- 01 - Volume 1, Chapter 01
- 02 - Volume 1, Chapter 02
- 03 - Volume 1, Chapter 03
- 04 - Volume 1, Chapter 04
- 05 - Volume 1, Chapter 05
- 06 - Volume 1, Chapter 06
- 07 - Volume I, Chapter 07
- 08 - Volume I, Chapter 08
- 09 - Volume I, Chapter 09
- 10 - Volume I, Chapter 10
- 11 - Volume I, Chapter 11
- 12 - Volume I, Chapter 12
- 13 - Volume I, Chapter 13
- 14 - Volume I, Chapter 14
- 15 - Volume I, Chapter 15
- 16 - Volume I, Chapter 16
- 17 - Volume I, Chapter 17
- 18 - Volume I, Chapter 18
- 19 - Volume II, Chapter 1
- 20 - Volume II, Chapter 2
- 21 - Volume II, Chapter 3
- 22 - Volume II, Chapter 4
- 23 - Volume II, Chapter 5
- 24 - Volume II, Chapter 6
- 25 - Volume II, Chapter 7
- 26 - Volume II, Chapter 8
- 27 - Volume II, Chapter 9
- 28 - Volume II, Chapter 10
- 29 - Volume II, Chapter 11
- 30 - Volume II, Chapter 12
- 31 - Volume II, Chapter 13
- 32 - Volume II, Chapter 14
- 33 - Volume II, Chapter 15
- 34 - Volume II, Chapter 16
- 35 - Volume II, Chapter 17
- 36 - Volume II, Chapter 18
- 37 - Volume III, Chapter 1
- 38 - Volume III, Chapter 2
- 39 - Volume III, Chapter 3
- 40 - Volume III, Chapter 4
- 41 - Volume III, Chapter 5
- 42 - Volume III, Chapter 6
- 43 - Volume III, Chapter 7
- 44 - Volume III, Chapter 8
- 45 - Volume III, Chapter 9
- 46 - Volume III, Chapter 10
- 47 - Volume III, Chapter 11
- 48 - Volume III, Chapter 12
- 49 - Volume III, Chapter 13
- 50 - Volume III, Chapter 14
- 51 - Volume III, Chapter 15
- 52 - Volume III, Chapter 16
- 53 - Volume III, Chapter 17
- 54 - Volume III, Chapter 18
- 55 - Volume III, Chapter 19
Jane Austen famously described Emma Woodhouse, the title character of her 1815 novel, as "a heroine whom no-one but myself will much like." Yet generations of readers have loved Emma, as much for her blunders as for her wit and vivacity. Emma, "handsome, clever, and rich," has nothing else to do but try to pair off her friends, and she consistently mis-reads the relationships and situations around her as much as she mis-reads her own heart. The novel features a wonderful cast of characters, including Emma's hypochondriac father, the odiously prideful Mrs. Elton, the mysterious and reserved Jane Fairfax, and Miss Bates, who never stops talking. (Summary by Elizabeth Klett).
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