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Books with author Steven Crossley

  • Heart of Darkness

    Joseph Conrad, Steven Crossley

    2016 (Dreamscape Media, Feb. 23, 2016)
    Charles Marlow is a steamboat captain on the River Thames near Gravesend England. He and his crew work for an ivory trading company. One day he recounts to his fellow crew the story of his life and how he became a captain for the steam boat company. The focus of his story involves the journey Marlow undertook to the outer reaches of the company's operations. Here he tells of his wild encounters with Mr. Kurtz, a man with a great reputation for bringing in the most ivory for the company. Kurtz is widely respected by the natives, yet Marlow has some differing opinions as he struggles to understand Kurtz's way of life, while uncovering secrets about the strange way Kurtz conducts his business.
  • In the Woods

    Tana French, Steven Crossley

    Audio CD (Penguin, March 15, 2010)
    Unabridged CD Audiobook 18 CDs / 20 hours long
  • Beyond the Manor: The Place Where Dragert, Zyglot, and Human Finally Find Peace and Understanding.

    Mr. Steven M. Cross

    Paperback (Independently published, Oct. 22, 2017)
    Jesse faces bullies almost every day of his life but when the evil Huskus kidnaps a beautiful Elven girl, Jess takes on the responsibility of saving her. He finds himself in an alternative world of magic and sorcery where three proud races, the dragerts, the zyglots, and humans hate each other. Jess helps them to understand each other and to realize that Huskus has used trickery to drive them apart. Now, it is up to Jess to unite the three races so that they can work together to defeat Huskus' evil kingdom.
  • Howards End

    E. M. Forster, Steven Crossley

    Audio CD (Tantor Audio, Sept. 29, 2010)
    Considered by many to be E. M. Forster's greatest novel, Howards End is a beautifully subtle tale of two very different families brought together by an unusual event. The Schlegels are intellectuals, devotees of art and literature. The Wilcoxes are practical and materialistic, leading lives of "telegrams and anger." When the elder Mrs. Wilcox dies and her family discovers she has left their country home-Howards End-to one of the Schlegel sisters, a crisis between the two families is precipitated that takes years to resolve. Written in 1910, Howards End is a symbolic exploration of the social, economic, and intellectual forces at work in England in the years preceding World War I, a time when vast social changes were occurring. In the Schlegels and the Wilcoxes, Forster perfectly embodies the competing idealism and materialism of the upper classes, while the conflict over the ownership of Howards End represents the struggle for possession of the country's future. Forster refuses to take sides in this conflict. Instead he poses one of the book's central questions: In a changing modern society, what should be the relation between the inner and outer life, between the world of the intellect and the world of business? Can they ever, as Forster urges, "only connect"?
  • The Secret Agent

    Joseph Conrad, Steven Crossley

    MP3 CD (Tantor Audio, Aug. 3, 2010)
    Secret agent Mr. Adolph Verloc operates from a seedy Soho shop, where he deals in pornography and espionage. Idle, treacherous, and self-righteous, he makes the life of his wife, Winnie, one of silent misery. When Verloc is assigned to plant a bomb at Greenwich Observatory, his plans go terribly awry, and his family has to deal with the tragic repercussions of his actions. Joseph Conrad's dark satire on English society, while rooted in the Edwardian period, remains strikingly contemporary. Presenting a corrupt London underworld of terrorists, grotesques, and fanatics, Conrad's savagely ironic voice is concerned not just with politics but with the desperate fates of ordinary people.
  • The Picture of Dorian Gray

    Oscar Wilde, Steven Crossley

    1997 (Recorded Books, Inc., Nov. 20, 1997)
    Moral fantasy novel by Oscar Wilde, published in an early form in Lippincott's Magazine in 1890. The novel had six additional chapters when it appeared in book form in 1891. An archetypal tale of a young man who purchases eternal youth at the expense of his soul, the novel was a romantic exposition of Wilde's aestheticism. Dorian Gray is a wealthy Englishman who gradually sinks into a life of dissipation and crime. Despite his unhealthy behavior, his physical appearance remains youthful and unmarked by dissolution. Instead, a portrait of himself catalogues every evil deed by turning his once handsome features into a hideous mask. When Gray destroys the painting, his face turns into a human replica of the portrait, and he dies.Gray's final negation, "ugliness is the only reality," neatly summarizes Wilde's aestheticism, both his love of the beautiful and his fascination with the profane. Publication of the novel scandalized Victorian England, and The Picture of Dorian Gray was used as evidence against Wilde in his 1895 trial for homosexuality. The novel became a classic of English literature.
  • GCSE Questions and Answers French

    Steven Crossland

    Paperback (Letts Educational, )
    None
  • Rowan and the Zebak

    Emily Rodda, Steven Crossley

    Audio Cassette (Recorded Books, Jan. 1, 2002)
    Book by Emily Rodda
  • Rowan and the Keeper of the Crystal

    Emily Rodda, Steven Crossley

    Audio Cassette (Recorded Books, March 15, 2002)
    When a mysterious messenger arrives in the valley of Rin, young Rowan learns his mother must travel to the seaside land of Maris. There she will chose a new keeper of the crystal. ages 7 and up
  • Soul Stealer The Alchemist's Son

    Martin Booth, Steven Crossley

    Unknown Binding (Recorded Books, March 8, 2005)
    None
  • Lord Jim

    Joseph Conrad, Steven Crossley

    (Recorded Books, Jan. 1, 1997)
    "This is a novel about a man's lifelong efforts to atone for an act of instinctive cowardice. Young Jim, chief mate of the Patna, dreams of being a hero. When the Patna threatens to sink and the cowardly officers decide to save their own skins and escape in the few lifeboats, Jim despises them. But at the last moment, dazed by horror and confusion, he joins them, deserting the 800 Muslim passengers to apparent death. Tormented by this act of cowardice and desertion, Jim flees to the West. Living among the natives in Patusan, a remote trading post in the jungle, he is able to cease sacrificing himself on the altar of conscience. When he defends Patusan against the evil ''Gentleman Brown,'' his efforts create order and well-being, thereby winning the respect and affection of the people for whom he becomes Tuan, or Lord Jim."
  • The Thirty-Nine Steps

    John Buchan, Steven Crossley

    Audio CD (Tantor Audio, July 26, 2010)
    John Buchan takes us back to Edwardian Britain on the eve of the First World War in the modern thriller The Thirty-Nine Steps. An inexplicable murder drives the innocent Richard Hannay, on the run from a manhunt that never seems to end, to hide in remote Scottish moorland. Disguise and deception are his only weapons, as he struggles to decode the clues left by the murdered man to prevent the theft of naval secrets by an unfriendly foreign power. The best-known of Buchan's thrillers, The Thirty-Nine Steps has been continuously in print since its first publication and has been filmed three times, including the brilliant 1935 version directed by Alfred Hitchcock. The Thirty-Nine Steps was also a powerful influence on the development of the detective novel, the action romance, and the spy story.