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  <id>887</id>
  <title>Pride and Prejudice</title>
  <author>Jane Austen</author>
  <image>http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/41S3F3REXGL._SX80_.jpg</image>
  <rating>9</rating>
  <description>For over 150 years, Pride And Prejudice has remained one of the most popular novels in the English language. Jane Austen herself called this brilliant work her "own darling child." 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&amp;#8212;the haughty, and even wealthier, Mr. Fitzwilliam Darcy&amp;#8212;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.</description>
  <reviews_count>21049</reviews_count>
</entity>
<entity>
  <id>434</id>
  <title>Sense and Sensibility</title>
  <author>Jane Austen</author>
  <image>http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/51l4eJLCH-L._SX80_.jpg</image>
  <rating>8</rating>
  <description>In 1811, Jane Austen&#8217;s first published work, Sense and Sensibility, marked the debut of England&#8217;s premier novelist of manners. Believing that &#8220;3 or 4 families in a country village is the very thing to work on,&#8221; she created a brilliant tragicomedy of flirtation and folly. Romantic walks through lush Devonshire and genteel dinner parties at a stately manor draw two pretty sisters into the schemes and manipulations of landed gentry determined to marry wisely and well. Neither sense nor sensibility can guarantee happiness for either&#8212;as romantic Marianne falls prey to a dangerous rascal, and reasonable Elinor loses her heart to a gentleman already engaged. Wonderfully entertaining yet subtle and probing in its characterizations, Sense and Sensibility richly displays the supreme artistry of a great English novelist.</description>
  <reviews_count>4491</reviews_count>
</entity>
<entity>
  <id>937</id>
  <title>Emma</title>
  <author>Jane Austen</author>
  <image>http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/41aRcnMLOdL._SX80_.jpg</image>
  <rating>8</rating>
  <description>Emma Woodhouse is a wealthy, exquisite, and thoroughly self-deluded young woman who has "lived in the world with very little to distress or vex her."

Jane Austen exercises her taste for cutting social observation and her talent for investing seemingly trivial events with profound moral significance as Emma traverses a gentle satire of provincial balls and drawing rooms, along the way encountering the sweet Harriet Smith, the chatty and tedious Miss Bates, and her absurd father Mr. Woodhouse&#8211;a memorable gallery of Austen's finest personages. Thinking herself impervious to romance of any kind, Emma tries to arrange a wealthy marriage for poor Harriet, but refuses to recognize her own feelings for the gallant Mr. Knightley. What ensues is a delightful series of scheming escapades in which every social machination and bit of "tittle-tattle" is steeped in Austen's delicious irony. Ultimately, Emma discovers that "Perfect happiness, even in memory, is not common."

Virginia Woolf called Jane Austen "the most perfect artist among women," and Emma Woodhouse is arguably her most perfect creation. Though Austen found her heroine to be a person whom "no one but myself will much like," Emma is her most cleverly woven, riotously comedic, and pleasing novel of manners.</description>
  <reviews_count>4162</reviews_count>
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  <id>185882</id>
  <title>Persuasion</title>
  <author>Jane Austen</author>
  <image>http://a4.ak.lscdn.net/system/uploads/3c234ace-d190-4155-b455-57a4113dd24d/autoscale-80.png</image>
  <rating>8</rating>
  <description>Persuasion celebrates romantic constancy in an era of turbulent change. Written as the Napoleonic Wars were ending, the novel examines how a woman can at once remain faithful to her past and still move forward into the future. Anne Elliot seems to have given up on present happiness and has resigned herself to living off her memories. More than seven years earlier she complied with duty: persuaded to view the match as imprudent and improper, she broke off her engagement to a naval captain with neither fortune, ancestry, nor prospects. However, when peacetime arrives and brings the Navy home, and Anne encounters Captain Wentworth once more, she starts to believe in second chances. Jane Austen's last completed novel features a heroine much older and wiser than her predecessors in earlier books, and presents a more intimate and sober tale of a love found long after such happiness had been deemed hopeless. This edition includes an appendix giving the original ending of Persuasion.</description>
  <reviews_count>3604</reviews_count>
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<entity>
  <id>3263</id>
  <title>Mansfield Park</title>
  <author>Jane Austen</author>
  <image>http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/41oDiPzizCL._SX80_.jpg</image>
  <rating>8</rating>
  <description>Begun in 1811 at the height of Jane Austen's writing powers and published in 1814, Mansfield Park marks a conscious break from the tone of her first three novels, Northanger Abbey, Sense and Sensibility, and Pride and Prejudice, the last of which Austen came to see as 'rather too light.' Fanny Price is unlike any of Austen's previous heroines, a girl from a poor family brought up in a splendid country house and possessed of a vast reserve of moral fortitude and imperturbability. She is very different from Elizabeth Bennet, but is the product of the same inspired imagination. Mansfield Park shows Austen as a mature novelist with an almost unparalleled ability to render character and an acute awareness of her world and how it was changing. Through the stories of Fanny Price, the Bertrams, and the Crawfords, she tackles the themes of faith and constancy and the threat that metropolitan manners could pose to a rural way of life. Mansfield Park is as amusing as any of Austen's novels, but, according to the critic Tony Tanner, it is also arguable that it is 'her most profound novel (indeed... it is one of the most profound novels of the nineteenth century).'</description>
