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Pride and Prejudice
Pride and Prejudice
Pride and Prejudice
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Pride and Prejudice

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Pride And Prejudice, the story of Mrs. Bennet's attempts to marry off her five daughters is one of the best-loved and most enduring classics in English literature. Excitement fizzes through the Bennet household at Longbourn in Hertfordshire when young, eligible Mr. Charles Bingley rents the fine house nearby. He may have sisters, but he also has male friends, and one of these—the haughty, and even wealthier, Mr. Fitzwilliam Darcy—irks the vivacious Elizabeth Bennet, the second of the Bennet girls. She annoys him. Which is how we know they must one day marry. The romantic clash between the opinionated Elizabeth and Darcy is a splendid rendition of civilized sparring. As the characters dance a delicate quadrille of flirtation and intrigue, Jane Austen's radiantly caustic wit and keen observation sparkle.

LanguageEnglish
PublisherBooklassic
Release dateJun 29, 2015
ISBN9789635255566
Author

Jane Austen

Jane Austen (1775-1817) was an English novelist whose works are among the most popular novels ever written. Her keen eye for social tension, and ear for taut, witty dialogue have delighted readers for centuries, while her novels have maintained historical importance through their analysis of the dependence of women on marriage to gain social standing and security. She has been widely adapted for both stage and screen, and continues to be among the most widely-read of late-18th-/early 19th-century writers.

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Reviews for Pride and Prejudice

