9780062293183
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Sense & Sensibility audiobook

  • By: Joanna Trollope
  • Narrator: Kate Reading
  • Length: 10 hours 10 minutes
  • Publisher: HarperAudio
  • Publish date: October 29, 2013
  • Language: English
  • (12976 ratings)
(12976 ratings)
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Sense & Sensibility Audiobook Summary

Two sisters could hardly be more different . . .

Elinor Dashwood, an architecture student, values patience and reliability. Her impulsive sister, Marianne, takes after their mother, Belle, and is fiery and creative, filling the house with her dramas and guitar playing while dreaming of going to art school.

But when their father, Henry Dashwood, dies suddenly, his whole family finds itself forced out of Norland Park, their beloved home for twenty years. Without the comfort of status, they discover that their values are severely put to the test.

Can Elinor remain stoic and restrained knowing that the man she really likes has already been ensnared by another girl? Will Marianne’s faith in a one-and-only lifetime love be shaken by meeting the hottest boy in the county, John Willoughby? And in a world where social media and its opinions are the controlling forces at play, can love ever triumph over conventions and disapproval?

With her wit and eye for social nuance, Joanna Trollope casts Jane Austen’s Sense & Sensibility in a fresh new light to retell a wonderful coming-of-age story about young love and heartbreak, and how, when it comes to money especially, some things never change. . . .

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Sense & Sensibility Audiobook Narrator

Kate Reading is the narrator of Sense & Sensibility audiobook that was written by Joanna Trollope

About the Author(s) of Sense & Sensibility

Joanna Trollope is the author of Sense & Sensibility

Sense & Sensibility Full Details

Narrator Kate Reading
Length 10 hours 10 minutes
Author Joanna Trollope
Publisher HarperAudio
Release date October 29, 2013
ISBN 9780062293183

Additional info

The publisher of the Sense & Sensibility is HarperAudio. The imprint is HarperAudio. It is supplied by HarperAudio. The ISBN-13 is 9780062293183.

Global Availability

This book is only available in the United States.

Goodreads Reviews

Deborah

February 21, 2014

Twice upon a time, there were three Dashwood sisters, though no one took much notice of the youngest one. Their father died far too young, and they and their mother were forced by their cruel sister-in-law and weak half-brother to leave the home they'd grown up in. _Sense & Sensibility_ -- the first one, that is -- is a novel many readers find hard to love. I hated it the first time through. Marianne drove me *insane.* All that screaming and selfishness! "I don't *care* what anyone thinks, I shall *die* without the man I love!" Okay, she didn't actually say that in so many words; but she sure as heck acted like it. And she very nearly made it come true.Now that I've read it more times than I've bothered to count, it's one of my favorite books in the world. Which sounds like some kind of literary Stockholm Syndrome, but really it's just a matter of my finally developing the kind of muscles and perspective it took for me to enjoy Austen's genius.I love S&S and I love Joanna Trollope's novels, so of course I grabbed this when I saw it sitting alone and unloved on the library shelf. I am one of those Austen admirers who does *not* want to read the eleventy-millionth "sequel" to _Pride & Prejudice_, but I had faith in Trollope's powers. I wanted to see what she'd do with the story.She'd transplant it directly to 21st-century England, is what she'd do. She'd keep all the names and major plot events exactly the same, on the theory that a story worth telling once is worth hearing twice.Part of me was eaten up by envy. It never occurred to me that we were allowed to do that -- to take a book we admire and just write it again. Immediately, I started casting around in my mind for stories *I* could own like that.I kept reading the whole time I was thinking along these lines, and I soon saw just how much subtle genius it takes to get away with a stunt like that. Yes, all the people and places go by the same names as they did in Austen's novel. But the Dashwood family in S&S1 is four women living on an inherited income. True, they're living on the cheap, for a genteel family. But it's taken as a given that their supposedly meager funds will stretch to cover not merely food and rent, but several servants and a home big enough to house all of them and a visitor or two besides. How will a modern reader relate to this sort of "poverty"? What will a modern writer employ as a sympathetic equivalent?And what about the really melodramatic plot points that Austen barely got away with in the early nineteenth-century: the dueling, the forced marriages and secret engagements and natural daughters. How on earth are *those* going to be carried to our times?Half the fun in reading this book is seeing how Trollope handles these tricky patches; the other half is the soothing delight of a story well told.Romance is certainly important in this novel. (It *better* be, considering who its readers are sure to be.) But the modern Dashwood sisters must of course have something more going on in their lives than the hopes of a marriage both affectionate and reasonably wealthy. Trollope paints the story anew with grace, wit, and obvious enjoyment. She doesn't do the usual cringe-inducing nonsense of trying to write like Austen (though she does sneak in a few lines from the original text, so smoothly that you won't notice unless you're a severe S&S nerd). She does make a few references to how things have changed since Austen's time: "Honestly, Abi, it's all you ever think about. You're like those nineteenth-century novels where marriage is the only career option for a middle-class girl."But mostly Trollope relies on her own clear, unmuddled prose to tell the story. Long-suffering Elinor is the sister who has to organize, plan, settle, smooth over, and smile when she feels like screaming -- "the price of having your head screwed on the right way," as Mrs. Jennings revisited observes sympathetically. And Elinor's affection for Marianne is made clear early on, in spite of the sisters having so little in common. Elinor actually feels sorry for her tempestuous, overly romantic younger sis:"It must be awful, she often thought, to take everything to heart so, as Marianne did; to react to every single thing that happened as if you were obliged to respond on behalf of the whole feeling world."That's some lovely character sketching. But it takes more than that to create a story worth reading. How is a contemporary reteller going to keep her audience engaged in a story we already know? How can she bring enough surprises to be interesting without leaving the original tale in tatters? She'll bore her readers if she changes too little, and enrage them if she interferes too much. If you've read S&S, read this so you can see for yourself how clever Trollope is. If you haven't, read this and then go read Austen's novel. Either way, let's all be happy that when Trollope decided to try her hand at Austen, she wisely steered clear of P&P.Now, if only someone would tackle _Northanger Abbey_...

