The Commute That Disappeared
Look, I'll be honest - I've been avoiding Austen for years. Not because I don't appreciate her (I do, genuinely), but because every time I tried to read Pride and Prejudice in print, I'd get about three chapters in before my brain started wandering to whatever sci-fi novel was sitting on my nightstand. The prose is dense. The sentences are long. And my attention span? Not what it used to be.
So when I finally decided to give the audiobook a shot during my morning commute, I wasn't expecting much. Maybe I'd get through it out of sheer stubbornness. What I didn't expect was to miss my exit. Twice. In one week.
Elizabeth Klett Gets It
Here's the thing about narrating Austen - you can't just read the words. The whole point of her writing is the irony, the subtle jabs, the way she'll describe someone as "perfectly agreeable" when she absolutely means the opposite. Elizabeth Klett understands this on a molecular level.
Her voice has this quality that's hard to describe - warm but sharp? She delivers Austen's narration with just enough of a knowing edge that you catch every single barb. When she's describing Mrs. Bennet's nerves (and oh, those nerves get mentioned approximately seven thousand times), there's this tiny hint of amusement that never crosses into mockery. It's like she's your clever friend reading aloud and occasionally raising an eyebrow at you.
The character differentiation is solid too. Mr. Bennet's dry wit comes through in a lower, more measured tone. Mrs. Bennet is appropriately shrill without being grating - which is honestly an achievement, because that character could easily become unbearable in the wrong hands. And Darcy? She nails the shift from insufferable pride to genuine vulnerability. By the time you get to that letter scene, you feel the change.
Now, I've seen some people compare this to the Rosamund Pike version, and sure, Pike's got the star power and the professional polish. But Klett's version - which is actually a LibriVox recording, so free if you know where to look - has something the glossy productions sometimes lack. It feels more intimate. Less performed. Like someone who genuinely loves this book is sharing it with you.
Where It Drags (Because Honesty)
Okay, so here's where I have to be real with you. At 11 hours, this is not a short listen. And there are stretches - particularly some of the middle sections with all the visiting and letter-writing and social maneuvering - where even Klett's narration can't quite save you from checking how much time is left.
The pacing runs a bit quick in places. I caught myself rewinding a few times during dialogue-heavy scenes because the characters were talking over each other (figuratively, I mean - Klett's doing all the voices, but the back-and-forth can get rapid). Not a dealbreaker, but if you're listening while doing something that requires actual brain power, you might miss things.
Also - and this is minor - the production is clean but basic. No music, no sound effects, just Klett and the text. Some people prefer that. I'm one of them, actually. But if you're coming from those fully-produced Audible originals with orchestral swells and ambient noise, this might feel stripped down.
Why This Version Works for First-Timers
I think what surprised me most was how funny this book actually is. I'd always thought of Pride and Prejudice as this serious romance thing - all longing glances and repressed emotions. And sure, that's in there. But Austen was writing comedy. Mr. Collins alone is worth the price of admission (or in this case, the free download). The way Klett delivers his pompous speeches with such earnest sincerity - I actually laughed out loud on the train. Got some looks.
If you've bounced off Austen before, like I did, the audiobook format genuinely helps. The sentences that seem endless on the page flow naturally when spoken. The social dynamics that feel confusing in print become clear when you can hear the tone. And Elizabeth Bennet - who I'd always found a bit too perfect in my previous attempts - becomes genuinely relatable. Stubborn, quick to judge, way too confident in her own perceptions. Basically me, but in a bonnet.
The Verdict
Is this the definitive Pride and Prejudice audiobook? I honestly don't know - I haven't listened to all of them, and I'm not going to pretend I have. What I can tell you is that Elizabeth Klett's narration made me finally understand why people have been obsessing over this book for two hundred years. The wit lands. The romance builds properly. The social commentary still hits. (Seriously, the stuff about marriage and money and women's limited options? Still relevant. Still uncomfortable.)
If you're an Austen devotee who's heard every version, maybe this won't blow your mind. But if you're like me - someone who always meant to get around to the classics but never quite did - this is an excellent way in. The 11-hour runtime flew by faster than most 6-hour thrillers I've listened to recently.
Just maybe don't start it right before your exit. Trust me on that one.







