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She writes with a waspish wit, about what she knows. Yes, it is a narrow band of society and culture, within a very specific time-frame, but she sometimes manages to dissociate herself from its constraints, and always excels in what she does. View all 28 comments. Time for a re-read! Four for you, Mr Tilney, you go Mr Tilney. View all 13 comments. I wasn't originally planning on reading it this week, but it just ended up happening. I listened to the audiobook for this, and I recommend it wholeheartedly. This book was witty, sarcastic, so much fun, and I just really enjoyed Catherine's character.

The first half of the book was my favorite because of how drama filled it was. The second half was good as well, but I felt like I was missing something. I wanted more dialogue and conversation between the characters, particularly Tilney and Catherine. Overall though this was a very fun read, and a Jane Austen book that I think is a little underrated! This book was amazing and very cleverly written! I've now read 4 out of Jane Austen's 6 novels, and so far this is my favourite. This is a story about Catherine who is a very plain and dull girl. However, in this book, she goes on a journey - first to Bath, later to Northanger Abbey - where she encounters new characters and establish new connections.

I must admit that during the first half of the novel, I was anxious to get to the scary and creepy part which I had been told was part of this Vict This book was amazing and very cleverly written! I must admit that during the first half of the novel, I was anxious to get to the scary and creepy part which I had been told was part of this Victorian novel. Even though I was mildly disappointed that the creepy part didn't set in until late into the book, I very much enjoyed the first half.

Jane Austen is excellent at writing satire as well as creating exaggerated characters that make you laugh and smile. Isabella, the obnoxious friend, was amazing, and the way that Catherine is constantly put into uncomfortable and unfavorable situations through her friendship with her was hilarious. Then the creepy part set in, and I was very much satisfied. I read some parts at night in bed and some parts in my couch during the day, but I was still equally creeped out. Catherine's experiences are once again hilarious, however very understandable, and I loved her even more for it.

All in all, this is a coming-of-age story in which Catherine grows tremendously in three months. I can't put my finger on anything I didn't like about the book, and I'm eager to spread my love for it to everyone else. Please, read it if you haven't already and if you like Jane Austen's writing, because this one certainly won't disappoint you. View all 3 comments. View all 26 comments.

This is one of the lesser regarded Austens. It's one of her first books and it's true, the prose and development of characters is not as mature. Seriously, this book is so wonderful. The voice on this book. In later books, Jane A This is one of the lesser regarded Austens.

In later books, Jane Austen tempered her personal voice to become more moderate, fading behind the prose and the characters. She does not do that here. The narrator's voice is the best character in the book. It's bright, witty, and vicious, vicious, vicious. She will cheerfully embroil her ridiculous main character in ridiculous situations, and proceed to torture her. That's the majority of the book, making fun of Gothic novels that were popular at the time, as well as silly silly teenage girls.

It's hard not to recognize yourself at some age in the main character. But it's viciousness with love. It's actually kind of trippy, all the things she convinces herself of, all the visions and fantasies she's capable of. It would make a great post-modernist movie.

Northanger Abbey by Jane Austen

This main character is adorable, if inconsequential and silly. The hero has his witty moments, and I rather enjoyed him. There are a lot of lessons on love here that are less idealistic than her other novels. Much less of a grand passion, much more practical. But I kind of love that. These characters get together on a very unequal basis, but one you see happen all the time in life. They complete each other, however differently that might be.

I am actually grinning as I write this review of it, remembering how much I loved it. View all 16 comments. Mar 16, Trevor rated it it was amazing Shelves: Having read both Pride and Prejudice and Persuasion I was a little surprised by this one. The first thing that surprised me was that the heroine is basically as thick as they come. I would have said that Austen is the sort of writer who creates the sort of main female characters that men are rather likely to fall in love with.

I mean, I know women who go all weak at the knees over Mr Darcy, but when compared to Lizzy he is merely a sad shadow. All the same, Catherine is hardly what I would have t Having read both Pride and Prejudice and Persuasion I was a little surprised by this one. All the same, Catherine is hardly what I would have thought of as one of the great Austen female characters.

