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  • av Joseph A. Altsheler
    275,-

    Joseph A. Altsheler's "The Scouts of Stonewall" is a continuation of his Civil War saga. The story follows the adventures of Harry Kenton, a young Confederate soldier, and his friends as they navigate the dangers of war. Altsheler's vivid descriptions bring to life the harsh realities of war, from brutal battles to gruelling marches. Along the way, Harry must navigate complex relationships with both his fellow soldiers and his enemies. As he struggles to reconcile his duty to his country with his own conscience, Harry faces difficult choices that will shape the course of his life. Altsheler's masterful storytelling draws readers into this gripping tale of loyalty, sacrifice, and honour in a time of great turmoil.

  • av Joseph A. Altsheler
    275,-

    "The Shades of the Wilderness" is the seventh volume of the Civil War Series, which follows the fortunes of Harry Kenton and his friends. It takes them on the retreat from Gettysburg, gives them a short period of social life in Richmond, describes the great battles of the Wilderness and Spottsylvania, and ends with the deadlock in the trenches before Petersburg. It offers readers a detailed and immersive account of the Civil War, exploring the experiences and challenges faced by the characters. It delves into the personal journeys, triumphs, and hardships of Harry Kenton and his friends, capturing the spirit of the era and shedding light on the human side of the war.

  • av Joseph A. Altsheler
    299,-

    "The Scouts of the Valley" by Joseph A. Altsheler tells the story of Henry Ware, a young man who joins the Kentucky Rifles during the American Revolution. Henry is eager to prove himself as a soldier and quickly becomes friends with Paul Cotter, a fellow rifleman. Together, they fight in several battles against the British and their Native American allies. As Henry and his comrades continue to fight for their country's independence, they must also confront personal challenges and difficult decisions. Will they be able to overcome these obstacles and emerge victorious?

  • av Joseph A. Altsheler
    275,-

    Joseph A. Altsheler's "The Guns of Shiloh" is a gripping historical novel that immerses readers in the heart-wrenching battles and personal struggles of the American Civil War. Set against the backdrop of the pivotal Battle of Shiloh, Altsheler's vivid descriptions and well-drawn characters bring to life the harrowing realities of war. Through the eyes of young Harry Kenton, readers witness firsthand the chaos and brutality of battle, as well as the camaraderie and loyalty that develop between soldiers. But "The Guns of Shiloh" is more than just a war novel; it also explores themes of honour, sacrifice, and redemption. As Harry grapples with his own conscience and the moral implications of war, readers are forced to confront difficult questions about what it means to be a patriot and a hero.

  • av Joseph A. Altsheler
    285,-

    Joseph A. Altsheler's monumental work, "The Tree of Appomattox," is the culmination of a series of interconnected romances that delve into the depths of the Civil War. The series, comprising "The Guns of Bull Run," "The Guns of Shiloh," "The Scouts of Stonewall," "The Sword of Antietam," "The Star of Gettysburg," "The Rock of Chickamauga," "The Shades of the Wilderness," and finally, "The Tree of Appomattox," spans the vast landscape of the war. Altsheler approaches his subject matter with a sense of fairness and detachment, drawing from firsthand accounts and the stories passed down by those who lived through the conflict. This brilliant novel serves as a poignant reminder of the monumental upheaval that shaped a nation and the indomitable spirit of those who endured it. Altsheler's laborious efforts and dedication to accuracy shine through in this masterful conclusion to the series.

  • av Joseph A. Altsheler
    285,-

    Joseph A. Altsheler's "The Hunters of the Hills" is a story about Robert Lennox, a young frontiersman thrust into the tumultuous world of the French and Indian War. Through his determination and resourcefulness, he earns the respect and admiration of his comrades on the battlefield. At the heart of the story is Robert's bond with Tayoga, a Mohawk warrior. Altsheler's vivid descriptions and engaging storytelling make for an enthralling reading experience that brings this pivotal period in American history to life. Through the eyes of Robert Lennox, readers are transported to a world of danger, courage, and camaraderie. Altsheler's vivid descriptions and engaging storytelling make for an enthralling reading experience that brings this pivotal period in American history to life.

