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Great
collection of timeless literary classics
that will never go out of style for any
generation of readers.
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Some of the
Greatest Fiction Classics of all time.
Delivered in PDF Format so they can be
viewed on any computer, or even on your
PDF capable PDA device.
Complete
with this sales page, all graphics, and
Master Resale Rights.
|
How would you
like to own a collection of some of the
greatest literary works of all time.
This collection of classic novels are
some of the very best and most well
known. The ebooks come in easy to manage
PDF format and are well put together.
These eBooks are compatible with any
Windows PC, Mac or even most PDA
devices.
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30 eBooks plus bonuses listed
below!
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Aesop's
Fable's - Aesop
Aesop's Fables
refers to a collection of fables
credited to Aesop (620–560 BC), a
slave and story-teller who lived in
Ancient Greece. Aesop's Fables have
become a blanket term for
collections of brief fables, usually
involving personified animals. The
fables remain a popular choice for
moral education of children today.
Many stories included in Aesop's
Fables, such as The Fox and the
Grapes, and more...
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Animal Farm -
George Orwell
Animal
Farm is a satirical allegory of
Soviet totalitarianism. Orwell based
major events in the book on ones
from the Soviet Union during the
Stalin era. Orwell, a democratic
socialist, and a member of the
Independent Labor Party for many
years, was a critic of Stalin, and
was suspicious of Moscow-directed
Stalinism after his experiences in
the Spanish Civil War.
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Anna Karenina
- Leo Tolstoy
Anna Karenina
(Анна Каренина) is a novel by the
Russian writer Leo Tolstoy first
published in periodical installments
from 1875 to 1877. The novel first
appeared as a serial in the
periodical Ruskii Vestnik (Russian:
"Русский Вестник", "Russian
Messenger") -- but Tolstoy clashed
with its editor Mikhail Katkov over
issues that arose in the final
installment. Therefore, the novel's
first complete appearance was in
book form.
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Around the
World in 80 Days - Jules Verne
Around
the World in Eighty Days is a
classic adventure novel by the
French writer Jules Verne, first
published in 1873. In the story,
Phileas Fogg of London and his
newly-employed French valet
Passepartout attempt to
circumnavigate the world in 80 days
on a £20,000 wager set by his
friends at the Reform Club.
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A Christmas
Carol - Charles Dickens
written as a potboiler to enable
Dickens to pay off a debt,[2] the
tale has become one of the most
popular and enduring Christmas
stories of all time. In fact,
contemporaries noted that the
story's popularity played a critical
role in redefining the importance of
Christmas and the major sentiments
associated with the holiday. Few
modern readers realize that A
Christmas Carol was written during a
time of decline in the old Christmas
traditions. |
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Crime and
Punishment - Fyodor Dostoevsky
Crime and Punishment focuses on
Raskolnikov, an impoverished
student who formulates a plan to
kill and rob a hated pawnbroker,
thereby solving his money
problems and at the same time
ridding the world of her evil.
Exhibiting some symptoms of
megalomania, Raskolnikov thinks
himself a gifted man, similar to
Napoleon.
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Dracula -
Bram Stoker
Dracula has been attributed to
many literary genres including
horror fiction, the gothic novel
and invasion literature.
Structurally it is an epistolary
novel, that is, told as a series
of diary entries and letters.
Literary critics have examined
many themes in the novel, such
as the role of women in
Victorian culture, conventional
and repressed sexuality,
immigration, post-colonialism
and folklore.
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Emma -
Jane Austen
Emma is a comic novel by Jane
Austen, first published in 1816,
about the perils of misconstrued
romance. The main character,
Emma Woodhouse, is described in
the opening paragraph as
"handsome, clever, and rich" but
is also rather spoiled. Prior to
starting the novel, Austen
wrote, "I am going to take a
heroine whom no-one but myself
will much like."
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Great
Expectations - Charles Dickens
Great Expectations is the story
of the orphan Pip told by the
protagonist in
semi-autobiographical style as a
remembrance of his life from the
early days of his childhood
until years after the main
conflicts of the story have been
resolved in adulthood. The story
is also semi-autobiographical to
the author Dickens, as are some
other of his stories, drawing on
his experiences of life and
people.
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The Green
Mile - Stephen King
More or less as a challenge,
Stephen King published this
story as a serial in six parts.
Just as in Charles Dickens'
time, the story was crafted
while the book was already in
production. In keeping with the
serial concept, the first
edition consists of six thin,
low-priced paperbacks.
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Hans
Christian Andersen - Fairy Tales
The Danish author Hans Christian
Andersen is known for his
original fairy tales, eighteen
of which are collected here.
Contents - The Emperor’s New
Clothes - The Swineherd - The
Real Princess - The Shoes of
Fortune - The Fir Tree - The
Snow Queen - The Leap-Frog - The
Elderbush - The Bell - The Old
House - The Happy Family - The
Story of a Mother - The False
Collar - The Shadow - The Little
Match Girl - The Dream of Little
Tuk - The Naughty Boy - The Red
Shoes.
