s experiences as a young girl, and many early iterations can be found in the earliest of her writing: her Juvenilia.
Austen was only a teenager when she wrote her Juvenilia. In the '
History of England', Austen champions (and laments) the great kings of England as '
a partial, prejudiced, and ignorant Historian'; in '
Lady Susan', she writes a titular anti-heroine that schemes and cheats her way through high society; and in '
Love and Freindship', Austen paints a picture of a woman looking back on her extremely unfortunate life.
Writing on the cusp of literary greatness, Love and Freindship offers a fascinating - and often surprising - insight into a young Jane Austen.