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Literature |
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By: Alicia Catherine Mant (-1869) | |
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Christmas, A Happy Time A Tale, Calculated for the Amusement and Instruction of Young Persons
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By: Allan Pinkerton (1819-1884) | |
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The Burglar's Fate And The Detectives
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The Somnambulist and the Detective The Murderer and the Fortune Teller
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By: Allan Ramsay (1866-1932) | |
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Told in the Coffee House
In the course of a number of visits to Constantinople, I became much interested in the tales that are told in the coffee houses. These are usually little more than rooms, with walls made of small panes of glass. The furniture consists of a tripod with a contrivance for holding the kettle, and a fire to keep the coffee boiling. A carpeted bench traverses the entire length of the room. This is occupied by turbaned Turks, their legs folded under them, smoking nargilehs or chibooks or cigarettes, and sipping coffee... | |
By: Allen French (1870-1946) | |
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At Plattsburg
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By: Allen Kim Lang (1928-) | |
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Blind Man's Lantern
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The Great Potlatch Riots
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By: Allen Raine (1836-1908) | |
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Garthowen A Story of a Welsh Homestead
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By Berwen Banks
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By: Allen Upward (1863-1926) | |
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The International Spy Being the Secret History of the Russo-Japanese War
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Athelstane Ford
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By: Alleyne Ireland | |
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An Adventure with a Genius
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By: Alphonse Daudet (1840-1897) | |
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Tartarin of Tarascon
It tells the burlesque adventures of Tartarin, a local hero of Tarascon, a small town in southern France, whose invented adventures and reputation as a swashbuckler finally force him to travel to a very prosaic Algiers in search of lions. Instead of finding a romantic, mysterious Oriental fantasy land, he finds a sordid world suspended between Europe and the Middle East. And worst of all, there are no lions left. | |
The Immortal Or, One Of The "Forty." (L'immortel) - 1877
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Artists' Wives
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The Nabob
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Tartarin De Tarascon
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Jack 1877
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Le Petit Chose (part 1) Histoire d'un Enfant
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Tartarin On The Alps
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The Nabob, Volume 1
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Fromont and Risler
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The Nabob, Vol. 2 (of 2)
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By: Alvin Addison | |
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Ellen Walton Or, The Villain and His Victims
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Eveline Mandeville Or, The Horse Thief Rival
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By: Amanda Minnie Douglas (1831-1916) | |
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Floyd Grandon's Honor
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A Modern Cinderella
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Hope Mills or, Between Friend and Sweetheart
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By: Ambrose Bierce (1842-1914?) | |
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Present at a Hanging and Other Ghost Stories
Ambrose Bierce (1842 – 1914?), satirist, critic, poet, short story writer and journalist. His fiction showed a clean economical style often sprinkled with subtle cynical comments on human behaviour. Nothing is known of his death, as he went missing while an observer with Pancho Villa’s army in 1913/14. (Summaries by Peter Yearsley)The Ways of Ghosts: Stories of encounters with the ghosts of the dead and dying. The spirits of the dead reach out to the living, to pass on a message or to pursue a killer... | |
The Parenticide Club
Ambrose Bierce (1842 – 1914?), best known as journalist, satirist and short story writer. Cynical in outlook, economical in style; Bierce vanished while an observer with Pancho Villa’s army. Four grotesque short stories about murder within the family, seen through the gently innocent eyes of family members … usually the murderer himself.My favorite murder (00:23)Oil of Dog (20:13)An Imperfect Conflagration (29:32)The Hypnotist (37:14) | |
Can Such Things Be?
24 short stories in fairly typical Bierce fashion - ghostly, spooky, to be read (or listened to) in the dark, perhaps with a light crackling fire burning dimly in the background. Stories of ghosts, apparitions, and strange, inexplicable occurrences are prevalent in these tales, some of which occur on or near Civil War fields of battle, some in country cottages, and some within urban areas. Can Such Things Be? implies and relates that anything is possible, at any time. | |
An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge
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