  • av Plato
    169,-

    Plato's Phaedo is a philosophical dialogue that recounts the final moments of the Greek philosopher Socrates's life and his discussions on the immortality of the soul. The dialogue centres around the philosophical argument for the existence of an immortal soul and the nature of death. Socrates presents his theory that the soul is eternal and separable from the physical body, suggesting that it continues to exist after death. Plato explores several philosophical ideas through the dialogue, such as the theory of forms, the nature of reality, and the concept of the soul's journey after death. The dialogue reflects Plato's belief in the existence of a realm of eternal and unchanging forms, which the soul can access through reason and contemplation. It invites readers to contemplate the nature of reality, the pursuit of wisdom, and the potential transcendence of the soul beyond the physical realm.

  • av Aldous Huxley
    245,-

    Brave New World by Aldous Huxley is a dystopian novel that delves into the consequences of genetic engineering, conditioning, and the use of a drug called Soma. The story follows Bernard Marx, an Alpha Plus who feels out of place in his regimented world, and John, a Savage who struggles to adapt to the new world he encounters. Huxley explores themes of individuality, freedom, and the impact of technology on human relationships as he weaves a cautionary tale about sacrificing personal liberties for societal stability and technological advancement.

  • av Plato
    425,-

    Plato, the ancient Greek philosopher, made significant contributions to the field of philosophy, including his exploration of laws and their role in society. In his dialogue "The Laws," he delves into the concept of justice and the ideal construction of laws to create a just society. Plato's perspective on laws revolves around the idea that they should reflect and promote virtue, order and the common good of society. He argues that laws should be based on reason and the understanding of universal principles rather than arbitrary decisions made by individuals. Plato's exploration of laws serves as a cornerstone in the study of ethics, political science, and the philosophy of law.

  • av Plato
    199,-

    Plato's Cratylus is a philosophical dialogue that examines the nature of language, its relationship to reality, and the role of names and words in conveying meaning. Socrates engages in a discussion with Cratylus, who argues that names have an inherent connection to the objects they represent. Hermogenes contends that names are arbitrary conventions agreed upon by humans, lacking any inherent connection to their referents. Plato explores the question of whether language is a mere convention or if it has a deeper relationship with reality. Through Socratic dialogue, he investigates the nature of language, the power of names, and the possibility of a true and correct language that accurately reflects the world. The dialogue raises profound questions about the nature of language and its relationship to truth and knowledge. It invites readers to reflect on the power and limitations of language, the process of naming, and the complex relationship between words and the world they seek to describe.

  • av Joseph Conrad
    315,-

    Joseph Conrad's novel Chance was published in 1913. It is narrated by Charles Marlow and other narrators, and it is unique among the author's works in that it places a strong emphasis on a female character: Flora de Barral. The narrators try to interpret various events in Miss de Barral's life, the daughter of a convicted swindler named Smith de Barral. When her father is released from prison, he joins them on the ship, and the novel reaches its conclusion. The plot alternates between human will and purposeful activity and an opposing "apathetic" force that dismisses the significance of human action.

  • av Margaret Mitchell
    599,-

    Gone with the Wind by Margaret Mitchell is a classic novel that has captured the hearts of readers for generations. Set in the American South during the Civil War and Reconstruction eras, the story follows the life of Scarlett O'Hara, a headstrong and determined young woman who is forced to navigate the challenges of war, love, and loss. Throughout the novel, Scarlett's character undergoes significant growth and transformation as she learns to adapt to changing circumstances and overcome adversity. Along the way, she forms relationships with a cast of unforgettable characters, including Rhett Butler, Ashley Wilkes, and Melanie Hamilton. Mitchell's vivid descriptions of Southern life and culture provide a rich backdrop for this epic tale of passion and survival. Gone with the Wind remains a beloved classic that continues to captivate readers today.

