Jane Austen discussion
General questions & discussions
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What has reading her books meant to you?
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I agree about the wicked part Andrea - they just don't know what they are missing and we are the ones who seem intellectual as we have read her works.
For me she makes me feel happy but sad at the same time. I am a true romance so naturally JA is perfect for me and love all the intriguing stories etc but it her novels also make me wish to be back in that time with the manners and dancing etc etc. I hope to one day find an austenesque man who will treat me properly, like in her Novels :)
JA has brought me through some hard times and I am always glad to read a few chapters or watch an adaptation.
Just hearing 'It is a truth universally acknowledged ...' and I feel better already! :D
For me she makes me feel happy but sad at the same time. I am a true romance so naturally JA is perfect for me and love all the intriguing stories etc but it her novels also make me wish to be back in that time with the manners and dancing etc etc. I hope to one day find an austenesque man who will treat me properly, like in her Novels :)
JA has brought me through some hard times and I am always glad to read a few chapters or watch an adaptation.
Just hearing 'It is a truth universally acknowledged ...' and I feel better already! :D
I actually started reading the books when i was going through a very difficult phase and i was very very negative about life. Jane austen became somewhat like a companion....i mean meeting hilarious but realistic characters like mrs bennet, collins and even miss bingley(ueah she is just too dumb to be counted as a villain :p) was so refreshing and it actually made me feel positive in a strange way....some how some people really influence your personality when you are growing up and i am really proud to say 8 gals influenced me...Lizzy,Emma,Elinor, Marriane, Anne, Catherine( I love her! She sounds really cute ryt??), Fanny and last but definitely not the least Jane! Ok this really sounds like i am giving a speech at some awards ceremomy!:P thanx Austen!! :-)
that is amazing!! similar story for me i suppose. She helped me through a really tough patch at school as it is a truth universally acknowledged that reading the line 'it is a truth universally acknowledged' and you feel better immediatley! (sorry - couldn't resist!!)
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Haha!! I noe!!i mean wenever i hear or read that line anywere i literally start jumping! Jane austen..jane austen!! I have got an older sis and even she loves that boo k! ( mainly coz of darcy :p)
The female characters inspire me) And I'm pretty sure the most influential thing I EVER read EVER was Miss Bingley's explanation of what an accomplished woman is. The characters are something like the characters of fairytales ... they represent certain virtues and vices, but then they are absolutely real, old friends to cuddle up with on a winter's night)
They make me remember what life could have been like if I was born in a different time & place. Sometimes I wish that I could go back in time and live like that. I love the clothes, the characters, and especially the settings.
I always wish I could go back to those times. I just sounds better. The manners the clothes and everything are just better!!! And real men wear cravats!! *sigh* I think about it too much...
I started reading Jane Austen when I was 14th and, in that period, I was only interested in the plot: will Mr Darcy and Elizabeth be together? Then I read her novel again and again and every time I did I found out something new, some details I've missed the previous time, some new meanings in her perfect words.
I don't think I would like to live in Jane Austen time. It wasn't only a matter of balls and dresses and courtship. Life was quite simple for wealthy women, but just think about Elizabeth. She found Mr. Darcy (because it's a novel), but probably in real life she would have to marry Mr Collins, just to be sure to have an income in the future.
Now we are far more indipendent and we can really choose.
Nevertheless Jane Austen is and will be my favourite writer because she interprets human beings as anyone else. The period is different, but I believe that everyone knows someone arrogant and assuming just like Mr Collins and Caroline Bingley, someone self-pitying like Mrs Bennet or imputent like Henry Crawford.
Unfortunately the first bit you wrote is true.... But I try not to think about it.
And I agree with the last paragraph!!
And I agree with the last paragraph!!
I guess for me, the books of Jane Austen I've read have been able to give me a sense of hope, whenever I'm feeling down and in despair of romance - it helps me to believe in the beauty of life. And the movies of the books - the music in them always makes me feel so happy. Watching the 1995 Sense and Sensibility has helped me through a tough time before, and if I wasn't for Austen I would never have these books or movies.Plus, it does make me feel a little bit smarter and sophisticated. :D Like I've legitimately read classic books that some silly people can't get through for some reason, I can't imagine why...
Reading Jane Austen gave me English voices in my head. Honestly, I hear the character chitty chatty in my head and the adaptions make it worst :D. Additionally, she gave me confidence that if I care to pursue my dream to be a writer, I can be great like all the gents in the business.I absolutely love books never picked a favourite reader but the last few weeks had me thinking. Once again, I had that insatiable appetite for anything Austen related and I utter good gracious, she is my favourite.
