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Books in Classic World Novels series

  • Peter Pan

    James Matthew Barrie, Yeong-seon Jang

    Library Binding (Big & Small, Aug. 1, 2015)
    Briskly told, this timeless children's classic is a pleasure to read in this picture book form. All the characters are here in a great introduction to Neverland that is accessible to early readers.
    N
  • The Nightingale

    Hans Christian Andersen, Jin-kyeong Lee

    Library Binding (Big & Small, Jan. 1, 2016)
    Recreated from the Hans Christian Andersen story, The Nightingale tells the tale of a nightingale's singing voice. It is so beautiful that it even warms the heart of Death itself. Sure to move the hearts of readers, the book is beautifully illustrated featuring Chinese backgrounds.
    N
  • The Wild Swans

    Hans Christian Andersen, Seong-hye Hwang

    Library Binding (Big & Small, Aug. 1, 2015)
    A princess rescues her eleven brothers from a spell cast by an evil queen that has forced them to live as humans at night and swans during the day. This picture book beautifully evokes the mood of this classic story with warm watercolors.
    N
  • The Three Little Pigs

    Joseph Jacobs, Do-yeon Kim

    Library Binding (Big & Small, Jan. 1, 2016)
    Featuring pigs with personalities, this favorite tale is delightfully drawn. We all know how it ends, but it is so much fun getting there, as the Three Little Pigs' idyllic world is nearly blown away by a wolf with a very large lung capacity and a craving for pork.
    J
  • The Frog Prince

    Brothers Grimm, Yeon-joo Kim

    Library Binding (Big & Small, Jan. 1, 2016)
    The Brothers Grimm tale about a spoiled princess who reluctantly befriends the Frog Prince is faithfully followed in this edition. The beautiful artwork combines etching and illustration techniques.
    K
  • Anne of Windy Poplars

    Lucy Maud Montgomery

    Paperback (Sovereign, Nov. 18, 2012)
    Anne of Windy Poplars takes place over the three years between Anne's graduation from Redmond College and her marriage to Gilbert Blythe. While Gilbert is in medical school, Anne takes a job as the principal of Summerside High School, where she also teaches. She lives in a large house called Windy Poplars with two elderly widows, Aunt Kate and Aunt Chatty, plus their housekeeper, Rebecca Dew, and their cat, Dusty Miller. This book follows Anne from the age of 22 to 25.
  • Anne of Ingleside

    L. M. Montgomery

    Paperback (Sovereign, Nov. 20, 2012)
    Seven years after Anne's House of Dreams, Anne Shirley visits Diana Wright and her daughter, Anne Cordelia, in Avonlea following the funeral of Gilbert's father. When she returns home to the old Morgan house, now named Ingleside, she is greeted by her five children: James, Walter, twins Anne and Diana, and Shirley. This book follows Anne from the age of 34 to 40.
    Y
  • Peter and the Wolf

    Sergei Prokofiev, Mi-Yeon Ahn, Joy Cowley, Sook-Hee Choi

    Paperback (Big and Small Publishing, Nov. 13, 2014)
    None
  • The Wanderer's Necklace