  • av H. Rider Haggard
    275,-

    A Yellow God is a short story written by Joseph Conrad that tells the tale of a man named James Wait who is on a mission to find the lost treasure of King Solomon. Wait, along with his team of adventurers, travels deep into the African jungle, where they encounter various obstacles and dangers. As they make their way through the treacherous terrain, they come across a tribe of natives who worship a mysterious yellow god. The tribe's chief warns them to turn back, but Wait is determined to press on. Eventually, they reach their destination and uncover the treasure, but not without paying a heavy price. The story explores themes of greed, ambition, and the consequences of blindly pursuing wealth and power. Conrad's vivid descriptions of the African landscape and its inhabitants transport readers to another world and leave them captivated until the very end.

  • av Plato
    155,-

    Plato's Symposium is a philosophical work that explores the nature of love, desire, and the pursuit of wisdom. It takes the form of a dialogue among a group of prominent Athenians gathered at a symposium, where each speaker presents different perspectives on love and its manifestations. Plato delves into the idea that true love goes beyond mere physical attraction and encompasses the quest for wisdom and the transcendence of the individual self. He presents the concept of "Platonic love," which transcends physical beauty and aims for a higher, more abstract form of love rooted in intellectual and spiritual connection. Through vivid and engaging dialogue, Plato invites readers to contemplate the nature of love and its profound impact on individuals and society. Symposium remains a timeless philosophical work that continues to inspire discussions on the nature of love, desire, and the pursuit of wisdom.

  • av Plato
    245,-

    Plato's Theaetetus is a philosophical dialogue that explores the nature of knowledge, perception, and the definition of truth. It takes its name from its central character, Theaetetus, a young mathematician whose understanding of knowledge is challenged and examined by Socrates. Through a series of thought experiments and philosophical arguments, Plato explores different theories of knowledge, including sensory perception, rationalism, and the nature of concepts and definitions. The dialogue delves into topics such as the role of perception in acquiring knowledge, the relationship between true belief and knowledge, and the limitations of human understanding. The dialogue challenges conventional notions of knowledge and invites readers to critically examine their own understanding of truth and certainty. It remains a significant work in the field of epistemology and continues to influence discussions on the nature of knowledge and perception.

  • av Jack London
    299,-

    The Sea-Wolf is a psychological adventure tale written by American writer Jack London in 1904. It's the story of Humphrey Van Weyden, who was caught by a seal-hunting ship and is now a reluctant sailor under the command of its terrifying captain, Wolf Larsen. The sailors who sailed with Larsen were dangerous outcasts, but the skipper was the renowned Sea Wolf¿a savage beast.

  • av Charlie Brown
    185,-

  • av Winston Churchill (Novelist)
    355,-

    Winston Churchill, an American author, wrote Mr. Crewe's Career in 1908. In the book, a railroad lobby uses every trick in the book to try to take over the state government of New Hampshire. Churchill was born in St. Louis, Missouri, and attended Smith Academy in Missouri and the United States Naval Academy, where he graduated in 1894. He joined the Army and Navy Journal as an editor after graduating. In order to pursue a writing career, he left the American Navy. He was appointed managing editor of the Cosmopolitan Magazine in 1895, but he left that position in less than a year to devote more time to writing. He was a published poet and essayist in addition to being a famous author. Some of his famous works include The Celebrity (1898), Richard Carvel (1899) The Crisis (1901), Coniston (1906), Mr. Crewe's Career (1908), A Modern Chronicle (1910), The Inside of the Cup (1913), A Far Country (1915) and The Dwelling-Place of Light (1917).

