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By: Timothy S. Arthur (1809-1885) | |
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After the Storm | |
Home Scenes and Home Influence; a series of tales and sketches | |
Cast Adrift | |
Married Life; Its Shadows and Sunshine |
By: F. Marion Crawford (1854-1909) | |
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The White Sister |
By: F. Marion Crawford (1854-1909) | |
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Casa Braccio, Volumes 1 and 2 |
By: F. Marion Crawford (1854-1909) | |
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Paul Patoff |
By: Timothy S. Arthur (1809-1885) | |
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Lizzy Glenn or, The Trials of a Seamstress |
By: F. Marion Crawford (1854-1909) | |
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Stradella |
By: Timothy S. Arthur (1809-1885) | |
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Ten Nights in a Bar Room |
By: Pansy (1841-1930) | |
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Divers Women
A collection of short stories, highlighting some of the best and worst characteristics we women are capable of in our Christianity and in our home life. |
By: Jessie Graham Flower (-1931) | |
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Grace Harlowe's Golden Summer
The College Girls Series sees the friends part ways: Grace, Anne, and Miriam depart for Overton College, while Jessica and Nora attend a conservatory. The Eight Originals gather on holidays, but the seven College books focus on the three at Overton, along with new friends like J. Elfreda Briggs. They form Semper Fidelis, a society devoted to aiding less fortunate students at Overton. Following graduation, Grace rebuffs offers of marriage for "what she had firmly believed to be her destined work," managing Harlowe House at Overton. | |
Grace Harlowe's Return to Overton Campus
The four series follow Grace Harlowe and her friends through high school, college, abroad during World War I, and on adventures around America. In The High School Girls Series, Grace attends Oakdale High School with friends Anne Pierson, Nora O'Malley, and Jessica Bright. The four promote fair play and virtue while winning over troubled girls like Miriam Nesbit and Eleanor Savell, playing basketball, and founding sorority Phi Sigma Tau. The group becomes friends with boys in their acquaintance: David Nesbit, Tom Gray, Hippy Wingate, and Reddy Brooks, forming "The Eight Originals... | |
Grace Harlowe's Problem
The four series follow Grace Harlowe and her friends through high school, college, abroad during World War I, and on adventures around America. The College Girls Series sees the friends part ways: Grace, Anne, and Miriam depart for Overton College, while Jessica and Nora attend a conservatory. The Eight Originals gather on holidays, but the seven College books focus on the three at Overton, along with new friends like J. Elfreda Briggs. They form Semper Fidelis, a society devoted to aiding less fortunate students at Overton. Following graduation, Grace rebuffs offers of marriage for "what she had firmly believed to be her destined work," managing Harlowe House at Overton. |
By: Fredric Brown (1906-1972) | |
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Earthmen Bearing Gifts | |
Keep Out |
By: Orison Swett Marden (1848-1924) | |
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Eclectic School Readings: Stories from Life |
By: William Wells Brown (1814-1884) | |
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Clotel, or, The President's Daughter
Clotel; or, The President's Daughter is a novel by William Wells Brown (1815-84), a fugitive from slavery and abolitionist and was published in London, England in December 1853. It is often considered the first African-American novel. This novel focuses on the difficult lives of mulattoes in America and the "degraded and immoral condition of the relation of master and slave in the USA" (Brown). It is about the tragic lives of Currer, Althesea, and Clotel. In the novel, Currer is the former mulatto mistress of President Thomas Jefferson who together have two daughters, Althesea and Clotel... | |
Clotelle; or, the Colored Heroine, a tale of the Southern States; or, the President's Daughter | |
Clotelle: a Tale of the Southern States |
By: Dinah Maria Mulock Craik (1826-1887) | |
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Fairy Book
The sleeping beauty in the wood -- Hop-O'-My-Thumb -- Cinderella; or, the little glass slipper -- Adventures of John Dietrich -- Beauty and the Beast -- Little One Eye, Little Two Eyes, and Little Three Eyes -- Jack the giant-killer -- Tom Thumb -- Rumpelstilzchen -- Fortunatus -- The Bremen Town Musicians -- Riquet with the tuft -- House Island -- Snow-White and Rose-Red -- Jack and the bean-stalk -- Graciosa and Percinet -- The iron stove -- The invisible prince -- The woodcutter's daughter --... |
