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Books published by publisher Blackmore Dennett

  • Knock, Knock, Knock and Other Stories

    Ivan Turgenev

    eBook (Blackmore Dennett, Dec. 12, 2018)
    Ivan Turgenev was a Russian novelist, short story writer, poet, playwright, translator and popularizer of Russian literature in the West. He considered himself an artist first, and approached his storytelling as such.Knock, Knock, Knock and Other Stories features:Knock, Knock, KnockThe InnLieutenant Yergunov's StoryThe DogThe Watch
  • Day and Night Stories

    Algernon Blackwood

    eBook (Blackmore Dennett, Feb. 18, 2019)
    Fifteen short stories by Algernon Henry Blackwood, CBE (1869 – 1951), an English short story writer and novelist, one of the most prolific writers of ghost stories in the history of the genre. He was also a journalist and a broadcasting narrator. S. T. Joshi has stated that "his work is more consistently meritorious than any weird writer's except Dunsany's..."Day and Night Stories features:The TrystThe Touch Of PanThe Wings Of HorusInitiationA Desert EpisodeThe Other WingThe Occupant Of The RoomCain’s AtonementAn Egyptian HornetBy WaterH. S. H.A Bit Of WoodA Victim Of Higher SpaceTransitionandThe Tradition
  • The Great Return

    Arthur Machen

    eBook (Blackmore Dennett, Aug. 3, 2018)
    They were purged as if they had passed through the Furnace of the Sages governed with Wisdom that the alchemists know. They spoke without much difficulty of what they had seen, or had seemed to see, with their eyes, but hardly at all of what their hearts had known when for a moment the glory of the fiery rose had been about them.
  • The Great Return

    Arthur Machen

    eBook (Blackmore Dennett, Aug. 3, 2018)
    They were purged as if they had passed through the Furnace of the Sages governed with Wisdom that the alchemists know. They spoke without much difficulty of what they had seen, or had seemed to see, with their eyes, but hardly at all of what their hearts had known when for a moment the glory of the fiery rose had been about them.
  • The Great Return

    Arthur Machen

    eBook (Blackmore Dennett, Aug. 3, 2018)
    They were purged as if they had passed through the Furnace of the Sages governed with Wisdom that the alchemists know. They spoke without much difficulty of what they had seen, or had seemed to see, with their eyes, but hardly at all of what their hearts had known when for a moment the glory of the fiery rose had been about them.
  • The Great Return

    Arthur Machen

    eBook (Blackmore Dennett, Aug. 3, 2018)
    They were purged as if they had passed through the Furnace of the Sages governed with Wisdom that the alchemists know. They spoke without much difficulty of what they had seen, or had seemed to see, with their eyes, but hardly at all of what their hearts had known when for a moment the glory of the fiery rose had been about them.
  • The Story of the Persian War

    Alfred Church

    language (Blackmore Dennett, Aug. 13, 2018)
    King Darius gave Myrcinus that is on the river Strymon, in the land of Thrace, to Histiæus, lord of Miletus, for a reward; for Histiæus had done him good service in his warfare against the Scythians. But when the man began to build a wall about the place, one said to the King, "O King, what is this that thou hast done, giving this city in Thrace to a man that is a Greek, and wise moreover and crafty? For in that country is great store of timber for ship-building, and mines also of silver and there are many inhabitants, both Greeks and barbarians, who will take this fellow for a leader, and will do what he shall bid them, working day and night. Do thou therefore stay him in this work; but stay him with soft words. Bid him come to thee, and when he is come, take good care that he never go among the Greeks any more." This counsel seemed good to the King. Wherefore he sent a messenger to Histiæus, saying, "Thus saith the King, I am persuaded that there is no better man disposed to me and to my kingdom than thou. Come therefore to me, for I have great matters in hand and would fain ask thy counsel about them." So Histiæus, taking these words to be true, and counting it a great thing to be the King's counselor, came to Sardis to Darius. And when he was come, Darius said to him, "Hear now the cause wherefore I have sent for thee. Since the day that thou didst depart from me I have desired nothing so much as to see thee and talk with thee; for in my judgment there is nothing so precious as a friend that is both faithful and wise; and this I know thee to be. Leave now thy city of Miletus, and that also which thou art building in Thrace, and come with me to Susa, for all that I have is thine, and thou shalt live with me, and be my counselor."
  • The Queen of Hearts

    Wilkie Collins

    eBook (Blackmore Dennett, Aug. 5, 2018)
    Collins' collection of 10 short stories with one connecting narrative: The Queen of Hearts', the school nickname of Jessie who is staying with her guardian. Griffith, a lawyer, lives with his two brothers, a clergyman and a doctor, in an isolated house in South Wales. Not all is as it seems, however, and love is in the air just to complicate matters.
  • The Story of the Middle Ages

    Samuel Harding

    eBook (Blackmore Dennett, Aug. 13, 2018)
    When the Germans conquered the Romans, and settled within the bounds of the Empire, it might well have seemed that the end of the world was come. Cities were plundered and destroyed; priceless works of art were dashed to pieces; and the inhabitants of many lands were slain or enslaved. For nearly a thousand years Europe did not entirely recover from the shock; and the period which immediately follows the invasions of the barbarians is so dreary and sad that historians have called it "the Dark Ages."But what was best in the old Greek and Roman civilization did not wholly perish. The Christian Church, too, grew steadily stronger, and sought to soften and civilize the rude Germans. The Germans, in turn, did not lose their vigor or their good ideas. At last from the combination of all these elements a new civilization arose,—stronger, better, and capable of higher development than the old,—and the Middle Ages were past. Then and only then could—and did—the new nations, which meanwhile had slowly been forming, set out on their careers of discovery and exploration which have made our New World possible.So, we may say, the Middle Ages were the period when Europe became Europe, and made ready to found new Europes in America, in Australia, and in Africa. It was the growing-time for all the great harvest which has come since that time.
  • Wishing Upon a Star a Tale of the Holoca

    Eline Hoeks Dresden

    Paperback (Blackmore Blackmore, June 1, 2000)
    First Edition, 2000, first printing, SIGNED BY THE AUTHOR at the top of the title page (we didn't scan the full page with signature to keep from cracking the spine at that point), an otherwise new, unread, unopened, unmarked trade softcover, from Blackmore & Blackmore. By Eline Hoekstra Dresden. 95 pages. ISBN 0-9666244-1-6.
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  • The Sea Lady

    H.g. Wells

    eBook (Blackmore Dennett, )
    None
  • The Frozen Deep

    Wilkie Collins

    (Blackmore Dennett, Aug. 2, 2018)
    Exchanging vows of love with sailor Frank Aldersley the night before his departure, Clara Burnham is haunted by the memory of Richard Wardour, and his mistaken belief that they will one day marry. With her gift of 'Second Sight', Clara foresees terrible tragedy ahead and is racked by guilt. Allied to two different ships, the two men at first have no cause to meet — until disaster strikes and they find themselves united in a battle for survival. It cannot be long before they discover the nature of their rivalry, and the hot-tempered Wardour must choose how to take his revenge.