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Mariana Starke
Mariana Starke was a British writer and traveler who toured Italy between the late 18th and early 19th centuries, going from Liguria to Piedmont and is known for her travel books. -
Jane Austen
Born in the United Kingdom in 1775, Jane Austen was a very important novelist whose works are still sold today, and even films are made about her. Jane had seven brothers. Her father was a parish priest in the town of Steventon, and her mother was a housewife. -
Charles Dickens
He was a famous English novelist and one of the best known in world literature, who knew how to handle the narrative genre, humor, the tragic feeling of life, irony, with a sharp and critical social criticism as well as descriptions of people and places, both real and imaginary. -
Thomas Hardy:
An English poet and writer, Thomas Hardy studied architecture and worked as a restorer and builder for several years. During this time, Hardy began writing, but he did not publish his first novel until 1871. In 1874, with his third novel, Hardy achieved some success that led him to devote himself entirely to literature. -
Viginia Woolf
A British writer, she was one of the great innovators of the modern novel. Experimenting with the temporal and spatial structure of the narrative, in her novels she perfected the interior monologue, a procedure that attempts to represent the thoughts of a character in their original form, in their unconscious flow, just as they arise in the mind. Some of his most famous works, such as Mrs. Dalloway, To the Lighthouse and The Waves -
George Orwell
Eric Arthur Blair1, better known by his pen name George Orwell, was an Indian-born British novelist, journalist, essayist and critic, best known for his dystopian novels Animal Farm, as well as being a chronicler, literary critic and novelist, he is one of the most prominent English-language essayists of the 1930s and 1940s. However, he is best known for his criticism of totalitarianism in his allegorical short novel Animal Farm and his dystopian novel 1984.