Austen’s coming-of-age satire on Gothic novel-mania — her earliest completed novel, written when she was 23, but published only after her death.
| Catherine Morland | Seventeen-year-old clergyman’s daughter; voracious reader of Ann Radcliffe’s Gothics; the heroine the novel’s narrator constantly teases. |
| Henry Tilney | The witty younger Tilney son; clergyman; the only Austen hero who is genuinely funny. |
| Eleanor Tilney | Henry’s elegant sister; Catherine’s only true friend at the Abbey. |
| General Tilney | The Tilney patriarch; not a Gothic villain but very much a real-world tyrant. |
| Captain Frederick Tilney | The dissipated elder brother; pursues Isabella to her ruin. |
| John Thorpe | Boastful, lying neighbor in Bath; mistakes Catherine’s family fortune. |
| Isabella Thorpe | His sister; befriends Catherine, becomes engaged to her brother James, then jilts him for Captain Tilney. |
| James Morland | Catherine’s eldest brother; the throughline of the Thorpe subplot. |
| Mr. and Mrs. Allen | Wealthy childless neighbors who take Catherine to Bath. |
Catherine’s Gothic imagination paints the Abbey with horrors that turn out to be more pedestrian — and more cruelly real — than fiction.
The narrator catalogues all the things Catherine is not — orphaned, talented, beautiful in a particular way — and proceeds anyway.
Chapter 5 contains Austen’s most famous defense of fiction itself: “Only a novel.”
John Thorpe’s rumor-spreading turns Catherine into both a target and a casualty of false credit.
The half-finished cabinet, the unfinished letter, the locked chest — all the props of Radcliffe, gently mocked.
Initial sales of the joint posthumous publication were modest. Modern criticism finds in Northanger Abbey Austen’s most playful narrator — a young writer’s book, kept fresh by years of revision.
| Year | Production | Cast / Notes |
|---|---|---|
| 1986 | BBC | Katharine Schlesinger |
| 2007 | ITV | Felicity Jones & JJ Feild — the most-loved screen Northanger; Andrew Davies’s screenplay |
For deep guides to individual adaptations — cast, awards, fidelity to novel, where to watch — see the Adaptations index.
Read all 31 chapters of Northanger Abbey, hosted on Austen.com since the 1990s.
Jump to chapter index ↓The full text of Northanger Abbey is hosted in the original chapter files on this site. The chapter URLs have been live since the late 1990s and remain unchanged.
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