250 (& More) Reasons We Love Jane Austen
Born on December 16, 1775, Jane Austen turns 250 this year. Help us celebrate!
Everyone has their own reason for adoring Jane Austen, and we would all love to hear yours. Whether it's as simple as "Mrs. Bennet's nerves," a favorite witty line, or a heartfelt toast, we're gathering a joyful collection of 250—and more!—reasons you, her readers and fans, appreciate her. Join us in celebrating the incomparable Jane!
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Comments
Jo Oct 7, 2025, 7:50 AM (6 days ago)
Articulating the reasons why I love Jane Austen is difficult—there are so many that keeping this comment brief is a challenge! Number one on my list, though, has to be her razor-sharp insights into human nature. In two hundred plus years people remain, sadly, not much evolved, with many of the same (serious) flaws that Austen exposes to comic effect. She is an antidote to the depressing days in which we find ourselves.
Gianna Pasquale Oct 5, 2025, 5:54 PM (7 days ago)
Dear Jane,
Every heroine that you brought to life with your pen knows her own heart better at the end of the novel than she did at the beginning. Thank you for always encouraging us to grow in self-knowledge, discover the true desires of our hearts, and become worthy heroines of our own stories.
With gratitude,
Gianna
P.S. Thank you for the countless memories laughing and glowing with my mom and sister over everything from Mrs. Bennet's nerves to Captain Wentworth's letter (which we know by heart)! :)
Lori Bellitt Oct 5, 2025, 5:01 PM (7 days ago)
I learned from Lizzie how to eloquently (sharpness of tongue) and visually (piercing look) put a patronizing man in his place.
Jenni Taylor Swain Oct 5, 2025, 1:06 PM (8 days ago)
I love Jane Austen for giving me over 250 (plus) things to talk about with my friends! What rabbit hole should we go down today?
Bridget Gethins Sep 30, 2025, 10:41 AM (13 days ago)
Dearest Jane,
As I think back on our introduction, me reader and you, goddess of your pen. I knew not what to expect. As a dyslexic, which I hid from all! Until an acquaintance ask me to join her book club.
I was 23. For some reason I said yes. "Great. The first book is ,"Emma" by Jane Austen."
I bought my first paperback novel. The cover was a portrait of a lovely young woman. This was 1985.
Something magical happened, something clicked in my brain. I slowly worked through, "Emma." Then I read "Pride and Prejudice." And now I have many books by and about Jane Austen.
Happy Birthday, and thank you, Jane Austen.
Friend,
Bridget Gethins
Susan Weisgrau Sep 27, 2025, 12:54 PM (16 days ago)
I love Jane Austen novels because they make me feel smart. Every time i follow the thread of where the sentence is going, some of her brilliance rubs off on me. Every time I get her "wink" which I'm sure is given just to me, I feel clever and witty.. I read Jane Austen the same way she is reading me. I end up feeling smart, more self-aware and entertained at the same time. Can any reader ask for more?
rebecca bowes Sep 23, 2025, 8:28 AM (20 days ago)
When I compare Austen to her contemporaries, she is SO far ahead of her time that there IS no comparison. Is there any other fiction writer in history who has been read so consistently and so avidly for 250 years, and with no sign of diminishing popularity? Nope. She's just extraordinary.
Kira Adams Sep 18, 2025, 11:20 AM (25 days ago)
Jane Austen’s words are as relevant today as they were when they were first published.
Ashley Given Sep 17, 2025, 4:36 PM (25 days ago)
Each time I read Austen I pick up on new nuances I missed in previous readings. I love that I can relive the stories that I enjoy but still have a different experience with new discoveries each time. I adore Austen's wit and satire and her brilliant critiques on class, society, and gender roles all well being entertaining stories in their own right.
Yvonne MILLER Sep 16, 2025, 4:19 PM (26 days ago)
I love it Austen for all the reasons mentioned by other readers in this space. I particularly love her, though for two reasons:
Her penetrating insight and wit into the foibles and frailties of some of her characters. I must say, though that I was older before I actually began to notice these subtle digs…
I also had to be older before I could appreciate some of her works. Persuasion has become especially dear to me as I mature. I went through a period last year where I listened to a recording of Persuasion almost every night as I lay waiting to go to sleep.. It was so comforting to me.
I think I understand why soldiers carried copies of Austen into the trenches.
I love her also for the clarity of her writing. This clarity is so inviting and yet, contains within layers and layers of illusion which the author then proceeds to reveal.
She is definitely an author for all seasons of life.
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