Pride and Prejudice

eBook, 276 pages

Published June 7, 2017 by Amazon Classics.

ASIN:
B071SKHMDL

Love is in the air when five sisters discover that a wealthy and eligible bachelor is suddenly within reach. But it is his friend, the haughty Mr. Darcy, who becomes smitten. Unfortunately for him, the object of his affection is not so easily swayed.

One of the most popular characters in English literature, Elizabeth Bennet is intelligent, witty, well-spoken and ahead of her time. If the terrible rumors about Mr. Darcy are true, he doesn’t stand a chance. Yet not all gossip is to be believed when marriage, money, and reputations are on the line. Will Elizabeth and Mr. Darcy circumvent her haste, his ego, and society’s expectations to find love?

Written more than two centuries ago, Jane Austen’s enduring story of manners, family, and love continues to delight new generations of readers.

207 editions

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Pride And Prejudice is a difficult novel for me to review because, although this was my first reading of Austen's work, I have already encountered its essential storyline in televised adaptations and numerous other novels so I felt as though I was revisiting the book rather than coming to it fresh. I enjoyed the humour, especially Austen's partly-veiled observations on the predicament of women rendered useless without a husband and, of course, her wonderful characters. Austen had such a talent for observation and for just exaggerating foibles enough to make people such as Mrs Bennet and Lady Catherine ridiculous, but not unbelievable. Personally I wasn't convinced by Darcy's complete change of behaviour mid-book, but both he and Elizabeth have wonderfully sparkling conversations and spats with the great energy fairly leaping from the page. The repression of their social situation contrasts brilliantly with the obvious strength of their emotional attraction to …

Review of 'Pride and Prejudice' on 'Goodreads'

Thank you to NetGalley and Sweet Cherry Publishing for the e-copy of this book in exchange for an honest review.


Gemma Barder’s adaptation of Jane Austen’s classic novel ’Pride and Prejudice’ is spectacular.

Designed to introduce children to the 1813 novel, Barder has taken the time to ensure that whilst the story is simplified for a younger audience? It hasn't lost anything that has made Austen’s work one that has remained a favourite for the last two hundred years.

The illustrations are perfect and remind me of ones found in my own version of the original story. They work perfectly alongside the written word and I especially liked the way each sister was depicted in the ’introduction’ to the five Bennet sisters at the beginning of the short story. The illustrated letters were also a brilliant idea although I fear the Miss Bennets’ governess would have been close to fainting …

Review of 'Orgullo y Prejuicio' on 'Goodreads'

I liked the book because it is not only about love, it is about Elizabeth, a girl who is very proud and does not agree with the way the society tells women how to act. I liked that she is revellious and sometimes she is so proud you want to yell at her to stop it because not everyone's bad.

You grow with Elizabeth's feelings and way of seeing life, I guess. And it's all thanks to Austen's way of writing, the way she tells the story in a quiet and sometimes funny and other times infurating (because of Elizabeth) way.

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Subjects

  • Drama
  • Fiction
  • Literary Fiction
  • love stories
  • Romance
  • Classics