Archiv der Kategorie: Classics of Fiction (English)

Under The Greenwood Tree

Under The Greenwood Tree – Thomas Hardy

“Under the Greenwood Tree” is a year-long rural idyl. The nine chapters of the first part entitled “Winter,” are taken up with a wonderfully humorous description of the old-fashioned wind-instrument choir of the parish of Mellstock trudging around on Christmas night to serenade every dweller in the parish, and with an equally humorous description of the party given by honest Reuben Dewey, the tranter, or wagoner. The other parts, named after the other seasons, commemorate the love of Dick Dewey, the tranter’s son for Fancy Day, the village schoolmistress—a love which ends in the most typical of rural weddings, in spite of the fact that the young rector himself is somewhat smitten with … Read more.../Mehr lesen ...

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The Conquest Of Granada

The Conquest Of Granada – Washington Irving

In 1830 Irving published his ” Chronicles of the Conquest of Granada,” one of the most delightful of his works, an exact history, for such it is admitted to be by those who have searched most carefully the ancient records of Spain, yet so full of personal incident, so diversified with surprising turns of fortune, and these wrought up with such picturesque effect, that, to use an expression of Pope, a young lady might read it by mistake for a romance.

The Conquest Of Granada

The Conquest Of Granada

Format: Paperback.

The Conquest Of Granada.

ISBN: 9783849674281.

Available at amazon.com and other venues.

 

Biography of Washington Irving (from Wikipedia):

Washington Irving (April 3, 1783 – November … Read more.../Mehr lesen ...

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The Awakening

The Awakening – Kate Chopin

Mrs. Chopin’s most ambitious work, and that by many regarded as her greatest achievement, is ‘The Awakening’. It was written in the belief that in this larger form she could best develop the qualities of her talent. The book shows breadth of view, sincerity, art of the finest kind, a deep knowledge of the woman soul, and accurate individualized character delineation. Edna, the wife of Leonce Pontellier, and mother of two children, is aroused by the simple love of a young Creole to the knowledge of demands in her rich passionate nature that cannot be satisfied by her wifely and maternal duties. Without a fitting education she tries to realize her self at the expense … Read more.../Mehr lesen ...

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Historical Mysteries

Historical Mysteries – Andrew Lang

A collection of 12 essays on historical mysteries. Contents:

The Case Of Elizabeth Canning
The Murder Of Escovedo
The Campden Mystery
The Case Of Allan Breck
The Cardinal’s Necklace
The Mystery Of Kaspar Hauser
The Gowrie Conspiracy
… and more …

Historical Mysteries

Historical Mysteries

Format: Paperback.

Historical Mysteries.

ISBN: 9783849674267.

Available at amazon.com and other venues.

 

Short biography of Andrew Lang (from Wikipedia):

Lang was born in Selkirk. He was the eldest of the eight children born to John Lang, the town clerk of Selkirk, and his wife Jane Plenderleath Sellar, who was the daughter of Patrick Sellar, factor to the first duke of Sutherland. On 17 April 1875, he married Leonora Blanche Alleyne, youngest … Read more.../Mehr lesen ...

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The Invisible Man

The Invisible Man – H. G. Wells

Such a kind of literature as that of which The Invisible Man is a specimen is inevitable. We are living in an age of inventions. The conditions of life are being more or less modified by these. It is very natural to imagine the development of invention ; very natural also to ask whether the world will be any happier for it. Mr. Wells has remarkable literary abilities. He has also had a good scientific training, and he is saved alike by his sense and knowledge from the insanity which might easily wreck such attempts as these. The Invisible Man is decidedly striking and original, and what is rare in such books, it … Read more.../Mehr lesen ...

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The Gilded Age

The Gilded Age – Mark Twain

Ladies and gentlemen, there are many American writers today who in their way are great, and many, many more during this man’s life have come and gone—but Samuel L. Clemens, the delight of our fathers and our grandfathers, who. with his same brilliant wit and humor was wilting of the Mississippi River and its first steamboat in the “Gilded Age” of the old South before the war, appears with us tonight as young in spirit, as humorous and as handsome as he ever was, and our only hope is that like Tennyson’s Brook and the application of steam to navigation by Robert Fulton he will “roll on and on forever.”

The Gilded Age

The Gilded Age

Format: … Read more.../Mehr lesen ...

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Mark Twain’s Letters

Mark Twain’s Letters – Mark Twain

Like his other writings, Mark Twain’s letters attest that he was not the greatest of all humorists, but that he did have an amazing gift of depicting the average American, and what is more, that he could do it sympathetically and from the inside of the house, not ironically through the window as Thackeray depicted the absurdities of his contemporaries. The letters show, also, what a storybook life he led. Born obscurely in a western town without advantages, half-educated as a typesetter for a country newspaper, a runaway, a soldier “riding a small yellow mule” to the aid of the Confederacy, a runaway again, a mining prospector familiar with mountain gambling-saloons, a news reporter, … Read more.../Mehr lesen ...

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What is Man? And other essays

What is Man? And other essays – Mark Twain

Twain, embraces some of the latter day thoughts of the great humorist, some shorter and lighter sketches, together with the radical paper from which the book takes its name, never before given public circulation. Among the essays included in the collection are: “The Death of Jean,” “The Memorable Assassination,” “A Scrap of Curious History,” “A Simplified Alphabet,” and “Taming the Bicycle.” In “The Bee” (published for the first time) there are some deliciously funny paragraphs; such as: “Bee scientists always speak of the bee as she. It is because all the important bees are of that sex. In the hive there is one married bee called the queen; she has fifty-thousand … Read more.../Mehr lesen ...

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The Mysterious Stranger (and other stories)

The Mysterious Stranger (and other stories) – Mark Twain

Three Austrian boys, in 1590, meet a mysterious stranger, who calls himself an angel, yet is named Satan. He is a fascinating companion, performing miracles that charm the boys, but they soon find out that he has no Moral Sense. In fact, he scorns Moral Sense, as the thing that gives the Human Race its finishing touch of ubnoxiousness. The lives of the villagers arc turned from their predestined paths by his casual interference. He is willing to do a person a good turn, since it costs him nothing, but in several cases his kindness consists in bringing about the early death of his beneficiaries. And such acts he justifies. In … Read more.../Mehr lesen ...

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Mark Twain’s Speeches

Mark Twain’s Speeches – Mark Twain

This book reveals Mark Twain in a new and interesting phase. Mark Twain was first of all a lecturer, almost before he began to write. Conceived and composed to be spoken, these speeches are even more simple and direct than his written works. These speeches are all humorous in their style and method. They show one remarkable thing about Mark Twain’s work, whether spoken or writteu — he never repeated himself. It naturally follows that these lectures cover almost every conceivable subject, from weather and women to politics and fishing. The speeches of Mark Twain, in point of time, cover a little more than half his life. Many of them were delivered at important … Read more.../Mehr lesen ...

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