Becca!
They have helped me through tough times as well! :)
And we should be proud really... We have read some proper classics and understood them! My friends can't understand them. Some adults have trouble as well. It does feel good to say you have read them! ;)
They have helped me through tough times as well! :)
And we should be proud really... We have read some proper classics and understood them! My friends can't understand them. Some adults have trouble as well. It does feel good to say you have read them! ;)
Marren:
I am English but I have the voices in my head and the adaptations don't help! ;)
She is also my favourite author! Her books will always please!
I am English but I have the voices in my head and the adaptations don't help! ;)
She is also my favourite author! Her books will always please!
Soph wrote: "Becca! They have helped me through tough times as well! :)
And we should be proud really... We have read some proper classics and understood them! My friends can't understand them. Some adults ha..."
Haha, yes, it does make me feel quietly proud. I remember when I first started reading Pride and Prejudice for a reading assignment I was avoiding it and couldn't get through it, but when I finally decided to start it again and read it properly, I absolutely loved it! Obviously her writing style is very different to most authors because of the time she was writing in, but it just makes sense to me. And it's so lovely, like returning to an old friend, when you have been reading other books and then you come back to Jane Austen books - the style and the romance and feel of them just makes people like us feel at home.
I totally agree!!
The regency era is such a great era! I love it! The manners and social rules and clothing and everything! Jane Austen was truly talented. It was an english assessment in which I had to read P&P and that was what set me off onto the world of Jane Austen!!
The regency era is such a great era! I love it! The manners and social rules and clothing and everything! Jane Austen was truly talented. It was an english assessment in which I had to read P&P and that was what set me off onto the world of Jane Austen!!
This is such a lovely thread, seeing what Jane means to people, such a long time after her death.For me, I have never read any book that I enjoyed as much as Pride & Prejudice. Jane wrote the first romantic comedy, for me. And whenever I'm feeling ill or low, reading or watching Jane Austen books/adaptations always cheers me up!
I am an author too so she's provided a lot of inspiration for me!
From a personal standpoint, I've found comfort in knowing a woman living 200 years in the past envisioned very much the same troubling relationship themes that have run through my own family. The moment I read their stories, I identified immediately with Lizzie and Elinor.From a writer's standpoint, I've learned a lot about building tension between characters while fleshing out the scene and setting - not that anything I write is remotely like her wonderful work. :)
That is such a good point and so true. A lot of what she wrote is still relevant today and still applies, especially about relationships.
Very true - society and the way we go about life has changed but people, feelings, relationships are very much as they always were!
Me too. I sometimes think I was born in the wrong era. I'd like to have live back then, but only if I came from a rich family!
Sarah Louise wrote: "Me too. I sometimes think I was born in the wrong era. I'd like to have live back then, but only if I came from a rich family!"LOL! Rich would definitely be good in that era, vs. not so rich.
Same! After reading the moves my vocabulary increased dramatically! My friends noticed and keep saying that I now speak (to use their words) very 'Jane Austeny' ;)
hehe, Jane Austeny, I like it! :DI am not sure about remembering all of them but at times, my brain beserk but then I go "I know what means" and I think and then I go "oh yeahhhh, I saw this word in NA, or in P etc."
Whenever I'm reading Jane Austen and Georgette Heyer I start adopting their sentence structures and the odd word or two, I don't mean to but it happens ;P
Heehe, you guys are funny. I too have found that reading Austen has bettered my vocab, but it's more after watching JA adaptions that my speech becomes, um, more refined. :D
Yes! The sentence structure definitely!
One of the words that has creeped in a LOT would be.... Acquaintance!
One of the words that has creeped in a LOT would be.... Acquaintance!
I use amiable and agreeable more often. And just speak better English in general, esp. Soon after watching a lot of adaptations in a row :)



I think her books make me feel optimistic. It is hard to be in a bad mood after a few chapters, or a Jane movie! The romance and integrity of the stories make me want to share them with others, but at the same time, hold them close to myself! Does that even make sense? Also, (get ready for the wicked part) having read JA also makes me feel the tiniest bit superior to people who have not read her! It's like, "what do you mean you can't answer that Jeopardy question?" However, I guess mostly the books make me feel happy, satisfied, and longing for a more decent, civilized culture. Long live the memory of Jane Austen! Huzzah!