A much-overlooked kind of children's literature is work written by children and young teens, such as The Young Visitors by Daisy Ashford (aged nine) or the a of Jane Austen, written to amuse brothers and sisters. Barbara Newhall Follett wrote four books, beginning with a novel called The House without windows at the age of nine; when the manuscript was destroyed in a fire, she rewrote it from memory Dorothy Straight's How the World Began and S.E. Hinton's The outsiders are more recent examples.