Rating: 4.416343415603633 out of 5 stars
4.5/5

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  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    No wonder this book is a classic; it's awesome!
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Obviously the language is dated and heavy on narrative. Structurally, it's an excellent example of a 3-act play with multiple plot lines and surprising twists.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Forced myself to listen to it, because I kept giving up on reading after page 50. Love the BBC version with Colin Firth. The book, not so much. Definitely do not understand the Austen obsession.
  • Rating: 1 out of 5 stars
    1/5
    Oh gosh. This book is not for me. I made it to page 70 in a borrowed book, and returned it at that point rather than taking the person up on the offer to take it with me.
    The wife calling her husband 'Mr. Darcy' during their personal conversations with each other was hard to overlook after the fifth time.
    The underhanded and sneaky means of finding husbands for the females was annoying, but when it became more obvious that was the only goal in life for the female characters, I got truly discouraged and disappointed. Is this the 200 year old version of Twilight or 50 Shades of Grey?
    Just like in a Harlequin novel, the rouge vagrant of a man that the heroine initially despises was to become her object of undying love (or so I think, from what I've heard of the book over the past decades). And just like a Harlequin novel, I could not care less about these characters near the middle of the book than before I met them.
    I will try again in a few years in an attempt to see the greatness that others have seen. Just having a hard time right now thinking that I ever will enjoy it.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Very enjoyable as an audiobook.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    The Little BookwormElizabeth Bennett and Fitzwilliam Darcy meet and dislike each other, then through a series of meetings realize that first impressions do not always make the kindest.I haven't read Pride and Prejudice in a very long time so when the Everything Austen Challenge came along I decided to take advantage and do an all P&P list. Since it had been so long since I read it, it seemed only natural to start at the beginning. Oddly I found myself bored until Mr. Collins arrived (ironic). That's when the action started to pick up as much as it ever does in this book. The characters start moving locations and interacting in situations outside their normal places and then it starts to get good.I love how natural the relationship between Elizabeth and Darcy becomes and is, frankly, the archetype for this type of relationship. If this book was published now it would totally be considered chic lit. The meet cute, the fighting and misunderstanding, the declaration of love at the end, well, actually it has been made into chic lit through the Bridget Jones character. Anyway, P&P still holds up in my esteem and it was well worth re-reading.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    The Top Ten Things to know about the characters and character of Pride and Prejudice:•Jane Austen is observant in a way that could do you much credit or reveal you to be the most lamentable boor or ninny ever.•“Elizabeth Bennet is one of the greatest and most complex characters ever written.” That line’s lifted from the movie You’ve Got Mail. It’s got truth.•Mr. Bennet, Elizabeth’s father, is often sensible and well-humored, though not without defect even good humor cannot always compensate. One wonders if he has, in his parental supervisions and marital forbearance, support from something distilled.•Mrs. Bennet, Elizabeth’s mother, isn’t sensible and her good humor deserts her often. Yet, despite her follies and the vexations afforded by her family, she is set aglow by even small promise of desired events to come. That is a thing not to be scoffed at.•Elizabeth Bennet pays firm notice of Mr. Darcy’s prejudice; her pride is to interpret it prejudicially.•Mr. Darcy’s pride is to have a stick up his hind side for the longest time. Elizabeth Bennet, in her musings, somehow refrains from expressing her identical sentiments with identical words.•Mr. Wickham, a roguish fellow, boldfaces the grievances Elizabeth Bennet has with Mr. Darcy. The comparison has consequences and is a source of much that’s fun.•Lady Catherine’s genius is to put pride and prejudice in service of her very great admiration of her own greatness at endeavors she’s never attempted and emotions she’s never felt, thus calling to mind a person quite prominent in present-day U.S. politics.•The last third or so of the book is not as good as what came before. But keep on—Elizabeth Bennet does and that should suffice.•You might not be enchanted by Elizabeth Bennet. But if you are not, justice should petition that Lady Catherine (or her toady, Mr. Collins) become an affliction to your days.And that’s the true gen. Count on it.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    My favourite.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Title says it all.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I LOVE this book!
