The Memoirs of Sherlock Holmes collects together eleven stories detailing the famous exploits and adventures of Baker Street's greatest detective.
The Count of Monte Cristo is Alexandre Dumas' classic tale of revenge and adventure.
Major Barbara is a 1905 play by George Bernard Shaw.
William Morris was an English writer, architect, and artist and was integral to the birth of socialism in Great Britain.
The Son of Tarzan is Edgar Rice Burroughs' fourth novel in the Tarzan series.
Lewis Carroll's Through the Looking-Glass, from 1871, is a children's novel that is often put in the genre literary nonsense.
There never was anybody, wrote the Spectator, who had adventures as well as Miss Bird.
Notes from the Underground is Fyodor Dostoevsky's 1864 masterpiece following the ranting, slightly unhinged memoir of an isolated, anonymous civil servant.
The Land That Time Forgot is an Edgar Rice Burroughs science fiction novel that starts out as a nerve-wracking wartime naval adventure but develops into the story of a unique and mysterious prehistoric lost world.
Leaves of Grass is a collection of poems by Walt Whitman originally published in 1855 at the poet's own expense.
The following book consists of brief biographical commentaries about Beethoven, each followed by sections of quotations attributed to the muse.
Oscar Wilde's play An Ideal Husband is a comedy about politics, blackmail and corruption.
Arms and the Man was George Bernard Shaw's first commercially successful play.
Harvard psychologist and philosopher William James' The Varieties of Religious Experience.
Causing mass hysteria as listeners of its 1938 radio broadcast believed a Martian invasion of Earth really was taking place, H. G. Wells' The War of the Worlds is perhaps the most famous novel of its genre.
Jane Eyre is raised in her aunt's house after the death of her parents.
The Importance of Being Earnest is the last play Oscar Wilde ever wrote, and remains his most enduringly popular.
A beautiful young man, Dorian Gray, sits for a portrait. In the garden of the artist's house he falls into conversation with Lord Wotton.
A remarkable writer and intellectual in her own right, Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley first encountered the poet Percy Bysshe Shelley when she was only a teenager. After fathering three of her children, Shelley drowned during a storm.
This fascinating travelogue details the visit of author Ellen Clacy to the massive gold mines that were erected in Australia in the nineteenth century.