The book begins with an extended description of her and although she comes across as a pretty sort of girl — she is hardly the brain of Britain or really accomplished in any way at all. The other surprise I found in this was how satirical Austen is — satirical to the point of cynicism. I can only assume she never read this book aloud as she was writing it, because, with her tongue placed quite so firmly in her cheek, she would have bitten the tip of it off if she had.

By way of example: Okay, so the characters are basically thick and young. The heroine also has the advantage of being gormless. She spends much of the book unaware that people could be anything other than what they seem to be or, when they are clearly acting in a way that is directly opposite to what they say of themselves, she almost invariably takes their word over their deeds. An ideal friend, then I guess, and all too easily manipulated by those around her.

But some of the themes are just as interesting. The affect of trashy novels on the character of young and impressionable heroines is played with beautifully in this book. Again, with her tongue firmly placed in her cheek, she says things like: If the heroine of one novel be not patronized by the heroine of another, from whom can she expect protection and regard?

Northanger Abbey

Jul 19, Diane rated it really liked it Shelves: This book was a delight! I hadn't read it in more than a decade, and decided to pick it up again for a few reasons: First, I recently had the good fortune to visit Bath, and much of this novel is set in that lovely English city; second, I had just read Henry James' "The Turn of the Screw," which is a ghost story, and I was eager to revisit this early Austen work that played with Gothic themes; third, and perhaps most importantly, I just like reading Jane Austen novels. A quick plot summary: Cathe This book was a delight!

Catherine Morland is a sweet-but-adventure-seeking country girl who gets invited to visit Bath with her wealthy neighbors, the Allens. While there, she meets and falls in love with Henry Tilney. Complications ensue when the boorish John Thorpe tries to woo her, and his sister, Isabella Thorpe, becomes engaged to Catherine's brother. Luckily, Catherine is invited to visit the Tilney home, called Northanger Abbey, and she becomes closer with both Henry and his sister. Of course, there are still some muddles to sort out, including an illicit romance and an overbearing parent. Throughout the book, Catherine, who loves reading novels, has some amusing scenes in which she lets her imagination run wild, envisioning murder and thrilling mysteries and dark family secrets.


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Eventually, reality sets in and Catherine has better control of her fancies. While reading Northanger Abbey , I was surprised that so many of my favorite Austen quotes are from this book! This novel is sometimes considered the weakest of her works -- it was written first, but wasn't published until after her death -- so it's true she was a less experienced writer and was playing around with structure and Gothic elements, but it's still a delight. If you like Jane Austen, don't skip over this humorous and charming novel.

Favorite Quotes "The person, be it gentleman or lady, who has not pleasure in a good novel, must be intolerably stupid. I am delighted with the book! I should like to spend my whole life in reading it. Nov 02, Will M. This is my very first romance novel, and I have to say that I'm not that entertained. It's not because guys shouldn't read romance, but because I just don't like reading romance novels.

I'm confident about my masculinity, so reading romance novels shouldn't be a problem for me, but I didn't enjoy this, so reading romance is not going to happen very often. This is my very first Austen novel. My main reading goal would be to read more classics.

Learn English Through Story ★ Subtitles ✦ Northanger Abbey - pre intermediate level

I saw this lying around in my shelf, and conside This is my very first romance novel, and I have to say that I'm not that entertained. I saw this lying around in my shelf, and considering it's the only Austen novel that I own, I decided to give it a try. I really like the Penguin English Library collection, so that's actually the main reason why I own this novel.

It was one of the few available ones in my local bookstore at the time. My main problem with this one would be the outdated writing. This was published in , so that means Austen probably wrote this way before I'm not that used to the classic-writing, but I'm sure after a few more classics I would be. I've only read about 5 classics, and I actually enjoyed the writing of those. It could be that I'm not fond of Austen's writing. I'll be completing the BBC book list challenge thing, so I'll be reading at least 3 more Austen novels.

Hopefully I'd like her writing style then. The plot was simple and straightforward. It was about Catherine's love for this guy, and then another guy, and then she kept complaining about her slut friend, then her gothic novel obsession, and finally view spoiler [ her wedding in the end. I'm not saying that I enjoy watching romance movies, but I believe they're a bit better than the novels. I haven't seen much but I remember at least enjoying one or two romance movies. The romance genre is just not for me. A little bit of romance in the novel would be okay for me, but if it is the central theme of the plot, then odds are I won't be enjoying it.

