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By: Frank Harris (1855-1931) | |
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Gulmore, The Boss | |
Elder Conklin |
By: Frank Herbert (1920-1986) | |
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Old Rambling House | |
Operation Haystack |
By: Frank L. Packard (1877-1942) | |
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The Adventures of Jimmie Dale
Frank Lucius Packard (February 2, 1877 – February 17, 1942) was a Canadian novelist born in Montreal, Quebec. He worked as a civil engineer on the Canadian Pacific Railway. He later wrote a series of mystery novels, the most famous of which featured a character called Jimmie Dale. Jimmie Dale is a wealthy playboy by day, with a Harvard education and membership to New York City’s ultra-exclusive private club St. James. But at night he puts on a costume and becomes The Grey Seal, who enters businesses or homes and cracks safes, always leaving a diamond shaped, grey paper “seal” behind to mark his conquest, but never taking anything... | |
The White Moll
Frank Lucius Packard (February 2, 1877 – February 17, 1942) born in Montreal, Quebec, was a Canadian novelist. Packard is credited with bridging the gap from the “cozy” style mysteries to the more gritty, hard-boiled style of such writers as Dashiell Hammet and Raymond Chandler. Packard also wrote a series of novels, beginning in 1917, featuring Jimmie Dale. A wealthy playboy by day, at night, Jimmie becomes a crimefighter “The Gray Seal” complete with mask and secret hide-out, “The Sanctuary”... |
By: Frank Lockwood (1846-1897) | |
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The Law and Lawyers of Pickwick A Lecture |
By: Frank M. Robinson (1926-) | |
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Decision |
By: Frank N. (Frank Noyes) Westcott | |
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Hepsey Burke |
By: Frank Norris (1870-1902) | |
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McTeague
McTeague is a simple dentist who becomes infatuated with Trina, the cousin of his friend Marcus. Trina then buys a winning lottery ticket worth $5,000, and McTeague announces his plans to marry her. But their marriage quickly falls apart as greed consumes them both, and Marcus' jealousy toward McTeague boils over. | |
The Octopus
Frank Norris based his 1901 novel The Octopus (A Story of California) on the Mussel Slough Tragedy of 1880, a bloody conflict between ranchers and agents of the Southern Pacific Railroad. The central issue was over the ownership of the ranches, which the farmers had leased from the railroad nearly ten years earlier with intentions of eventually purchasing the land. Although originally priced at $2.50 to $5 per acre, the railroad eventually opened the land for sale at prices adjusted for land improvements; the railroad’s attempts to take possession of the land led the ranchers to defend themselves as depicted in the book. | |
Blix | |
Moran of the Lady Letty |
By: Frank Pinkerton | |
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Dyke Darrel the Railroad Detective
Dyke Darrel investigates an audacious train robbery that included the murder of a friend, and embarks on a man-hunt. High Victorian serial melodrama at its best! |
By: Frank R. Stockton (1834-1902) | |
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Buccaneers and Pirates of Our Coasts
Buccaneers and Pirates of our Coasts is a non-fiction, rolicking story of the origins of piracy and of the famous pirates of the coasts of the United States. The stories don’t cast pirates in the glowing light of modern day renditions – in Stockton’s stories, pirates are bad guys! – but the dramatic style makes them good fun to read, anyway! (Summary by Sibella Denton) | |
The Bee-Man of Orn and Other Fanciful Tales
A collection of nine enchanting short stories filled with curious beasts and unexpected endings. Included are The Bee-Man of Orn; The Griffin and the Minor Canon; Old Pipes and the Dryad; The Queen's Museum; Christmas Before Last: Or, The Fruit of the Fragile Palm; Prince Hassak's March; The Battle of the Third Cousins; The Banished King; and The Philopena |
By: Frank Richard Stockton (1834-1902) | |
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The Lady, or the Tiger? | |
The Magic Egg and Other Stories | |
The Great War Syndicate | |
The Great Stone of Sardis | |
A Chosen Few Short Stories | |
The House of Martha | |
The Associate Hermits | |
The Squirrel Inn | |
John Gayther's Garden and the Stories Told Therein | |
My Terminal Moraine 1892 | |
Round-about Rambles
ROUND-ABOUT RAMBLES, In Lands of FACT AND FANCYBY FRANK R STOCKTONPREFACECome along, boys and girls! We are off on our rambles. But please do not ask me where we are going. It would delay us very much if I should postpone our start until I had drawn you a map of the route, with all the stopping-places set down. We have far to go, and a great many things to see, and it may be that some of you will be very tired before we get through. If so, I shall be sorry; but it will be a comfort to think that none of us need go any farther than we choose... |
By: Frank Stockton (1834-1902) | |
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Rudder Grange
This book presents a number of short, comedic sketches of a country life in middle America in the late 1800s. The hilarious twists and turns endear our adorable, naive married couple to the reader; and the orphan servant Pomona – dear, odd, funny Pomona! – is the focus of several of the stories. Imagine a honeymoon in a lunatic asylum, and you’ve got Rudder Grange! |
