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Books in Collector's library of the Civil War series

  • Tales & Poems

    Edgar Allan Poe

    Hardcover (Collector's Library, Sept. 1, 2013)
    This companion volume to Tales of Mystery & Imagination contains PoeÂ’s best-known poetry and a selection of his very best stories, including some fine tales from the last decade of his tragically short life. Many of these stories and poems reflect familiar Poe themes of murder, obsession, and love, but there are also tales of the fantastic, black comedies, parodies, and hoaxes.
  • Rights of Man

    Thomas Paine

    Hardcover (Crw Pub Ltd, Aug. 31, 2004)
    None
  • The Thirty-nine Steps

    John Buchan

    Hardcover (Collector's Library, Jan. 1, 2008)
    None
    Z+
  • The Secret Agent

    Joseph Conrad

    Hardcover (Crw Pub Ltd, March 1, 2005)
    None
  • The Riddle of the Sands

    Erskine Childers

    Hardcover (Impress Mystery, July 6, 2008)
    320 pages - unabridged
  • Fanny Hill : Memoirs of a Woman of Pleasure

    John Cleland

    Hardcover (Crw Pub Ltd, Feb. 28, 2005)
    Forced by the death of her parents to seek her furtune in London, Fanny Hill is duped into prostitution by an old procuress. In Mrs Brown's bawdy-house the naive young woman begins her sexual initiation and soon embarks on her own path in pursuit of pleasure, until she at last finds true love.
  • The Dairy of a Nobody

    George Grossmith

    Hardcover (Collector's Library, Aug. 16, 2008)
    Channelling a razor-sharp satire through the everyday mishaps of the immortal comic character Mr Pooter, George and Weedon Grossmith's The Diary of a Nobody is edited with an introduction and notes by Ed Glinert in Penguin Classics. Mr Pooter is a man of modest ambitions, content with his ordinary life. Yet he always seems to be troubled by disagreeable tradesmen, impertinent young office clerks and wayward friends, not to mention his devil-may-care son Lupin with his unsuitable choice of bride. In the bumbling, absurd, yet ultimately endearing character of Pooter, the Grossmith brothers created a wonderful portrait of the class system and the inherent snobbishness of the suburban middle-class suburbia - one which sends up the late Victorian crazes for Aestheticism, spiritualism and bicycling, as well as the fashion for publishing diaries by anybody and everybody. This edition contains the original illustrations by Weedon Grossmith and an introduction by Ed Glinert, author of The London Compendium, discussing the novel's serialisation in Punch, the growth of the suburbs and the figure of Mrs Pooter. George Grossmith (1847-1912) initially worked as a journalist, reporting Police Court proceedings for The Times. In 1870 he began his career as a singer and entertainer, creating some of the most memorable characters in Gilbert and Sullivan's operettas. Weedon Grossmith (1854-1919) brother of George, was educated at the Slade and the Royal Academy with a view to following a career as a painter, and exhibited at the Grosvenor Gallery and the Royal Academy. Joining a theatre company in 1885, he toured the provinces and America. The best-known of his many plays, The Night of the Party, was published in 1901. If you enjoyed The Diary of a Nobody, you might like Jerome K. Jerome's Three Men in a Boat, also available in Penguin Classics. 'The funniest book in the world' Evelyn Waugh 'True humour ... with its mixture of absurdity, irony and affection ... a masterpiece, immortal' J.B. Priestley
  • Women in Love

    D H Lawrence

    Hardcover (CRW PUBLISHING LTD, Jan. 1, 2005)
    None
  • Atlantis: The antediluvian world

    Ignatius Donnelly

    Hardcover (Time-Life Books, March 15, 1991)
    None
  • Army Life in a Black Regiment

    Thomas Wentworth Higginson

    Leather Bound (Time-Life Books, Aug. 16, 1982)
    None
  • Army life in a Black regiment

    Thomas Wentworth Higginson

    Hardcover (Time-Life Books, Aug. 16, 1982)
    None