Cross-media recommendations across film, TV, games, books & music — picked by taste.
Pride and Prejudice is a novel of manners set among the English landed gentry, where the Bennet daughters must marry well or face poverty when their father dies. At its heart it is a study in perception: Elizabeth Bennet mistakes charm for virtue and reserve for arrogance, and the novel traces her slow, humbling correction. The taste it signals is for stories where social performance and genuine character diverge, where wit is a weapon, and where the real drama is interior.
Pride and Prejudice is a novel by English author Jane Austen. Written when she was aged 20–21, it was her third novel scribed and became the second to see print when it was published in 1813. A novel of manners, it follows the character development of Elizabeth Bennet, the protagonist of the book, who learns about the repercussions of hasty judgments and comes to appreciate the difference between superficial goodness and actual goodness.
From the Wikipedia article Pride_and_Prejudice, available under CC BY-SA.
Film
Pride & Prejudice
The same Hertfordshire household, entailed estate, and daughters navigating a society where a wealthy neighbour reshapes everything.
Film
Pride and Prejudice
Five unmarried daughters, a status-conscious Mr Darcy, and the social manoeuvring of early-19th-century England rendered for the screen.
Film
Pride and Prejudice
Elizabeth Bennet transplanted to a modern campus, still wary of marriage and still about to misjudge a charming stranger.
Film
Bride & Prejudice
A Bollywood retelling with a Mrs Bakshi just as marriage-minded and a Darcy figure who arrives with wealth and friction.
Film
Pride and Prejudice and Zombies
Elizabeth Bennet as a trained combatant — the class divide and tangled courtship survive intact beneath the zombie siege.
Film
Love & Friendship
Another Austen heroine working the rules of polite society from the inside, using social cunning where Elizabeth Bennet uses sharp judgment.
Series
Pride and Prejudice
The BBC serial that follows the same unmarried Bennet daughters as wealth and pride arrive in their quiet neighbourhood.
Series
Pride and Prejudice
The same early-19th-century England, the same five daughters competing for the attention of Bingley and the guarded Mr Darcy.
Series
Pride and Prejudice
Young prosecutors fighting entrenched power and learning to cooperate — the struggle against institutional prejudice as its connective thread.
Series
Sense and Sensibility
A second Austen novel of manners adapted for television, where family circumstances and shifting romantic fortunes drive the drama.
Series
Death Comes to Pemberley
A murder mystery set at Pemberley six years on, with Elizabeth and Darcy now married and their social world suddenly dangerous.
Series
Jane Eyre
An orphan navigating a rigid social world who falls for a brooding, mysterious man in a gloomy Yorkshire estate.
Book
Pride and Prejudice
The novel itself in a scholarly edition that frames it within its cultural and critical contexts for a fuller reading.
Book
Darcy's Story
The same courtship retold entirely from Darcy's point of view, filling in what he thought when Elizabeth first dismissed him.
Book
Darcy's Passions
Darcy's side of Austen's story, recast to explore his interior life with the sardonic humour of the original.
Book
Happily ever after
An account of how *Pride and Prejudice* became a global phenomenon, beloved across cultures for more than two centuries.
Book
The Darcy connection
A sequel centred on the Collins household, where the next generation of daughters faces the same marriage pressures as the Bennets.
Book
Pies & Prejudice (The Mother-Daughter Book Club #4)
A teenage book club reads *Pride and Prejudice* while one member adjusts to an unexpected move to England — the novel inside the novel.
The acclaimed 1995 BBC miniseries Pride and Prejudice is the gold standard for fans of the novel, while Death Comes to Pemberley offers a satisfying murder-mystery sequel set six years after Elizabeth and Darcy's marriage.
The 2005 Pride & Prejudice is a fan favourite, but if you want something different, Bride & Prejudice reimagines the story in Bollywood style, and Love & Friendship adapts another Austen work with the same sharp wit.
Darcy's Story and Darcy's Passions both revisit Austen's plot through Mr. Darcy's eyes, offering the same events with new emotional depth for readers who can't get enough of the original dynamic.