|
Books Should Be Free Loyal Books Free Public Domain Audiobooks & eBook Downloads |
|
Fiction |
|---|
|
Book type:
Sort by:
View by:
|
By: Harriet T. (Harriet Theresa) Comstock (1860-) | |
|---|---|
At the Crossroads
| |
A Son of the Hills
| |
Joyce of the North Woods
| |
By: Harriet T. Comstock (1860-1925) | |
|---|---|
Janet of the Dunes
Known primarily for her children's books, Harriet T. Comstock would occasionally depart from that genre and showcase her writing talent in adult prose as well. Janet of the Dunes is one such departure wherein she masterfully takes us into the lives of the bold men and women who tended those life saving stations along the seaboard which many a ship relied upon for their safety. They were simple people, large of heart and as close-knit as a tiny community can and must ever be, and they, above all else, took their duties very seriously... | |
By: Harrison Weir (1824-1906) | |
|---|---|
Favourite Fables in Prose and Verse
| |
By: Harry Bates (1900-1981) | |
|---|---|
Under Arctic Ice
| |
By: Harry Bates, Editor | |
|---|---|
Astounding Stories of Super-Science, September 1930
This is a collection of short science fiction stories by various writers, circa 1930. Writers include Paul Ernst, Miles Breuer, Ray Cummings, Sewell Wright, and others. | |
By: Harry Coghill (1836-1907) | |
|---|---|
A Canadian Heroine, Volume 1 A Novel
| |
A Canadian Heroine, Volume 3 A Novel
| |
A Canadian Heroine, Volume 2 A Novel
| |
By: Harry Harrison (1925) | |
|---|---|
Deathworld
Jason dinAlit, an inhabitant of the planet Porgostrosaand, is a fast talking, conniving, tough as nails, gun toting gambler whose ethics wax and wane with each planet he travels to. He also has amazing psionic abilities which means he is gifted with a variety of psychic abilities including telekinesis, telepathy, pyrokinesis and a host of other interesting capabilities. He is not above using these to tip the odds in his favor while gambling. A chance meeting with Kerk Pyrrus who is the Ambassador of planet Pyrrus ends up with dinAlit traveling back with the Ambassador to Pyrrus... | |
Planet of the Damned
Once in a generation, a man is born with a heightened sense of empathy. Brion Brandd used this gift to win the Twenties, an annual physical and mental competition among the best and smartest people on Anvhar. But scarcely able to enjoy his victory, Brandd is swept off to the hellish planet Dis where he must use his heightened sense of empathy to help avert a global nuclear holocaust by negotiating with the blockading fleet, traversing the Disan underworld, and cracking the mystery of the savagely ruthless magter. Summary by Great Plains. | |
The Ethical Engineer
The Ethical Engineer also known as Deathworld II finds our hero Jason dinAlt captured to face justice for his crimes, but the ever-wily gambler crashes his transport on a primitive planet populated by clans that hoard knowledge. It’s a difficult situation for a guy who just wants to get back to Pyrrus. – The Ethical Engineer was first published in the July and August 1963 issues of Analog Science Fact & Fiction. | |
The Misplaced Battleship
"It might seem a little careless to lose track of something as big as a battleship ... but interstellar space is on a different scale of magnitude. But a misplaced battleship—in the wrong hands!—can be most dangerous." The world class con man and thief known as the Stainless Steel Rat (diGriz) has another very big problem to solve and this science fiction novella by the great Harry Harrison will see if he can solve it and perhaps four or five more like it before this fascinating and funny tale is finished. 'Use a thief to catch a thief' sounds great but it sometimes has unexpected results. | |
Arm of the Law
A quiet backwater outpost on Mars gets a surprise in the form of a new police recruit - in a box! Yep, it's a prototype robot cop sent to the backwater station for testing. And Harrison tells the strange, funny and scary things that begin to happen after that, as only he can. | |
The K-Factor