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Heart of
Darkness - Joseph Conrad
The story details an incident
when Marlow, an Englishman, took
a foreign assignment as a
ferry-boat captain on what
readers may assume is the Congo
River, in the Congo Free State,
a private colony of King Leopold
II; the country is never
specifically named. Though his
job is transporting ivory
downriver.
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Hound of
the Baskervilles - Sir Arthur
Conan Doyle
The Hound of the Baskervilles is
a crime novel by Sir Arthur
Conan Doyle, originally
serialized in the Strand
Magazine in 1901 and 1902, which
is set largely on Dartmoor 1889.
At the time of researching the
novel, Conan Doyle was a General
Practitioner in Plymouth, and
thus was able to explore the
moor and accurately capture its
mood and feel. In the novel, the
detective Sherlock Holmes and
his assistant Dr. Watson are
called to investigate a curse
which is alleged to be on the
house of the Baskervilles.
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Adventures
of Huckleberry Finn - Mark Twain
Accounted
as one of the first Great
American Novels. It was also one
of the first major American
novels ever written using Local
Color Realism or the vernacular,
or common speech, being told in
the first person by the
eponymous Huckleberry "Huck"
Finn, best friend of Tom Sawyer
(hero of three other Mark Twain
books). The book was first
published in 1884.
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The Jungle
Book - Rudyard Kipling
The tales in the book (and also
those in The Second Jungle Book
which followed in 1895, and
which includes five further
stories about Mowgli) are
fables, using animals in an
anthropomorphic manner to give
moral lessons. The verses of The
Law of the Jungle, for example,
lay down rules for the safety of
individuals, families and
communities.
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Little
Women - Louisa May Alcott
It
was based on Alcott's own
experiences as a child in
Concord, Massachusetts. After
much demand, Louisa May Alcott
wrote a sequel, Good Wives,
which was published in 1869 and
is often published together with
Little Women as if it were a
single work. Good Wives picks up
three years after the events in
the last chapter of Little Women
("Aunt March Settles The
Question"), and includes
characters and events often felt
by fans to be essential to the
Little Women story.
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Lord of
the Rings - J.R.R. Tolkien
The Lord of the Rings is an epic
high fantasy novel written by
English academic J. R. R.
Tolkien. The story began as a
sequel to Tolkien's earlier
fantasy book, The Hobbit, and
soon developed into a much
larger story. It was written in
stages between 1937 and 1949,
with much of it being created
during World War II. It was
originally published in three
volumes in 1954 and 1955 and has
since been reprinted numerous
times and translated into at
least 38 languages, becoming one
of the most popular works in
20th-century literature.
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Last of
the Mohicans - James Fenimore
Cooper
It
was one of the most popular
English-language novels of its
time, and helped establish
Cooper as one of the first
world-famous American writers.
Although stylistic and narrative
flaws left it open to criticism
since its publication, and its
length and distinctive prose
style have reduced its appeal to
later readers, The Last of the
Mohicans remains embedded in
American literature courses. It
is the most famous of the
Leatherstocking Tales.
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Island of
Dr. Moreau - H.G. Wells
After being rescued from
shipwreck and brought to a
mysterious island, Edward
Prendick discovers that its
inhabitants are the macabre
result of experimental
vivisections, the work of the
visionary Dr Moreau. In the
interests of scientific
advancement, the doctor has
transformed various beasts into
strange looking man-creatures,
"human in shape, and yet human
beings with the strangest air
about them of some familiar
animal."
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Paradise
Lost - John Milton
The protagonist of this
Protestant epic is the fallen
angel, Satan. Looked at from a
modern perspective it may appear
to some that Milton presents
Satan sympathetically, as an
ambitious and prideful being who
defies his tyrannical creator,
omnipotent God, and wages war on
Heaven, only to be defeated and
cast down. Indeed, William
Blake, a great admirer of
Milton's, and who illustrated
the epic poem, said of Milton
that 'he was a true Poet, and of
the Devil's party without
knowing it'
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Pride and
Prejudice - Jane Austen
Pride and Prejudice, first
published on 28 January 1813, is
the most famous of Jane Austen's
novels. It is one of the first
romantic comedies in the history
of the novel and its opening is
one of the most famous lines in
English literature—"It is a
truth universally acknowledged,
that a single man in possession
of a good fortune, must be in
want of a wife."
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Red Badge
of Courage - Stephen Crane
The
Red Badge of Courage (1895) is
an impressionistic novel by
Stephen Crane about the meaning
of courage, as it is discovered
by Henry Fleming, a recruit in
the American Civil War. It was
filmed in 1951 and again in
1974, and is one of the most
influential American war stories
ever written, even though the
author was born after war and
had never seen battle himself.