The characters were not that likable either. They would either complain or only appear for a short time, not enough for them to be fully developed. Catherine was a bit likable, but not a character that I would remember in the future. Like I said though I'm still confident with my masculinity after reading this. It wasn't erotica after all. View all 14 comments. It's been some time since Jane and I communed. If your first encounters with the Austen adaptations include all of the BBC's remastered collection from the early s, then consider yourself fortunate.

Before then, many of us Austenites we're left to scour through various adaptations and hope for the best. My first encounter with Northanger Abbey was the awful made-for-TV adaptation that bordered on campy. The characters were all wrong, the score reminiscent of early 80s horror films, and the storyline was hard to follow. The only saving grace was Peter Firth, the dreamy-eyed actor I'd fallen in love with after watching Polanski's ' Tess.

Now that I've finally read the book and understand what the heck happened, I could kick myself for having waited so long! This is a great book! Reading through it was like having a conversation with a good friend that you can always pick back up with despite years of absence. It was hilarious, sarcastic, and just my cuppa. I love farce on the big screen, but it's often lost on me in literature, especially the classics. I was afraid that this one would be too based on reviews I'd read, but my worries were unfounded.

I feel like it really rounded out my reading this year, and hopefully I get to a few more classics I've avoided before it is over. View all 4 comments. The trashiest of Austen's novels. Easy to read, utterly ridiculous and it's got Henry Tilney I decided that maybe my love for Austen was waning. That maybe she wasn't all she was cracked up to be. So when Gabby suggested this Austen buddy read I thought okay. Let's stop wondering and see if I could be as much into Austen now as I was as a teenager. Northanger Abbey is Austen's gothic parody.

On one hand she sends up these expected The trashiest of Austen's novels. On one hand she sends up these expected gothic situations and tropes and on the other she devoutly defends the value of a novel read for enjoyment more than for its alleged literary worth. It is only a novel! It's an absolute two fingers to the concept that there is nothing valuable to be gained from reading a novel.

That novels are somehow less than 'proper reading'. And to me this is why Jane Austen is so great. This is a very self-aware novel. Austen frequently addresses the reader in this novel, sharing almost salty remarks about the characters and, most strikingly, unashamedly voicing her own opinions about women and society through her writing. I think it's also very evident that this is Austen's first novel because plot-wise it is probably the weakest.

But as a piece of satire it works brilliantly. Catherine Morland, the MC, is the most naive of all of Austen's lead female characters. She's pretty much oblivious to everything that is going on around her and at times as a reader you kinda sit back and just go Naaaawwww bless you you sheltered petal.

And honestly I love how gloriously teenage she feels with her near-obsessive love for gothic novels that rivalled my own love for Austen at that age. I love how she lets this almost obsessiveness seep into her own life and causes her to almost daydream her life away But then she grows up. Her character changes but in ways that feel honest and not disingenuous to the storyline. She basically learns not to be quite so ridiculous and that people aren't always genuine As for the Catherine Morland - Henry Tilney romance. It really isn't the plot driver here.

To me, this is a coming of age story. The romance aspect is the least developed and they are the Austen couple that you do sort of question is it going to last. He is witty and salty AF and I just don't ever see Catherine as "getting" him because I struggle to see their common ground except that they are both nice I like to think that those two lived happily ever after because of brief moments that showed the development of their relationship. Initially, the age gap between the two was noticeable. And Henry was just more savvy. So with this glimpse of her truly knowing her own mind and Henry respecting this as he should obvs , it gives me hope that these two can make it.

If not, I'll happily take Tilney for myself. But it is her trashiest. And I am trash for trash!!! So it's one I thoroughly enjoyed and would recommend if you want something with some utterly batshit craziness to lose yourself in. It probably deserves a rating between three and four stars which I'll round up to four because I laughed my butt off so much! And as for my relationship with Austen. I think it's very much back on track.

