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Books published by publisher Blackmore Dennett

  • Mike and Psmith

    P.G. Wodehouse

    eBook (Blackmore Dennett, Dec. 11, 2018)
    It was a preference for cricket over schoolwork that united Mike and Psmith in their reluctance to attend their new school, Sedleigh. The school insists that its attendees be keen, but it is sorely unprepared for boys of such foresight and resources as Mike and Psmith, who have decided to devote their energies exclusively to ragging.
  • The Bandit of Hell's Bend

    Edgar Rice Burroughs

    language (Blackmore Dennett, July 17, 2018)
    No better yarn of the old cattle days can be found in current fiction. Tense dramatic situations; unforgettable characters presented with incomparable skill; the humor and repartee of the "boys," and over all the glamor and romance of the old west.
  • The Rights of Man

    Thomas Paine

    eBook (Blackmore Dennett, Aug. 10, 2018)
    Rights of Man, a book by Thomas Paine, posits that popular political revolution is permissible when a government does not safeguard the natural rights of its people.
  • The Head of Kay's

    P.G. Wodehouse

    language (Blackmore Dennett, Aug. 3, 2018)
    Set at the fictional public school of Eckleton, the story centres upon the "house of Kay's", the riotous boys therein, its tactless, unpopular master Mr Kay, and Kennedy, the head boy.
  • Limbo

    Aldous Huxley

    eBook (Blackmore Dennett, Dec. 13, 2018)
    Limbo (1920), Aldous Huxley's first collection of short fiction, consists of six short stories and a play."Farcical History of Richard Greenow""Happily Ever After""Eupompus Gave Splendour to Art by Numbers""Happy Families" (play)"Cynthia""The Bookshop""The Death of Lully"
  • The French and Indian War

    Joseph Altsheler

    language (Blackmore Dennett, April 21, 2019)
    THE FRENCH AND INDIAN WAR includes six novels dealing with the great struggle of France and England and their colonies for control of North America during 1754-1763, culminating with the fall of Quebec. It is also concerned to a large extent with the Iroquois, the mighty league known in their own language as the Hodenosaunee, for the favor of which both French and English were high bidders.
  • The Girl from Hollywood

    Edgar Rice Burroughs

    language (Blackmore Dennett, Feb. 5, 2019)
    In the foothills of the southern California mountains are the Rancho del Ganado, owned by Colonel Pennington, and a smaller ranch on which Mrs. Evan lives with her daughter Grace and her son Guy. Grace feels that she has dramatic talent and is determined to make a bid for fame as a motionpicture actress. Guy has become involved inthe schemes of Slick Allen who is selling stolen whisky. Another neighbor is Mrs. Burke whose daughter, known as Gaza de Lure in Hollywood, has developed a morphine habit.
  • The Virgin of the Sun

    H. Rider Haggard

    eBook (Blackmore Dennett, Dec. 28, 2018)
    "A tale that deals with the marvellous Incas of Peru; with the legend also that, long before the Spanish Conquerors entered on their mission of robbery and ruin, there in that undiscovered land lived and died a White God risen from the sea."
  • Jacob's Room

    Virginia Woolf

    eBook (Blackmore Dennett, Jan. 12, 2019)
    Virginia Woolf's first original and distinguished work, Jacob's Room is the story of a sensitive young man named Jacob Flanders. The life story, character and friends of Jacob are presented in a series for separate scenes and moments from his childhood, through college at Cambridge, love affairs in London, and travels in Greece, to his death in the war. Jacob's Room established Virginia Woolf's reputation as a highly poetic and symbolic writer who places emphasis not on plot or action but on the psychological realm of occupied by her characters.
  • The Story of Spain

    Charles Horne

    language (Blackmore Dennett, Aug. 10, 2018)
    Far back among the shadows of prehistoric times, a horde of Celts swarmed over the Pyrenees into this land of the Iberians, encountering possibly a still earlier race, whose descendants of to-day are the Basques. The Celts swerved to the west and settled in what now is Portugal and Gallicia. In civilization and physique, the invaders were much superior to the Iberians. As the centuries rolled on, the two peoples fought for mastery. They gradually blended in the central part of Spain, while the Celts continued dominant in the west and northwest of the peninsula, and the Iberians held their own in the east and south...
  • The Golden Slave

    Poul Anderson

    language (Blackmore Dennett, April 27, 2019)
    100 B.C.The Cimbrian hordes galloped across the dawn of history and clashed in screaming battle against the mighty Roman legions.Led by their chief, Boierik, and his son, Eodan, the hungry and homeless pagan tribes hurled back the Romans time after time in their desperate search for land. But for all the burning towns, the new-caught women weeping, the wine drunk, the gold lifted, the Cimbri did not find a home.And now it was over. At Vercellae the Roman armies shattered them completely. Only a few survived—and for them death would have been more merciful.Eodan, the proud young chieftain, had been caught and sold into slavery, his infant son murdered and his beautiful wife, Hwicca, taken as a concubine.But whips and slave chains could not break the spirit of this fiery pagan giant who fought, seduced and connived his way to a perilous freedom to rescue the woman he loved.
  • The Metamorphosis

    Franz Kafka

    language (Blackmore Dennett, Jan. 17, 2019)
    "The Metamorphosis" is a short novel by Franz Kafka, first published in 1915. It is often cited as one of the seminal works of fiction of the 20th century and is widely studied in colleges and universities across the western world. The story begins with a traveling salesman, Gregor Samsa, waking to find himself transformed into an insect.