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Books with title Botchan: Classic literature

  • Botchan: Classic literature

    Natsume Natsume Soseki, Yasotaro Morri

    Paperback (CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, Oct. 27, 1906)
    A hilarious tale about a young man's rebellion against "the system" in a country school, Natsume Soseki's Botchan has enjoyed a timeless popularity in Japan. The setting is Japan's deep south, where the author himself spent some time teaching English in a boys' school. Into this conservative world, with its social proprieties and established pecking order, breezes Botchan, down from the big city and with scant respect for either his elders or his noisy young charges. The result is a light, funny, fast-paced novel.
  • Basil: Classic Literature

    Wilkie Collins

    Paperback (CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, May 16, 1852)
    Basil is the second novel written by Wilkie Collins. The plot centers around the title character who rebels against his father and secretly marries a woman beneath his station. Wilkie Collins was a prominent English writer in the 19th century. Collins was a close friend of Charles Dickens and his books were often featured in Dickens' journals All the Year Round and Household Words. Collins' books still enjoy wide popularity, especially mystery and detective novels such as The Woman in White, The Moonstone, and Armadale.
  • The Brass Bottle: Classic literature

    Thomas Anstey Guthrie

    Paperback (CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, March 9, 1900)
    A djinn, sealed in a jar for three thousand years, has been found by Horace Ventimore, a young and not very flourishing architect. Upon his release the djinn expresses his gratitude by seeking to grant his benefactor's every wish--generally with results the very opposite to those desired!
  • The Rich Boy: classic literature

    Francis Scott Fitzgerald

    Paperback (CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, Feb. 16, 2017)
    Francis Scott Key Fitzgerald (September 24, 1896 –December 21, 1940) was an American Jazz Age author of novels andshort stories. He is regarded as one of the greatest twentieth centurywriters. Fitzgerald was of the self-styled "Lost Generation,"Americans born in the 1890s who came of age during World War I.He finished four novels, left a fifth unfinished, and wrote dozens ofshort stories that treat themes of youth, despair, and age.
  • The Law: Classic Literature

    Frederic Bastiat, Patrick James Stirling

    Paperback (CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, April 14, 1849)
    Here, in this 1850 classic, a powerful refutation of Karl Marx's Communist Manifesto, published two years earlier, Bastiat discusses: what is law?, why socialism constitutes legal plunder, the proper function of the law, the law and morality, "the vicious circle of socialism", and the basis for stable government. French political libertarian and economist CLAUDE FRÉDÉRIC BASTIAT (1801-1850) was one of the most eloquent champions of the concept that property rights and individual freedoms flowed from natural law.
  • Youth: Classic literature

    Lev Nikolayevich Tolstoy, CJ Hogarth

    Paperback (CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, Oct. 8, 1857)
    Count Lev Nikolayevich Tolstoy, commonly referred to in English as Leo Tolstoy, was a Russian novelist, writer, essayist, philosopher, Christian anarchist, pacifist, educational reformer, moral thinker, and an influential member of the Tolstoy family. As a fiction writer Tolstoy is widely regarded as one of the greatest of all novelists, particularly noted for his masterpieces War and Peace and Anna Karenina; in their scope, breadth and realistic depiction of Russian life, the two books stand at the peak of realistic fiction. As a moral philosopher he was notable for his ideas on nonviolent resistance through his work The Kingdom of God is Within You, which in turn influenced such twentieth-century figures as Mohandas K. Gandhi and Martin Luther King, Jr.
  • Boyhood: Classic literature

    Lev Nikolayevich Tolstoy, CJ Hogarth

    Paperback (CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, Feb. 10, 1854)
    A definitive translation of Tolstoy's early work. Leo Tolstoy began his trilogy, Childhood; Boyhood; Youth, in his early twenties. Although he would in his old age famously dismiss it as an 'awkward mixture of fact and fiction', generations of readers have not agreed, finding the novel to be a charming and insightful portrait of inner growth against the background of a world limned with extraordinary clarity, grace and color. Evident too in its brilliant account of a young person's emerging awareness of the world and of his place within it are many of the stances, techniques and themes that would come to full flower in the immortal War and Peace and Anna Karenina, and in the other great works of Tolstoy's maturity.
  • Adam Bede: Classic Literature

    George Eliot

    Paperback (CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, July 19, 1859)
    Carpenter Adam Bede is in love with the beautiful Hetty Sorrel, but unknown to him, he has a rival, in the local squire’s son Arthur Donnithorne. Hetty is soon attracted by Arthur’s seductive charm and they begin to meet in secret. The relationship is to have tragic consequences that reach far beyond the couple themselves, touching not just Adam Bede, but many others, not least, pious Methodist Preacher Dinah Morris. A tale of seduction, betrayal, love and deception, the plot of Adam Bede has the quality of an English folk song. Within the setting of Hayslope, a small, rural community, Eliot brilliantly creates a sense of earthy reality, making the landscape itself as vital a presence in the novel as that of her characters themselves
  • Lady Susan: Classic Literature

    Jane Austen

    Paperback (CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, Aug. 6, 1794)
    This novel, an early complete work that the author never submitted for publication, describes the schemes of the main character—the widowed Lady Susan—as she seeks a new husband for herself, and one for her daughter.
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  • The Titan: Classic literature

    Theodore Dreiser

    Paperback (CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, March 2, 1914)
    The Titan is a novel written by Theodore Dreiser in 1914. It is Dreiser's sequel to The Financier. Cowperwood moves to Chicago with his new wife Aileen. He decides to take over the street-railway system.
  • Lilith: classic literature

    George Macdonald

    Paperback (CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, June 6, 1895)
    Lilith is a fantasy novel written by Scottish writer George MacDonald and first published in 1895. Lilith is considered among the darkest of MacDonald's works, and among the most profound. It is a story concerning the nature of life, death and salvation. Many believe MacDonald is arguing for Christian universalism, or the idea that all will eventually be saved. Mr. Vane, the protagonist of Lilith, owns a library that seems to be haunted by the former librarian, who looks much like a raven from the brief glimpses he catches of the wraith. After finally encountering the supposed ghost, the mysterious Mr. Raven, Vane learns that Raven had known his father; indeed, Vane's father had visited the strange parallel universe from which Raven comes and goes and now resides therein. Vane follows Raven into the world through a mirror (this symbolistic realm is described as "the region of the seven dimensions", a term taken from Jacob Boehme)
  • No Name: Classic Literature

    Wilkie Collins

    Paperback (CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, May 10, 1862)
    "Shall I tell you what a lady is? A lady is a woman who wears a silk gown, and has a sense of her own importance." Wilkie Collins's investigation of illegitimacy and 'the woman question' in No Name (1862) compels with a wholly different order of suspense from that of The Woman in White or The Moonstone. For its family secret - the Vanstone daughters' illegitimacy, their consequent disinheritance and fall from social grace - is revealed early on, and as Magdalen Vanstone struggles to reclaim her identity, the plot uncovers many a moral, social and legal skeleton in the cupboards of Victorian society. Mercurial and unscrupulous, Magdalen is Wilkie Collins's most exhilarating heroine, one of the rare subversives in Victorian fiction and a woman dazzlingly versatile in her powers of self-transformation. Through her, with great comic vigour, No Name exposes how social identity is constructed, and how it can be dismantled, buried, borrowed or invented.