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         Austen Jane:     more books (100)
  1. Lady Susan by Jane Austen, 2009-10-04
  2. The Jane Austen Handbook: A Sensible Yet Elegant Guide to Her World by Margaret C. Sullivan, 2007-04-19
  3. Jane Austen 6-book Boxed Set: "Emma", "Pride and Prejudice", "Sense and Sensibility", "Persuasion", "Mansfield Park" and "Northanger Abbey" (Collector's Library) by Jane Austen, 2004-02-01
  4. Becoming Jane Austen by Jon Spence, 2007-07-03
  5. Jane Austen's Letters by Jane Austen, 2003-05-28
  6. Jane Austen in Boca: A Novel by Paula Marantz Cohen, 2003-10-01
  7. Charlotte Collins: A Continuation of Jane Austen's Pride and Prejudice by Jennifer Whiteley Becton, 2010-08-25
  8. What Jane Austen Ate and Charles Dickens Knew: From Fox Hunting to Whist-The Facts of Daily Life in Nineteenth-Century England by Daniel Pool, 1994-04-21
  9. Persuasion (Norton Critical Editions) by Jane Austen, 1994-12-17
  10. Jane Austen: The World of Her Novels by Deirdre Le Faye, 2003-09-01
  11. The Jane Austen Companion to Life by Inc. Sourcebooks, 2010-03-01
  12. The Man Who Loved Jane Austen by Sally Smith O'Rourke, 2009-01-01
  13. Jane Austen's Guide to Dating by Lauren Henderson, 2005-01-12
  14. Talking About Jane Austen in Baghdad: The True Story of an Unlikely Friendship by Bee Rowlatt, May Witwit, 2010-02-04

41. NPR: PBS To Air Adaptations Of Jane Austen Novels
Andrew Davies is the goto screenwriter for adapting classic literature for television and the movies. He adapts Northanger Abbey and Sense and Sensibility
http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=18212238

42. Jane Austen: Free Web Books, Online
jane austen (17751817). Biographical note. Novelist, daughter of a clergyman, was born at the rectory of Steventon near Basingstoke.
http://ebooks.adelaide.edu.au/a/austen/jane/
The University of Adelaide Library eBooks Help
Jane Austen (1775-1817)
Biographical note
Sense and Sensibility Pride and Prejudice Mansfield Park (1814) and Emma Northanger Abbey Persuasion [From A Short Biographical Dictionary of English Literature by John W. Cousin, 1910 More ...
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43. Jane Austen’s World
This blog brings jane austen and the Regency Period alive through food, dress, social customs, and other 19th C. historical details.
http://janeaustensworld.wordpress.com/
This blog brings Jane Austen and the Regency Period alive through food, dress, social customs, and other 19th C. historical details.
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The Dummification of Mansfield Park
January 27, 2008 by Ms. Place On a superficial level this is an enjoyable film, but nothing substantive happens. Every element that makes this powerful Jane Austen novel thought provoking and crackle with tension has been squeezed out of this 90-minute adaptation. The viewer is merely left with – pulp. I watched this movie several times, hoping to get some sense of why director Iain McDonald and writer Maggie Wadey felt they needed to dumb down the plot. Mrs. Norris is now a merely irritating figure; the Bertram sisters are almost non-existent after Maria’s marriage to Mr. Rushworth; there is no return visit to Portsmouth, in fact there is no Portsmouth at all; the Crawford siblings don’t seem to live any where; and Fanny has morphed into a sweet but stubborn, though slovenly chit who likes to play badminton and ride horses with her first cousin. Oh, and she’s wildly in love with him. One wonders why the tug of war between a young heroine who stands up for her values and moral convictions against those who are in control of her life has been reduced to a few verbal skirmishes and some minor mental anguishes. I admit this is my least favorite Jane Austen novel, though that is by a small degree. Edmund Bertram comes across as a prig; and Fanny is much too staid and timid for my tastes. She is so morally upright that I would feel quite uncomfortable in her presence and not know precisely what to say. Whereas I suspect I could have a delightful and scintillating conversation with Lizzie Bennet, my favorite Austen heroine, or Mary Crawford, who always excited my interest more than Fanny. Not that Lizzie isn’t moral, but she does seem more approachable to me.

