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By: R. W. (Robert W.) [Editor] Shoppell | |
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The Children's Portion |
By: H. Lovett Cameron | |
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Vera Nevill Or, Poor Wisdom's Chance |
By: Charles Edward Pearce (-1924) | |
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Madame Flirt A Romance of 'The Beggar's Opera' | |
By: Reuben Bertram Oldfield (1878-) | |
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Exciting Adventures of Mister Robert Robin |
By: Leopold Kompert (1822-1886) | |
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A Ghetto Violet From "Christian and Leah" |
By: J. J. Grandville (1803-1847) | |
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Comical People |
By: I. I. (Isaac Israel) Hayes (1832-1881) | |
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Cast Away in the Cold An Old Man's Story of a Young Man's Adventures, as Related by Captain John Hardy, Mariner |
By: Lilian Turner | |
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An Australian Lassie |
By: Gustave Droz (1832-1895) | |
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Monsieur, Madame, and Bebe |
By: Daniel Wise (1813-1898) | |
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Jessie Carlton The Story of a Girl who Fought with Little Impulse, the Wizard, and Conquered Him |
By: Harriet L. (Harriet Lummis) Smith | |
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Other People's Business The Romantic Career of the Practical Miss Dale |
By: Daniel Wise (1813-1898) | |
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Aunt Amy or, How Minnie Brown learned to be a Sunbeam |
By: H.H. Bashford (1880-1961) | |
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Half-Past Bedtime
Ah, the wonderful adventures of Marian after she meets the strange Mr. Jugg. "And who are you, Mr Jugg?" she inquired. "I'm the King of the Bumpies," he replied. When Marian was puzzled there came a little straight line, exactly in the middle, between her two eyebrows. "What are bumpies?" she said. "My hat!" he gasped. "Haven't you ever heard of bumpies?" Marian shook her head. "Oh dear, oh dear!" he sighed. "Have you ever heard of angels?" "Well, of course," said Marian. "Everybody's heard of angels... |
By: John Miller (1861-1917) | |
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The Workingman's Paradise An Australian Labour Novel |
By: E. Frances (Eleanor Frances) Poynter | |
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My Little Lady |
By: William S. Hart (1876-) | |
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Injun and Whitey to the Rescue |
By: Beatrice Egerton | |
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Lippa |
By: L. L. (Leopold L.) Flood (1881-) | |
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Bright-Wits, Prince of Mogadore |
By: Herbert M. (Herbert Müller) Hopkins (1870-1910) | |
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The Mayor of Warwick |
By: Jane Barlow (1857-1917) | |
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Strangers at Lisconnel
Strangers at Lisconnel is a sequel to Jane Barlow’s Irish Idylls. The locations and most of the characters are common to both. There is great humor and concomitantly a certain melancholy in most of these stories of the most rural of rural places in Ireland. Although of a higher social class than her characters, Our Jane seems to have a touch of softness in her heart for their utter simplicity, abject poverty and naiveté. From the following brief example of dialogue, can be seen that Ms Barlow could only have come to write these words after having heard them countless times in person: Mrs... |
By: Marguerite Audoux (1863-1937) | |
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Marie Claire |
By: Grace Beaumont | |
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Aunt Judith The Story of a Loving Life |
By: V. M. | |
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The Strange Little Girl A Story for Children |
By: Jessie Margaret Edmondston Saxby (1842-1940) | |
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Viking Boys |
By: Luke Allan (-1962) | |
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The Return of Blue Pete |
By: Władysław Stanisław Reymont (1867-1925) | |
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The Comedienne |
By: Edward Eldridge | |
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A California Girl |
By: Charles S. Bentley | |
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The Fifth of November A Romance of the Stuarts |
By: Henry Clarke (1853-1908) | |
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Miss Merivale's Mistake |
By: Annie Trumbull Slosson (1838-1926) | |
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Story-Tell Lib |
By: Lucy S. Furman (1869-1958) | |
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Mothering on Perilous
Cecelia Loring is alone in the world after the death of her mother and has come to the Kentucky mountains in search of work. Although very depressed from her loss she soon becomes caretaker of the garden at a school and not many days later finds herself quite busy as housemother to a group of energetic boys that keep running away from the school because of homesickness, especially Nucky, who seems to have the weight of the world on his shoulders, worrying about not being at home to help his brother Blant "keep lookout" for the Cheevers, who have been at war with the Marrses for years over a piece of land... |
By: Marianne L. B. Ker | |
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How the Fairy Violet Lost and Won Her Wings |