austen's "Gothic parody" and I see where that's coming from. Catharine Moreland is enraptured by Gothic novels and when life seems to throw her into the middle of one...well, read the book and find out how it all goes. Oh, this was also the only Austen book with a character I just hated. I think the reader is supposed to, but STILL. Boo on John Thorpe.

2 comments:

Lexi said...

Plowed through? No - Jane Austen's novels are too good for that.

Did you like Fanny Price? I think she is insufferable; quietly judging and condemning everybody, but so meek none of them realize it. Mary Crawford thinks of her as a friend, for instance. Jane Austen thought no one would like Emma; but to my mind, it's Fanny readers don't warm to.

Tara said...

"Plowed through" = read very quickly. I think Jane Austen's books are perfect for that!

No, I didn't like Fanny Price. I know she's a "heroine" in literature circles but I'm not a fan. However, I am a great lover of Emma. :)