By: Frank Swinnerton (1884-1982) | |
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Nonsenseorship |
By: Frank T. Bullen (1857-1915) | |
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The Cruise of the Cachalot Round the World After Sperm Whales |
By: Frank V. Webster | |
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The Young Firemen of Lakeville; or, Herbert Dare's Pluck |
By: Frank Wedekind (1864-1918) | |
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Earth Spirit
Earth Spirit (1895) (Erdgeist) is a play by the German dramatist Frank Wedekind. It forms the first part of his pairing of 'Lulu' plays (the second is Pandora's Box [1904]), both of which depict a society "riven by the demands of lust and greed". Together with Pandora's Box, Wedekind's play formed the basis for the silent film Pandora's Box (1929) starring Louise Brooks and the opera Lulu by Alban Berg in 1935 (premiered posthumously in 1937). The eponymous "earth spirit" of this play is Lulu, who Wedekind described as a woman "created to stir up great disaster... |
By: Frank Williams (1887-?) | |
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The Harbor of Doubt
Young Code Schofield had lost his schooner May Schofield in an Atlantic gale a few months ago, and now the townspeople on the small island of Grande Mignon off the coast of New Brunswick were beginning to talk suspiciously of the events surrounding that loss. Insurance investigators have been summoned to investigate, friends are alienating themselves from Code, and he finds himsef challenged by even those he's known and trusted his whole life. Does Code Schofield have anything to prove, and if so, to whom, and why? |
By: Franklin D. Roosevelt (1882-1945) | |
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State of the Union Address |
By: Franklin H. (Franklin Harvey) Head (1832-1914) | |
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Shakespeare's Insomnia, and the Causes Thereof |
By: Franklin P. (Franklin Pierce) Adams (1881-1960) | |
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Something Else Again | |
Tobogganing on Parnassus |
By: Franklin Pierce (1804-1869) | |
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State of the Union Address |
By: Franz Kafka (1883-1924) | |
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Metamorphosis (version 3)
The Metamorphosis (German: Die Verwandlung, also sometimes translated as The Transformation) is a novella by Franz Kafka, first published in 1915. It has been cited as one of the seminal works of fiction of the 20th century and is studied in colleges and universities across the Western world. The story begins with a traveling salesman, Gregor Samsa, waking to find himself transformed (metamorphosed) into a large, monstrous insect-like creature. The cause of Samsa's transformation is never revealed, and Kafka never did give an explanation... | |
Metamorphosis (version 4)
This story, about a man who wakes up transformed into a bug and the repercussions it has on his life and the people around him, has intrigued me for many years. The translation is by Ian Johnston, not the translator that is in Gutenberg; I like Johnston's more. What does it mean? [Spoiler possibly]In my mind it is not complicated at all and is most probably an autobiography of how Kafka himself had experienced his early life living with his parents. Kafka describes how he had experienced his parents’ financial and emotional exploitation's of him, to the point of detaching from them and thereby ceasing to be their son ... |
By: Fred M. White (1859-) | |
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The Slave of Silence | |
The Crimson Blind |
By: Frederic Arnold Kummer (1873-1943) | |
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The Ivory Snuff Box |
By: Frederic Harrison (1831-1923) | |
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Studies in Early Victorian Literature |
By: Frederic Homer Balch (1861-1891) | |
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The Bridge of the Gods A Romance of Indian Oregon. 19th Edition. |
By: Frederic Jesup Stimson (1855-1943) | |
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Pirate Gold |
By: Frederic Mayer Bird (1838-1908) | |
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A Pessimist In Theory and Practice |
By: Frederic Remington (1861-1909) | |
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Crooked Trails | |
The Way of an Indian |
By: Frederic Stewart Isham (1866-1922) | |
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Under the Rose | |
The Strollers | |
Half A Chance | |
A Man and His Money |
By: Frederic Taber Cooper (1864-1937) | |
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Some American Storytellers
Frederic Taber Cooper, who was an editor and author, provides a superb insight into the works of some of the most popular authors of the turn of the century decade. Excerpt: The subjects of the essays included in this volume differ widely in aim and in accomplishment; but all of them possess, to a considerable extent, the gift that makes them next of kin to the minstrel and troubadour, to the ancient fabulist, and to the forgotten spinner of the world s first nursery tales, the gift of holding the attention by the spell of the spoken word. - Summary by Celine Major |
By: Frederic W. Farrar (1831-1903) | |
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