  <reviews_count>2296</reviews_count>
</entity>
<entity>
  <id>435</id>
  <title>Northanger Abbey (Modern Library Classics)</title>
  <author>Jane Austen</author>
  <image>http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/51aoe+5THWL._SX80_.jpg</image>
  <rating>8</rating>
  <description>Jane Austen&amp;#8217;s first novel, Northanger Abbey&amp;#8212;published posthumously in 1818&amp;#8212;tells the story of Catherine Morland and her dangerously sweet nature, innocence, and sometime self-delusion. Though Austen&amp;#8217;s fallible heroine is repeatedly drawn into scrapes while vacationing at Bath and during her subsequent visit to Northanger Abbey, Catherine eventually triumphs, blossoming into a discerning woman who learns truths about love, life, and the heady power of literature. The satirical Northanger Abbey pokes fun at the gothic novel while earnestly emphasizing caution to the female sex.This Modern Library Paperback Classic is set from the first edition of 1818.</description>
  <reviews_count>1959</reviews_count>
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<entity>
  <id>2373647</id>
  <title>Pride and Prejudice and Zombies: The Classic Regency Romance -- Now With Ultraviolent Zombie Mayhem!</title>
  <author>Jane Austen and Seth Grahame-Smith</author>
  <image>http://a2.ak.lscdn.net/system/uploads/d196b7f4-5ea6-b652-860a-034fc70e9fdf/autoscale-80.png</image>
  <rating>7</rating>
  <description>So begins Pride and Prejudice and Zombies, an expanded edition of the beloved Jane Austen novel featuring all-new scenes of bone-crunching zombie mayhem. As our story opens, a mysterious plague has fallen upon the quiet English village of Meryton-and the dead are returning to life! Feisty heroine Elizabeth Bennet is determined to wipe out the zombie menace, but she's soon distracted by the arrival of the haughty and arrogant Mr. Darcy. What ensues is a delightful comedy of manners with plenty of civilized sparring between the two young lovers- and even more violent sparring on the blood-soaked battlefield. Can Elizabeth vanquish the spawn of Satan? And oversome the social prejudices of the class-conscious landed genttry? Complete with romance, heartbreak, swordfighs, cannibalism, and thousands of rotting corpses, Pide and Prejudice and Zombies transforms a masterpiece of world literature into something you'd actually want to read.</description>
  <reviews_count>1769</reviews_count>
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  <id>1790037</id>
  <title>The Jane Austen Book Club</title>
  <author>Karen Joy Fowler</author>
  <image>http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/51ZNAJT7H8L._SX80_.jpg</image>
  <rating>6</rating>
  <description>A sublime comedy of contemporary manners, this is the novel Jane Austen might well have written had she lived in twenty-first- century California.  Nothing ever moves in a straight line in Karen Joy Fowler's fiction, and in her latest, the complex dance of modern love has never been so devious or so much fun.  Six Californians join to discuss Jane Austen's novels. Over the six months they meet, marriages are tested, affairs begin, unsuitable arrangements become suitable, and love happens. With her finely sighted eye for the frailties of human behavior and her finely tuned ear for the absurdities of social intercourse, Fowler has never been wittier nor her characters more appealing. The result is a delicious dissection of modern relationships.  Dedicated Austenites will delight in unearthing the echoes of Austen that run through the novel, but most readers will simply enjoy the vision and voice that, despite two centuries of separation, unite two great writers of brilliant social comedy.</description>
  <reviews_count>1100</reviews_count>
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<entity>
  <id>66604</id>
  <title>Lady Susan, The Watsons, Sanditon</title>
  <author>Jane Austen</author>
  <image>http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/51HBS25B46L._SX80_.jpg</image>
  <rating>7</rating>
  <description>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.</description>
  <reviews_count>136</reviews_count>
</entity>
<entity>
  <id>58872</id>
  <title>Becoming Jane Austen</title>
  <author>Jon Spence</author>
  <image>http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/51--XEAaljL._SX80_.jpg</image>
  <rating>7</rating>
  <description>Jane Austen was a great novelist and one of the central figures of English literature, but she herself lived a quiet and uneventful life, mostly in the two Hampshire villages of Steventon and Chawton. Jon Spence&amp;#8217;s new biography focuses its attention away from the wider literary and intellectual currents that informed her writing and instead concentrates on the immediate influences on her life and work. Becoming Jane Austen shows how Jane Austen&amp;#8217;s own personal experiences resonated throughout her work, from her juvenilia to Sanditon.</description>
  <reviews_count>115</reviews_count>
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