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Pride and Prejudice: The Complete Novel, with Nineteen Letters from the Characters' Correspondence, Written and Folded by Hand
By (Author) Jane Austen
Curated by Barbara Heller
Chronicle Books
Chronicle Books
8th September 2020
8th September 2020
United States
Hardback
240
Width 199mm, Height 238mm, Spine 39mm
800g
Pride and Prejudice is one of the most beloved novels of alltime, and nothing captures Jane Austens vivid emotion and keen wit better than her characters correspondence. This deluxe edition pays homage to the power of these epistles, from Lydias announcement of her elopement to Mr. Darcys honest, beseeching missive to Elizabeth. Glassine pockets placed throughout the book contain removable replicas of all 19 letters in the story. Each one has been re-created with gorgeous, hand-written calligraphy and hand-folded with painstaking attention to historical detail. In additional text, curator Barbara Heller offers the history of letter writing in Austens time, and reveals the detailed process behind creating the letters.
"The letters in Heller's edition of Pride and Prejudice are painstakingly detailed, from the style of folding (letters didn't have envelopes, so they served as their own containers) to the postal markings and wax imprints indicating price, mileage, date, etc.... These letters, with the various character traits that their appearances indicate, can bring 21st-century readers closer to Austen's world." --Ted Scheinman, Smithsonian
"This exquisite book presents the novel's full text along with 19 letters 'handwritten' by Mr. Darcy, Elizabeth Bennet, Caroline Bingley and others. Their notes, complete with appropriate postmarks, are dropped into pouches placed at just the right moments in the story. More than a gimmick, it's a dramatic way to experience the central role that correspondence plays in the novel." --The Washington Post Book Club
Jane Austen(1775-1841) was the seventh of eight children born to George Austen, an Anglican rector, and Cassandra Austen in Steventon, Hampshire, England. During her adolescence, she penned humorous pieces that greatly entertained her close-knit family. At 19, she wrote a novella, Lady Susan, and soon after began drafts of what would become Sense and Sensibility and Pride and Prejudice. After her father died in 1801, Austen, her mother, and beloved older sister Cassandra, moved frequently due to financial difficulties. In 1809, they settled in Chawton in a cottage owned by her brother, Edward. While residing there, she revised Sense and Sensibility and Pride and Prejudice and wrote Emma and Mansfield Park all published anonymously. Though popular at the time, the novels did not achieve the success or acclaim they enjoy today. In 1816, Austen fell ill with a malady that remains undiagnosed. She died at age 41. Persuasion and Northanger Abbey were published posthumously and Austens authorial identity was at last revealed. It is estimated that Jane Austen wrote as many as three thousand letters during her lifetime. One hundred and sixty-one of her letters are known to have survived.
Barbara Hellers career in film and television encompasses finding furnishings and props for many shows including The Americans and When They See Us; location managing films for Francis Coppola, Nancy Meyers, and Barbet Schroeder; making award-winning short films that have played at festivals around the world (Cannes, Berlin, Sundance); and reporting on why hotels fold the end of the toilet paper into a point for NPR. She lives with her son in New York City.