Author: Jane Austen
Pages: 249
Published: 1817
Publisher: Penguin Classics
Publisher: Penguin Classics
I never read a Jane Austen book until I had to read Persuasion in school
for my AS English Language and Literature. My teacher did not quite
like it (or so she says) cause she refers to it now as the P - word or
the book that must not be named.
I, however, didn't mind it at all. I like the time period so the context
was interesting. My thoughts often went wondering about the first time I
read it but I have probably read it four times by now and the more I do
the more I like it. Just after Christmas I had no motivation for
revision for my PPEs at all, but as one always has to I eventually sat
down and found that writing a Persuasion essay wasn't very bad at all. I
liked the plot, the characters, the setting and the context. It's not
very bad at all.
Captain Wentworth is not Austen's most famous romantic hero (Mr Darcy),
but he is probably one of the most vulnerable and emotional ones. 'You
pierce my soul'. Could you get anymore hyperbolic?
Plot Summary:
"Her last completed novel,
marrying witty social realism to a 'Cinderella' love story, Jane Austen's
"Persuasion" is edited with an introduction by Gillian Beer in
"Penguin Classics". Anne Elliot, twenty-seven and still single, seems
destined for spinsterhood. In her youth, she broke off an engagement to
penniless Captain Wentworth at the insistence of her friend Lady Russell,
acquiescing to the demands of her class at the expense of her happiness. But
when Wentworth returns from the Napoleonic wars rich and famous, Anne finds her
affection rekindled - even though Wentworth seems more interested in Anne's
friend Louisa Musgrove."
- Waterstones.com
My Rating:
6/10
It is a good classic book and I did enjoy studying it in school but it's a little cheesy and silly at points, possibly for the time it's written.
Other Books by Jane Austen:
Pride and Prejudice
Sense and Sensibility
Emma
Persuasion
Northanger Abbey
Mansfield Park
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