Reading her words is what I have always loved. What I have always connected to. What has always made me laugh. I think my brief disaffection with Austen has stemmed from a Jane overload in popular culture. No Hollywood adaptation is as smart. I'm sorry you can disagree all you want but to me adaptations lose that essence. That intimacy between writer and reader.

No actor portraying a character is exactly like I would picture or imagine them. They disconnect me from the vision of Austen's world that I have in my head and in my heart. And any of these Austen rip-off novels that focus only on the romance make me want to tear out my eyeballs. They just don't have that sense of humour. They don't have the gossip.

Northanger Abbey by Jane Austen

They focus on dull romance. And forget the vitality of life and community that occurs in Austen's novels outside the romance stories. What I don't love and won't accept are pale imitations of her literary genius. There really can be only one Jane Austen. This malicious and delicate story invites the reader to reflect on the usefulness of reading novels. With a pleasant sense of humor, the author mocks Gothic novels and their exaggerations bordering on ridicule, and introduces their story into a daily and plausible scenario, not less tender.

Jane Austen makes the social critique of her time and also the moral analysis of her characters.

(A Modern Library E-Book)

The heroine, Catherine Morland, gets carried away by the imagination addicted to readings about mysterious crimes This malicious and delicate story invites the reader to reflect on the usefulness of reading novels. The heroine, Catherine Morland, gets carried away by the imagination addicted to readings about mysterious crimes in haunted castles. Catherine is the fourth daughter among ten siblings, residing in Hertfordshire.

His parents, not being poor, can not predict a good dowry so numerous offspring. Besides, Catherine did not stand out in beauty or intelligence - in short, a normal girl. There they stay with Mrs. Allen, who accompanies the girls to the balls and rides of the season. In her first ball Catherine meets Henry Tilney, a handsome twenty-five-year-old gentleman. Thorpe and her daughters, one of whom, Isabella, becomes friends with Catherine, while her son, John, wishes to be her boyfriend.

Isabella is a love seat and engages with several boys, including Catherine's brother James and Henry's older brother Frederick to Catherine's great astonishment. John Thorpe is very unpleasant, and in many unkind ways frustrates Catherine's encounters with Eleanor Tilney, for whom the girl nurtures a sincere friendship, and not because she is only the younger sister of his chosen. It is Eleanor who invites Catherine to stay for some time in Northanger Abbey, property of the Tilney family. Catherine accepts the invitation with pleasure, including for wanting to get away from the Thorpe.

In the abbey, she is caught up in ridiculous attitudes in search of mysteries and criminal tracks, until realizing that she is in an old property, not in a haunted castle. James writes to his sister, telling Isabella had left him and was tagged with wedding Frederick. Eleanora and Henry are very surprised and do not believe in the notice. Henry retired for a few days to his residence in Woodston, where the father should appear soon with the two girls. General Tilney, who at first seems to be very impressed with his children's friend, insinuates some modifications to be made on the property for Henry's future wife, and implies that he would like to have Catherine as his daughter-in-law.

Isabella writes to Catherine, wishing her help to rejoin James, now that Frederick has moved away. Catherine is shocked by Isabella's audacity and ignores her. Not long after, Catherine is surprised by a servant who makes her hurry off at dawn under the embarrassed gaze of Eleanor, who can not excuse her father's behavior. The general, who had thought that Catherine was a rich heiress, practically expelled it to discover its error. Henry, on hearing of the incident, challenges his father and leaves for Hertfordshire to request Catherine's hand in marriage, but the girl's parents wisely advise the couple to wait for the consent of the general.

Eleanor marries a rich viscount and uses her influence to defend her brother's cause. It turns out that John Thorpe had slandered Catherine's family, painting her as miserable and dowager, and when the general discovers the truth makes amends with her boyfriends, who, in the end, marry, and obstacles, away of harming their happiness, assured them, making them know each other better, fortifying them in love. View all 12 comments. This was such a great first classic for the year. The society and the play with a Gothic setting was so fun and the characters had such defined personalities.

It was quite a low-key romance, which I enjoyed, as Catherine did get sad when Henry disappeared for a bit, but it's not like she stopped going to the theatre and hanging out with her best friends. Friendship is valued in this book way more than love is, and that was a nice change. Also, Eleanor may have been my favourite like Charlotte f This was such a great first classic for the year. I only wish that the friendship between Catherine and Isabella had been lingered on a little more, but this is like a 19th century version of cutting out toxic people from your life, so Jane Austen strikes again with modern relevancy!