By: Robert W. Service (1874-1958) | |
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The Trail of '98 A Northland Romance |
By: Dinah Maria Mulock Craik (1826-1887) | |
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The Adventures of A Brownie As Told to My Child by Miss Mulock | |
Agatha's Husband A Novel |
By: Noah Lott | |
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The Silly Syclopedia
A Terrible Thing in the Form of a Literary Torpedo which is Launched for HILARIOUS PURPOSES ONLY. Inaccurate in Every Particular Containing Copious Etymological Derivations and Other Useless Things by Noah Lott (an ex-relative of Noah Webster) |
By: Émile Gaboriau (1832-1873) | |
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Monsieur Lecoq: The Inquiry
Monsieur Lecoq is a captivating mystery, historical and love story : Around 11 o'clock, on the evening of Shrove Sunday 18.., close to the old Barrière d'Italie, frightful cries, coming from Mother Chupin's drinking-shop, are heard by a party of detectives led by Inspector Gévrol. The squad runs up to it. A triple murder has just been committed. The murderer is caught on the premises. Despite Gévrol's opinion that four scoundrels encountered each other in this vile den, that they began to quarrel, that one of them had a revolver and killed the others, Lecoq, a young police agent, suspects a great mystery... |
By: Dinah Craik (1826-1887) | |
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John Halifax, Gentleman
This novel, published in 1856, was one of the popular and beloved novels in the Victorian era. It is told in the first person by Phineas Fletcher, an invalid son of a Quaker tanner who is presented to us in the beginning as a lonely youth. John Halifax, the first friend he ever had, is a poor orphan who is taken in by his father to help in the work which his sickly son can't constantly do. Phineas tells us in an unforgettable way how John succeeded in rising from his humble beginning and become a wealthy and successful man. But with the money come horrible troubles... In an unforgettable manner, we learn to know all the characters of the novel as if they really lived. |
By: Frank Herbert (1920-1986) | |
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Operation Haystack |
By: Maksim Gorky (1868-1936) | |
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Mother | |
Creatures That Once Were Men | |
Through Russia | |
The Man Who Was Afraid | |
Creatures That Once Were Men |
By: Agnes C. Laut (1871-1936) | |
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Lords of the North | |
Heralds of Empire Being the Story of One Ramsay Stanhope, Lieutenant to Pierre Radisson in the Northern Fur Trade | |
The Freebooters of the Wilderness |
By: L. Adams Beck (1862-1931) | |
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The ninth vibration and other stories
This is a collection of the following short stories: The Ninth Vibration -- The Interpreter : A Romance of the East -- The Incomparable Lady : A Story of China with a Moral -- The Hatred of the Queen : A Story of Burma -- Fire of Beauty -- The Building of the Taj Majal -- How Great is the Glory of Kwannon! -- The Round-Faced Beauty. Many of them are romantic, some of them are fantasy and others are occult fiction.(Introduction by Linda Andrus) |
By: Gabriele D'Annunzio (1863-1938) | |
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The Child of Pleasure |
By: William Congreve (1670-1729) | |
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Incognita; or, Love and Duty Reconcil'd |
By: Rex Ellingwood Beach (1877-1949) | |
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Heart of the Sunset | |
Pardners | |
Going Some | |
The Net | |
The Auction Block | |
The Winds of Chance |
By: Rex Beach (1877-1949) | |
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Silver Horde
The Silver Horde , is set in Kalvik, a fictionalized community in Bristol Bay, Alaska, and tells the story of a down on his luck gold miner who discovers a greater wealth in Alaska's run of salmon (silver horde) and decides to open a cannery. To accomplish this he must overcome the relentless opposition of the "salmon trust," a fictionalized Alaska Packers' Association, which undercuts his financing, sabotages his equipment, incites a longshoremen's riot and bribes his fishermen to quit. The story line includes a love interest as the protagonist is forced to choose between his fiance, a spoiled banker's daughter, and an earnest roadhouse operator, a woman of "questionable virtue." | |
Flowing Gold
