Mansfield Park [Swedish Edition], by Jane Austen
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Mansfield Park [Swedish Edition], by Jane Austen
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PDF Ebook Download Online: Mansfield Park [Swedish Edition], by Jane Austen
Fanny Price er vokset op hos sin rige onkel og tante på det storslåede, idylliske gods Mansfield Park sammen med sine to kusiner og to fætre. Hun mindes gang på gang om sin underordnede rang i familien, og hendes eneste allierede er fætteren Edmund, der altid tager hende i forsvar over for de mange urimeligheder, hun udsættes for af den øvrige familie. Mens Fannys onkel er på forretningsrejse i Antigua, ankommer de to charmerende søskende Mary og Henry Crawford til egnen, og der opstår hurtigt en forbindelse mellem dem og de unge mennesker på Mansfield Park. Dette nye bekendtskab vender op og ned på livet på godset, der kommer til at danne kulisse for et dristigt teaterstykke, ublu flirten, forelskelse, jalousi og splid. Edmund drages af den livlige Mary, og Fanny må håndtere følelser, hun aldrig har oplevet før.
Please note: This audiobook is in Swedish.
Mansfield Park [Swedish Edition], by Jane Austen - Amazon Sales Rank: #174555 in Audible
- Published on: 2015-10-01
- Format: Unabridged
- Original language: Swedish
- Running time: 989 minutes
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Most helpful customer reviews
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful. More shadow than light By The One Who Reads Fanny Price, a timid and gentle nine year old, is uprooted from her impoverished home in Portsmouth to live with her wealthy relations in Northampton. Of them all, only righteous Cousin Edmund has any idea of her loneliness amidst the splendours of Mansfield Park and he sets out to befriend her. His kindness has the inevitable result and Fanny grows evermore attached to him as she grows into her subservient position in the household.As she reached young adulthood, Sir Thomas is called over to the West Indies to investigate problems on the plantation which is the source of the family's riches and at this point Dr and Mrs Grantley (the clergyman who has the local living) introduce Mrs Grantley's sister and brother to the neighbourhood. Mary and Henry Crawford are irreverent, socially sophisticated and captivatingly good company. Edmund falls in love with the unsuitable Mary and Henry causes havoc with the hearts of the Bertram sisters, Julia and Maria. Fanny watches with a stern and judgemental eye.This is a wonderful book - full of grotesques : the horrid, mean, bullying Aunt Norris, Lady Bertram who never has the energy to move off her sofa or Sir Thomas Bertram, full of rectitude but unable to see how his parenting is stunting the growth of his daughters.We see more of the dark side of early nineteenth century life than is usual in Jane Austen's novels - Sir Thomas's association with the slave trade, the shocking poverty of Fanny's family in Portsmouth (her description of the milk which is served there ("motes floating in blue liquid") seems to sum up the whole ill-managed and depressing household or the seaman who is brutally whipped on one of William Price's ships.Fanny may not be a heroine the reader can fall in love with but she is the heroine of a multi-layered book which can be read again and again.
0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. Good wins in the end By Avid Reader This is a surprisingly frivolous book, given that it's a major work by an acclaimed author. I was surprised at its repetitiveness, its mostly stale humor and its hurried ending that wraps up everything too neatly. It's certainly not a bad book, but I found myself trudging through sections of it, feeling that I was reading the same things over and over again: a drawing room scene, a walk on the grounds; an unrequited lover bemoaning his or her fate. I'm guessing that it was popular fiction in its day, and like popular fiction in any era, it has limitations.The story line revolves around Fanny, a poor relation taken in by her ultra-wealthy aunt, Lady Bertram. Lady Bertram lives on the estate Mansfield Park with her husband, a member of Parliament who is a distant and utterly proper gentleman. The family has two daughters (beautiful and spoiled) and two sons (one a playboy, one planning to become a minister). Fanny arrives at age 10, and she spends the next 7 years being intimidated by all in the family except minister-to-be Edmund, who befriends her out of pity and then learns to respect and love her stable, thoughtful character.By the time Fanny reaches 18, she's become a beauty like her older step-sisters. She's still terribly shy and intimidated, but nonetheless attracts the attention of Henry, another playboy who is living with relatives at the nearby luxurious parsonage. Fanny does not return Henry's affections, as she has fallen in love with her cousin Edmund. There are twists and turns, as one of Fanny's stepsisters marries a stupid but very wealthy man with whom Henry has been