44. Jane Austen On LibraryThing | Catalog Your Books Online
LibraryThing catalogs yours books online, easily, quickly and for free.
http://www.librarything.com/author/austenjane
Language: English [ others Courtesy of the Perry-Casta±eda Library, University of Texas at Austin. 1 picture add a picture
Author: Jane Austen
Also known as: et al Jane Austen J. Austen J.A. Austen Jame Austen ... Jane Austen ; (WITH AFTERWORD BY JOANN MORSE) Members Reviews Rating Favorited Conversations Disambiguation Notice Please be careful when combining editions of Austen's complete novels - some editions contain 7 novels, others 8. Still others add various novels that were not completed.
Books by Jane Austen
combine/separate works

45. JANE AUSTEN
A guide to the best articles on the internet on jane austen and her novels, from literaryhistory.com.
http://www.literaryhistory.com/19thC/AUSTEN.htm
Jane Austen (1775-1817)
A selective bibliography of 158 active links for Jane Austen, favoring signed articles by recognized scholars, articles published in reviewed sources, and web sites that adhere to the MLA Guidelines for Authors of Web Sites main page 20th century authors 19th century authors about LiteraryHistory.com ... Web sites
Introductory and Light Reading
A substantial introduction to Jane Austen by Dr. Robert Clark from the Literary Encyclopedia. On Emma ; On Persuasion Transcript of a PBS News Hour discussion on Jane Austen's books and films, with Elizabeth Farnsworth, Carol Shields, Cynthia Heimel, and Roger Rosenblatt A short, introductory biography of Jane Austen from the Books and Writers web site, Kuusankoski Public Library, Finland About the problem of liking the wimpy heroine Fanny Price in Mansfield Park , by Carol Shields "The Jane Austen thing" asks, "What is the appeal of these highly mannered and moralistic tales of rigidly choreographed courtship and marriage rituals to a generation of young women brought up to assume they could 'have it all'" In The Progressive, July, 1996 by Elaine Rapping "Jane Austen wins more fans than Zadie Smith."

46. Jane Austen's Illness
Sir Zachary Cope examines jane austen s final illness in an article of 18 July 1964 in the British Medical Journal.
http://www.orchard-gate.com/bmj.htm
Jane Austen's Illness
An article by Sir Zachary Cope appeared in the British Medical Journal of 18 July 1964, the anniversary of Jane Austen's death. The following leader appeared on page 140 of the journal:
Jane Austen's End
When Jane Austen died on 18 July 1817 (exactly 147 years ago) she was only 41. Of the six novels she had written four had been published. Though they appeared anonymously the author was known to a small circle of admirers. But the acclaim in which she is held to-day had then hardly begun to gather. Such is the sustained and even quality of her novels that critics have remained doubtful about the order in which some of them were composed, so that her death at so comparatively early an age surely robbed us of more at least equally delightful works. What was the cause of this catastrophe? Sir Zachary Cope has been studying Jane Austen's letters for clues to it, and this week he presents his findings at page 182 of the B.M.J.
The main features of Jane Austen's last illness seem to have been its insidious onset about a year before her death, intermittently progressive weakness and languor, gastric upsets, and discoloration of the skin. Sir Zachary's discussion of the differential diagnosis includes pernicious anaemia, myasthenia gravis, and cancer of the stomach, but many doctors will probably agree with him that the most likely condition is Addison's disease of the suprarenal glands.
Further research may perhaps show that letters of her contemporaries provide evidence for or against the diagnosis, though Sir Zachary found nothing of help in the documents that survive from the immediate family circle or her doctors. As he remarks, her own observations are particularly trustworthy, for her perspicacity and cool judgment of what she observed were the essence of her genius. It is peculiarly tragic that so uncommon a disease should have struck down so rare a spirit.