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The
Scarlet Letter- Nathanial
Hawthorne
The Scarlet Letter published in
1850, is a Gothic American
romance novel written by
Nathaniel Hawthorne; generally
considered to be his
masterpiece. Set in Puritan New
England (specifically Boston) in
the seventeenth century, it
tells the story of Hester
Prynne, who gives birth after
committing adultery, refuses to
name the father, and struggles
to create a new life of
repentance and dignity.
Throughout, Hawthorne explores
the issues of grace, legalism,
and guilt.
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The
Shining - Stephen King
The Shining (1977) is a horror
novel by American author Stephen
King. King's third published
novel, the success of the book
firmly established King as a
pre-eminent author in the genre.
A film based upon the book, The
Shining directed by Stanley
Kubrick, was released in 1980.
The book was later adapted into
a television mini-series.
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Legend of
Sleepy Hollow - Washington
Irving
The
story is set in the Dutch
settlement of Tarry Town, New
York, in a secluded glen called
Sleepy Hollow. It tells the
story of Ichabod Crane, a
priggish schoolmaster from
Connecticut, who competes with
Abraham "Brom Bones" Van Brunt,
for the hand of
eighteen-year-old Katrina Van
Tassel. As Crane leaves a party,
he is pursued by the Headless
Horseman, supposedly the ghost
of a Hessian trooper who lost
his head to a cannon-ball during
"some nameless battle" of the
American Revolutionary War
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Shakespeare's Sonnets Collection
The Sonnets comprise a
collection of 154 poems in
sonnet form written by William
Shakespeare that deal with such
themes as love, beauty,
politics, and mortality. The
poems were probably written over
a period of several years. The
Sonnets were published under
conditions that have become
unclear to history. For example,
there is a mysterious dedication
at the beginning of the text
wherein a certain "Mr. W.H." is
described as "the only begetter"
of the poems by the publisher
Thomas Thorpe, but it is not
known who this man was.
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A Tale of
Two Cities - Charles Dickens
A
Tale of Two Cities (1859) is a
historical novel by Charles
Dickens. The plot centers on the
years leading up to the French
Revolution and culminates in the
Jacobin Reign of Terror. It
tells the story of two men,
Charles Darnay and Sydney
Carton, who look similar but are
very different in personality.
Darnay is a romantic French
aristocrat, while Carton is a
cynical English barrister.
However, the two are in love
with the same woman, Lucie
Manette.
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The Time
Machine - H.G. Wells
The Time Machine is a novel by
H. G. Wells, first published in
1895, later made into two films
of the same title. This novel is
generally credited with the
popularization of the concept of
time travel using a vehicle that
allows an operator to travel
purposefully and selectively.
The novel's protagonist is an
amateur inventor or scientist
living in London identified
simply as The Time Traveler.
Having demonstrated to friends
using a miniature model that
time is a fourth dimension, and
that a suitable apparatus can
move back and forth in this
fourth dimension.
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Ulysses-
James Joyce
Ulysses chronicles the passage
through Dublin by its main
character, Leopold Bloom, during
an ordinary day, June 16, 1904.
The title alludes to the hero of
Homer's Odyssey (Latinised into
Ulysses), and there are many
parallels, both implicit and
explicit, between the two works
(e.g. the correlations between
Leopold Bloom and Odysseus,
Molly Bloom and Penelope, and
Stephen Dedalus and Telemachus).
June 16 is now celebrated by
Joyce's fans worldwide as
Bloomsday.
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Wuthering
Heights- Emily Bronte
Wuthering Heights is Emily
Brontë's only novel. It was
first published in 1847 under
the pseudonym Ellis Bell, and a
posthumous second edition was
edited by her sister Charlotte.
The name of the novel comes from
the manor on which the story
centers. Wuthering Heights has
given rise to many adaptations,
including several films, radio,
and television dramatizations,
and two musicals (including
Heathcliff). It also inspired a
hit song by Kate Bush, which
subsequently has been covered by
a variety of artists.
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Some of the
Greatest Fiction Classics of all time.
Delivered in PDF Format so they can be
viewed on any computer, or even on your
PDF capable PDA device.
Complete
with this sales page, all graphics, and
Master Resale Rights.
Delivery of the bonus books will be made
along with the confirmation letter that
you will receive with any package
purchase. Delivery of the sales page and
graphics will be completed on October
29th. This is to protect our investment
in the design of this sales page and
additional graphics. |
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How would you
like to own a collection of some of the
greatest literary works of all time.
This collection of classic novels are
some of the very best and most well
known. The ebooks come in easy to manage
PDF format and are well put together.
These eBooks are compatible with any
Windows PC, Mac or even most PDA
devices.
|
| |
This is a perfect
package of 30 timeless novels with Master Resale Rights that
you can use:
- To Build Your Subscriber List
- Sell As a Stand-Alone Package
- Include As A Bonus To Other
Product Offers
- Or Use Them As Great Holiday
Gifts For Family, Friends and Business Associates
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