The human race has reached the stars, colonized many planets and done amazing things in all areas of scientific progress. But humans are still humans and remain both honorable and not so honorable; some with high ideals and others with very low ones indeed. So why hasn't war occurred in several centuries among the hundreds of planets? Has man really changed? Not on your life it hasn't! Read how science has given man peace but at what cost? | |
The Repairman
This is a collection of 3 of Harry Harrison marvelous early stories that were published in Galaxy, Analog and Fantastic Universe. The Repairman (1958) is a straight fun SF story of a man getting a job done. It is most typical of his later style in series like the Stainless Steel Rat; Toy Shop (1962), a short piece exploring bureaucratic blindness and one ingenious way around it and The Velvet Glove (1956), my favorite for its writing style, fun perspective, sly social commentary on the scene in 1956 and just plain delightful imagination. And he manages to pack excitement and mystery in at the same time. | |
The Velvet Glove
| |
By: Harry Leon Wilson (1867-1939) | |
|---|---|
Merton of the Movies
Merton of the Movies is a comedy that centers around Merton Gill, an aspiring dramatic artist from Simsbury, Illinois who makes his way to Hollywood to become a serious actor. How could Merton fail in attaining his dreams after finishing a correspondence course from the General Film Production Company of Stebbinsville, Arkansas, certifying him to be a competent screen actor? Harry Leon Wilson, the author, was a very popular humor writer in the first decades of the 20th century. This book was made into film several times, the last in 1947 starring Red Skelton. | |
By: Harry Moore | |
|---|---|
The Liberty Boys Running the Blockade or, Getting Out of New York
| |
By: Harry Steele Morrison (1880-) | |
|---|---|
The Adventures of a Boy Reporter
| |
By: Harry Stephen Keeler (1890-1967) | |
|---|---|
John Jones's Dollar
| |
By: Hartwell James | |
|---|---|
The Enchanted Castle: Fairy Tales from Flowerland
Every boy and girl—and for that matter every man and woman, too—rejoices when the winter snows have vanished and the earth once more puts on her beautiful dress of green, for then the flowers wake from their sleep and clothe the earth with beauty. Because all boys and girls love flowers, those of them who read this book will be interested in the beautiful stories they have to tell, loving them even more when they know something of their past history and some of the events with which they are associated. | |
By: Harvey Fergusson (1890-1971) | |
|---|---|
The Blood of the Conquerors
| |
By: Harvey Newcomb (1803-1863) | |
|---|---|
Anecdotes for Boys
| |
By: Hawley Smart (1833-1893) | |
|---|---|
Belles and Ringers
| |
By: Hayden Carruth (1862-1932) | |
|---|---|
The Voyage of the Rattletrap
| |
By: Hazel Hutchins Wilson (1898-1992) | |
|---|---|
Jerry's Charge Account
| |
By: Hector Malot (1830-1907) | |
|---|---|
Nobody's Girl (En Famille)
| |
Conscience
| |
By: Heinrich Hoffmann (1809-1894) | |
|---|---|
Slovenly Betsy
Hienrich Hoffmann was a German psychiatrist and doctor. He had written poetry and sketches for his son, and was persuaded to have a collection of these printed.The stories were not perceived as cruel or overly moral by Hoffmann's contemporaries.This American version contains a few of the stories from the original German "Struwwelpeter" publication. | |
By: Heinrich von Kleist (1777-1811) | |
|---|---|
Michael Kohlhaas (English Translation)
Michael Kohlhaas is an 1811 novella by Heinrich von Kleist, based on a 16th-century story of Hans Kohlhase. Both the theme (a fanatical quest for justice) and the style (existentialist detachment posing as a chronicle) are surprisingly modern. They resonated with other writers more than a century after it was written. Kafka devoted one of only two public appearances in his whole life to reading passages from Michael Kohlhaas. Kafka said that he "could not even think of" this work "without being moved to tears and enthusiasm." | |
By: Heinrich Zschokke (1771-1848) | |
|---|---|
The Bravo of Venice; a romance
| |
By: Helen Bannerman (1862-1946) | |
|---|---|
Little Black Sambo
| |
The Story of Little Black Sambo and The Story of Little Black Mingo
| |
