Selected Product: no picture available | Sense and Sensibility (Signet Classic) Paperback Author: Jane Austen Publisher: Signet Classics Release Date: 1961-05-01 ISBN-10: 0451524195 ISBN-13: 9780451524195 List Price: $3.95 Average Customer Rating: | | Pride and Prejudice (Bantam Classics) ISBN-10: 0553213105 ISBN-13: 9780553213102 List Price:$4.95 Emma (Penguin Classics) ISBN-10: 0141439580 ISBN-13: 9780141439587 List Price:$8.00 Northanger Abbey (Penguin Classics) ISBN-10: 0141439793 ISBN-13: 9780141439792 List Price:$7.00 Persuasion (Tor Classics) ISBN-10: 0812565886 ISBN-13: 9780812565881 List Price:$3.99 Mansfield Park (Norton Critical Editions) ISBN-10: 0393967913 ISBN-13: 9780393967913 List Price:$11.25 |
To use our price comparison to get the cheapest price, please click on the "Find the Cheapest Price" button located above for Sense and Sensibility (Signet Classic) by Jane Austen (ISBN-10: 0451524195, ISBN-13: 9780451524195). At this time we have not yet written a review for Sense and Sensibility (Signet Classic) by Jane Austen (ISBN-10: 0451524195, ISBN-13: 9780451524195). Please continue to keep checking back to this page as we are constantly adding reviews. Summaries and Customer Reviews are supplied by Amazon.com Jane Austen (1775-1817) is considered by many scholars to be the first great woman novelist. Her novels revolve around people, not events or coincidences. Miss Austen sets her novels in the upper middle class English country which was her own environment. Her novels have increased in stature over time. Her skills of writing, including a dry humor and a witty elegance of expression have attracted generations to her work. Miss Austen completed six novels and part of a seventh, "Sense and Sensibility", "Pride and Prejudice", "Mansfield Park", "Emma", "Northanger Abbey", "Persuasion" and the partial "Lady Susan". Quiet Vision publishes all seven. Austen - Timeless as ever | Customer Rating: | | Critical reviews of Austen's first book don't rate Sense and Sensibility as her best work. In any event, I find her sense of humor and grasp of the English language makes this book a must in any collection of Austen's works. It is well worth purchasing. Too, the Everyman's Library cover is finely done. This book will last on your shelf for years. | Great book--poor copy | Customer Rating: | | SENSE AND SENSIBILITY is an excellent book by one of the great authors of all time. However, the large-print volume (issued by Pavilion Press) that I purchased for my wife is one of the worst-bound books I have ever seen. The pages literally fell out as she was reading, no matter how careful she was. There are also numerous typographical errors throughout. This is a shame, because the format is quite attractive and the print size is very good. I wrote a letter of complaint to the publisher, but received no reply. | It Suits Me Well! | Customer Rating: | I love the narrator, I love her accent. It took me a little longer to figure out the whole story since I didn't catch her for the most part. But I think it is not uncommon for a foreigner to find some difficulties in getting used to her accent. I like British accent although sometimes I cannot understand them. | Let's try this review again.... | Customer Rating: | Okay, I wrote a review on this novel about 4 days ago, and I don't think it's going to show up on here, so I'll give it another try. I can't help but love Jane Austen. She is my guilty pleasure read, like a Jackie Collins of the early 19th century because her novels are just drenched in drama and scandal. They are not really a thinking man's novel, just fun stories to read. I also enjoy the romance aspects of her novels because they are classy, not like the trash smut you read in today's modern "romance" stories. I feel almost uncomfortable and embarrassed when I read a modern romance story. Well anyhow, when it comes to drama and scandal, Sense and Sensibility does not disappoint. When you commit to the story, it really takes you in. I really enjoyed the protagonist, Elinor, but I was unhappy with Austen's Marianne character. It seems as if Austen could truly identify with Elinor because she did a great job developing her character as level-headed, proud, and classy. Perhaps she took a little Elinor from herself? Now, in the beginning of the novel you get drawn in by Marianne. She commands a good third of the book with her story and her character starts off well developed. You get a true feeling for her impetuousness. She is emotional, passionate, wears her heart on her sleeve. The novel is so interesting until the end. The end completely disappoints. Now I don't know if Austen became uninspired at the end of the novel or just didn't know how to end it better, but it falls completely flat. Like I mentioned before, you get interested in this Marianne character and you know how she is, but then at the end she decides one day to become like Elinor?! Just like that?! An impetuous person like Marianne would not and could not do a 180 with their mannerisms. Then, Austen does no justice to Marianne by having her marry at the end of the novel. It is just so dubious it doesn't make sense. Austen also wraps up all the scandal and drama in almost 3 pages. How convenient! That was just bogus to me. But the rest of the story is so good I would still recommend this, especially to Austen fans. If I were to make a recommendation to a new Austen reader, I would recommend Pride and Prejudice over Sense and Sensibility. It is more concise and it is a shorter novel. | Good....Probably Not Austen's Best, However | Customer Rating: | I used to wonder why so many people preferred Pride and Prejudice over Sense and Sensibility. What differences were dynamic enough to make so many people sway? I read the novel and was intrigued, yet not as much as I was when reading Pride and Prejudice. Sense and Sensibility is a delightful story with characters easy to fall in love with. You automatically root for Elinor at the drop of a hat, and though we prefer to think of Marianne as someone completely different from ourselves, we resist reproaching her and root for her instead. Though I wouldn't call it Austen's best, this book is a great way to pass time, especially on a shaded porch swing in a drizzle. |
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