Jane Austen

Born: December 16, 1775 | Died: July 18, 1817
Nationality: British | Genre: Classic Fiction, Romance, Social Commentary

Jane Austen was a pioneering English novelist whose sharp wit, steady irony, and clear-eyed view of everyday life reshaped how love and society were written about. In novels like Sense and Sensibility, Pride and Prejudice, Mansfield Park, and Emma, she set courtship and family dramas against the pressures of money, status, and reputation in Regency England. Her heroines think for themselves, test the limits of convention, and learn to balance feeling with judgment—turning domestic plots into lasting studies of character.

Born to a country clergyman in Steventon, Hampshire, Austen wrote from the rhythms of village life she knew well. She drafted stories from a young age, later revising them in Chawton, where most of her mature work took shape. Publishing anonymously (“By a Lady”), she saw Sense and Sensibility (1811), Pride and Prejudice (1813), Mansfield Park (1814), and Emma (1815) into print; Northanger Abbey and Persuasion appeared posthumously in 1818, when her authorship was publicly acknowledged. Austen’s elegant prose, sly humor, and early use of free indirect style helped modernize the novel, and her keen insight into choice, compromise, and self-knowledge keeps her work vividly alive today.

Quotes by Jane Austen