The Story of Little Black Mingo
| |
By: Helen Beecher Long | |
|---|---|
Janice Day the Young Homemaker
| |
The Mission of Janice Day
| |
Janice Day at Poketown
| |
How Janice Day Won
| |
By: Helen Fuller Orton (1872-1955) | |
|---|---|
Prince and Rover of Cloverfield Farm
| |
Bobby of Cloverfield Farm
| |
By: Helen Hay Whitney (1875-1944) | |
|---|---|
The Rose of Dawn A Tale of the South Sea
| |
By: Helen Hunt Jackson (1830-1885) | |
|---|---|
Letters from a Cat
Letters from a Cat: published by her mistress for the benefit of all cats and the amusement of little children is a collection of letters that a little girl receives from her pet while she is away from home. They tell of her pet’s adventures and misadventures. The book includes a preface which gives a little biography of the cat including its sad demise. H.H. was the alias of Helen Maria Hunt Jackson (1830 –1885) who is better known for her novel Ramona in which she dramatized the mistreatment of Native Americans and which formed part of her campaign for improved treatment of Native Americans by the U.S. Government. | |
The Hunter Cats of Connorloa
| |
Hetty's Strange History
| |
Hetty's Strange History
| |
By: Helen Keller (1880-1968) | |
|---|---|
The World I Live In
The World I Live In by Helen Keller is a collection of essays that poignantly tells of her impressions of the world, through her sense of touch, smell, her imagination and dreams. My hand is to me what your hearing and sight together are to you. In large measure we travel the same highways, read the same books, speak the same language, yet our experiences are different. All my comings and goings turn on the hand as on a pivot. It is the hand that binds me to the world of men and women. The hand is my feeler with which I reach through isolation and darkness and seize every pleasure, every activity that my fingers encounter... | |
By: Helen Leah Reed (1860-1926) | |
|---|---|
Brenda, Her School and Her Club
"Brenda was used to getting her own way. Her parents and older sisters spoiled her, her friends followed her lead, servants obeyed her, and she was truly beautiful. That was so, until her cousin Julia (who is everything that she is not) came to live with her family. And that's when our book starts." | |
By: Helen M. (Helen Maria) Winslow (1851-1938) | |
|---|---|
A Woman for Mayor A Novel of To-day
| |
By: Helen Nicolay (1866-1954) | |
|---|---|
Boys' Life of Abraham Lincoln
The Boys’ Life of Abraham Lincoln is a biography with many anecdotes that takes one deeper into the thoughts, personality, and beliefs of the man that was Lincoln. While the title indicates the book is about Lincoln’s life as a boy, the book is a full, if somewhat shortened biography. It is very well written and was a joy to record. One might ask, "Who was Helen Nicolay?" Her father, John George Nicolay, was Abraham Lincoln's private secretary and doubtless much of the material comes from his complete biography of Abraham Lincoln. ( | |
By: Helen Randolph | |
|---|---|
Secret of Casa Grande
While visiting their friend, Florence, at her home in Mexico, Jo Ann and Peggy noticed a barred window which has no opening into any of the rooms of an ancient adobe house. Curious to find out what it is, the girls tried to investigate but no one seems eager to help them. Undaunted, the girls made plans to get there only to encounter dangers and find a thrilling discovery. - Summary by Mary Escano | |
By: Helen Reid Cross | |
|---|---|
Humpty Dumpty's Little Son
| |
By: Helen Reimensnyder Martin (1868-1939) | |
|---|---|
Tillie, a Mennonite Maid; a Story of the Pennsylvania Dutch
| |
By: Helen Wells (1910-1986) | |
|---|---|
Clue of the Gold Coin
Vicki Barr is a popular mystery series for girls published by Grosset & Dunlap from 1947 to 1964. This book is volume 12 of The Vicki Barr Air Stewardess Series. When a shipment of priceless gold doubloons being transported on her flight from New York to Tampa goes missing, Federal Airline's stewardess Vicki Barr is unwittingly dragged into a sinister conspiracy spanning two countries. Vicki faces a determined group of criminals willing to go to any lengths to stop her from discovering their secret... | |