We’ve written before about authors that will remind you of Jane Austen and her novel Pride and Prejudice (read that here), and the list just kept on growing after we wrote that. Here are five more authors who remind us of Jane Austen and her famous novels like Sense and Sensibility and Emma.
For the Era: Susan Ferrier (Marriage)
If you are looking for more stories from Jane Austen’s era, look no further than Susan Ferrier, who is called Scotland’s Jane Austen in the new introduction to her book, Marriage. It only takes a few quotes from the book to see the flair for wisdom and wit that you are craving from the best books of this era.
“You’ll never get rid of a stupid man by civility.”
“Heath covered hills and high cheek-bones are the charms that must win my heart."
“Love is a passion that has been much talked of, often described, and little understood.”
For the Interpersonal Relationships: George Eliot (Middlemarch)
There is something so comforting about Jane Austen’s deft interplay of relationship dynamics and internal turmoil, where we find a balance in relating to the characters of the story while also enjoying the ride as a reader. George Eliot strikes a similar balance in her works, especially her famous novel Middlemarch. Published sixty years after Sense and Sensibility, this book is more than twice as long which means you have plenty of pages to savor the relationships as they unfold.
For the Humor: Stella Gibbons (Cold Comfort Farm)
Known for its humor even more than its heart, Cold Comfort Farm is an oft-recommended classic that will make you laugh with witty one-liners and satirical insights akin to Jane Austen’s finest. The most-quoted lines of the book can give you a taste of its flavor:
For the Drama: Edith Wharton (The Custom of the Country)
Edith Wharton, sometimes called the American Jane Austen, brings us up close and personal to the people in her novels, in this case Undine Spragg, a heroine who wrestles her way upward in life and society, only to be uncertain of what she really wants. She’s relatable in all of the worst ways, and we can’t look away from her and the decisions she makes.
“She had everything she wanted, but she still felt, at times, that there were other things she might want if she knew about them.”
For the Title Alone: Rosa N. Carey (Not Like Other Girls)
Before coming across this book, we had no idea this internet-flavored phrase had a history so deep that it went back to the 19th century. The most obscure of the books on this list, Rosa Carey spins a story that hits many of the classic beats: A young girl growing up in poverty, the opportunity to move up in the world, suitors who compete for her attention, and motives that are not all that they seem.
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