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Lady Susan
- Narrated by: Cindy Hardin Killavey
- Length: 2 hrs and 21 mins
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Publisher's summary
One of Austen's earliest novels, Lady Susan is not only a wonderful character study, but it is the only time that Jane Austen deals with London high society.
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What listeners say about Lady Susan
Average customer ratingsReviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.
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- Victoria
- 06-14-16
I liked the plotline
the recording had a lot of static so I wasn't able to hear the story at times.
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1 person found this helpful
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Overall
- Joseph R
- 02-23-09
Lady Susan, an Austen leading lady one cannot love
I thoroughly dislike Lady Susan (the woman, not the book) from start to finish. Yet, every time I finish the book, I have to step back and give grudging admiration for this unprincipled, schemer. She got everything she wanted. Lady Susan got the much younger man she craved and got her daughter married into a family who at one time would have scorned to be associated with Lady Susan.
The more I think about the matter, the more I become convinced that the daughter and Lady Susan were executing a clever plot to accomplish their ends. The tears and lamentations of the daughter and the fury of Lady Susan were just part of the scheme, all sound and fury, signifying nothing.
This is a book one loves to hate.
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17 people found this helpful
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- Hannah
- 06-26-15
Jane Austen
Thus was a very interesting book. I want to read more like it. I enjoyed it.
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- Jes_074
- 01-02-15
I like Jane’s writing
This was never submitted to be published by the author and I don’t understand why? All you have to do is pick the most annoying, ugly and unlikely character in the story who's a man to marry the best looking woman. Whom is often the main character.
I did like this story and it’s a quick read even though I’ve figured out Jane’s writing style. Plus I can usually tell how the story will end just by the first chapter. This is a good work with a few twists you’ll enjoy.
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- Helen
- 07-18-13
One of Austen's most saucy, vitriolic works
I believe that Austen wrote this before she geared up to write longer form works, and chose to never have this published during her lifetime, and shows how she may have felt about about 'Lady Susan'. Certainly, it lacks the subtlety of character and rich language seen in her later known works - the insults and witticisms are less veiled, the characters (or moreover, Lady Susan herself) is a more a cut and dry villain: everything just seems a little rougher around the edges. And, perhaps more tellingly, it's written solely as a series of letters, which gives it the feel of being a literary exercise. But for people like myself, an Austen geek through and through (she's my go-to any time I need to feel better), it still has some of that sparkling chutzpah (even if less polished) so typical of the author. The only mildly irritating thing was the performer's accent - was she American? Was she British? It Whatever it was, it made me feel at odds with the text. Perhaps having been spoiled by British film adaptations of Austen made me cringe a little when I heard this weird amalgam of posh American/British. Alright, yes, I am a snob.
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