
Northanger Abbey and The History of England
Jane Austen
Unabridged
9 uur 24 minuten
Opmerking: Er kunnen kosten verbonden zijn aan het afspelen van de audioboeken of hoorspelen op de respectievelijke platforms, bijv. Spotify. Lismio heeft geen invloed op welke luisterboeken en hoorspelen beschikbaar zijn op de service.
Sommige artikelen bevatten affiliate links (gemarkeerd met een sterretje *). Als je op deze links klikt en producten koopt, ontvangen we een kleine commissie zonder extra kosten voor jou. Uw steun helpt ons deze site draaiende te houden en nuttige inhoud te blijven maken. Hartelijk dank voor uw steun!
Van de uitgever
"Award-winning narrator and internationally acclaimed writer/comedienne, Alison Larkin brings her signature wit to this dazzling audio production of Jane Austen's first novel, Northanger Abbey, followed by The History of England, a short, delightfully satirical piece rarely heard on audio, written by Jane Austen when she was just fifteen years old.
In Northanger Abbey, Catherine Morland, a clergyman's daughter, longs for the kind of romantic adventures she has read about in her favorite Gothic novels. After spending a season mingling with fashionable high society in Bath, she is invited to stay at Northanger Abbey where nothing is what it seems.
In The History of England, the teenage Jane Austen pokes fun at the historians of the day who pretended to be objective when they clearly were not, and wrote about the kings and queens of England with less respect (and more wit) than a British newspaper."
In Northanger Abbey, Catherine Morland, a clergyman's daughter, longs for the kind of romantic adventures she has read about in her favorite Gothic novels. After spending a season mingling with fashionable high society in Bath, she is invited to stay at Northanger Abbey where nothing is what it seems.
In The History of England, the teenage Jane Austen pokes fun at the historians of the day who pretended to be objective when they clearly were not, and wrote about the kings and queens of England with less respect (and more wit) than a British newspaper."