Tag Archives: books

Jane Austen Timeline

Jane Austen

Jane Austen turned 250 in December! Happy Birthday girl! There were hundreds of celebrations around the world to honor the author, including the Jane Austen Society of North America’s Annual General Meeting in October in Baltimore.

As a member of JASNA, Maryland I helped plan that meeting, and one of the things I did was create a timeline of Austen’s life.

Jane Austen Timeline

Recently I was asked to speak about how I created the timeline.

[If you are interested in that talk or seeing the slideshow from it… send me a note below.]

Then I started thinking about how this would be a more useful tool not as a physical timeline, but as an online resource … and I created a Google Slideshow version of the timeline itself.

As you can see the timeline begins with the birth of her father, George Austen in 1731. It progresses thru the birth of all her mother and all her siblings.

The next slide shows her early life in Steventon. Things Jane wrote are below the line and get a dark purple dot. Things above the line include important events in the family, like Edward’s “adoption”, marriages (yellow), and deaths (red). When Jane’s father moved with the ladies to Bath, the location line changes color to orange.

The third slide shows the publication dates of her novels in dark purple below the line. Above the line we get more family business. Alas, Jane’s death is noted about halfway across the slide. But her legacy lives on… and so the timeline continues.

Slide four again show books below the line. Books about Jane, like her nephew James Edward Austen-Leigh’s biography with a gray dot, and second editions of Jane’s books with lighter purple dots. While above the line we see that the red dots continue as her siblings and friends die.

In the fifth slide we see more editions below the line and our first media adaption with a play in 1935. Above the line is now devoted to important events and people that shaped what is now JASNA and the world of Janeites.

In slide six the plethora of media adaptations begin to take hold on Jane’s legacy. The first television adaptation took place in 1938! Above the line we see that Jane Austen’s House, the cottage in Chawton where she finished her “big six” opened as a museum in 1949. We also see that JASNA began in 1979.

You can see in slide seven how 1995 was the year that Jane Austen exploded on the popular scene. With movies and television series regularly delighting viewers for the next several decades. In 2012 the VLOGosphere entered the fray with The Lizzie Bennet Diaries that brought the Bennet sisters to Southern California and whole new audience to Austen’s books.

And on it goes with new plays, TV and movie adaptions bringing us into Austen’s 250th.

[If you are interested in seeing the full slideshow / timeline send me a note below.]

Throughout the slideshow you’ll be able to click on the tags at the bottom of the photos and link to more information about what interest you.

This blog and the Jane Austen timeline is free to use, but remains the intellectual property of the creator. The images on the timeline are property of the institutions indicated by their links. Permission is NOT given to copy the images or the timeline with out express permission. Thank you.


July Creative Challenge Day 11, Parting Thoughts

endings

Well, if yesterday took a look at famous opening lines, I have to do famous ending lines today, don’t I? So… beware of SPOILERS!!! Here are the last lines to some famous novels, and some of my favorites. Please comment with your own faves.

lasting Impressions4

Lasting 3

Lasting 1

lasting 2

Want to take a quiz to test you mad “last line” skills? …[Click Here]


Thought of the Day 9.1.12 Edgar Rice Burroughs

“I write to escape…to escape poverty.”

Edgar Rice Burroughs

Русский: Эдгар Райс Берроуз

Edgar Rice Burroughs (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Edgar Rice Burroughs was born on this day in Chicago, Illinois in 1875. Today is the 137th anniversary of his birth.

He was the middle child Major George Burroughs and his wife Mary Evaline. His younger siblings died of childhood diseases, leaving him the baby of the family. He bounced around several different local schools. Whenever there was an outbreak of a disease his parents took him out of one school and put him in another.  Since schools taught Latin and Greek as well as English he later …

“his erratic schooling… resulted in his … learning little English while taking the same Greek and Latin courses over and over again. Despite his claims to the contrary, this early exposure to Classical literature and mythology would serve Burroughs well in his future writing career.” [The Official Edgar Rice Burroughs Mini-Bio]

When a flu epidemic swept through Chicago his parents sent a teenaged Edgar to his brothers’ cattle ranch in Idaho. He love the rough and tumble “wild west”  with its range wars and saloon shoot outs and he lived there for six months before his parents realized the danger of  frontier life was on par with the danger of getting influenza. They called him home and enrolled him in Phillips Academy in Andover, Massachusetts. He didn’t last long there and was soon transferred to the more structured  Michigan Military Academy. He failed the West Point entrance exam  and signed up for the Army  as a private where he served with the 7th US Cavalry at Fort Grant, Arizona Territory. He was discharged from the Army for a heart condition in 1897.

In 1899 he was back in Chicago working for his father ‘s company, and the next year he married his childhood sweetheart, Emma Hulbert. After a few years he and Emma travelled west to Idaho so he could try his luck with his brothers again, this time at gold mining. But that venture soon went bust and Burroughs went through a number of jobs from railway policeman to peddler for quack medicine.

One of his jobs was as a pencil sharpener wholesaler. He placed ads for the pencil sharpeners in pulp fiction magazines and he would read through the magazines to check the placement of the ads.

“After reading several thousand words of breathless pulp fiction Burroughs determined … that ‘if people were paid for writing rot such as I read in some of those magazines that I could write stories just as rotten. As a matter of fact, although I had never written a story, I knew absolutely that I could write stories just as entertaining and probably a whole lot more so than any I chanced to read in those magazines.'” [The Official Edgar Rice Burroughs Mini-Bio]

Cover of "Under the Moons of Mars: A Prin...

Cover via Amazon

In fact he had already written stories, but his introduction into the pulp fiction market with Under the Moons of Mars,  for which he received a whopping $400 from All-Story magazine, was a turning point in his career. The story was serialized  in the magazine and produced as a novel under its original name of A Princess of Mars. By the time the last installment was published in July of 1912 Burroughs had completed two more novels. The Outlaw of Torn and Tarzan of the Apes. Outlaw was not picked up by the publisher, but Tarzan was an immediate hit. Burroughs got $700 for the book. He wrote a number of sequels for both Mars (11, including John Carter of Mars) and Tarzan (26).

Dustjacket by Armstrong Sperry for the first e...

Dustjacket by Armstrong Sperry for the first edition of Tarzan and the Lost Empire by Edgar Rice Burroughs (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Other book series by Burroughs includes:

  • The Pellucidar series, which takes place in the hollow shell of the Earth (7 books, including one featuring a cross over appearance from Tarzan).
  • The Venus series, where Carson Napier, who is attempting a solo flight to Mars, crash lands instead on the watery planet of Venus. — look for a film made from the series coming out next year. (5 books)
  • The Caspak series, a prehistoric series, including The Land That Time Forgot (3 books)

He crossed writing genres at will penning social realism, horror stories, and westerns (and more).

Burroughs was living in Honolulu,  Hawaii when the Japanese bombed Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941. He volunteered  to serve the war effort as a war correspondent  (the oldest in the Pacific theatre).

He died on March 19, 1950.

English: Bookplate of American writer Edgar Ri...

English: Bookplate of American writer Edgar Rice Burroughs (1875-1950) showing Tarzan holding the planet Mars, surrounded by other characters from Burroughs’ stories and symbols relating to the author’s personal interests and career. Associated media: File:Letter from Edgar Rice Burroughs to Ruthven Deane 1922.jpg explaining the design of his bookplate. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)