Jane Austen (1775–1817) wrote five completed novels in a small Hampshire parlour, with her manuscripts hidden under a blotter whenever visitors came. All five have never left print. They are among the most technically accomplished novels in English — precise, ironic, and always aware of the distance between what people say and what they mean.
All five are available to read free on warpread.
The novels, in recommended reading order
| Novel | Words | Time at 350 WPM | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pride and Prejudice | 122,000 | 5h 49m | First Austen — the benchmark |
| Sense and Sensibility | 119,000 | 5h 40m | The contrast between the sisters |
| Emma | 160,000 | 7h 37m | Austen's most complex comedy |
| Persuasion | 84,000 | 4h | Most emotionally direct; best second Austen |
| Mansfield Park | 160,000 | 7h 37m | Darkest; Fanny Price divides readers |
Where to start
Start with Pride and Prejudice. It is the entry point for good reason: Elizabeth Bennet is one of the most immediately appealing characters in English fiction, Darcy's arc is clearly constructed, and Austen's wit is at its most accessible. The novel's opening line — "It is a truth universally acknowledged, that a single man in possession of a good fortune, must be in want of a wife" — signals exactly what kind of book this is.
Second: Persuasion. At 84,000 words, it is the shortest of the five, and the most emotionally concentrated. Anne Elliot's situation — having been persuaded to refuse the man she loved eight years earlier, and now encountering him again — generates a sustained ache that Austen's earlier novels don't match. The famous "Letter" scene near the end is the most emotionally direct thing Austen ever wrote.
Third: Emma — but only if you have read one or two Austens first. Emma Woodhouse is not immediately sympathetic in the way Elizabeth Bennet is, and the novel's comedy depends on recognising her self-deception as comic rather than irritating. Readers who approach Emma as their first Austen often find it slow; readers who come to it after Pride and Prejudice or Persuasion tend to consider it her masterpiece.
Sense and Sensibility is best read either second or third. It is darker than Pride and Prejudice — the fate of the Dashwood women is genuinely precarious — and the contrast between Elinor's restraint and Marianne's romantic excess gives the novel its structure.
Mansfield Park is best saved for last. It is the most serious of the five — Fanny Price is passive in ways that frustrate some readers — and its moral argument is the most sustained. Read it as a deliberate counterweight to the wit of the earlier novels.
What makes Austen worth reading at speed
Austen's irony depends on pace. The gap between what a character believes and what the reader understands is the engine of all her comedy — and that gap is more visible when you are reading at momentum rather than pausing to inspect individual sentences. At 300–350 WPM in RSVP, Austen reads as something between reading and watching: the dramatic irony lands harder.
Her sentences are long by modern standards but rhythmically clear. The subordinate clauses are always doing semantic work; you can read through them without stopping. Austen's prose is ideal for RSVP: consistent register, no sudden tonal shifts, clear dramatic stakes in every chapter.
Reading tips
- Don't slow down for the social descriptions. The opening chapters of Pride and Prejudice and Sense and Sensibility establish the economic stakes of the plot. Read them at pace; the details you need will recur.
- Pay attention to what characters do not say. Austen's most important moments are often conveyed through silence, deflection, or conspicuously not mentioning something.
- Lydia Bennet is not a subplot. Her elopement with Wickham in Pride and Prejudice is the structural crisis the entire novel has been building toward. Read that section at the same pace as the rest.
Start with Pride and Prejudice on warpread →
FAQ
Q: Which Jane Austen novel should I read first? A: Pride and Prejudice — the funniest, most propulsive, and most immediately readable. Persuasion is the best second Austen if you have already read it.
Q: How long does it take to read Pride and Prejudice? A: Approximately 122,000 words — about 5 hours 49 minutes at 350 WPM, or 8 hours at careful literary reading speed (250 WPM).
Q: Are Jane Austen's novels difficult to read? A: Difficulty 3 out of 5. The language is 19th-century but not archaic. The main adjustment is the social context: understanding what the stakes are for women in Regency England sharpens the comedy.
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