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  • av Jack London
    366,-

    Humphrey Van Weyden is rescued by the cruel and nihilistic captain 'Wolf' Larsen. Humphrey's body, spirt, and ideology are challenged while living at the edge of survival.

  • av Ernest Hemingway
    366,-

    The Sun Also Rises tracks the aftermath of the lives of men and women recently emerged from that calamity which we call World War I.

  • av Upton Sinclair
    386,-

    Upton Sinclair'sThe Jungle follows immigrants in the early 1900's who come to question "American Dream."

  • av William Faulkner
    380,-

    Before William Faulkner won the Nobel Prize in Literature, he was the author of "Soldiers' Pay", his first novel, published in 1926.

  • av Fyodor Dostoyevsky
    350,-

    Are we witnessing a psychotic break? Or, has someone with physical features strikingly similar to his own spotted an opportunity, and seized it? In "The Double" we wonder!

  • av F. Scott Fitzgerald
    316,-

    In a 1922 edition of a literary magazine edited by H. L. Mencken is this mountain-sized 'gem' of a short story by F. Scott Fitzgerald.

  • av Louisa Mae Alcott
    380,-

    Eight Cousins was published in 1875 by American novelist Louisa May Alcott.

  • av E. M. Forster
    316,-

    Are we witnessing a psychotic break? Or, has someone with physical features strikingly similar to his own spotted an opportunity, and seized it?

  • av Leo Tolstoy
    366,-

    Considered one of the greatest literary achievements of the 19th century, The Death of Ivan Ilyitch by Leo Tolstoy rocks the reader out of his smug self-assurance that he is 'living as he ought.' Having accomplished this, the next question is raised: "If I certainly know that I have not lived as I have ought, and I certainly know that I will die tomorrow, with no time to make amends, what possible hope for me is left?" Astute readers will understand that we are all Ivan. His dilemma is our own. A Russian author, Tolstoy published The Death of Ivan Ilyitch in 1886. This edition of the novella carefully re-creates the 1902 translation by Constance Garnett, which was the primary avenue by which this masterpiece became known to the English-speaking world for many decades.

  • av H. P. Lovecraft
    316,-

    In the 1928 The Call of Cthulhu H. P. Lovecraft draws forth from his dreams and imagination all the dark things.

  • av E. M. Forster
    366,-

    Where Angels Fear to Tread catapulted E.M. Forster into his renowned career as an author.

  • av Jack London
    420,-

  • av Robert Louis Stevenson
    346,-

    Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde might represent one of the first literary memes, dropping into the western canon like a bombshell, and staying put 150 years later.

  • av Ayn Rand
    360,-

    Seventy years after Ayn Rand published her warning to the world about collectivism, you can't throw a rock without hitting a collectivist. What will it take to awaken us to the surpassing value of individual liberty?

  • av Johann David Wyss
    416,-

    The Swiss Family Robinson chronicles the adventures and heroics of a marooned Pastor and his family on a deserted, tropical island.

  • av Lew Wallace
    510,-

    The 1880 Ben-Hur was beloved for its faithful representation of the person of Jesus.

  • av L M Montgomery
    450,-

    Anne of Green Gables chronicles the life of a young girl in the fictional town of Avonlea.

  • av Bram Stoker
    280,-

  • av George MacDonald
    350,-

  • av A A Milne
    396,-

    Winnie-the-Pooh has been treasured by generations, rooted into our culture and imagination. Have you ever wondered how it all started? Wonder no more! This edition is virtually an exact replica of the original 1926 edition.

  • av Charlotte Perkins Gilman
    366,-

    "Herland" prompts readers to consider the failures of men to create a utopia, and wonder if women could succeed where men did not.

  • av Charlotte Perkins Gilman
    366,-

    Written by feminist Charlotte Perkins Gilman of "The Yellow Wallpaper" fame in 1911, "Moving the Mountain" is a utopian novel where America has fulfilled its Progressive 'destiny.'

