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Emma
Emma
Author: Jane Austen
Jane Austen's beautiful, accomplished heroine has only one fault - her love of matchmaking. With the best intentions, Emma decides which of her friends should marry, then makes elaborate plans to pair everyone off. But she finds out the hard way that people don't fall in love according to plan . . . — A sparkling 19th-century "comedy of manners...  more »
ISBN: 16681
Pages: 511
Rating:
  • Currently 4.8/5 Stars.
 3

4.8 stars, based on 3 ratings
Publisher: Scholastic Book Services
Book Type: Paperback
Other Versions: Hardcover, Audio Cassette, Audio CD
Members Wishing: 0
Reviews: Member | Write a Review

Top Member Book Reviews

reviewed Emma on + 4 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 4
Emma Woodhouse, the title character of this wonderful book, thinks that she would be a good matchmaker. She lives on an estate in the English countryside with her father, her sister, and, until recently, her best friend and former governess, Miss Taylor. Miss Taylor recently married a man Emma introduced her to. So, with this success, Emma feels that her matchmaking career has begun.
Unfortunately, Emma is lacking in two essential qualities for the job. As Austen says she is "handsome, clever, and rich, with a comfortable home and a happy disposition.." but she is not very observant and does not yet understand the human heart.
It can be difficult for today's reader to get into books by Jane Austen. She wrote her books in the early 19th century and often wrote about life in the English countryside, a setting far from our own experience. The pace of the books is slower and the descriptions longer than we are used to, and the characters are often not able to say quite exactly what they mean. The books were written for a different audience at a much different time.
Also, the books are long; they are definitely not the fast-paced, action-packed thrillers we love to read today. Austen's books require a different kind of reader: one who has some time: one who can slow down and savor the characters and the story.
Because, unlike her heroine, Jane Austen is observant and does understand the human heart. The characters she describes are the principal joy of this book and, once you get to know them, you will find that you already know others like them. Besides bright but slightly bored Emma, we find here the eccentric Mr. Woodhouse, always concerned about his health and the health of other, the dull Miss Bates, always chattering away about nothing, the pliant Harriet, whose life Jane almost ruins, the ambitious Mr. Elton, a self-centered social climber, and Mr. Knightly, Emma's friend and gentle critic.
This book will reward those who can make their way into the story, who can step away a little from the fast pace of life today and enjoy some familiar people who lived long ago.
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reviewed Emma on + 5 more book reviews
Excellent book even if you have seen the movie.
mywoodybird avatar reviewed Emma on + 28 more book reviews
very well written and interesting book
reviewed Emma on + 15 more book reviews
Nice looking version of "Emma." The book is practically brand new.
reviewed Emma on
This book was a fantastic book that made me laugh and cry. This book had me talking about it for days.
reviewed Emma on + 43 more book reviews
A wonderful Austen classic, with a happy ending -
reviewed Emma on + 33 more book reviews
Emma is one of my favorite Jane Austen novels - and this QPBC version is lovely - beautifully illustrated and thoughtfully presented.
reviewed Emma on
A multi-voice dramatization, with narrator. Nearly verbatim, (word for word), but not exactly. 4 cassettes Produced in 1989

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