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By: Catherine Helen Spence (1825-1910) | |
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Mr. Hogarth's Will
Jane and Elsie Melville were raised by their kindly but eccentric uncle, Mr Hogarth who believed that women were just as good as men, and thus gave his nieces a boy’s education. Upon his death, they find that he has left his entire fortune to his heretofore unknown son and left them only a small allowance, expecting them to make their own way in the world using the education he furnished them. Will the girls survive in a world that expects them, at the most, to become governesses? |
By: Catherine L. Moore (1911-1987) | |
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Song in a Minor Key |
By: Cecilia Pauline Cleveland (1850-) | |
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The Story of a Summer Or, Journal Leaves from Chappaqua | |
By: Champion Ingraham Hitchcock | |
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The Dead Men's Song Being the Story of a Poem and a Reminiscent Sketch of its Author Young Ewing Allison |
By: Charles A. (Charles Albert) Curtis (1835-1907) | |
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Captured by the Navajos |
By: Charles A. Gunnison (1861-1897) | |
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A Napa Christchild; and Benicia's Letters | |
The Beautiful Eyes of Ysidria | |
In Macao |
By: Charles A. Stearns | |
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The Marooner |
By: Charles Alden Seltzer (1875-1942) | |
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The Range Boss | |
'Drag' Harlan | |
The Boss of the Lazy Y | |
The Trail Horde | |
'Firebrand' Trevison | |
Square Deal Sanderson |
By: Charles Alexander Eastman (1858-1939) | |
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Old Indian Days |
By: Charles Almanzo Babcock (1847-1922) | |
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Bird Day; How to prepare for it |
By: Charles B. Cory (1857-1921) | |
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Montezuma's Castle and Other Weird Tales
This is a collection of weird tales inspired from the natural history expeditions of the author, an independently wealthy bird collector, Olympic golfer, writer of many books on birds of the world, and, as evidenced in these pages, a fine storyteller to boot. |
By: Charles Beadle | |
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Witch-Doctors |
By: Charles Blanden (1857-1933) | |
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Omar Resung
Most of the translations of the Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam have been in verse. However, there have been three notable exceptions to this convention; the French translation by J. B. Nicolas (1867), the English version by Justin Huntly McCarthy (1889) and another English version by Frederick Rolfe (better known as Baron Corvo, the author of Hadrian VII), published in 1903. Charles Blanden (1857 - 1933) belonged to the group known as the Chicago poets, the most famous of which was Carl Sandburg. Unlike his celebrated contemporary... |
By: Charles Brockden Brown | |
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Arthur Mervyn
Kicked out of his parental home by his scheming young stepmother, a young country boy, Arthur Mervyn arrives in Philadelphia. Here he finds the city in the throes of a deadly yellow-fever epidemic. However, he finds a small job as a clerk and is determined to make his way in the world. He soon discovers that his employer is a con man and a murderer. One night, Arthur helps him dispose of a body in the river. While they're struggling with the corpse, the employer is swept away by the current... If you haven't encountered American Gothic before, Arthur Mervyn by Charles Brockden Brown is a great introduction to this genre... | |
Edgar Huntly or, Memoirs of a Sleep-Walker | |
Memoirs of Carwin, the Biloquist | |
Jane Talbot |
By: Charles Carleton Coffin (1823-1896) | |
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Daughters of the Revolution and Their Times 1769 - 1776 A Historical Romance | |
Winning His Way |
By: Charles Clark Munn (1848-1917) | |
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Pocket Island
Along the coast of Maine are littered thousands of small islands. One such, named 'Pocket Island' by the locals was so called because of a pocket formed twice daily by the waning of the tides. The coast of Maine holds many secrets and legends, and Pocket Island was no exception. Subtitled "A Story of Country Life in New England", this story holds such varied and fascinating glimpses into the lives of a few individuals, and is not limited to merely a story of ghosts, of war, of barn dances, friendship, tales of rum-runners, smugglers, and seafarers... | |
Uncle Terry A Story of the Maine Coast |
By: Charles D. (Charles David) Stewart (1868-1960) | |
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The Wrong Woman |
By: Charles de Bernard (1804-1850) | |
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Gerfaut |
By: Charles Dickens | |
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Great Expectations
From the opening passage itself of Great Expectations by Charles Dickens, the reader is drawn into the world of the hero, Pip, who is at that time, seven years old. The author creates an unforgettable atmosphere: the gloom of the graveyard, the melancholy of the orphan boy, the mists rising over the marshes and the terrifying appearance of an escaped convict in chains. Told in first person (one of the only two books that Dickens used this form for, the other being David Copperfield) Great Expectations is a classic coming of age novel, in which we trace the growth and evolution of Pip or Philip Pirrip to give his full name... | |
The Life and Adventures of Martin Chuzzlewit
Dickens thought it was “in a hundred points, immeasurably the best” of his stories. Yet it was also one of his greatest flops. Compared to his other novels, The Life and Adventures of Martin Chuzzlewit was a dismal failure in terms of sales and the main reason for Dickens falling out with his long term publisher Chapman & Hall. They invoked a penalty clause and demanded that he pay back a portion of the advance which he refused. Martin Chuzzlewit was also dimly received in Dickens friendly America... |