These two stories by Koos Rozemond, with English translations by Aart van den End.
It's been said if two or more people strongly agree on any one thing.
This fascinating travelogue details the visit of author Ellen Clacy to the massive gold mines that were erected in Australia in the nineteenth century.
In 1856 the Reverend Edmund Donald Carr was overtaken by a blizzard.
A Personal Record is writer Joseph Conrad's autobiography.
First published in 1905, A Thief in the Night is the third collection of stories.
Stonehenge is the sacred site Lilly desires to visit more than any other place in the world.
A young Dutch trader, Kaspar Almayer, marries Captain Lingard's adopted Malay daughter.
Norwegian playwright Henrik Ibsen wrote An Enemy of the People in 1882.
Robert Louis Stevenson's 1878 travelogue, An Inland Voyage, details his canoeing trip.
H. G. Wells' Ann Veronica, first published in 1909, looks at political and feminist issues.
Areopagitica: A speech for the Liberty of Unlicensed Printing to the Parliament of England.
Cursed by her own pride and greed, Crawna has lived a lonely life of seclusion.
In this book, Wishbone, the lovable dog imagines he is the great warrior-hero Beowulf.
Samuel Taylor Coleridge's 1817 work Biographia Literaria is an autobiography in discourse.
Black Beauty (1877) is the classic children's book by English author Anna Sewell.
A enthralling story about the inequalities of the 19th-century English legal system.
In these modern version of the French folktale "Stone Soup," Rag-Tag Meg shows the neighborhood.
Though Frances Burney's novels significantly influenced writers such as Jane Austen.
Ever since 1759, when Voltaire wrote Candide in ridicule of the notion.