January: "Sense & Sensibility" - Verstand & Gefühl/Sinn & Sinnlichkeit - 1811 (The Motherhood and Jane Austen)
February: Worsley, Lucy "Jane Austen at Home" - 2017
March: "Pride & Prejudice" - Stolz & Vorurteil - 1813 (The Motherhood and Jane Austen)
April: Bell, Catherine "Jane Austen and the Art of Words" (GE: Jane Austen und die Kunst der Worte) - 2021
May: "Mansfield Park" - Mansfield Park - 1814 (The Motherhood and Jane Austen)
June: Hornby, Gill "Miss Austen" - 2020
July: "Emma" - Emma - 1816 (The Motherhood and Jane Austen)
August: Sullivan, Margaret C. "The Jane Austen Handbook. A Sensible Yet Elegant Guide to Her World" - 2007
September: "Northanger Abbey" - Kloster Northanger - 1818 (The Motherhood and Jane Austen)
October: Adkins, Roy & Lesley "Eavesdropping on Jane Austen's England: How our ancestors lived two centuries ago" (aka "Jane Austen's England) - 2013
November: "Persuasion" - Überredung/Anne Elliot - 1817 (The Motherhood and Jane Austen)
December: Deresiewicz, William "A Jane Austen Education: How Six Novels Taught Me About Love, Friendship, and the Things That Really Matter" - 2011
And there are, of course, hundreds of books about Jane Austen, her life, her novels, plus numerous "sequels" to the novels she wrote, written by contemporary authors. I am not a big fan of those kind of stories, so I'm not including any since I haven't read them.
"Lady Susan" - Lady Susan - 1795
"The Watsons" - Die Watsons - 1803/05
"Sanditon" - Sanditon - 1817
"Selected Letters. 1796-1817" - 1796-1817
Tomalin, Claire "Jane Austen - A Life" - 1997
Which Austen Heroine are You?
Other books relating to her work:
Baker, Jo "Longbourn" - 2013
McCall Smith, Alexander "Emma. A Modern Retelling" - 2015
Rowlatt, Bee & Witwit, May "Talking About Jane Austen in Baghdad. The True Story of an Unlikely Friendship" - 2010
Austen, Jane "The History of England: By a Partial, Prejudiced and Ignorant Historian" - 1791
You will find more posts where she has been mentioned here.
And there are some recommendations by friends:
Harman, Claire "Jane’s Fame - How Jane Austen Conquered the World"
Mullan, John "What Matters in Jane Austen? - Twenty Crucial Puzzles Solved"
And during the year, Captivated Reader found a YouTube link on PBS for a Jane Austen dance and general information about her life.

A year of Austen sounds lovely. :D
ReplyDeleteIt was fantastic, Lark. I mean, you don't necessarily have to do it in her jubilee year, you can always start whenever. And I will definitely add other books I will read in future but I am sure you'll find lots of books about her books yourself. Looking forward to seeing whether you embark on it.
DeleteSo many books about Jane Austen, unbelievable. It seems she is more popular than ever. Well deserved, of course.
ReplyDeleteDefinitely, Lisbeth. I always have the feeling that she grows to be more read every year. Of course, new readers always grow up, so they will add to her fans.
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