Unfairly given a dishonorable discharge from the army, Calvin Gray goes to Dallas, where he manages to win the trust of a jeweler and is able to sell a number of diamonds to the newly oil rich Briskows. He makes friends with the family and helps them adjust to their newly found riches. The Briskows, in turn, help him prove false the charges that caused his dismissal from the army. |
By: Rex Ellingwood Beach (1877-1949) | |
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Rainbow's End | |
The Iron Trail |
By: Garrett Putman Serviss (1851-1929) | |
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Edison's Conquest of Mars |
By: Kate Douglas Wiggins (1856-1923) | |
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Mother Carey’s Chickens
“When Captain Carey went on his long journey into the unknown and uncharted land, the rest of the Careys tried in vain for a few months to be still a family, and did not succeed at all. They clung as closely to one another as ever they could, but there was always a gap in the circle where father had been….. The only thing to do was to remember father's pride and justify it, to recall his care for mother and take his place so far as might be; the only thing for all, as the months went on, was to be what mother called the three Bs -- brave, bright, and busy... |
By: Edward V. Lucas (1868-1938) | |
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Forgotten Tales of Long Ago | |
The Slowcoach | |
The Flamp, The Ameliorator, and The Schoolboy's Apprentice |
By: Carolyn Steward Taylor | |
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Werewolf -- Five Pieces
Five stories and essays about werewolves. |
By: Laurence M. Janifer (1933-2002) | |
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Supermind
FBI agent Kenneth Malone lives in a world where psionic powers such as telepathy and teleportation exist. He must cope with them as well as an FBI Director who leaves Malone continually confused about what situation he is being asked to handle and what he is expected to do about it. Someone or something is causing confusion in the U.S. Government, Unions, The Mafia, and other sectors of society and Malone has been given the job of finding the source of the confusion. A good story composed of science fiction and slap stick comedy with a bit of romance thrown into the mix. | |
Wizard | |
Hex |
By: William Carleton (1794-1869) | |
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The Black Prophet - A Tale of Irish Famine
A story about the Irish, just before the onset of the famine of 1847, with all the color and dialogue of a man who lived it. | |
Stories And Tales Of The Irish |
By: Temple Bailey (-1953) | |
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Mistress Anne | |
Contrary Mary | |
Glory of Youth | |
Judy |
By: Arthur Morrison (1863-1945) | |
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A Child of the Jago
Arthur George Morrison (1 November 1863, Poplar, London - 4 December 1945, Chalfont St Peter, Buckinghamshire) was an English author and journalist known for his realistic novels about London's East End and for his detective stories. Morrison's most famous novel is A Child of the Jago, published in 1896, The novel described in graphic detail living conditions in the East End, including the permeation of violence into everyday life (it was a barely fictionalized account of life in the Old Nichol Street Rookery). (Introduction by Wikipedia and Algy Pug) | |
The Red Triangle Being Some Further Chronicles of Martin Hewitt, Investigator |
By: David Garnett (1892-1981) | |
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Lady into Fox
When Sylvia Tebrick, the 24-year-old wife of Richard Tebrick, suddenly turns into a fox while they are out walking in the woods, Mr. Tebrick sends away all the servants in an attempt to keep Sylvia's new nature a secret. Both then struggle to come to terms with the problems the change brings about. |
By: Henry Lawson (1867-1922) | |
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Joe Wilson and His Mates |
By: Harold L. Goodwin (1914-1990) | |
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The Electronic Mind Reader | |
Rip Foster Rides the Gray Planet
"Foster, Lieutenant, R. I. P.," blared the voice horn, and five minutes later Rip Foster was off into space on an assignment more exciting than any he had ever imagined. He could hardly believe his ears. Could a green young Planeteer, just through his training, possibly carry out orders like these? Sunny space, what a trick it would be! From the moment Rip boards the space ship Scorpius there is a thrill a minute. He and his nine daring Planeteers must cope with the merciless hazing of the spacemen commanding the ship, and they must outwit the desperate Connies, who threaten to plunge all of space into war... |