What Every Woman Knows (1908) is a play by J. M. Barrie. It ran for 384 performances at the Duke ...
Women in Love is D.H Lawrence's sequel to The Rainbow, and is widely considered by critics to beL...
We of the Never Never (1908) is an autobiographical novel by Jeannie Gunn. Based on her experienc...
The Sins of the Cities of the Plain (1881) is an erotic novel attributed to Irish prostitute Jack...
The Private Papers of Henry Ryecroft (1903) is a semi-autobiographical work by George Gissing. Pu...
Julian West is an aristocrat in 19th century America. He has all that he would ever need, a happy...
In Three Short Works, three character-driven stories follow each protagonist as they attempt to n...
Ralph Waldo Emerson's essays and poems on the transcendental movement in the United States became...
The Blue Lagoon (1908) is a novel by Henry De Vere Stacpoole. The first in a trilogy of novels in...
'Revolutionary...Brontë's most feminist novel.'-Lyndall Gordon'Charlotte Brontë has us by the han...
The Celtic Twilight (1893) is a collection of stories written and edited by W.B. Yeats. Compiled ...
Now, as in this lifetime, cab drivers, statesmen, academics, and raggedy-assed children sit spell...