Author
Jane Austen
Birth Date
December 16, 1775
(41 Years)
Death Date
July 18, 1817
Associated Country
United Kingdom
Jane Austen was an English novelist whose keen observations of society, human nature, and relationships have made her one of the most celebrated writers in English literature. Born in Steventon, Hampshire, she was the daughter of a clergyman and spent much of her life within the social circles she would later portray in her fiction. Although her novels were published anonymously during her lifetime, they earned admiration for their wit, realism, and insightful characterizations.
Austen's novels explore themes of love, marriage, family, social class, and personal growth, often focusing on the lives and choices of women in Georgian and Regency England. Her writing is renowned for its sharp humor, elegant prose, and ability to reveal the complexities of human behavior through everyday interactions. Through memorable characters and carefully constructed narratives, she created works that continue to resonate with readers across generations.
Despite publishing only a small number of novels, Austen's influence on literature has been profound. Her works have inspired countless adaptations, retellings, and scholarly studies, and she is widely regarded as one of the greatest novelists in the English language. More than two centuries after her death, her stories remain among the most widely read and beloved works of classic literature.
Austen's novels explore themes of love, marriage, family, social class, and personal growth, often focusing on the lives and choices of women in Georgian and Regency England. Her writing is renowned for its sharp humor, elegant prose, and ability to reveal the complexities of human behavior through everyday interactions. Through memorable characters and carefully constructed narratives, she created works that continue to resonate with readers across generations.
Despite publishing only a small number of novels, Austen's influence on literature has been profound. Her works have inspired countless adaptations, retellings, and scholarly studies, and she is widely regarded as one of the greatest novelists in the English language. More than two centuries after her death, her stories remain among the most widely read and beloved works of classic literature.
Books
Northanger Abbey 1992
Northanger Abbey is a perfectly aimed literary parody that is also a withering satire of the commercial aspects of marriage among the English gentry at the turn of the nineteenth century. But most of...
Persuasion 1992
Anne Elliot, daughter of the snobbish, spendthrift Sir Walter Elliot, is a woman of quiet charm and deep feelings. When she was nineteen, she fell in love with—and was engaged to—a naval officer, the...
Mansfield Park 1992
At the center of Jane Austen's Mansfield Park is Fanny Price, the classic “poor cousin” who has been brought to live with the rich Sir Thomas Bertram and his wife as an act of charity. Over time,...
Its two heroines, Marianne and Elinor—so utterly unlike each other–both undergo the most violent passions when they are separated from the men they love. What differentiates them, and gives this...
Emma 1991
Twenty-one-year-old Emma Woodhouse is comfortably dominating the social order in the village of Highbury, convinced that she has both the understanding and the right to manage other people’s lives—for...
Pride and Prejudice 1991
In a remote Hertfordshire village, far off the good coach roads of George III's England, a country squire of no great means must marry off his five vivacious daughters. At the heart of this...