flirting shamelessly both before and after her engagement. Also, Fanny becomes friendly with Henry's sister Mary, though fully aware that Mary can't be trusted. Edmund, meanwhile, falls in love with Mary, even while recognizing her faults, as he thinks he can cure them with his goodness.All this spins out in the very sleepy British countryside, where the same half-dozen people meet for dinner each night and then sit around playing cards and trying to be charming and polite. Jane Austen does a good job of conveying the mood in those parlours and drawing rooms, and there's some witty dialogue and repartee. But the scenes are repeated over and over, and you wonder how anyone could stand the dullness. Frankly, you recognize why Fanny's stepsisters, as well as Mary and Henry, long for more :society" and activity in London. It's hard to feel that Fanny is really the person to identify with.If the book is read as a sly satire about Fanny, who is smug in her own thoughts, then it does have added meaning. And I think that is part of the lesson, especially when Fanny goes back to her birth family for a three-week visit at age 18 and chafes at the noise, dirt and lousy food. But Fanny is too virtuous to be angry; she's just uncomfortable and embarrassed.In the end, things wrap up neatly. Sir Thomas of Mansfield Park shows that he has a heart after all. Those who flout society's conventions get their comeuppance. The prodigal son matures. The incredibly annoying Aunt Norris finally moves to another country instead of infesting Mansfield Park with her jealousy. And Fanny and Edmund live happily ever after.
0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. Mansfield Park-- A Masterpiece! By Ornery, Swaggering, Piece of work Mansfield Park, one of Austen's later novels, though not popular with all, perfectly satisfies me as another of Jane Austen's wonderfully written stories. Here is a summary of the plot, with a word of warning: I have left nothing out, it will spoil all surprises.Fanny Price, ten years old, timid and lonely, has been sent to live with her aunt and uncle, Sir Thomas and Lady Bertram, at their extensive estate, Mansfield Park. Her cousins ignore her, and Lady Bertram's sister, her aunt Norris, never fails to remind her that she is "The lowest and the last". Only Edmund, her older cousin, is kind and attentive.Eight years later, Sir Thomas and his eldest son go abroad on business, and when the son Tom returns early, he brings a friend, Mr. Yates along. Shortly after this, Maria Bertram becomes engaged to a Mr. Rushworth. Mr. Yates has a passion for acting, and persuades the Bertrams and the newly arrived Crawfords to put on and act in a play at Mansfield Park. Edmund and Fanny disapprove of the scheme, and also the play of their choice, Lovers Vows; however, the aspiring performers refuse to give it up, regardless of the impropriety of their actions. Shortly before the final rehearsal, Sir Thomas returns and puts an end to any future attempts at their play.Edmund is captivated by Mary Crawford, and any romantic feelings between him and Fanny seem now hopeless. Also, Fanny has a new, albeit unwelcome, admirer in Henry Crawford. When asked by him for her hand in marriage, she firmly refuses, but Crawford is not one to give up easily. When she goes to visit her family in Portsmouth, he follows, and tries to ingratiate himself with her, to no avail. Fanny is eager to be back home at Mansfield when her two month visit merges into three; however, the letter she receives, instead of inviting her back, informs her that Maria, now Mrs. Rushworth and living in London, had left her husband for Mr. Crawford, and the two had fled. Latter, Edmund writes that his sister Julia had eloped with Mr. Yates, and they had gone to Scotland.Soon after, Fanny returns to Mansfield Park, and Edmund, disappointed in the lax manner that Mary Crawford treats her brother's infamy, has broken ties with her forever. Mrs. Norris, not wanting to be separated from her still dear Maria, relocates from Mansfield, to everyone's mutual satisfaction. Edmund realizes how important Fanny has become to him, and they are soon united in marriage.Many have criticized this book as not being as good as Austen's other works, and though the heroine may not have the same traits of the others, that shouldn't make the story any less enjoyable.Some complain that Fanny is "priggish" or "too timid" or "not human enough". Personally, I do not see Fanny as priggish, only very upright in all her doings. True, she is timid, but she rises above that and by the end of the book, seems much more outspoken. I really don't see how Fanny could be deemed not human enough, she seems very human to me; perhaps it is because she refuses to lower her moral standards that she is termed such; to me, this only raised my opinion of her.Mansfield Park is now one of my favorite books by Jane Austen, why it has not enjoyed as much popularity as her other novels is beyond me. Hope you enjoy it!
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