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Always a favorite
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    What can I say? An absolute favorite from seventh grade.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Who doesn't love this book? I mean, really. It's the quintessential love story that most of us base our romantic fantasies and reading preferences on. Even if you're the type to shy away from classic literature, you'll find this story accessible, relevant, and enjoyable.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    A beautiful love story full of biting humor, Pride & Prejudice has some of the most memorable, endearing characters in literary history. This book will be remembered and cherished long after you read it.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Jane Austen's Pride & Prejudice is probably her most popular novel. I have to admit; I read Austen's novel Emma first and didn't thoroughly enjoy it. Therefore, I put off Pride & Prejudice for months and months. Finally one day I decided to take a crack at it. At first I found once again the plot to be slow and dry. Once the characters were all introduced I really became engrossed with the story and setting. I immediately fell in love with Elizabeth and grew to feel sorry for her. Elizabeth is the second eldest of five daughters. She is completely misunderstood by everyone in her family except for her eldest sister Jane and her father. It was very obvious that Elizabeth’s mother favored Jane and was very anxious for her to be engaged to Mr. Bingley, a wealthy gentleman who just moved in to Netherfield Park. When Mr. Darcy was introduced, I thought he was very arrogant and rude and just a revolting man to be around. However, as the story and plot continued I began to like him more and more. It was really hard to get a handle on Mr. Darcy. Is he arrogant and rude or is he really shy and mysterious?Overall, I absolutely loved Austen’s Pride & Prejudice. I really got a feel for who most of the characters were and I loved the twists and turns. Austen did a fantastic job making it witty and comical. I would have given this novel 5 out of 5 stars, however, I did find it to be dry in parts and found myself skipping paragraphs and even a page or two at times and didn’t really feel I was missing anything. I highly recommend this book to anyone who loves a witty romance novel.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Returned to a classic as my library offered no attractive newer options and I was well rewarded by a reread as a mature--very--adult. 'The marriage game' to use Eugenides' phrase in its most sophisticated and subtle rendition. In its most essential lines a typical lady romance, but its sensibility to the social context of the times brings it to another level altogether, plus that something magical of an artist's(author's) unique expression. As I sometimes felt I was wading through the oblique and rather artificial for our time's dialogue, where people rarely spoke openly, I wondered how the book could still be so absorbing. But the editor I think hit it spot on saying that difference can be fascinating. So in that sense it was interesting as a historical novel, bringing alive the context of the times, and the same holds for the rather circumscribed setting and actors of the genteel English countryside. Again I wondered how these so different and 'irrelevant' characters could hold my interest whereas in the contemporary --peerless for some-- "Corrections" I ended up saying I just don't care about them. I think likely because the latter were so extremely self-absorbed, selfish in their mundane problems, whereas in the former there is balance and retrospection rather than absorption. And if I don't give it a fifth star, it's basically because of the light romantic theme and of the 'distant' to us setting, which are also the main points for giving it four stars.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    When I started my reading list for 2017, I decided to go heavy on the classics, those books that always appear on those Read These Books Before You Die lists, 100 Greatest Books, blah-blah-blah. So I read it. It was okay, but I wasn’t exactly bowled over, it was a bit stiff and stilted. Not surprising considering the setting, plot, etc. “Oh, Lady Frillypants and Lord Salsburywichshireford! What an honor to see you at our daughter’s ball! Fa-la-la!” It wasn’t horrible, and I’m glad to have read it, but I did remove the other Jane Austen novels I had put on my list. One was enough.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Oh what can I say about this book, or any Jane Austen book, that hasn't already been said. And by people who are more intelligent than me. I have always been a fan of Jane Austen but, surprisingly, I have never read any of her books until now. Not that I haven't wanted to but school, after school activities, and many other little things were in the way. Resulting in me not having a chance to read it until a couple of weeks ago, but having started it about ten times.

