Books Should Be Free Loyal Books Free Public Domain Audiobooks & eBook Downloads |
|
Fiction |
---|
Book type:
Sort by:
View by:
|
By: Ernest Thompson Seton (1860-1946) | |
---|---|
The Biography of a Grizzly |
By: Ernest William Hornung (1866-1921) | |
---|---|
The Amateur Cracksman
“I’d tasted blood, and it was all over with me. Why should I work when I could steal? Why settle down to some humdrum uncongenial billet, when excitement, romance, danger and a decent living were all going begging together” – A. J. Raffles, The Ides of March. | |
Dead Men Tell No Tales
Ernest William Hornung (June 7, 1866 – March 22, 1921) was an English author. Hornung was the third son of John Peter Hornung, a Hungarian, and was born in Middlesbrough. He was educated at Uppingham during some of the later years of its great headmaster, Edward Thring. He spent most of his life in England and France, but in 1884 left for Australia and stayed for two years where he working as a tutor at Mossgiel station. Although his Australian experience had been so short, it coloured most of his literary work from A Bride from the Bush published in 1899, to Old Offenders and a few Old Scores, which appeared after his death... | |
Raffles, Further Adventures of the Amateur Cracksman
Raffles, Further Adventures of the Amateur Cracksman (also published as The Black Mask) is the second collection of stories in the Raffles series. After the dark turn of events at the end of The Gift of the Emperor, Bunny’s done his time and, his life not being quite what it was before, now finds himself longing for the companionship of his Raffles. | |
The Shadow of the Rope
Rachel Minchin stands in the dock, accused of murdering the dissolute husband she was preparing to leave. The trial is sensational, and public opinion vehemently and almost universally against her. When the jury astonishes and outrages the world with a vedict of Not Guilty, Rachel quickly finds herself in need of protection. It comes in the form of a surprising offer of marriage from a mysterious stranger who has sat through every day of her trial. The marriage to this intriguing stranger, Mr. Steel, is by mutual agreement to be a platonic one, the only condition of which is that neither is ever to question the other about the past... | |
A Thief in the Night
Gentleman thief A.J. Raffles burgles his way through a series of homes in late Victorian England. A Thief in the Night is a short story collection and Hornung's third book in the Raffles series. | |
Mr. Justice Raffles
A. J. Raffles is a British gentleman thief of some renown who, in this, the hero's final adventure, ironically demonstrates a sense of morality by teaching a London East End loan shark a lesson. The book was later made into a movie, as well as a British television series. | |
Stingaree |
By: Ernst von Wildenbruch (1845-1909) | |
---|---|
Good Blood |
By: Erskine Childers (1870-1922) | |
---|---|
The Riddle of the Sands
Containing many realistic details based on Childers’ own sailing trips along the German North Sea coast, the book is the retelling of a yachting expedition in the early 20th century combined with an adventurous spy story. It was one of the early invasion novels which predicted war with Germany and called for British preparedness. The plot involves the uncovering of secret German preparations for an invasion of the United Kingdom. It is often called the first modern spy novel, although others are as well, it was certainly very influential in the genre and for its time... |
By: Esther Bakewell | |
---|---|
The Book of One Syllable |
By: Esther Chamberlain | |
---|---|
The Coast of Chance |
By: Ethel C. Pedley (1859-1898) | |
---|---|
Dot and the Kangaroo
Dot and the Kangaroo, written in 1899, is a children’s book by Ethel C. Pedley about a little girl named Dot who gets lost in the Australian outback and is eventually befriended by a kangaroo and several other marsupials. |
By: Ethel Calvert Phillips | |
---|---|
Christmas Light |
By: Ethel Hueston (1887-) | |
---|---|
Prudence Says So | |
Prudence of the Parsonage | |
Eve to the Rescue | |
Sunny Slopes |
By: Ethel Hume Bennett (1881-) | |
---|---|
Judy of York Hill |
By: Ethel M. (Ethel May) Kelley (1878-) | |
---|---|
Outside Inn | |
Turn About Eleanor |
By: Ethel M. Dell (1881-1939) | |
---|---|
The Safety Curtain, and Other Stories | |
The Swindler and Other Stories | |
The Odds And Other Stories |
By: Ethel Sybil Turner | |
---|---|
Seven Little Australians
This is the story of seven incorrigible children living near Sydney in the 1880’s with their military-man father, and a stepmother who is scarcely older than the oldest child of the family. A favourite amongst generations of children for over a century, this story tells of the cheeky exploits of Meg, Pip, Judy, Bunty, Nell, Baby, and The General (who is the real baby of the family), as well as providing a fascinating insight into Australian family life in a bygone era. | |
In the Mist of the Mountains |
By: Ethel Twycross Foster (1881-1963) | |
---|---|
Little Tales of the Desert
A six year-old girl named Mary spends Christmas vacation with her parents in the Arizona desert of 1901 or thereabouts. |
By: Etta Austin Blaisdell McDonald (1872-) | |
---|---|
Rafael in Italy A Geographical Reader |
By: Eugene Field (1850-1895) | |
---|---|
The House An Episode in the Lives of Reuben Baker, Astronomer, and of His Wife, Alice |
By: Eugène Sue (1804-1857) | |
---|---|
The Mysteries of Paris, Volume 1
The Mysteries of Paris (French: Les Mystères de Paris) is a novel by Eugène Sue which was published serially in Journal des débats from June 19, 1842 until October 15, 1843. Les Mystères de Paris singlehandedly increased the circulation of Journal des débats. There has been lots of talk on the origins of the French novel of the 19th century: Stendhal, Balzac, Dumas, Gautier, Sand or Hugo. One often forgets Eugène Sue. Still, The Mysteries of Paris occupies a unique space in the birth of this... | |
The Wandering Jew | |
Pride one of the seven cardinal sins |