Nov 30, 2015 06:01 PM
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"It is a truth all around recognized, that a solitary man possessing a favorable luck must be in need of a wife."
This is not a ladies' book. On the other hand if the 429 clients who have racked this book as "Chick Lit" are correct, then consider me Summer's Eve on the grounds that this book gets ALL THE STARS.
I'm not certain that I could satisfactorily express what I adored best about Pride and Prejudice, on the grounds that there are such a variety of things. The written work, for one, is brilliant. There is an immaculate persuasiveness to Austen's written work whereby each circumstance, each idea, each turn of expression is conveyed effortlessly, yet with the best exactitude. Awkwardness does not exist here. Second, and maybe much all the more convincing, are her characters. Each of them is drawn completely and totally, with qualities one of a kind to the person.
I may have rejected this novel as one principally proposed for the female group of onlookers, yet I am not all that tenacious as to decline to submit to its being a romance book. It is a romance book. What's more, prepare to be blown away. I adored it. Austen identifies with us the developing regard that two defective individuals have for one another and she does it in a way that never double-crosses their characters. Everything that happens, happens thus—immediate or backhanded—of the nature and mien of these two characters, and yes, I did think it delight.