There is plenty to enjoy in this parade of Austen micro-knowledge <b><i></i></b>
Evening Standard
Highly entertaining ... reveals a quite unexpected aspect to the novelist and her books
Daily Mail
Any new book on Jane Austen raises the urgent question, Would I get more pleasure from reading this than from re-reading my favourite Jane Austen novel? If you decide to give <i>What Matters in Jane Austen</i> a chance you'll know after a few pages that you've made the right choice
John Carey, Sunday Times
[A] fine collection of essays ... Like all good literary critics, he has the happy knack of making you read even familiar works with fresh eyes, and the essays in this book are among the best of their kind
Daily Telegraph
A detailed primer on Jane Austen's attitudes to sex, money, class and even the weather
Sunday Times Must Reads
Fascinating ... If you love Jane Austen, you'll love this book too - it's almost as good as finding an unpublished novel
The Lady
250TH BIRTHDAY EDITION
‘Almost as good as finding an unpublished novel’ The Lady
'Any new book on Austen raises the urgent question, Would I get more pleasure from reading this than from re-reading my favourite Austen novel? You'll know after a few pages here that you've made the right choice' Sunday Times
Is there any sex in Jane Austen?
Why do her plots rely on blunders?
Which important characters never actually speak?
Jane Austen’s novels have been a staple of the British canon since the nineteenth century. Yet critics of the time did not appreciate the true complexity of her work. Neither Austen’s literary innovations nor the cunning intracacy of her novels were understood – much less the fascinating patterns and puzzles thrown up by some of the most famous works of English literature. Nothing, John Mullan argues, is accidental or coincidental in Austen. As she herself said, she wrote for readers who have ‘a great deal of ingenuity themselves’.
What Matters in Jane Austen? gets to the heart of what it is that makes Austen’s work so singular. In twenty chapters, answering questions her novels have posed for over two centuries, Mullan uncovers the hidden truth of an extraordinary fictional world and reveals the true brilliance – and underappreciated complexity – of Austen’s oeuvre.