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Literature |
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By: John Kendrick Bangs (1862-1922) | |
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Mr. Bonaparte of Corsica
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A Rebellious Heroine
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By: Philip Verrill Mighels (1869-1911) | |
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As It Was in the Beginning
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The Furnace of Gold
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Bruvver Jim's Baby
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By: Percy Bysshe Shelley (1792-1822) | |
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A Defence of Poetry and Other Essays
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The Complete Poetical Works of Percy Bysshe Shelley — Volume 1
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The Daemon of the World
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The Witch of Atlas
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Peter Bell the Third
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By: Emily Post (1873-1960) | |
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The Title Market
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By: Charles Brockden Brown (1771-1810) | |
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Edgar Huntly or, Memoirs of a Sleep-Walker
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Memoirs of Carwin, the Biloquist
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Jane Talbot
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By: Edward Lear (1812-1888) | |
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Nonsense Songs, Stories, Botany and Alphabets
A selection of nonsense poems, songs (not sung!), stories, and miscellaneous strangeness. The work includes the "Owl and the Pussycat" and a recipe for Amblongus Pie, which begins "Take 4 pounds (say 4½ pounds) of fresh ablongusses and put them in a small pipkin."Edward Lear was an English writer, poet, cat-lover, and illustrator (his watercolours are beautiful). This recording celebrates the 200th anniversary of Lear's birth. | |
Nonsense Drolleries The Owl & The Pussy-Cat—The Duck & The Kangaroo.
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More Nonsense
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By: Frank Richard Stockton (1834-1902) | |
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The Lady, or the Tiger?
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The Magic Egg and Other Stories
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The Great War Syndicate
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The Great Stone of Sardis
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A Chosen Few Short Stories
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The House of Martha
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John Gayther's Garden and the Stories Told Therein
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The Associate Hermits
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The Squirrel Inn
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My Terminal Moraine 1892
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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: George Barr McCutcheon (1866-1928) | |
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Brewster's Millions
He hosts an all expenses paid luxury cruise to Europe for fifty guests and showers them with expensive gifts. When he's mugged in a dark alley, he insists that the thugs also take the $300 stashed away in his back pocket. He flies into a rage whenever one of his employees suggests cutting costs. Every time he places a bet, he wins, causing him even more despair! In Brewster's Millions by George Barr McCutcheon, a classic riches-to-rags tale, Montgomery Brewster is bound by the terms of an eccentric uncle's will to spend one million dollars completely within a year so that he can lay claim to an even bigger fortune... | |
Graustark
The Graustark novels are stories of court intrigue, royal disguise, and romance similar to Anthony Hope’s 1894 novel, The Prisoner of Zenda, and its sequels. They were popular best-sellers at the time they were published and the original editions are still readily available in used book shops. The novels gave their name to a fictional genre called Graustarkian: this genre contains tales of romance and intrigue usually featuring titled characters in small, fictional, Central European countries... | |
Beverly Of Graustark
Beverly Of Graustark is the second book in the Graustark series. Lorry and his wife, the princess, made their home in Washington, but spent a few months of each year in Edelweiss. During the periods spent in Washington and in travel, her affairs in Graustark were in the hands of a capable, austere old diplomat–her uncle, Count Caspar Halfont. Princess Volga reigned as regent over the principality of Axphain. To the south lay the principality of Dawsbergen, ruled by young Prince Dantan, whose half brother, the deposed Prince Gabriel, had been for two years a prisoner in Graustark, the convicted assassin of Prince Lorenz, of Axphain, one time suitor for the hand of Yetive... | |
Anderson Crow, Detective
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