I can't wait to read 'Sense and Sensibility' soon, although I'm going to dive into 'Wives and Daughters' by Elizabeth Gaskell so I can't be scared off by the page classics. Let me know which Austen is your favourite! I understand this novel is a satire. I also understand that this book was published posthumously and so right now, Jane Austin may very well be rolling in her grave saying "Oh God, I can't believe they published Northanger Abbey. However, I do feel this way. You can't just write a book about incredibly irritating characters who are flustered by very trivial situations and then say "oh no, but it's a satire about books that have incredib I understand this novel is a satire.

You can't just write a book about incredibly irritating characters who are flustered by very trivial situations and then say "oh no, but it's a satire about books that have incredibly irritating characters who are flustered by very trivial situations. But satire or no, I am still reading a book about incredibly irritating characters who are flustered by very trivial situations! It's similar to people liking things ironically.

The irony is irrelevant. You still like the thing. Look, it didn't escape me. I saw the satire. I particularly enjoyed Mrs. I didn't even mind Catherine. She was quite sweet, really. But for me it was just all a little tedious. And I imagined Henry to be eons older than Catherine.

He treated her like a little sister more than anything, but maybe that's what flirting was like in However, I'm incredibly excited to read Pride and Prejudice again. I wrote a nasty one star review when I was about 17 and I've been waiting almost ten years to revisit it.

Nov 20, Apatt rated it really liked it Shelves: While they snugly repair to their own end of the house, she is formally conducted by Dorothy, the ancient housekeeper, up a different staircase, and along many gloomy passages, into an apartment never used since some cousin or kin died in it about twenty years before. Can you stand such a ceremony as this?

Will not your mind misgive you when you find yourself in this gloomy chamber—too lofty and extensive for you, with only the feeble rays of a single lamp to take in its size—its walls hung with tapestry exhibiting figures as large as life, and the bed, of dark green stuff or purple velvet, presenting even a funereal appearance? However, perhaps Austen was somewhat concerned about the more fainthearted among her constant readers, who probably formed a sizable section of her readership, so she reassures them from time to time: Nothing more alarming occurred than a fear, on Mrs.

Being a highly impressionable girl she sometimes has trouble separating fantasy from reality, something of a Don Quixote syndrome but not so certifiable. Nothing spooky happens in the first half of the book where Catherine visits Bath with the Allens, her neighbours, where she meets her new BFF, the flirty Isabella Thorpe, and her annoying brother John. She gladly accepts of course, and her imagination immediately goes into overdrive. Did he do his wife in? 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 Catherine Morland, an unlikely heroine—unlikely because she is so ordinary—forsakes her English village for the pleasures and perils of Bath. But with her imagination fueled by melodramatic novels, Catherine turns a visit to his home, Northanger Abbey, into a hunt for dark family secrets. Northanger Abbey is a perfectly aimed literary parody that is also a withering satire of the commercial aspects of marriage among the English gentry at the turn of the nineteenth century.

When she is invited to stay with the Tilneys in their seemingly foreboding abbey, she fears that it is the kind of terrible place described in the novels she devours. Fiction Classics Literary Fiction Category: Fiction Classics Literary Fiction. About Northanger Abbey Northanger Abbey is both a perfectly aimed literary parody and a withering satire of the commercial aspects of marriage among the English gentry at the turn of the nineteenth century. About Northanger Abbey Northanger Abbey is a perfectly aimed literary parody that is also a withering satire of the commercial aspects of marriage among the English gentry at the turn of the nineteenth century.

Also in Vintage Classics. The most significant allusion, however, is to Ann Radcliffe's The Mysteries of Udolpho , as it is the Gothic novel most frequently mentioned within this text. Notably, Jane Austen sold the manuscript of Northanger Abbey to the same firm that published Radcliffe's novel in This outside text is first mentioned in Chapter Six, when Isabella and Catherine discuss the mystery "behind the black veil," and further establish their friendship based on their similar interests in novel genre, and their plans to continue reading other Gothic novels together.

