
Northanger Abbey
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Narrado por:
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Anna Massey
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De:
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Jane Austen
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Good, but some tough narration points
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Snarky wit with unfortunate narration
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Super funny and unique!
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The heroine is excitable and dramatic and the hero is quick witted and playful. And everything is tied up as neat as a bow at the end
Probably the most openly funny Austen Novel
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Just a fun listen
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The characters probably will not hold a strong impression in my heart or life, but they are honest characters whom I expect to see and now at least recognize in my own experience and in my own short life time.
Eh...great since it’s free...
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Definitely not my favorite Austen story
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Let's imagine that you did not know the word "gothic" other than as some kind of wardrobe. This is the place to start. A mere 40 years after The Castle of Otranto; ninety years before Dracula, 190 years before Harry Potter. Gives us another Swift-like example of satire. It is fun to see how she plays with the narrational voice, in a way that is rare today.
As I noted, scholars (eg Beatrice Grove "Literary Allusion...") of the works of JKR keep pointing here. Really glad I checked out these references to Austen and Brontë.
I came to Austen via Rowling. Thanks JKR.
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Narrator nearly drove me mad!
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This time, however, I found myself laughing out loud. Having read “Dracula” and “Frankenstein” and so many of Austen’s own work, she really does mock the genre and even some of her own tropes. She describes Catherine as the “heroine” throughout and, at times, makes statements about what COULD happen or SHOULD happen to a heroine, but do not in this story. The narrative, as a result, feels uneventful in the end.
This is, I think, the most distinct of Austen’s novels. Catherine isn’t highly intelligent but actually rather simple minded and immature. She is enraptured throughout by horror stories, exciting her own imagination that things are not what they seem but eerie and perverse like the novels she is reading. She works herself up into a real terror at the movement of a curtain or the opening of a dark black wardrobe only to find nothing inside it. For this reason, I think this is more of a coming of age story where she learns not to be so easily excitable and to have realistic expectations of people and places.
“Northanger Abbey” is like a giant inside joke; and if you haven’t read any gothic literature before reading this one, you won’t get it.
It’s an inside joke!
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