    I love this book. I knew I would. A beautiful, engaging, wonderful book. I have always thought I was born in the wrong time. Although, I want the fashions I would love them with the values of the 21st century. But the book has captivated me and Jane Austen as gained another fan.

    Elizabeth was a refreshing, lively, stubborn young woman who in some ways is ahead of her time. Her sisters and parents are all amazing characters who are living in the world were girls are supposed to be married and have children. However, Elizabeth wanted to marry for love and in walks Mr. Darcy who turns her world on end. My love for this book cannot be expressed in words, nor will I ever be able to.

    5/5
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    The absolute embodiment of the Romance novel. The style, though lovely and expressive in its own peculiar, is outdated for the genre today. The characters though are still the paragons of "boy meets girl" plots, imitated and copied millions of time - and usually worse than in the original.Karen Savage did a superb job in the Librivox reading, giving every character their very own quirks. Especially Mr. Collins and Mrs. Bennet were as hilarious as they were supposed to be.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    I gave a 3 due to the story cause it was just a simple love story set among rich people blah blah blah; I’ve been recently watching Downton Abbey set 100 years later and not much has changed; the writing itself however is excellent in itself; it would be awesome to see modern story writers use language so effectively like Austen, Shelly, Hugo, or Wells.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    The novel Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen is confusing but also enjoyable. This novel is about the Bennets who have five unmarried daughters. Mrs. Bennet is eager for her daughters to marry a man of good fortune. Jane is the oldest daughter and also the prettiest. Elizabeth is the second oldest then Mary who is very serious. Then is Kitty who is not as much as a flirt as Lydia, who is the youngest. When Bingley comes to Nether field Mrs. Bennet intends to have one of her daughters marry him. Jane and Bingley have a connection, which is ruined by his friend Mr. Darcy. Mr. Darcy admires Elizabeth but she dislikes him because he doesn’t seem to be much of a gentle men and she also heard horrible things about him from his old friend Mr. Wickham. When Elizabeth hears Mr. Darcy’s side of the story she doesn’t know who to believe. After she realizes Mr. Darcy is right she doesn’t warn her youngest sisters about Mr. Wickham. Elizabeth feels as if it’s her fault when Lydia ends up with Mr. Wickham. While Jane still has a broken heart Mr. Bingley comes back to see her and the reconnect. Elizabeth’s feeling toward Mr. Darcy change and the soon establish a relationship. I enjoyed reading this novel because Jane and Bingley end up together and so do Elizabeth and Mr. Darcy. The character I disliked from this novel is Lydia because she’s only 15 and the only thing she does is flirt with men. I also don’t like Lydia because she’s not nice to her sister Mary and her parents don’t do anything about it.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I read this (for the third time) to get a jump-start on the bicentennial. As I began it it was enjoyable but felt a little repetitive like I remembered virtually every word and scene and was not getting anything new out of them. But the time I got to Darcy's letter I was completely sucked in and absorbed as if I was reading it for the first time. And unaccountably, I had completely forgotten the magnificent interview between Elizabeth and Lady De Bourgh near the end of the book so at least that felt new to me. Overall, very much worth re-reading ever now and then.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    What a classic. No matter how many times you read it, it never gets old. Though not quite as good as Sense & Sensibility (in my humble opinion), I still "greatly esteem" this book. Mr. Darcy is and always will be my favorite fictional character. Thank you Mr. Darcy for setting the bar so high that I know without a doubt I will die a lonely cat lady surrounded by empty boxes of wine. Pride & Prejudice can be summed up in one sentence, "Two people who strongly dislike each other end up falling madly in love despite their initial prejudices." Even though I spoiled the entire plot for you, you should still read it. Ladies, you will have new standards for men and gentlemen... you will hopefully learn how to properly woo a lady. Also... the only movie Mr. Darcy to nail it is Colin Firth, don't even try to argue with me on that one!
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Pride and Prejudice is the classic romance that tells the story of Elizabeth Bennet, one of five sisters, for whom Mrs. Bennet’s only goal in life is to find five husbands. When rich and eligible Mr. Bingley and his friend the unpleasant and very proud seeming Mr. Darcy move in to a large house in the neighborhood, Mrs. Bennet is ecstatic at Mr. Bingley’s preference for her oldest daughter Jane. Elizabeth is determined from the beginning to hate Mr. Darcy and even more when he conspires to keep Mr. Bingley away from Jane because of the Bennet’s firmly middle class existence in comparison to Bingley and Darcy’s much higher standing. In this engaging story that spans an entire year we see society, expectations, manners, and first impressions and how many things change and many things stay exactly the same. I read this book as apart of a personal quest to read the books before seeing the movies whenever possible, and while their are several movies of Pride and Prejudice they were not actually the inspiration. The youtube series The Lizzy Bennet Diaries which created by Hank Green of who I am a fan and then strongly recommended to my by my older brother whose opinion I greatly treasure, meant that it was time to read Pride and Prejudice (that and finding a good copy for 99 cents and goodwill). There are many characters in Pride and Prejudice and often (especially in the beginning) there names get confusing and hard to keep straight, but our main cast have very strong characteristics that become well defined early. I did however find it a very strange feature of this book that the characters with the most strongly defined characteristics and sympathetic personalities were only the females. It is likely either a symptom of the society in which the story takes place or the authors sex (most likely both) that lead to this strange lack of understanding of