Emma, Jane Austen
Emma, Jane Austen
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Emma

Author: Jane Austen

Narrator: Alex Squire, The Light

Unabridged: 14 hr 40 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 04/11/2026

Categories: Fiction


Synopsis

This richly observed novel by Jane Austen follows the life of a confident, intelligent young woman who believes she understands the hearts and motives of everyone around her. Secure in her social position and convinced of her own good judgment, she delights in arranging the romantic futures of friends and acquaintances, certain that she can manage love as easily as she manages her household. Her intentions are often kind, but they are tangled with pride, vanity, and the pleasure of being right.As her schemes unfold, misunderstandings multiply and hidden feelings begin to surface in painful and unexpected ways. Innocent hopes are quietly wounded, trust is strained, and careless assumptions lead to lasting emotional consequences. The control she believes she holds over others slowly slips away as her own blind spots are exposed. With each mistake, her confidence is tested, and the cost of interference becomes impossible to ignore.Through embarrassment, regret, growing self-awareness, and hard-earned humility, Jane Austen traces a graceful journey toward emotional maturity. The novel explores class, friendship, love, pride, and the slow education of the heart. Warm in spirit yet sharp in insight, it is a timeless portrait of how true understanding comes not from cleverness, but from empathy, restraint, and the courage to admit one’s own flaws.

About Jane Austen

Jane Austen was born on December 16, 1775, to the Reverend George Austen and his wife, Cassandra Leigh Austen, in the village of Steventon in Hampshire, England. Though her mother was from a family of gentry, Jane's father was not well off, and the large family had to take in school boarders to make ends meet. The second youngest of the Austens' eight children, Jane was very close to her elder, and only, sister, Cassandra, and neither sister ever married. Both girls were educated at home, as many were at that time.

From a young age Jane wrote satires and read them aloud to her appreciative family. Though she completed the manuscripts of two full-length novels while living at Steventon, these were not published. Later, these novels were revised into the form under which they were published, as Sense and Sensibility and Pride and Prejudice, respectively.

In 1801, George Austen retired from the clergy, and Jane, Cassandra, and their parents took up residence in Bath, a fashionable town Jane liked far less than her native village. Jane seems to have written little during this period. When Mr. Austen died in 1805, the three women, Mrs. Austen and her daughters, moved first to Southampton and then, partly subsidized by Jane's brothers, occupied a house in Chawton, a village not unlike Jane's first home. There she began to work on writing and pursued publishing once more, leading to the anonymous publication of Sense and Sensibility in 1811 and Pride and Prejudice in 1813, to modestly good reviews.

Known for her cheerful, modest, and witty character, Jane Austen had a busy family and social life but very little direct romantic experience. Her last years were quiet and devoted to family, friends, and writing her final novels. In 1817 she had to interrupt work on her last and unfinished novel, Sanditon, because she fell ill. She died on July 18, 1817, in Winchester, where she had been taken for medical treatment. After her death, her novels Northanger Abbey and Persuasion were published, together with a biographical notice, due to the efforts of her brother Henry. Austen is buried in Winchester Cathedral.


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