  • av James Oliver Curwood
    350,-

    A young captain named Nathaniel Plum lands on the shore of an island ruled by its self-appointed king, James Strang. Plum is a witness to the total collapse of one of the most tragic American cults.

  • av F. Scott Fitzgerald
    366,-

    Forgotten and critically panned during his lifetime, F. Scott Fitzgerald's "The Great Gatsby" is now considered the quintessential American novel.

  • av W. Somerset Maugham
    366,-

    The Painted Veil by W. Somerset Maugham, is magical tale about the disillusionment of life.

  • av Sinclair Lewis
    366,-

    Using both satire and tragedy to explore medical and scientific themes. Lewis offers sharp criticism and wicked humor in discussing drugs, public health, and immunology, and more.

  • av G K Chesterton
    366,-

    The Everlasting Man aids readers in their journey quest to know God and his son, Jesus Christ.

  • av Aldous Huxley
    380,-

    These Barren Leaves is a satirical novel that makes witty, but dangerously sharp social criticism on the cultural elite.

  • av Edgar Wallace
    356,-

    From the prolific British author, Edgar Wallace, comes The Dark Eyes of London, a crime novel that has inspired two international films. During his lifetime, Wallace wrote over 900 short stories, over 170 novels, and 18 stage plays. While many of his thrilling tales have left a mark on cinematography, Wallace is most well known for writing "King Kong," which became hugely popular and is now considered a classic film. Wallace's work has reached into the far corners of the world and in some places, his novels are still favored by fans of the classics. In The Dark Eyes of London, published in 1924 and adapted into film first in 1939, readers follow Inspector Holt as he dives deep into a murder mystery. Inspector Holt of the Scotland Yard is planning a visit to Monte Carlo when Holt is called back to work. He's thrown on the case of Mr. Gordon Stuart, a man drowned in what seems to be suspicious circumstances. A Holt investigates, he discovers that there's been a series of deaths all involving wealthy men in London, and soon he sees the connections between them. Of course, attempting to solve a mystery such as this means danger awaits-and maybe a little romance, too. Wallace's The Dark Eyes of London is a grimy story of the darkness that lurks in London, complete with a melodramatic mystery and a thrilling romance.

  • av Edgar Rice Burroughs
    380,-

    American author Edgar Rice Burroughs is known best for his classic Tarzan novels. The Return of Tarzan is the second in his series, the direct sequel to The Return of Tarzan. These stories follow the adventures of a man raised by apes in the jungle, with themes such as Tarzan struggling to find his identity, racial superiority, and nature versus nurture. Along with his Tarzan stories, Burroughs is known for his speculative fiction and planetary worlds and is considered one of the most influential writers in history due to the fact that his science fiction inspired the real-life exploration of Mars. Burroughs inspired many important figures in the literature world, such as Rudyard Kipling and his "Jungle Books," as well as James Edwin Gunn, who won the Huge Award for his science fiction. The Return of Tarzan picks up soon after the first novel, where Tarzan is feels homesick after leaving the jungle to wed his lover, Jane Porter. Tarzan ventures out to Europe to visit his friend, Paul d'Arnot, but while on the ship Tarzan gets wrapped up in a whole new adventure. Tarzan meets Countess Olga de Coude and her husband, Count Raoul de Coude, who are being watched by a man named Rokoff. When Tarzan saves the Countess and her husband from Rokoff's evil schemes, Tarzan makes new enemies that he can't escape even after arriving in France. These enemies chase him all the way to a lost city found in the jungle, where a whole new civilization is found. With Rokoff dead set on eliminating Tarzan, the ape man must use who he is, in the jungle and out of it, to get back to Jane and her father alive. The Return of Tarzan is full of excitement and adventure with Burroughs' imaginative writing and the sweet romance between two humans from two vastly different worlds. "The Return of Tarzan" is a sequel that cannot be passed up.

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