Jane Austen's Northanger Abbey is both a perfectly aimed literary parody and a withering satire of the commercial aspects of marriage among the English gentry at the turn of the nineteenth century. But most of all it is the story of the initiation into life of its naive but sweetly appealing heroine Catherine Morland a willing victim of the contemporary craze for Gothic literature who is determined to see herself as the heroine of a dark and thrilling romance.
When Catherine is invited to Northanger Abbey the grand though forbidding ancestral seat of her suitor Henry Tilney she finds herself embroiled in a real drama of misapprehension mistreatment and mortification until common sense and humor-and a crucial clarification of Catherine's financial status-puts all to right. Written in 1798 but not published until after Austen's death in 1817 Northanger Abbey is characteristically clearheaded and strong and infinitely subtle in its comedy.
Jane Austen was an English novelist whose works of romantic fiction, set among the landed gentry, earned her a place as one of the most widely read writers in English literature. Her realism, biting i... more