Here are your Jane Austen and the Bronte sisters related links for the week:
- The many ways in which we are wrong about Jane Austen – LitHub
- Was Mr Darcy the Aussie lover of a teenaged Jane Austen? – The Weekend Australian
- Pink Floyd, Jane Austen and virtual reality – the week in art – The Guardian
- Jane Austen’s old story stays fresh for centuries – St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Rarely-seen Jane Austen portrait behind new £10 note design going on display in Winchester – Southern Daily Echo
- Jane Austen expert Lucy Worsley in tribute at Chawton – Petersfield Post
- Six Rare Portraits of Jane Austen Go on View – Hyperallergic
- Pride and Plagiarism? TV historian Lucy Worsley is forced to defend claims her Jane Austen biography ‘borrows’ from another author – Daily Mail
- Discussing Jane Austen’s talent and legacy on the 200th anniversary of her death – Irish Examiner
- Jane Austen Practising: Teenage Writings – Oxford University Press blog
- The real Downton Abbey celebrates Jane Austen – ITV News
- Kent links with Jane Austen from Tonbridge to Horsmonden and Canterbury to Ashford – Kent Online
- 7 Quotes That Prove Jane Austen’s Advice Never Goes Out Of Date – Elle Australia
- Threads of truth about Brontë frock – Keighley News
- For sale: magnificent Calder Valley hall once home to Branwell Bronte – The Yorkshire Post
- Insight into Brontë museum’s displays – Keighley News
- New cycle of Brontë fun to come through summer – Keighley News
- Why You’ve Never Heard of These 7 Geniuses – National Geographic
- 20 quotes on life by Charlotte Bronte on her 201st birthday – Your Story
- The Brontë sisters are the feminist heroes we need in 2017 – Vox
- Clinton and Patterson or Burroughs and Austen? Who’d be the best writing duo? – The Guardian
- Playing fast and Lucy – Private Eye
- Marriage of maths and words, or how to appreciate Jane Austen better – The Hindu
- Jane Austen News – Issue 67 – Jane Austen Centre
- Jane Austen News – Issue 68 – Jane Austen Centre
- Jane Austen’s fiction: an accurate portrayal of life in Georgian England?
– History Extra