the male characters. While I came to like the male characters of the story I still felt that I did not know them very well, while there were several female characters out side of our narrator that I feel like I know just as well as my best friends. Every character however felt like a real and complete person even those in the periphery. When it comes to plot, Pride and Prejudice is split in to three volumes of about equal length that split the story by its major events. (I am trying to not provide any spoilers for while this is a classic novel I read it with no knowledge of the out come of the story and greatly enjoyed it that way.) While I have read some reviews that complain that not enough of substance really happens in the story I would say: one, I don’t believe that to be true and, two isn’t that a great deal like real life? Every day life is not grand events and constant happenings some times its a few parties and walking in to town so as not to be too borred, or even looking after a sick friend. Pride and Prejudice feels real and honest in its events just as it does in its people. After the first few chapters in which very little happens and the distinctions between the five Miss. Bennet’s, Mrs. Bennet, Miss, Bingley, Mr. Bingley and Mr. Bennet get really confusing. The book really starts to find its stride. While there were times all the way through the book were a bit of language would trip me up or the usage of a particular word would be so vastly different then its common usage now that I would need a moment to figure out its exact meaning, over all this book is not a hard read. With even a small understanding of the society in which these events take place (a watching of Downton Abby helps with this and also its just awesome), and some care and attention payed to the book as your reading it to make sure that you are really comprehending the text It should not take more hen a few days to read. This is yet another book (like Count of Monte Cristo) that my mother would give me that look and say “Well honey they are generally classic for a reason.” I found the book to be truly beautiful and moving, Jane Austen is a fantastic author I suggest it to just about any one and I can’t wait to continue my way thought her works.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Probably my #1 OTP of all time, Elizabeth Bennet and Mr. Fitzwilliam Darcy. Oh, how I adore this book. I've read it countless times, watched the different adaptations countless times, and read so many P&P retellings.... The writing in this novel is superb. Favorite book of all time.
    I love the humor in this book. Mr. Collins is comically ridiculous and his lines always make me giggle. Lady Catherine definitely deserves a pie in the face. And I love to hate Mr. Wickham. Such a great cast of characters all in one novel.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    To review Pride and Prejudice in this day and age seems preposterous so I'll make it short and sweet and focus on the reading of this audiobook. I was, of course, predisposed to like it, as I am a Jane Austen fan. However for a single narrator to read Pride and Prejudice is extremely difficult with most of the book consisting of conversation and such a wide variety of characters waltzing in and out, that a great many distinctive voices are needed. I must confess that my favorite readings of Pride and Prejudice use a full cast of readers. So considering that Carolyn Seymour, the sole reader for this version, had a hard task to accomplish I think she did exceedingly well. All the main characters have clear distinguishable ways of speaking that suit their personalities. Ms. Seymour plays with the story allowing the listener to fully enjoy the flirtacious fun, Mrs. Bennet's delightful absurdity, and Darcy's grave, sometimes snobbish, forbearance. It is very pleasant to work through a day with Carolyn Seymour reading Jane Austen to me!
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Almost ten years ago, I read this, my very Jane Austen novel, and I was completely in love with the book. In the ensuing years I gobbled up every other single book of Austen’s I could get my hands on. Recently my book club decided to read Pride and Prejudice and I was shocked to learn that I was the only one in the group who had read anything by Austen. Keep in mind, I’m the youngest in the group by a solid 30 years. How had they missed the brilliance of one of my favorite authors? Anyway, the book club’s decision prompted me to re-read my second favorite Austen novel (Persuasion is still my fav). It was such an incredibly rewarding experience. The first time I read it I mainly focused on the romance between Elizabeth and Darcy. Second time around I noticed everything else, and there’s so much! **If you haven’t read the book, fair warning, the plot is pretty well known, but I do discuss things that might ruin it for you if you really don’t know how it ends.**For one thing, Austen’s wit is unmatched. Austen is sometimes considered boring because there's not a lot of action, but she's so funny and you can't forget the characters she creates. The stuffy Lady Catherine, the pious Mr. Collins, the insufferable Miss Bingley, the utterly unlikeable Mr. Darcy, who of course becomes so lovable; they are all such divine creations. Elizabeth, our heroine, can be stubborn and judgmental, but whatever her faults, her love of her sister Jane supersedes all else. I love that Jane’s happiness is more important to her than her own. It says a lot about her that she puts someone else’s welfare above all else. If there’s one thing that Austen could truly capture, it’s the love between two sisters. “Elizabeth instantly reads her feelings, and at that moment of solicitude for Wickham, resentment against his enemies, and everything else gave way before the hope of Jane’s being in the fairest way for happiness.” It’s easy to forget that turning down a marriage proposal was a huge deal during that time period, especially when you had no other prospects. Lizzy doesn’t just turn down one proposal, she turns down Darcy once and then Mr. Collins multiple times. And Collins isn’t the sharpest knife in the drawer. After Eliza turns him down four times in a row, he still thinks she’s being coy and says, “You are uniformly charming” and is convinced she will still accept him. A wonderful example of Austen’s famous social commentary is the section which talks about the public opinion on Darcy and Wickham. First everyone loves Wickham, then they hate him, they hate Darcy and then they love him, but it’s rarely based on their actual experience with the individuals. They are swayed by the merest whisper of a scandal or controversy. “…everybody was pleased to think how much they had always disliked Mr. Darcy before that had known anything of the matter.” One of Darcy’s main objections to Jane (as a possible wife for Bingley) is her family, which can be a bit embarrassing. I loved reading the section that chronicles Elizabeth and Darcy's dinner at Lady Catherine’s house. The pompous old woman (Darcy's aunt) is blatantly insulting Lizzy and he is mortified. It’s a great reminder that everyone has family members that they aren’t always proud of, but you can’t judge someone because of that.