- Sort by:
- Rating
- Alphabet
- Addition time
51-60 results of 0
Novels
- Author: Lang, Andrew, 1844-1912
- Genre: African American women authors
[v.1] Arthur O'Leary: his wanderings and ponderings in many lands.--[v.2-3] Barrington. To which is added. Tales of the trains.--[v.4-5] The Bramleighs of Bishop's Folly. To which is added Dairy and notes of Horace Templeton, esq.--[v.6-7] Charles O'Malley, the Irish dragoon.--[v.8-9] Confessions of Con Cregan, the Irish Gil Blas.--[v.10-11] The Daltons; or, Three roads in life.--[v.12-13] Davenport Dunn, a man of our day.--[v.14-15] The Dodd family abroad. To which is added, That boy of Norcott's.--[v.16] The fortunes of Glencore.--[v.17-18] Harry Lorrequer.--[v.19-20] Jack Hinton, the guardsman.--[v.21-22] The knight of Gwynne; a tale of the time of the union.--[v.23] Lord Kilgobbin.--[v.24-25] Luttrell of Arran. To which is added, Paul Gosslett's confessions.--[v.26-27] The Martins of Cro' Martin.--[v.28] Maurice Tiernay, the soldier of fortune.--[v.29-30] The O'Donoghue; a tale of Ireland fifty years ago. To which is added A rent in a cloud.--[v.31-32] One of them. To which is added, A day's ride: a life's romance.--[v.33-34] Sir Brook Fossbrooke. To which is added, St. Patrick's eve.--[v.35] Sir Jasper Carew, his life and experiences.--[v.36-37] Tom Burke of "Ours."--[v.38] Tony Butler
a wind flower a novel
- Author: caroline atwater mason
- Genre: African American women authors
This scarce antiquarian book is included in our special Legacy Reprint Series. In the interest of creating a more extensive selection of rare historical book reprints, we have chosen to reproduce this title even though it may possibly have occasional imperfections such as missing and blurred pages, missing text, poor pictures, markings, dark backgrounds and other reproduction issues beyond our control. Because this work is culturally important, we have made it available as a part of our commitment to protecting, preserving and promoting the world's literature. --This text refers to the Paperback edition.
by order of the czar a novel
- Author: joseph hatton
- Genre: African American women authors
This volume is produced from digital images created through the University of Michigan University Library's preservation reformatting program. The Library seeks to preserve the intellectual content of items in a manner that facilitates and promotes a variety of uses. The digital reformatting process results in an electronic version of the text that can both be accessed online and used to create new print copies. This book and thousands of others can be found in the digital collections of the University of Michigan Library. The University Library also understands and values the utility of print, and makes reprints available through its Scholarly Publishing Office.
Novels
- Author: Lang, Andrew, 1844-1912
- Genre: African American women authors
[v.1] Arthur O'Leary: his wanderings and ponderings in many lands.--[v.2-3] Barrington. To which is added. Tales of the trains.--[v.4-5] The Bramleighs of Bishop's Folly. To which is added Dairy and notes of Horace Templeton, esq.--[v.6-7] Charles O'Malley, the Irish dragoon.--[v.8-9] Confessions of Con Cregan, the Irish Gil Blas.--[v.10-11] The Daltons; or, Three roads in life.--[v.12-13] Davenport Dunn, a man of our day.--[v.14-15] The Dodd family abroad. To which is added, That boy of Norcott's.--[v.16] The fortunes of Glencore.--[v.17-18] Harry Lorrequer.--[v.19-20] Jack Hinton, the guardsman.--[v.21-22] The knight of Gwynne; a tale of the time of the union.--[v.23] Lord Kilgobbin.--[v.24-25] Luttrell of Arran. To which is added, Paul Gosslett's confessions.--[v.26-27] The Martins of Cro' Martin.--[v.28] Maurice Tiernay, the soldier of fortune.--[v.29-30] The O'Donoghue; a tale of Ireland fifty years ago. To which is added A rent in a cloud.--[v.31-32] One of them. To which is added, A day's ride: a life's romance.--[v.33-34] Sir Brook Fossbrooke. To which is added, St. Patrick's eve.--[v.35] Sir Jasper Carew, his life and experiences.--[v.36-37] Tom Burke of "Ours."--[v.38] Tony Butler
On the Vice of Novel Reading.
- Author: Allison Young Ewing
- Genre: African American women authors
This book was converted from its physical edition to the digital format by a community of volunteers. You may find it for free on the web. Purchase of the Kindle edition includes wireless delivery.
fabian dimitry a novel
- Author: Fawcett Edgar
- Genre: African American women authors
Purchase of this book includes free trial access to www.million-books.com where you can read more than a million books for free. This is an OCR edition with typos. Excerpt from book: n. Nor did Eninger by any means rid himself of that sensation when he paid, with Fabian, a visit to the Delameres on the following day. The small house in Lincoln's Inn Square was no less shabby within than grimy without, but Alicia Delamere lighted its dinginess as a buttercup lights a dingle. She had hair almost as golden as that flower, and so white a throat that it made the ardent yet velvety blue of her eyes burn all the more deliciously keen. Her figure, however, as Eninger soon told himself, was by no means a perfection of moulding, although lissome and graceful, while her deportment betokened neither the air de race nor the simple equipments of ordinary tact and finish. Watching her with the cold eye of criticism, he pronounced her manners almost piteously deficient. She had pretty hands, but was forever moving them about, like an embarrassed child; she would smile naturally one minute and artificially the next; her postures, whether she sat or stood, were one perpetual bashful unrest. And yet it soon began to dawn upon Eninger that she was irresistibly charming. It was not that he grew to approve her, but rather that he took a secret pleasure in watching her defects. She was not at all like an English girl, nor yet like an American : she had far too little gravity for the first and far too much reserve for the last. Eninger got rapidly to be fond of watching her; she made him think of a briar-rose in a breeze, of a little ruffled brook between fringes of cresses. Her wilding sort of demureness refreshed him after the correct repose of Lady Beatrice. Then, too, there was a pathos in her shyness. For had not Fabian told him that her mother had died when the dug was at her baby lip, and did not this gaunt, sour old spectre of a father look as though he could no more rear ... --This text refers to the Paperback edition.