47. Jane Austen - Jane Austen's Bath - Visit Bath
jane austen s Bath jane austen knew Bath as a thriving spa resort, popular with fashionable society. Visit Bath today and enjoy a vibrant city with great
http://visitbath.co.uk/janeausten/jane-austens-bath
@import "/styles/layout.css"; @import "/styles/style_channel6.css"; @import "/styles/hacks.css"; Skip Navigation The official tourism website for Bath, England Request Info Sign Up Quickfind: - Quickfind -
  • visitbath.co.uk Home Jane Austen's Bath Audio Tour Accommodation ... Jane Austen's Bath
    Jane Austen's Bath
    Jane Austen knew Bath as a thriving spa resort, popular with fashionable society. Visit Bath today and enjoy a vibrant city with great shopping, dining and plenty to see and do. Jane Austen set two of her six published novels, Northanger Abbey completed in 1803 and Persuasion written in 1817, in Bath and made the city her home from 1801 to 1806. In Northanger Abbey Jane writes;
    'They arrived in Bath. Catherine was all eager delight; - her eyes were here, there, everywhere, as they approached its fine and striking environs, and afterwards drove through those streets which conducted them to the hotel. She was come to be happy, and she felt happy already'. Visitors to Bath can still enjoy the striking environs with the magnificent and perfectly preserved Georgian buildings, 5000 of which are listed. There are many other parallels as a stay in Bath is uplifting not only because of the sheer physical beauty of the architecture and surrounding countryside, but it continues to be a centre for health and wellbeing. The opening of Thermae Bath Spa in 2006 means visitors can once again bathe in the thermal spring water.

48. Jane Austen Action FIgure - English Writer - Archie McPhee
jane austen was one of the greatest English novelists in history. Despite a rather sheltered life, she was able to capture the subtleties of human
http://www.mcphee.com/items/11513.html
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49. IPL Online Literary Criticism Collection
Use these links to search for jane austen outside the IPL. Click a link below to automatically search that site for jane austen. articles on jane austen
http://www.ipl.org/div/litcrit/bin/litcrit.out.pl?au=aus-35

50. Austen, Jane - Biography And Online Books
Includes a biography and works for online reading.
http://www.literaturepost.com/authors/Austen.html
HOME AUTHOR INDEX TITLE INDEX CATEGORY INDEX ... LINKS
Austen, Jane Biography
Jane Austen (1775-1817) English writer, who first gave the novel its modern character through the treatment of everyday life. Although Austen was widely read in her lifetime, she published her works anonymously. The most urgent preoccupation of her young, well-bred heroines is courtship, and finally marriage in the world dominated by men. Austen herself never married. Her best-known books include PRIDE AND PREJUDICE (1813) and EMMA (1816). Virginia Woolf called her "the most perfect artist among women." "It is a truth universally acknowledged, that a single man in possession of a good fortune, must be in want of a wife." (from Pride and Prejudice Jane Austen was born in Steventon, Hampshire, where her father was a rector. She was the second daughter and seventh child in a family of eight. The first 25 years of her life Austen spent in Hampshire. She was mostly tutored at home, and irregularly at school. Her parents were avid readers and she received a broader education than many women of her time. Her favorite poet was Cowper. On her father's retirement, the family sold off everything, including Jane's piano, and moved to Bath. Austen started to write for family amusement as a child. Her earliest-known writings date from about 1787. Very shy about her writing, she wrote on small pieces of paper that she slipped under the desk plotter if anyone came into the room. In her letters she observed the daily life of her family and fiends in an intimate and gossipy manner: "James danced with Alethea, and cut up the turkey last night with great perseverance. You say nothing of the silk stockings; I flatter myself, therefore, that Charles has not purchased any, as I cannot very well afford to pay for them; all my money is spent in buying white gloves and pink persian."

