At the turn of the 17th century, English writer and explorer Sir Walter Scott read an account.
The Time?The future. Hours, days, weeks, months. A couple of years, maybe. The Place?
The Devil's Dictionary was begun in a weekly paper in 1881, and was continued in a desultory way at long intervals until 1906.
Action, humor, and adventure rule as Ranger Black Jack Ransom accepts a special assignment.
The Deerslayer is the last book in Cooper's Leatherstocking Tales pentalogy.
The Debaucher, Jason Camlot's third collection of poetry, walks an oscillating lyrical tightrope between realms of cosmopolitan sophistication and ribald hilarity.
Magic cannot be used without consequences, that's why you need a license to use it.
The Curious Case of Benjamin Button is a 1922 short story by F. Scott Fitzgerald.
The following work is devoted to an account of the characteristics of crowds.
The Critique of Pure Reason is one of the seminal texts of Western philosophy, and the first of Kant's three Critiques.
The Critique of Practical Reason is the second of Kant's three Critiques, following Critique of Pure Reason.
The Fairy Books, or Coloured Fairy Books is a collection of fairy tales divided into twelve books, each associated with a different colour.
These lectures will not be concerned with history as a record of wars and political changes.
It is an old saying that Order is Heaven's First Law, and like many other old sayings it contains a much deeper philosophy than appears immediately on the surface.
This is the second in Warren Rovetch's Creaky Traveler series of entertaining.
The Country of the Blind and Other Stories brings together thirty-three of H. G. Wells' science fiction and fantasy short stories which were previously published separately in a variety of periodicals.
The Count of Monte Cristo is Alexandre Dumas' classic tale of revenge and adventure.
A young man, Olenin, is stationed in the Caucasus, where he falls in love with the place.
The book called 'The Consolation of Philosophy' was throughout the Middle Ages, and down to the beginnings of the modern epoch in the sixteenth century, the scholar's familiar companion.
Bob Brown, after living thirty years in as many foreign lands and enjoying countless national cheeses at the source, returned to New York and summed them all up in this book.