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Jane Austen's 250th Birthday
Did someone say bandwagon? Yes, I’ll jump on!As we’ve all noticed, 2025 is Jane Austen’s 250th birthday. Or, technically, it is the 250th anniversary of her birth, because she isn't celebrating anymore. But we can! Like others, I plan to reread her six major novels in celebration of this milestone. I may get to some of her other works as well.
I’m going to read them in publication order. I’m too Teutonic in my reading habits to do it any other way. There are readalong groups reading by popularity and other criteria, but chronologically is my preference. Because she stopped and started her writing of some of the books, there is uncertainty about the precise order in which she wrote them, particularly the last two. So I'm going with publication order, not the order in which they were necessarily written.
Jane Austen is a favorite of mine, ever since I first encountered her as an English Lit major in college. I’ve read the six major novels before, most of them two or three times. This time around, I plan to read them with my ears because I haven’t experienced them as audiobooks.
My set, shown in the picture above, is a Book of the Month Club special edition issued 25 years ago for the anniversary of her 225th birthday. My then sweetheart, soon to be husband, gave it to me for my birthday that year.
I read Sense and Sensibility in January. I’m happy to be back in Austenland!
Are you reading any Jane Austen books this year? What’s your favorite?
Are you reading any Jane Austen books this year? What’s your favorite?
WRITINGS OF JANE AUSTEN
Austen wrote six major novels, another novel that she never submitted for publication, two unfinished novels, a play, poems, letters, prayers, and a large collection of juvenilia published in three volumes.
Here is the list of Jane Austen's six main novels, in publication order. These are the books I plan to reread this year:
- Sense and Sensibility (1811)
- Pride and Prejudice (1813)
- Mansfield Park (1814)
- Emma (1816)
- Northanger Abbey (1818, posthumous)
- Persuasion (1818, posthumous)
Austen's other writings, which I may get to someday, but probably not this year, are:
- Lady Susan (the novel she never submitted for publication; published in 1871)
- The Watsons (novel begun in 1803 and abandoned in 1805; fragment published in 1871)
- Sanditon (novel begun in 1817 and left unfinished at her death in July of that year; fragment published in 1925)
- Sir Charles Grandison (a play adapted around 1800 from a novel by Samuel Richardson; published in 1980)
- Plan of a Novel (satire written in 1815; first published in 1926)
- Poems (written 1796–1817; perhaps published at her death in 1817, but I can't pin that down)
- Prayers (written 1796–1817; same as poems)
- Letters (written 1796–1817; same as poems)
- Juvenilia in Three Volumes (written 1787 to 1793, when she was 11 to 17 years old; organized by Austen into three volumes; perhaps first published in 1954, since updated)
There is a Kindle omnibus edition of that includes Lady Susan, The Watsons, Sanditon, Plan of a Novel, Sir Charles Grandison, and the three volumes of Juvenilia. This is all the minor works except the poems, prayers, and letters. At the time I wrote this post, the Kindle omnibus was $.99.
This is, as you put it, a bandwagon I can get behind! I always wonder what would Jane Austen think of the immense success that she is today. :)
ReplyDeleteI know! She might be quite surprised. I wonder what she'd make of all the tribute spinoffs. Did she even know about zombies and vampires?
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