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Romance Novels |
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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 |
By: Saint John of Damascus (676?-749) | |
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Barlaam and Ioasaph | |
By: Julia Magruder (1854-1907) | |
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A Beautiful Alien |
By: Susan Edmonstoune Ferrier | |
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Marriage, Volume 1
“Love!–A word by superstition thought a God; by use turned to an humour; by self-will made a flattering madness.” – Alexander and Campaspe. Lady Juliana, the indulged and coddled seventeen (”And a half, papa”) year old daughter of the Earl of Cortland, is betrothed by her father to a wealthy old Duke who can give her every luxury. She instead runs away and marries her very handsome but penniless lover. Very soon, they are forced to travel to Scotland to live with his quirky family in a rundown “castle” in the barren wilderness. Can this marriage survive?(Summary by P.Cunningham) |
By: Jessie Fothergill (1851-1891) | |
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The First Violin
May Wedderburn is a quiet provincial girl, living in small and seemingly boring Skernford. Underneath the dull exterior, there is mystery, suspicion and fear in this little town, surrounding the austere local wealthy landowner who is very interested in marrying poor May. It looks as though she will have to marry him whether she likes it or not until an unsuspected alliance is formed between her and a respected old lady. They both escape to Germany where music and excitement await them. |
By: Thomas Shaw (1843-1918) | |
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Clovers and How to Grow Them |
By: Munson Aldrich Havens (1873-1942) | |
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Old Valentines A Love Story |
By: Esther Chamberlain | |
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The Coast of Chance |
By: Florence A. (Florence Antoinette) Kilpatrick (1888-) | |
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Our Elizabeth A Humour Novel |
By: Olive M. (Olive Mary) Briggs (1873-) | |
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The Black Cross |
By: A. Ethelwyn Wetherald (1857-1940) | |
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An Algonquin Maiden A Romance of the Early Days of Upper Canada |
By: W. Pett (William Pett) Ridge (-1930) | |
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Love at Paddington |
By: Roy Irving Murray | |
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August First |
By: Margaret Peterson (1883-1933) | |
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To Love |
By: James Milne (1865-1951) | |
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The Black Colonel |
By: Edmund Day (1866-1923) | |
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The Round-Up A romance of Arizona novelized from Edmund Day's melodrama |
By: E. Temple (Ernest Temple) Thurston (1879-1933) | |
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Sally Bishop A Romance |
By: Charles Goff Thomson | |
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Terry A Tale of the Hill People |
By: David Whitelaw | |
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The Princess Galva
Edward Povey had been a correspondence clerk for twenty-two years when he was summarily dismissed. So how did he find himself mixed up with an orphan girl, who was really a princess, as she sought to reclaim her throne from the man who had killed her parents? Well, however it had happened, it was romantic. And after two decades in the basement office of a shipping company, he was ready for a bit of romance. (Introduction by MaryAnn) |
By: H. Lovett Cameron | |
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Vera Nevill Or, Poor Wisdom's Chance |
By: Ellen Thorneycroft Fowler (1860-1929) | |
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The Farringdons |
By: Alice Ames Winter (1865-1944) | |
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Jewel Weed |
By: M. G. (Mary Greenway) McClelland (1853-1895) | |
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Princess |
By: Florence Alice Sitwell (1858-1930) | |
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Daybreak A Story for Girls |
By: W. S. (Wilmarth Sheldon) Lewis (1895-1979) | |
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Tutors' Lane |
By: George Looms (1886-1926) | |
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Stubble |
By: Anonymous | |
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An Englishwoman's Love-Letters
It need hardly be said that the woman by whom these letter were written had no thought that they would be read by anyone but the person to whom they were addressed. But a request, conveyed under circumstances which the writer herself would have regarded as all-commanding, urges that they should now be given to the world; and, so far as is possible with a due regard to the claims of privacy, what is here printed presents the letters as they were first written in their complete form and sequence. From book explaination |
By: Joseph Hocking (1860-1937) | |
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Weapons of Mystery
Justin Blake receives an invitation from his old school-fellow Tom Temple to join him and his family for the Christmas holidays in Yorkshire. Having no other plans, he decides to go. Though he is normally much the opposite of what would be called a lady's man, he falls instantly in love with Miss Forrest, one of the guests, who had already shared his train compartment on the way. When he meets the mysterious Herod Voltaire and finds that he must protect the girl from him and his weapons of mystery, the adventure begins. |
By: Various | |
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30 American Poems
This is a sequel of sorts to 37 American Poems, one of my first solos. Concentration here is on late 19th to early 20th Century works by US poets. |
By: Zane Grey (1872-1939) | |
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To The Last Man
The story follows an ancient feud between two frontier families that is inflamed when one of the families takes up cattle rustling. The ranchers are led by Jean Isbel and, on the other side, Lee Jorth and his band of cattle rustlers. In the grip of a relentless code of loyalty to their own people, they fight the war of the Tonto Basin, desperately, doggedly, to the last man, neither side seeing the futility of it until it is too late. And in this volatile environment, young Jean finds himself hopelessly in love with a girl from whom he is separated by an impassable barrier. |
By: Eleanor H. Porter (1868-1920) | |
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The Road to Understanding
"If Burke Denby had not been given all the frosted cakes and toy shotguns he wanted at the age of ten, it might not have been so difficult to convince him at the age of twenty that he did not want to marry Helen Barnet.""Of course the inevitable happened. However near two roads may be at the start, if they diverge ever so slightly and keep straight ahead, there is bound to be in time all the world between them. In the case of Burke and Helen, their roads never started together at all: they merely crossed; and at the crossing came the wedding... |