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By: Alfred Henry Lewis (1857-1914) | |
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By: Alfred Lawson (1869-1954) | |
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![]() "I doubt that anyone who reads [Born Again] will ever forget it: it is quite singularly bad, with long undigestible rants against the evils of the world, an impossibly idealistic Utopian prescription for the said evils, and - as you will have gathered - a very silly plot." - oddbooks.co.ukAlfred Lawson was a veritable Renaissance man: a professional baseball player, a luminary in the field of aviation, an outspoken advocate of vegetarianism and economic reform, and the founder of a pseudo-scientific crackpot philosophy called Lawsonomy... |
By: Alfred Lichtenstein (1889-1914) | |
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By: Alfred Noyes (1880-1958) | |
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![]() Alfred Noyes, in the blank-verse epic "Drake", fictionalizes the historical Francis Drake, who, during the reign of Elizabeth I of England, sailed (and plundered) on the Spanish Main and beyond. | |
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By: Alfred Ollivant (1874-1927) | |
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By: Alfred Tennyson Tennyson (1809-1892) | |
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By: Alfred, Lord Tennyson (1809-1892) | |
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![]() Idylls of the King, published between 1856 and 1885, is a cycle of twelve narrative poems by the English poet Alfred, Lord Tennyson which retells the legend of King Arthur, his knights, his love for Guinevere and her tragic betrayal of him, and the rise and fall of Arthur's kingdom. The whole work recounts Arthur's attempt and failure to lift up mankind and create a perfect kingdom, from his coming to power to his death at the hands of the traitor Mordred. Individual poems detail the deeds of various knights, including Lancelot, Geraint, Galahad, and Balin and Balan, and also Merlin and the Lady of the Lake. | |
![]() The Princess is a serio-comic blank verse narrative poem, written by Alfred Tennyson, published in 1847. The poem tells the story of an heroic princess who forswears the world of men and founds a women's university where men are forbidden to enter. The prince to whom she was betrothed in infancy enters the university with two friends, disguised as women students. They are discovered and flee, but eventually they fight a battle for the princess's hand. |
By: Algernon Blackwood (1869-1951) | |
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![]() A party of campers on a deserted Baltic island is terrorized by a huge wolf… or is it? | |
![]() Another camper tale, this time set in the Canadian wilderness. A hunting party separates to track moose, and one member is abducted by the Wendigo of legend. Robert Aickman regarded this as "one of the (possibly) six great masterpieces in the field". | |
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![]() Four stories: The Insanity of Jones, The Man Who Found Out, The Glamour of the Snow, and Sand. Tales by one the greatest practitioners of supernatural literature. Reincarnation, the Occult, and mystery. | |
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![]() Six stories about Dr. John Silence if you want the shivers to run up your back, this is the right place to be | |
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By: Algis Budrys (1931-2008) | |
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By: Alice Ames Winter (1865-1944) | |
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By: Alice B. Emerson | |
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By: Alice Brown (1857-1948) | |
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By: Alice Caldwell Hegan Rice (1870-1942) | |
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By: Alice Christiana Thompson Meynell (1847-1922) | |
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By: Alice Harriman (1861-1925) | |
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By: Alice Ilgenfritz Jones (1846-1906) | |
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![]() In this work of utopian science fiction from the Victorian era written by Two Women of the West, a moniker for Alice Ilgenfritz Jones and Ella Marchant. A man travels to Mars to discover an Utopian world which is parallel to the Earth in some ways, but strikingly different in some. The freedom of women is not of this world. It is especially intriguing coming from the imagination of these two American women in the 19th Century. Summary by A. Gramour |
By: Alice MacGowan (1858-) | |
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By: Alice Meynell (1847-1922) | |
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![]() Alice Christiana Gertrude Meynell was an English writer, editor, critic, and suffragist, now remembered mainly as a poet. At the end of the 19th century, in conjunction with uprisings against the British (among them the Indians', the Zulus', the Boxer Rebellion, and the Muslim revolt led by Muhammad Ahmed in the Sudan), many European scholars, writers, and artists, began to question Europe's colonial imperialism. This led the Meynells and others in their circle to speak out for the oppressed. Alice Meynell was a vice-president of the Women Writers' Suffrage League, founded by Cicely Hamilton and active 1908–19. |
By: Alice Muriel Williamson (1869-1933) | |
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