 | Mary E. Wilkins - Fiction - 2009 - 476 pages
A collection of short stories by an influential 19th century author. They primarily deal with New England life. | |
 | H.G. Wells - Fiction - 2005 - 224 pages
Dr. Moreau, a scientist expelled from his homeland for cruel experiments, finds a deserted island where he can create hideous creatures with manlike intelligence. But as the ... | |
 | Ursula K. Le Guin - 1994 - 224 pages
A collection by an award-winning author includes ten short tales, eighteen poems, and the title story in which a child survives a plane crash and enters a Dream Time of ... | |
 | Eleanor Hodgman Porter - Juvenile fiction - 1946 - 308 pages
Optimism often fades to cynicism as children mature into adults. When we last saw Pollyanna, in an eponymous book, she had become paralyzed after a nasty fall and it looked ... | |
 | Mary Eleanor Wilkins Freeman - Fiction - 2002 - 330 pages
Generations before Peyton Place, there was Pembroke (1894), a novel that exposed the dark underside of an insular New England village. | |
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