Of Jane Austen's life there is little to tell, and that little has been told more than once by writers whose relationship to her made them competent to do so. It is impossible to make even microscopic additions to the sum-total of the facts already known of that simple biography, and if by chance a few more original letters were discovered they could hardly alter the case, for in truth of her it may be said, "Story there is none to tell, sir." To the very pertinent question which naturally follows, reply may thus be given. Jane Austen stands absolutely alone, unapproached, in a quality in which women are usually supposed to be deficient, a humorous and brilliant insight into the foibles of human nature, and a strong sense of the ludicrous.
Jane on the Brain : Exploring the Science of Social Intelligence with Jane Austen
Wendy Jones
audiobookbookThe Mind of the Maker
Dorothy L. Sayers
bookThe Wimsey Papers—The Wartime Letters and Documents of the Wimsey Family
Dorothy L. Sayers
bookNaturguide Grønland
Bo Normander
book101 Things You Didn't Know about Einstein: Sex, Science, and the Secrets of the Universe
Cynthia Phillips, Shana Priwer
bookBeing Elvis : Et ensomt liv
Ray Connolly
bookKarrusellen
Rosamunde Pilcher
audiobookbookVemod undercover
Jan Gradvall
audiobookbookPompeji : Livet i en romersk by
Mary Beard
audiobookbookSpørgsmål jeg er blevet stillet om Holocaust
Hédi Fried
audiobookbookVejen hjem
Rosamunde Pilcher
audiobookbookAuschwitz og efter
Charlotte Delbo
audiobookbook