Austen further satirizes the novel through Catherine's stay at Northanger Abbey, believing that General Tilney has taken the role of Gothic novel villain. Austen's discussion of Udolpho is also used to clearly separate Catherine from John Thorpe, as when Catherine talks about the novel with him, he crudely responds that he "never reads novels," but qualifies his statement by arguing he would only read a novel by Anne Radcliffe, who, as Catherine then points out, is the author of Udolpho.

When Catherine and Henry Tilney later discuss reading novels, and Henry earnestly responds that he enjoys reading novels, and was especially titillated by Udolpho, the match between Catherine and Henry is implied as both smart and fitting. Tenille Nowak has noted that critics and editors of Northanger Abbey often suggest that the names Laurentina and St Aubin appearing in the text are misrememberings of character names from Udolpho ; Nowak observes that due to there being very few copies of The Orphan of the Rhine available these critics did not realise that the names actually appear in their exact form Sleath's novel.

A passage from the novel appears as the preface of Ian McEwan 's Atonement , thus likening the naive mistakes of Austen's Catherine Morland to those of his own character Briony Tallis, who is in a similar position: Both treat their own lives like those of heroines in fantastical works of fiction, with Miss Morland likening herself to a character in a Gothic novel and young Briony Tallis writing her own melodramatic stories and plays with central characters such as "spontaneous Arabella" based on herself. Richard Adams quotes a portion of the novel's last sentence for the epigraph to Chapter 50 in his Watership Down ; the reference to the General is felicitous, as the villain in Watership Down is also a General.

The book, also, contains an early historical reference to baseball. Catherine, who had by nature nothing heroic about her, should prefer cricket, baseball, riding on horseback, and running about the country The modern game is not described, but the term is used. Northanger Abbey takes place in several settings, some of which are fictionalized, but many are actual locations in England, including London and Bath.

The Jane Austen Society of Australia created a map of the characters' whereabouts, designating the several real, and fake, locations traveled to or mentioned within the novel. Jasper Fforde , in his First Among Sequels , refers to Northanger Abbey as being under maintenance, and "should be ready on time as long as Catherine stops attempting to have the book 'Gothicized'.

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HarperCollins hired Scottish crime writer Val McDermid in to adapt Northanger Abbey for a modern audience, as a suspenseful teen thriller, the second rewrite in The Austen Project. And you can really feel a shiver of fear moving through it. I will be keeping the suspense — I know how to keep the reader on the edge of their seat.

I think Jane Austen builds suspense well in a couple of places, but she squanders it, and she gets to the endgame too quickly. So I will be working on those things. Lee artist and Nick Filardi color artist. The book, originally is the last of the Jane Austen adaptations made by Marvel, and contrarily to the other books of the series, is the only one to be released only in paperback, not in hardback. The same year, author Jenni James published a modern teen version entitled "Northanger Alibi", published by Inkpress, in which the main character's obsession for Stephenie Meyer 's Twilight saga replaces Catherine's love for Regency gothic novels.

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. This article is about the novel. For the novel's film adaptations, see Northanger Abbey film and Northanger Abbey film. For Brigadier Tilney, see Robert Tilney. This section needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. December Learn how and when to remove this template message. Reception history of Jane Austen. Yes, quite sure, for a particular friend of mine, a Miss Andrews, a sweet girl, one of the sweetest creatures in the world, has read every one of them.

Jane Austen portal Literature portal Novels portal. Jane Austen The Complete Works.


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  4. New York, New York: Retrieved 4 August Jane Austen and Her Art. Oxford University Press, Jane Austen's Northanger Abbey. Routledge, page Cambridge University Press, page Routledge, pages Val McDermid's 'Northanger Abbey ' ". Retrieved 8 September Gothic Reading in Northanger Abbey". Jane Austen Society of North America. The Gothic Imagination University of Sterling. Retrieved 22 April Retrieved 7 September Studies in Gothic Fiction. Retrieved 18 March A dark, daring adaptation - complete with social media and vampires". Jane Austen 's Northanger Abbey. Catherine Morland Henry Tilney. Northanger Abbey Northanger Abbey The Mysteries of Udolpho.

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