51. Calendars For Jane Austen's Novels
Probable calendars, which supports jane austen s prose narratives, are given for a few of her works.
http://mason.gmu.edu/~emoody/emcalendars.html
This page is moving to http://www.jimandellen.org/austen/emcalendars.html . Please change your bookmarks. You will be taken there automatically in 30 seconds. If you are impatient, you can click here to be taken there immediately.
Jane Austen and Time: A Study of her Uses of the Almanac
Jane Austen
Watercolour by Cassandra (detail)
The visitor to my site is invited to look at each of the calendars in order to discover the ways in which each novel is put together. When you discover this, you can see the different goals Austen had for each novel, and geologize into the early history of the revisions, and the ways in which she uses omniscient, epistolary, and psychological narrative. Or the reader can use these calendars to understand the novel that is in front of them more clearly simply to enrichen reading of the novel, to see what is literally there and the fineness of Austen's art. The calendars are also intended to help people writing about and teaching Austen who want to reach her text in the most fundamental way. In each of the sections I have included a bibliography for further research for each novel. For general information on almanacs in the period I used Bernard Capp's

52. PBS Pressroom - MASTERPIECE Complete Jane Austen Rls
There are six transcendently satisfying scenarios, as told in a halfdozen enchanting novels by jane austen — one of the most beloved writers in all of
http://pressroom.pbs.org/documents/masterpiece_theatre_complete_jane_austen_rls
Advanced Search Ellen Dockser WGBH Tel: 617/300-5338 Fax: 617/300-1016 email Olivia Wong WGBH Tel: 617/300-5349 email Christina Pan (photography) WGBH (photography) Tel: 617/300-5340 email PBS Pressroom Programs A-Z MASTERPIECE™ ... The Complete Jane Austen
MASTERPIECE™ "The Complete Jane Austen"
Sundays, beginning January 13, 2008 9:00 p.m. ET – New Adaptations of “Mansfield Park,” “Northanger Abbey,” “Persuasion” and “Sense and Sensibility”; “Emma” with Kate Beckinsale and Emmy-Winning “Pride and Prejudice”; and Biopic “Miss Austen Regrets” – How many ways can a young woman find true love amid the dinner parties, balls, carriage rides, picnics and other picturesque opportunities to meet the opposite sex in turn-of-the-19th-century England? There are six transcendently satisfying scenarios, as told in a half-dozen enchanting novels by Jane Austen — one of the most beloved writers in all of literature. For the first time on television, Austen fans can now sit down to a weekly feast of all of her immortal plots, presented by

53. Jane Austen Places
After Bath and before the move to Southampton jane austen stayed briefly in several places, including the rectory in Adlestrop in Gloucestershire,
http://www.astoft.co.uk/austen/
Astoft
Jane Austen Places
The Astoft Gallery
Click on photos to enlarge Steventon
Site of Steventon Rectory,
and the lime tree believed to have been planted by brother James in 1813 Steventon Church ( more...
... and vicinity
Ashe House
Home of
Mrs Lefroy Deane House
Home of the Harwoods Wheatsheaf Inn where mail was collected Ibthorpe House Home of the Lloyds Endless Debaries of Austen letter fame ( more... Bath 13 Queen Square Lodged during visit 1799 1 The Paragon Home of relations Stayed during house-hunting 4 Sydney Place Sydney Place No. 4 is 4th door Sydney Gardens opposite 3 Green Park Buildings East 1804-5
No picture (destroyed in the Blitz) 25 Gay Street Trim Street (no. not known) Assembly Rooms St Swithin's, Walcot, and George Austen's tombstone More of Bath Jane Austen Festival in Bath Adlestrop After Bath and before the move to Southampton Jane Austen stayed briefly in several places, including the rectory in

54. ERROR 999
Comic jane. Welcome to the website for. ‘I dearly love a laugh’ jane austen and. Comedy. International jane austen and VCE Literature
http://austen2007.net/
ERROR 999
Site is temporarily unavailable. Please try the following:
  • Site owner: Please refer back to the knowledge base for specifics on this error number. Site owner: Contact support for specific instructions. Web Mail: Don't forget to add /webmail to access mail.

