Reviews: Emma (15)
“Must read!”
(Paperback)
Emma’ is an amazing book in my opinion. It is one of Jane Austen’s funniest novels. The commentary and gossip is what makes it great. The love stories is also one of my favourites!, as well as having an among friendship between Emma and Harriet.
“Matchmaker,matchmaker, make me a match”
(Paperback)
Self-important, gossipy and sometimes just plain rude, Emma Woodhouse is an Austen heroine worlds away from her Pride and Prejudice counterpart, Elizabeth Bennett. Emma lives alone with her hypochiondriac father, spending her life matchmaking and mocking her les intelligent peers in order to spare herself from a life of monotony. However, will she learn her lesson when her efforts backfire? A novel less commercial, but thought to be more cleverly constructed than Pride and Prejudice, Emma will appeal to anyone who's ever delighted in interfering in other people's lives.
“Matchmaker,matchmaker, make me a match”
(Paperback)
Self-important, gossipy and sometimes just plain rude, Emma Woodhouse is an Austen heroine worlds away from her Pride and Prejudice counterpart, Elizabeth Bennett. Emma lives alone with her hypochiondriac father, spending her life matchmaking and mocking her les intelligent peers in order to spare herself from a life of monotony. However, will she learn her lesson when her efforts backfire? A novel less commercial, but thought to be more cleverly constructed than Pride and Prejudice, Emma will appeal to anyone who's ever delighted in interfering in other people's lives.
“Matchmaker,matchmaker, make me a match”
(Paperback)
Self-important, gossipy and sometimes just plain rude, Emma Woodhouse is an Austen heroine worlds away from her Pride and Prejudice counterpart, Elizabeth Bennett. Emma lives alone with her hypochiondriac father, spending her life matchmaking and mocking her les intelligent peers in order to spare herself from a life of monotony. However, will she learn her lesson when her efforts backfire? A novel less commercial, but thought to be more cleverly constructed than Pride and Prejudice, Emma will appeal to anyone who's ever delighted in interfering in other people's lives.
“Matchmaker,matchmaker, make me a match”
(Paperback)
Self-important, gossipy and sometimes just plain rude, Emma Woodhouse is an Austen heroine worlds away from her Pride and Prejudice counterpart, Elizabeth Bennett. Emma lives alone with her hypochiondriac father, spending her life matchmaking and mocking her les intelligent peers in order to spare herself from a life of monotony. However, will she learn her lesson when her efforts backfire? A novel less commercial, but thought to be more cleverly constructed than Pride and Prejudice, Emma will appeal to anyone who's ever delighted in interfering in other people's lives.
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