“Mr. Darcy looked a little ashamed of his aunt’s ill breeding, and made no answer.” Charlotte’s role in the novel completely changed for me this time. When I first read it I was only 18 and I couldn’t believe she settled for Mr. Collins. Now I’m 27, the same age she is in the book, and I understand her decision so much better. She was making a huge sacrifice. She had no prospects, she was getting "old" and she knew she would just be a burden to her family. I still wouldn’t have done it, but now I really get it. It was a different time and she knew this might be her only shot at having her own household. Her decision also underlines how unusual Lizzy’s decision to turn down Collins was. Another interesting element is Mr and Mrs. Bennet's relationship. Although she is a fluttering idiot and at first glance, he's hilarious and likable, I found myself really frustrated with him by the end of the book. He completely ignores Lizzy’s warning about Lydia’s behavior. He doesn’t take it seriously and doesn’t realize his mistake until it’s too late. He didn't think ahead and plan for his daughters' futures, thus putting them in a horrible position. He also treats his wife with utter disdain. Even though she incredibly annoying, he should at least show her some affection or respect because she's the mother of his children. Lizzy’s views of married life are rooted in her own parent’s unhappy marriage. It’s the only real example of how a husband and wife interact that she's witnessed for her whole life. She’s particularly horrified by Charlotte’s marriage because she sees it as the joining of two people who are so different in intelligence and temperament, just like her parents, and she’s worried it will lead to unhappiness for her friend. That’s why it was so important for her to end up with someone who was her intellectual equal; she needed a partner she could respect. “Elizabeth, however, had never been blind to the impropriety of her father’s behavior as a husband. She had always seen it with pain; but respecting his abilities, and grateful for his affectionate treatment of herself, she endeavored to forget what she could not overlook, and to banish from her thoughts that continual breach of conjugal obligation and decorum which, in exposing his wife to the contempt of her own children, was so highly reprehensible.” The problem with watching too many movie and miniseries versions of P&P is that I sometimes forget what is and isn’t in the book. It always bothered me that in the movie versions, Elizabeth and Wickham seem so buddy-buddy in the scene where they chat at the end, but I’d forgotten that in the book she’s still seething inside. She just acts nice so she can get out of the conversation.“…she had walked fast to get rid of him; and unwilling for her sister’s sake to provoke him.” P. 264I’d also forgotten that there’s a whole section where Lizzy has fallen in love with Darcy (after learning what he did for Lydia, etc.) and she thinks there’s no way he still likes her. They’re at a party together and she follows Mr. Darcy around the room with her eyes, and then gets mad at herself for being so silly. I love that we get to see her a bit vulnerable and girlish. She’s fallen for him and so her defenses are down. I love how the end of the book gives a summary of what happened to everyone in the following years. Jane and Bingley move closer to the newly-married Darcys. Lydia tries to weasel favors out of the Darcys, but gets turned down (ha). Kitty is improved by Jane and Lizzy’s new positions in society and is kept from Lydia’s company. Lizzy and Darcy’s sister get along so well, and Elizabeth maintains her spunk and ever shocks her new sister-in-law with how she talks to her husband, just brilliant. A few things I had forgotten about P&P: 1) Elizabeth goes by Lizzy and Eliza too, I love that. 2) Kitty’s real name is Catherine 3) Mr. Collins is described as “tall, heavy-looking” and is only 25. Because of the movies I had begun to picture him as short. 4) The book says about Mrs. Bennet, “Eliza was the least dear to her of all her children,” – ouch, even if you don’t get along well with your mother, that’s still pretty harsh. “There are few people whom I really love, and fewer of whom I think well. The more I see of the world, the more am I dissatisfied with it; and every day confirms my belief of the inconsistency of all human characters, and of the little dependence that can be placed on the appearance of either merit or sense.” – Elizabeth
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    After watching the Lizzie Bennett diaries I thought I'd re-read this as its been ages. Probably going to take a while I've been busy but it's nice to be able to read a copy right in the app!
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    This was my first book of Jane Austen that I've read and boy was it good! I loved every minute of it! It was beautiful, romantic, intriguing and just wonderful! I have been wanting to read this for a long time, I just always put it off. My sister-in-law read it recently and rated it 5 stars, so I thought it had to be really good. I literally could not put this down, any free time I had, I was glued to this book.Elizabeth was such a great character and I loved how her and Jane were so close and that they were always there for each other. Also, just the personality of Elizabeth was so interesting, she seemed very different from the rest of the woman from that time period. Very bold and knew what she wanted from a husband. Jane was great too, so sweet and kind. I disliked Mr.Darcy at the beginning but as time went on, fell in love with him too! I will definitely be reading more from Jane Austen and will be watching the movie. I've heard that the movie is really good too!
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I mean, it's Mr. Darcy for crying out loud. Go read it and fall in love with him like everyone else has!

Book preview

Pride and Prejudice - Jane Austen

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