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By: Ada Leverson (1862-1933) | |
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Bird of Paradise | |
The Limit | |
The Twelfth Hour | |
Tenterhooks
The second of the 'Little Ottleys' trilogy, an Edwardian comedy of manners. Several years have passed since the events in 'Love's Shadow', but Bruce Ottley is as difficult and irksome as ever. His beautiful wife Edith continues to gently manage his foibles, and regards him with a fond tolerance. But then she meets the enchanting - and very handsome - Aylmer Ross. The attraction between them is undeniable, and Edith's quiet serenity is shattered. Could this spell the end for the Ottley's marriage?... |
By: Emily Leigh Lowes | |
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Chats on Old Lace and Needlework |
By: Francesco Petrarca (1304-1374) | |
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The Sonnets, Triumphs, and Other Poems of Petrarch |
By: E.D.E.N. Southworth (1819-1899) | |
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The Missing Bride
Prepare yourself for a journey, full of adventures and plot twists which will keep you guessing until the very end. This is psychological romance at its best. In the war of 1814, an American heiress falls in love with a British officer. This ill-fated marriage brings together a large group of interesting people who would never have met in other circumstances. |
By: Mary Jane Holmes (1828-1907) | |
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Tempest and Sunshine
Tempest and Sunshine is the first book written by Mary Jane Holmes. Set in the pre-Civil War south, it follows the struggles and romances of two sisters, as different as night and day; blonde Fanny and dark haired Julia. (Introduction by jedopi) |
By: Margaret Alice Murray (1863-1963) | |
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The Witch-cult in Western Europe A Study in Anthropology |
By: Emma Dorothy Eliza Nevitte Southworth (1819-1899) | |
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Ishmael Or, In the Depths | |
Her Mother's Secret |
By: Samuel White Baker (1821-1893) | |
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Wild Beasts and Their Ways, Reminiscences of Europe, Asia, Africa and America — Volume 1 | |
Ismailia | |
The Albert N'Yanza, Great Basin of the Nile |
By: Mary Jane Holmes (1825-1907) | |
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The Cromptons |
By: Samuel White Baker (1821-1893) | |
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Eight Years' Wanderings in Ceylon | |
The Nile tributaries of Abyssinia, and the sword hunters of the Hamran arabs |
By: Emma Dorothy Eliza Nevitte Southworth (1819-1899) | |
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Hidden Hand |
By: Samuel White Baker (1821-1893) | |
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Cyprus, as I Saw It in 1879 |
By: Emma Dorothy Eliza Nevitte Southworth (1819-1899) | |
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Capitola's Peril A Sequel to 'The Hidden Hand' |
By: Samuel White Baker (1821-1893) | |
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The Rifle and the Hound in Ceylon |
By: Mary Jane Holmes (1825-1907) | |
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The English Orphans |
By: Emma Dorothy Eliza Nevitte Southworth (1819-1899) | |
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The Haunted Homestead A Novel | |
Self-Raised Or, From the Depths |
By: Mary Jane Holmes (1825-1907) | |
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Daisy Thornton | |
Family Pride Or, Purified by Suffering |
By: Emma Dorothy Eliza Nevitte Southworth (1819-1899) | |
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Capitola the Madcap | |
Tried for Her Life A Sequel to "Cruel As the Grave" |
By: Mary Jane Holmes (1825-1907) | |
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The Rector of St. Mark's |
By: Emma Dorothy Eliza Nevitte Southworth (1819-1899) | |
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The Lost Lady of Lone | |
For Woman's Love | |
Cruel As The Grave |
By: Mary Jane Holmes (1825-1907) | |
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Jessie Graham | |
Darkness and Daylight | |
Aikenside | |
Tracy Park | |
Miss McDonald | |
Bad Hugh | |
Rosamond — or, the Youthful Error | |
Dora Deane |
By: Emma Dorothy Eliza Nevitte Southworth (1819-1899) | |
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Victor's Triumph Sequel to A Beautiful Fiend |
By: Mary Jane Holmes (1825-1907) | |
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Ethelyn's Mistake | |
Homestead on the Hillside |
By: A. W. Duncan | |
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The Chemistry of Food and Nutrition |
By: John Richard Green (1837-1883) | |
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History of the English People, Volume I Early England, 449-1071; Foreign Kings, 1071-1204; The Charter, 1204-1216 |
By: Edric Vredenberg (1860-?) | |
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My Book Of Favourite Fairy Tales
This is a collection on well-known, favorite fairy stories, most of which we all grew up with. They were edited and retold in this volume. |
By: George Haven Putnam (1844-1930) | |
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Abraham Lincoln | |
The Little Gingerbread Man |
By: Henri Murger (1822-1861) | |
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Bohemians of the Latin Quarter |
By: George Haven Putnam (1844-1930) | |
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International Copyright Considered in some of its Relations to Ethics and Political Economy |
By: Carveth Read (1848-1931) | |
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Logic Deductive and Inductive |
By: William Tyler Olcott (1873-1936) | |
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A Field Book of the Stars |
By: George Farquhar (1677-1707) | |
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Recruiting Officer | |
The Beaux-Stratagem A comedy in five acts
Two gentlemen of broken fortune, disguised as master and servant, and thinking that a good dowry split both ways would solve their problems; some cludgy highwaymen and their confederates; foxy inn-keeper and saucy daughter; a country home with a drunken squire and his long suffering wife, medicine-practicing Lady, and beautiful daughter. What could possibly go wrong? |
By: Robert Henry Newell (1836-1901) | |
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The Orpheus C. Kerr Papers
These are a collection of humorous "letters" written by a fictional character to a relation in the north during the Civil War. They were published regularly in the New York Mercury Sunday newspaper for the four years of the war. In the letters, Newell pokes fun at northern generals, politicians, and has hard things to say about southerners. Although Newell is rarely serious, I imagine the letters reflect the bitterness and frustration of many northerners at the time. (Introduction by Margaret) |
By: William Edwards Henderson (1870-) | |
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An Elementary Study of Chemistry |
By: Luis Coloma (1851-1915) | |
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Perez the Mouse |
By: Kate M. Foley | |
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Five Lectures on Blindness
The [five] lectures were written primarily to be delivered at the summer sessions of the University of California, at Berkeley and at Los Angeles, in the summer of 1918. . . they are the outgrowth of almost a quarter of a century spent in work for the blind, and were written from the standpoint of a blind person, seeking to better the condition of the blind. They were addressed not to the blind, but to the seeing public, for the benefit that will accrue to the blind from a better understanding of their problems. (Extract from the Forward by Milton J. Ferguson) |
By: Jessie Willcox Smith (1863-1935) | |
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The Little Mother Goose | |
Dickens's Children Ten Drawings |