British writer Edith Maude Hull was best known for her classic romantic novel.
The Second Deluge is a science fiction novel by Garrett P. Serviss.
The Seagull is the first of Anton Checkov's four full-length plays.
The School for Scandal debuted at Drury Lane Theater in London in 1777.
The School for Husbands (L'École des maris) is a work by Molière (the stage name of Jean-Baptiste Poquelin), a French playwright who is often considered to be one of Western literature's great masters of comedy.
A simple, everyday tale of classroom life with an open-ended conclusion.
If only things had been different,Diane Tanner thought before discovering her alternate reality.
Edward FitzGerald gave the title The Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam to his translation of poetry attributed to the Persian poet, astronomer and mathematician Omar Khayyam (1048-1123).
The Romany Rye is a fictional, yet highly autobiographical novel by George Borrow, which follows his novel Lavengro.
Thomas Hardy (1840 1928) was a naturalist and writer, whose fiction sits on the cusp of the Industrial Revolution and is filled with an imminent sense of nostalgia for the coming transformation of the British countryside.
William Dean Howells' 1885 novel, The Rise of Silas Lapham tells the story of its protagonist's materialistic aspirations; his rise from rags to riches.
Browning's dramatic poem The Ring and the Book narrates the trial of a Roman for the death.
The Republic is Plato's most famous work and one of the seminal texts of Western philosophy and politics.
Published in 1901, M. P. Shiel's The Purple Cloud is an early last man science fiction novel.
THE human being who thrills to the experience of beauty in nature and in art does not forever rest.
The soul-consuming and friction-wearing tendency of this hurrying, grasping, competing age is the excuse for this book.
The Portrait of a Lady is perhaps Henry James' greatest novel.
The Politics of Aristotle is the second part of a treatise of which the Ethics is the first part.
First published in 1920, The Planet Mars and Its Inhabitants.
Since its publication in 1678, The Pilgrim's Progress has never been out of print.