Pride and Prejudice (Barnes & Noble Classics Series) FROM OUR EDITORS
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FROM THE PUBLISHER
Pride and Prejudice, one of the world’s most popular
novels, quickly establishes itself as a charming satire with its
hilarious opening line:
“It is a truth universally acknowledged, that a single man in
possession of a good fortune must be in want of a wife.”
Anthony Trollope once said of Jane Austen, “What she did, she did
perfectly.” Today Austen is regarded as the first modern novelist.
Pride and Prejudice—Austen’s own “darling
child”—tells the story of fiercely independent Elizabeth
Bennet, one of five sisters who must marry rich, as she confounds the
arrogant, wealthy Mr. Darcy. What ensues is one of the most delightful
and engrossingly readable courtships known to literature, replete with
finely drawn depictions of country manners, high society and high comedy,
and, ultimately, the economy-driven march toward marriage.
Written by a precocious Austen when she was just twenty-one years old,
and filled with scintillating dialogue, Pride and Prejudice is, in
the words of Eudora Welty, as “irresistible and as nearly flawless
as any fiction could be.”
Introduction and Notes by Carol Howard
“In Pride and Prejudice especially, Austen appeals to
modern readers’ nostalgia for a world of social, moral, and
economic stability, but one where characters are free to make their own
choices and pursue their hearts’ desires. The formal civility, the
carefully prescribed manners, and sexual and social restraint, set
against a backdrop of village community, stately manor houses, and an
English landscape devoid of industrial turmoil and the brisk pace of
modern technology—these are a welcome escape for today’s
reader.” —from the Introduction by Carol Howard
Chair of the English Department at Warren Wilson College, Carol Howard
has published essays on early British and contemporary African-American
women writers and has co-edited two books on British writers. Her current
book project traces the tension between the desire for freedom and for
stability in British women’s writings about slavery and empire,
from 1688 to 1805. She was educated at SUNY Purchase and Columbia
University, where she received her Ph.D. in 1999. She now lives in Black
Mountain, North Carolina, with her husband and two daughters.
Jane Austen was born on December 16, 1775, the seventh of eight
children. An avid reader from earliest childhood, Jane began writing at
age twelve, no doubt encouraged by her cultured and affectionate family.
Indeed, family and writing were her great loves; despite a fleeting
engagement in 1802, Austen never married. Productive and discreet, she
insisted that her work be kept secret from anyone outside the family. All
of her novels were published anonymously, including the posthumous
release, thanks to her brother Henry, of Northanger Abbey and
Persuasion.