Letters of Love & Deception: Book Give-away DAY FOUR

Quiz theFourthof the e-book give-away of Letters of Love & Deception  
To celebrate the upcoming release of Letters of Love & Deception and other Austenesque short stories, we're giving away six free e-books, in the format of your choice, in honour of Jane Austen's six novels.    
Comment below, and you'll be eligible to win either one of five copies of Letters of Love & Deception or a copy Nachtsturm Castle: A Gothic Austen Novel from Girlebooks.com !
The giveaway runs from Wednesday through to Monday, Sept. 19th, the official release date!  And don't forget that you can still comment in Wednesday , Thursday , and Friday 's quizzes!
If you want a preview of the short stories in LOL&D, click here !
The rules in brief:
Post a comment with answers to the quiz below (making sure to leave contact info) and your name will be entered to win a free e-book.  Each time you comment, on any of the quizzes, your name will be entered again.  So answer early and often!
And never fear if you don't know the answers off the top of your head!  You can look up the answers, or crib from the person above you (maybe even add some more information!), or just make it up and make us laugh!  It's all in good fun.
On Monday at midnight, the giveaway will close and six winners will be chosen!  Comment away!Quiz the Fourth
Novels: Can you list Jane Austen's novels...in backwards order?!?!?!

History: What is the difference between the Season and the Little Season?
Literature: What's one of your favorite quotes or passages from literature?  For example, I keep returning to Les Miserables by Victor Hugo, in Volume IV, Book Fourteen, Chapter 6, "The Agony of Death after the Agony of Life:"

"Now, for my trouble, promise me--"  And [Eponine] stopped.

"What?" asked Marius.

"Promise me!"

"I promise."

"Promise to give me a kiss on my brow when I am dead.--I shallfeel it."

She dropped her head again on Marius' knees, and her eyelids closed. He thought the poor soul had departed. Eponine remained motionless. All at once, at the very moment when Marius fancied her asleep forever,she slowly opened her eyes in which appeared the sombre profundityof death, and said to him in a tone whose sweetness seemed alreadyto proceed from another world:--

"And by the way, Monsieur Marius, I believe that I was a littlebit in love with you."
Austen: Jane Austen felt that she recorded life as it happened.  If she could return from the grave, what do you think she would poke fun of and why?
Austenesque: If all of Austen's ladies (e.g. Lady Catherine de Bourgh, et al!) tried to enter a room simultaneously, who would win the honour of going first?
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Published on September 16, 2011 21:00
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