50 books to read before you die discussion

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Sense and Sensibility
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Sense and Sensibility
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Buck
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Apr 01, 2017 08:31AM

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Austen poking fun at high society and prejudices against women was pretty good as expected.
I actually listened to an audio version, maybe that is why I did not feel it too slow going (in contrast with Mansfield Park which was really really slow)
Devonshire sounds beautiful.

Where are all the Janites out there?

My God, what is wrong with these stupid women that they keep falling in love with depressed, angry, brooding men! ...

Here are some spoiler-y thoughts copied from my review: (view spoiler)
I studied this book for a course as well as just reading it for pleasure. We looked at the theme of heartbreak, how people cope with it, whether Austen sits on one side of the sense vs sensibility debate and which of the sisters we identified more with. At first glance you might assume Elinor is 'Sense' and Marianne is 'Sensibility' but it's more complicated than that. Jane Austen shows different sides to all her characters, I love how real the people in her stories always are. They don't fit into neat little boxes or can be described in one word. They're complicated people with emotions and problems, strengths and weaknesses.
It was interesting to me that multiple people on the course talked about relating to Marianne when they were young but as they grew up and experienced more heartbreak they related more to Elinor. I love how people get different things from reading the same book with different perspectives.