    H Rider Haggard

    Paperback (CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, Feb. 5, 2014)
    The Wanderer's Necklace - H. Rider Haggard - World Classics. Sir Henry Rider Haggard, KBE (22 June 1856 – 14 May 1925) was an English writer of adventure novels set in exotic locations, predominantly Africa, and a founder of the Lost World literary genre. He was also involved in agricultural reform throughout the British Empire. His stories, situated at the lighter end of Victorian literature, continue to be popular and influential. Haggard's stories are still widely read today. Ayesha, the female protagonist of She, has been cited as a prototype by psychoanalysts as different as Sigmund Freud (in The Interpretation of Dreams) and Carl Jung. Her epithet "She Who Must Be Obeyed" is used by British author John Mortimer in his Rumpole of the Bailey series as the private name which the lead character uses for his wife, Hilda, before whom he trembles at home (despite the fact that he is a barrister with some skill in court). Haggard's Lost World genre influenced popular American pulp writers such as Edgar Rice Burroughs, Robert E. Howard, Talbot Mundy, Philip José Farmer, and Abraham Merritt. Allan Quatermain, the adventure hero of King Solomon's Mines and its sequel Allan Quatermain, was a template for the American character Indiana Jones, featured in the films Raiders of the Lost Ark, Temple of Doom, Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade, and Kingdom of the Crystal Skull. Quatermain has gained recent popularity thanks to being a main character in the League of Extraordinary Gentlemen. Haggard was praised in 1965 by Roger Lancelyn Green, one of the Oxford Inklings, as a writer of a consistently high level of "literary skill and sheer imaginative power" and a co-originator with Robert Louis Stevenson of the Age of the Story Tellers. The first chapter of his book People of the Mist is credited with inspiring the motto of the Royal Air Force (formerly the Royal Flying Corps), Per ardua ad astra.
  • A Tangled Tale

    Lewis Carroll

    Paperback (CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, March 31, 2017)
    A Tangled Tale By Lewis Carroll A Tangled Tale is a collection of 10 brief humorous stories by Lewis Carroll. In the December 1885 book preface Carroll writes: The writer's intention was to embody in each Knot (like medicine so dexterously, but ineffectually, concealed in the jam of our early childhood) one or more mathematical questions – in Arithmetic, Algebra, or Geometry, as the case might be – for the amusement, and possible edification, of the fair readers of that magazine. Describing why he was ending the series, Carroll writes to his readers that the Knots were "but a lame attempt." Others were more receptive: In 1888 Stuart Dodgson Collingwood wrote, "With some people, this is the most popular of all his books; it is certainly the most successful attempt he ever made to combine mathematics and humour." They have more recently been described as having "all the charm and wit of his better-known works". Table of Contents Preface Knot: 1. Excelsior 2. Eligible Apartments 3. Mad Mathesis 4. The Dead Reckoning 5. Oughts and Crosses 6. Her Radiancy 7. Petty Cash 8. De Omnibus Rebus 9. A Serpent with Corners 10. Chelsea Buns Answers to Knot 1 Answers to Knot 2 Answers to Knot 3 Answers to Knot 4 Answers to Knot 5 Answers to Knot 6 Answers to Knot 7 Answers to Correspondents Answers to Knot 8 Answers to Knot 9 Answers to Knot 10
    Q
  • Goldilocks and the Three Bears

    Eun-shil Kim

    Library Binding (Big & Small, Jan. 1, 2016)
    Recreated with 3D modeling, there has never been a Goldilocks and the Three Bears quite like this. The timeless story leaps off the page, as the Three Bears' orderly and peaceful existence is thrown into chaos when Goldilocks stumbles into their empty house.
    I
  • Edgar Huntly: Memoirs of a Sleep-Walker

    Charles Brockden Brown

    Paperback (CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, Nov. 19, 2017)
    Edgar Huntly; or, Memoirs of a Sleep-Walker by Charles Brockden Brown. Edgar Huntly, Or, Memoirs of a Sleepwalker is a 1799 novel by the American author Charles Brockden Brown. Edgar Huntly, a young man who lives with his uncle and sisters (his only remaining family) on a farm outside Philadelphia, is determined to learn who murdered his friend Waldegrave. Walking near the elm tree under which Waldegrave was killed late one night, Huntly sees Clithero, a servant from a neighboring farm, half-dressed, digging in the ground and weeping loudly. Huntly concludes that Clithero may be the murderer. He also concludes that Clithero is sleepwalking. Huntly decides to follow Clithero when he sleep walks. Clithero leads Huntly through rough countryside, but all this following doesn't lead to Huntly learning much about the murder. Eventually, Huntly confronts Clithero when they are both awake and demands that he confess. Clithero does confess, but not to Waldegrave's murder. Instead he tells a complicated story about his life in Ireland, where he believes he was responsible for the death of a woman who was his patron, after which he fled to Pennsylvania. Clithero claims to know nothing about Waldegrave's murder.