i really really love when people search for my austen stuff on google
- 9th January
2013 - 09
- 15th April
2012 - 15
The Jane Austen Book Club
- 10th April
2012 - 10
(via igorres)
- 29th February
2012 - 29
Asked by: masterpieceofass

WOOO! especially this one^^! he’s so adorable i want to punch him
- 29th February
2012 - 29
Asked by: masterpieceofass

yaaay! i have to admit, i’ve seen that movie well over 50 times. total comfort!
- 20th December
2011 - 20
- 31st October
2011 - 31
reader beware, you’re in for a scare!
- 8th October
2011 - 08
Star Wars & Mansfield Park & Incest
“The relationship between Edmund and Fanny. They seemed like brother and sister.
But then in the end, it’s like The Empire Strikes Back, but it’s in reverse. You know? ‘Cause in Jedi, Luke Skywalker, he gets over Princess Leia when she turns out to be his sister.
Edmund gets over Miss Crawford and gets it on with Fanny, who’s his first cousin, so…
Did that bother anybody else?”
- 29th September
2011 - 29
From The Jane Austen Book Club. A classic Janeite line that might also be interpreted as, “Fuck off if you don’t read those books, too.”
- 29th September
2011 - 29
“They’re not sequels.”
- 26th September
2011 - 26
(Source: quinnfabray)
- 17th September
2011 - 17
that awkward moment when you reach suavely for your adult beverage and end up with a candle instead
hot wax has a really nice kick to it, or so i hear.
gif: lovablegeek123.
- 3rd September
2011 - 03
Sylvia: She’s not even young.
Jocelyn: Do you think he has a brain tumor?
Sylvia: I think he fell in love.
Jocelyn: …well, I’m rooting for the brain tumor!
I think it might be a Jane Austen Book Club kinda day. Isn’t it the perfect Saturday morning movie to fold your laundry and cuddle your pup to?
(Source: lolixoxo)
- 29th August
2011 - 29
“Each of us has a private Austen.
Jocelyn’s Austen wrote wonderful novels about love and courtship, but never married.
Bernadette’s Austen was a comic genius. Her characters, her dialogue remained genuinely funny, not like Shakespeare’s jokes, which amused you only because they were Shakespeare’s and you owed him that.
Sylvia’s Austen was a daughter, a sister, an aunt. Sylvia’s Austen wrote her books in a busy sitting room, read them aloud to her family, yet remained an acute and nonpartisan observer of people. Sylvia’s Austen could love and be loved, but it didn’t cloud her vision, blunt her judgement.
Allegra’s Austen wrote about the impact of financial need on the intimate lives of women. If she’d worked in a bookstore, Allegra would have shelved Austen in the horror section.
Prudie’s was the Austen whose books changed every time you read them, so that one year they were all romances and the next you suddently noticed Austen’s cool, ironic prose. Prudie’s was the Austen who died, possibly of Hodgkin’s disease, when she was only forty-one years old.
None of us knew who Grigg’s Austen was.”
-The Jane Austen Book Club, by Karen Joy Fowler
How would you describe your own private Austen?
My Austen is a revolutionary and a true ironist who critiqued the hypocrisy of her society and loved the inconsistencies and strangeness of the people around her. You’re so punk, Jane.
(Source: frumpyspaceprincess)