55. Penn State S Electronic Classics Series Jane Austen Page
From this site you can download the works of jane austen (1775 1817 British) in Adobe s ® Acrobat ® Portable Document File format.
http://www2.hn.psu.edu/faculty/jmanis/j-austen.htm

56. Apple - Trailers - The Jane Austen Book Club Movie
As five women and one enigmatic man meet to discuss the works of jane austen, they find their love lives playing out in a 21st century version of her novels
http://www.apple.com/trailers/sony/thejaneaustenbookclub/
Small Medium Large HD ... www.TheJaneAustenBookClubMovie.com

57. The Online Books Page: Search Results
austen, jane, 17751817 The History of England, From the Reign of Henry the 4th to austen, jane, 1775-1817 Love and Friendship and Other Early Works
http://digital.library.upenn.edu/webbin/book/search?author=jane austen&amode=wor

58. Jane Austen Font | Dafont.com
jane austen Font dafont.com. jane austen. Custom preview. Only fonts with accents Euro. Number per page. 10, 20, 50. fonts show variants. Size
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Only as Domaine public / GNU GPL Free Free for personal use Donationware Shareware Demo Unknown The licence is just an indication. Please look at the readme-files in the zips or check the indicated author's website for details, and contact him if in doubt.
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59. Jane Austen And Laurence Sterne
Did jane austen ever read Laurence Sterne s Tristram Shandy? There is some evidence in her letter of September 14, 1804.
http://www.mirror.org/ken.roberts/austen.sterne.html
Jane Austen and Laurence Sterne
For some time I have wondered whether Jane Austen had read Laurence Sterne's "Tristram Shandy". Both authors display great wit and honesty in their depiction of characters. "Tristram Shandy" slightly addresses the duties of clergy, a subject which interested Jane Austen. She certainly read "A Sentimental Journey Through France and Italy". She might also have read Sterne's "Sermons of Mr. Yorick". "Tristram Shandy" was such a notorious book that I thought perhaps Jane Austen had avoided it. She was not one to honour the merely notorious. Tristram Shandy is not "merely notorious" of course, but did Jane Austen think so? I recently ran across a reference to "Tristram Shandy" in one of Jane Austen's letters. In her letter of September 14, 1804 to her sister Cassandra, Jane Austen is describing the household arrangements during the family's visit to Lyme. She says: [character in "Sir Charles Grandison"]
[This letter is unfortunately not one of those available online.] "Uncle Toby's annuity" is a reference to Corporal Trim in "Tristram Shandy". Trim's real name was James Butler see T.S. Vol.II Ch.V. That volume of "Tristram Shandy" was published in 1760.

60. A Memoir Of Jane Austen (Table Of Contents)
A Memoir of jane austen by her nephew prepared by PJ LaBrocca.
http://labrocca.com/ja/index.html
A Memoir of Jane Austen
by her nephew
J.E. Austen-Leigh Downloads
Table of Contents
  • Chapter 1
    Introductory Remarks Birth of Jane Austen Her Family Connections Their Influence on her Writings
  • Chapter 2
    Description of Steventon Life at Steventon Changes of Habits and Customs in the last Century
  • Chapter 3
    Early Compositions Friends at Ashe A very old Letter Lines on the Death of Mrs Lefroy Observations on Jane Austen's Letter-writing Letters
  • Chapter 4
    Removal from Steventon Residence at Bath and at Southampton Settling at Chawton
  • Chapter 5
    Description of Jane Austen's Person, Character, and Tastes
  • Chapter 6
    Habits of Composition resumed after a long Interval First Publication The Interest taken by the Author in the Success of her Works
  • Chapter 7
    Seclusion from the Literary World Notice from the Prince Regent Correspondence with Mr Clarke Suggestions to alter her Style of Writing
  • Chapter 8
    Slow Growth of her Fame Ill success of first Attempts at Publication Two Reviews of her Works contrasted
  • Chapter 9
    Opinions expressed by eminent Persons Opinions of Others of less Eminence Opinion of American Readers
  • Chapter 10 Observations on the Novels
  • Chapter 11 Declining Health of Jane Austen Elasticity of her Spirits Her Resignation and Humility Her Death
  • Chapter 12 The cancelled Chapter (Chap. X) of Persuasion

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