Jane & Me: My Austen Heritage cover art

Jane & Me: My Austen Heritage

Preview

Audible Standard 30-day free trial

Try Standard free
Select 1 audiobook a month from our entire collection.
Listen to your selected audiobooks as long as you're a member.
Get unlimited access to bingeable podcasts.
Standard auto renews for £5.99 a month after 30 days. Cancel anytime.

Jane & Me: My Austen Heritage

By: Caroline Jane Knight
Narrated by: Alison Larkin
Try Standard free

£5.99 a month after 30 days. Cancel anytime.

Buy Now for £14.99

Buy Now for £14.99

About this listen

Caroline Jane Knight is the last of the Austen Knight family to grow up at Chawton House, the sixteenth-century English manor house on the ancestral estate where Jane Austen lived and wrote. Caroline ate at the same dining table, read in the same library, explored the same country lanes and shared the same dreams of independence as Jane Austen did.

But when she was seventeen, Caroline and her family were forced to leave the home her family had lived in for centuries. Heartbroken and determined to leave all things Austen behind her, this is the story of Caroline's journey from an idyllic childhood in which she baked cakes with her Granny for Jane Austen tourists, through personal crisis and success to her eventual embrace of her Austen heritage and the creation of the Jane Austen Literacy Foundation.

A contemporary and dramatic story, it is also a major contribution to the library of works about Jane Austen, including information thrillingly new to Jane Austen's readers and scholars.

Read by award-winning narrator Alison Larkin whose critically acclaimed recordings of the novels of Jane Austen include Pride and Prejudice and Songs from Regency England, Persuasion and Poems, Northanger Abbey and the History of England and Emma - the 200th anniversary audio edition.

Fifteen per cent of the profits from the sale of this book will be donated to the Jane Austen Literacy Foundation.

©2017 Caroline Jane Knight (P)2017 Alison Larkin Presents and Caroline Jane Knight
Art & Literature Authors Women Heartfelt England
All stars
Most relevant
It is a deeply personal and touching story of Caroline Jane Knight, the last member of Austen Knight family to grow up in Chawton House, the ancient family seat, that Jane Austen referred to in her letters as a "Great House". The book is captivating, honest, brave and absolutely unique - it gives the reader a glimpse into the world so intricately and intimately connected with Jane Austen that one feels her continuous presence on every page, just like one feels it while visiting the village of Chawton.
After reading the book, listening to it is a wonderful way of re-visiting its pages, noticing more nuances, and paying attention to all the rich details that might have escape your attention first time. I thoroughly recommend it.

A Captivating and Moving Tale

Something went wrong. Please try again in a few minutes.

I had read the book last year and enjoyed it so much that I bought the audiobook too, so I could have it with me where ever I went. I do not regret it one bit. Alison Larkin's narration is magical. Having read just one chapter I already forgot that it is not Caroline herself, but Alison speaking. I have so many favourite parts. Some make me laugh, others make me so sad that I almost well up, like the instance where Caroline's father decided never to enter a vegetable growing competion again or where Caroline overheard a woman speak rudely of her and didn't stop even when it was apparent that it had been heard. I got so immersed in the narration that it felt almost as if I were having tea with Caroline and she were telling me her story. Now I listen to it whenever I drive in my car. It is so therapeutic to listen to her story.
A huge thank you to Caroline for sharing such a deeply private story and for Alison to narrate it.

Fantastic book

Something went wrong. Please try again in a few minutes.

I had read the book last year and enjoyed it so much that I bought the audiobook too, so I could have it with me where ever I went. I do not regret it one bit. Alison Larkin's narration is magical. Having read just one chapter I already forgot that it is not Caroline herself, but Alison speaking. I have so many favourite parts. Some make me laugh, others make me so sad that I almost well up, like the instance where Caroline's father decided never to enter a vegetable growing competion again or where Caroline overheard a woman speak rudely of her and didn't stop even when it was apparent that it had been heard. I got so immersed in the narration that it felt almost as if I were having tea with Caroline and she were telling me her story. Now I listen to it whenever I drive in my car. It is so therapeutic to listen to her story.
A huge thank you to Caroline for sharing such a deeply private story and for Alison to narrate it.

Fantastic book

Something went wrong. Please try again in a few minutes.

Whilst the author's enterprise project of setting up a literacy charity is laudable and if I'd sat and listened to her reminiscing about her Knight family and Chawton for an hour or two, I'd no doubt have been interested, there is too much about the author's own life, which I had no real interest in: how she spent her 21st birthday or what jobs (nannying, marketing) she had done It's not a bad book but if you're looking for insights about Jane Austen, you'll probably not find anything new here. The audio narration wasn't great either: I've not heard Vangelis pronounced like that before.

Not really for me

Something went wrong. Please try again in a few minutes.