CLM

November 16, 2013

Austen fans will enjoy this "remake" -- here is a link to my review:http://perfectretort.blogspot.com/201...

Cynthia

October 21, 2019

Without Trollope's rendition of this classic, I would have given up on Austin's novel. I got to page 100 and really was probably only understanding 10% of the plot. There were way too many characters, and way too much gibberish that distracted me from following along with the plot.That was until I picked up Trollope's version of Sense and Sensibility. I began reading the books simultaneously. A chapter of Trollope's, a chapter of Austen's. Together, I found that I wanted to put neither book down! Where Austen skipped over some character development, Trollope filled it in beautifully, making Fanny such a detestable character, I couldn't even stand it! I highly recommend that anyone who has trouble with the classics, try reading along side Trollope's work. It truly helps!

Jane

March 23, 2014

I really enjoyed this modern interpretation of Jane Austen's classic. Having reread the original recently it was easy to see the clever parallel's this author has made of, not only the characters and major events but the smaller less obvious things. I was interested that I found this story so much easier to read and to finish because of the modern language and familiar settings (not that I know many hooray Henry types or stately English homes!). It's not that I don't enjoy Jane Austen's language but it does actually take more thinking about to grasp the meaning.I look forward to reading more of this author.

Lisa

October 24, 2015

This retelling of the Austen classic is a fun and easy read, great for when you want to be entertained without working too hard. If you like the original, give this one a try!

Kristin

March 19, 2017

This book is part of a series called The Austen Project. The series reinvents and retells six of Austen's novels. This is the second book that I've read in the series. The other was Eligible, a P&P retelling.Eligible had nothing on this one. I love S&S. As much as I wish I was a Lizzie Bennet, I relate much more to Elinor Dashwood's total repression of her feelings. This is a fantastic retelling of S&S. It keeps all the best elements of the original novel. The bad guys stay bad guys (one of my biggest disappointments with the P&P retelling was that this was NOT the case). Marianne and Elinor are still polar opposites. Edward and Brandon are still hopeless and lovable. Fanny is still the devil.S&S held on to all of the major plot points of the original novel as well. I never forgot that I was reading an Austen reinterpretation. It was funny, sad, heartwarming, and frustrating. I haven't read the rest of the series of Austen retellings but I think I can safely say this one will remain my favorite.

Cheryl

September 12, 2017

Joanna Trollope was definitely channeling Jane Austen when she wrote this book. The language gave me a sense of old English, but with modern touches. I liked it very much.

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