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Romance Novels |
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By: Honoré Morrow (1880-1940) | |
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The Heart of the Desert Kut-Le of the Desert |
By: John Philip Sousa (1854-1932) | |
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The Fifth String | |
The Fifth String | |
By: Henry Harland (1861-1905) | |
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The Lady Paramount |
By: Ethel Hueston (1887-) | |
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Prudence of the Parsonage | |
Sunny Slopes |
By: Margaret M. (Margaret Murray) Robertson (1821-1897) | |
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Janet's Love and Service |
By: Clara Louise Burnham (1854-1927) | |
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In Apple-Blossom Time A Fairy-Tale to Date |
By: Mary Cholmondeley (1859-1925) | |
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Prisoners Fast Bound In Misery And Iron |
By: Will Lillibridge (1878-1909) | |
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Arcadia in Avernus
Unhappy wife leaves marriage of convenience for another man, the couple running away to the Dakota prairie to set up housekeeping. All seems romantically well... until the ex shows up. Surprisingly modern (if a little theatrical) novella from the early 1900's. From the posthumous collection of Lillibridge short stories, A Breath of Prairie, 1911. |
By: August von Kotzebue (1761-1819) | |
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Lover's Vows
Lovers' Vows (1798), a play by Elizabeth Inchbald arguably best known now for having been featured in Jane Austen's novel Mansfield Park (1814), is one of at least four adaptations of August von Kotzebue's Das Kind der Liebe (1780; literally "Child of Love," or "Natural Son," as it is often translated), all of which were published between 1798 and 1800. Inchbald's version is the only one to have been performed. Dealing as it does with sex outside marriage and illegitimate birth, Inchbald in the Preface to the published version declares herself to have been highly sensitive to the task of adapting the original German text for "an English audience... |
By: Anne Douglas Sedgwick (1873-1935) | |
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Franklin Kane |
By: Sarojini Naidu (1879-1949) | |
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Golden Threshold
Sarojini Naidu was a remarkable woman. Known as the Nightingale of India, she started writing at the age of thirteen and throughout her life composed several volumes of poetry, writing many poems which are still famous to this day. As well as being a poet, Naidu was an activist and politician, campaigning for Indian independence and became the first Indian woman to attain the post of President of the Indian National Congress. This volume contains the beautiful 'Indian Love-Song', as well as many other moving verses... |
By: Henry Russell Miller (1880-1955) | |
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The House of Toys |
By: Charles Garvice (-1920) | |
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The Woman's Way |
By: Ross Beeckman | |
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Princess Zara | |
The Last Woman |
By: W. J. (William James) Dawson (1854-1928) | |
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The Empire of Love |
By: Seth Curtis Beach (1837-1932) | |
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Daughters of the Puritans A Group of Brief Biographies |
By: Henry Theophilus Finck (1854-1926) | |
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Primitive Love and Love-Stories |
By: Mary Keith Medbery Mackaye (1845-1924) | |
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Pride and Prejudice: A Play
Pride and Prejudice, a comedy of manners and marriage, is the most famous of Jane Austen's novels. In this dramatic adaption by Mary Keith Medbery Macakaye some liberties are taken with the storyline and characters, but it is still a fun listen or read. Perhaps a good introduction for someone not ready to tackle the complete novel ~ and for the reader familiar with the work, a laugh can be had at the changes that were made in order to adapt it to the stage |
By: William Withering (1741-1799) | |
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An Account of the Foxglove and some of its Medical Uses With Practical Remarks on Dropsy and Other Diseases |
By: Ruth Comfort Mitchell (1882-1954) | |
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Play the Game! |
By: Leroy Scott (1875-1929) | |
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Children of the Whirlwind |
By: Eugene Walter (1874-1941) | |
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The Easiest Way A Story of Metropolitan Life |
By: David Carpenter Knight | |
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The Love of Frank Nineteen |
By: Molly Elliot Seawell (1860-1916) | |
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Throckmorton
This is a novel about the lives of the members of the Temple family and their connections in Tidewater, Virginia, in the Reconstruction era. The widow Judith Temple and her sister in law Jacqueline live quietly on the Temple plantation, when the widower George Throckmorton returns to Tidewater. He had joined the Union Army in the war, and led with distinction. The lives of the girls are turned upside-down.. |
By: Stella Benson (1892-1933) | |
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This Is the End
Some books have plots that drive relentlessly toward a conclusion. Others, like "This Is The End", just meander. It is the story of a Family halfheartedly searching for a missing relation who does not want to be found, while just off-stage, World War I is raging on the continent. It is a story about ordinary people trying to live ordinary lives in extraordinary times. The things they do are less important than the ways in which they do them: often comic, occasionally tragic, but always touching and true to life. It reminds us that Poetry and Romance can be found anywhere, hidden beneath the surface of the most commonplace things. |
By: Richard Lovell Edgeworth (1744-1817) | |
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Richard Lovell Edgeworth A Selection From His Memoirs |
By: Jesse Lynch Williams (1871-1929) | |
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Why Marry?
Why Marry? is a comedy, which "tells the truth about marriage". We find a family in the throes of proving the morality of marriage to a New Age Woman. Can the family defend marriage to this self-supporting girl? Will she be convinced that marriage is the ultimate sacredness of a relationship or will she hold to her perception that marriage is the basis of separating two lovers."Why Marry?" won the first Pulitzer Prize for Drama. |
By: Stephen McKenna (1888-1967) | |
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The Education of Eric Lane |
By: Cosmo Hamilton (1879-1942) | |
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Who Cares? a story of adolescence |