  • av Winston Churchill (Novelist)
    409,-

    Winston Churchill wrote this swashbuckling, patriotic tale of romance, villainy, and adventure on the high seas. Around the year 1765, young Richard Carvel, an orphaned descendant of English nobility, is living on his grandfather's estate in colonial Annapolis, Maryland. He witnesses growing discontent with King George III's rule and sees his childhood playmate, Dorothy Manners, blossom into a celebrated debutante. His life takes a turn when Richard's treacherous uncle Grafton plots to have him kidnapped by pirates bound for the West Indies in order to claim his inheritance.

  • av Winston Churchill (Novelist)
    355,-

    Winston Churchill, an American author, wrote the best-selling book Coniston in 1906. Winston Churchill's book Coniston examines New Hampshire's lengthy political history. It tells the tale of Granite State politics throughout the progressive reform era, featuring colourful politicians, corruption, and adherence to our long-standing political traditions, which, despite the state's tiny size, have left a significant historical impact. It takes place in the fictional New England town of Coniston between the 1830s and the immediate post-Civil War era and is centred on Jethro Bass, a man who abuses the political system to acquire enormous influence.

  • av Bram Stoker
    185,-

    Abraham Stoker, known as Bram Stoker, was an Irish author who is celebrated for his 1897 gothic horror novel Dracula. This book includes some of Stoker's most famous stories, namely, "Dracula's Guest," "The Judge's House," "The Squaw," "The Secret of the Growing Gold", "A Gipsy Prophecy," "The Coming of Abel Behenna," "The Burial of the Rats," "A Dream of Red Hands" and "Crooken Sands". Dracula's Guest is a short story by Bram Stoker, first published in the short story collection Dracula's Guest and Other Weird Stories (1914).

  • av Winston Churchill
    409,-

    After young orphan David Ritchie finds a new life in Kentucky, Col. George Rogers Clark enlists the boy in his daring quest to capture the Illinois Country from the British. Serving as Clark's drummer boy, David accompanies Clark and his intrepid volunteers on their arduous march across the prairies to Kaskaskia and through freezing swamps and backwaters to Vincennes. Years later, David has become a prosperous lawyer while Clark lives alone, forgotten and in poverty. Clark, in collusion with the French, hatches a desperate plan to regain his former glory by seizing control of the Mississippi from the Spanish. Unable to turn Clark aside from his plans, David and his roguish cousin Nick journey to the French settlements at St. Louis and New Orleans to thwart the scheme... and discover far more than they bargained for.

  • av H. Rider Haggard
    285,-

    H. Rider Haggard, the author of King Solomon's Mines and She, has produced a novel titled Cleopatra: Being a History of the Fall and Revenge of Harmachis. The book's initial edition appeared in 1889. The plot centres on the persistence of a dynastic lineage that is guarded by the Priests of Isis and is set in the Ptolemaic period of ancient Egyptian history. The Priesthood assigns the main character Harmachis, a living descendant of this bloodline, the task of overthrowing the alleged fake Cleopatra, driving the Romans out of Egypt, and re-establishing Egypt's golden age.

  • av Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley
    315,-

    Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley was an English novelist best known for her Gothic novel Frankenstein; or, The Modern Prometheus, which is considered an early example of science fiction. Her work is distinguished by themes of passion, peril, independent thought, and transformation. Her tales, set against varying backdrops of mediaeval chivalry, wars and revolutions of her time, and grandiose natural scenes, represent a high point in gothic storytelling art.

  • av Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley
    345,-

    The novel follows the education of a young woman under the tutelage of a tyrannical father figure. Elizabeth Raby, a six-year-old orphan, saves Rupert Falkner from suicide; Falkner then adopts her and raises her to be a model of virtue. She does, however, fall in love with Gerald Neville, whose mother Falkner had unintentionally killed years before. When Falkner is acquitted of murdering Neville's mother, Elizabeth's female values subdue the destructive impulses of the two men she loves, who reconcile and unite in domestic harmony with Elizabeth.

  • av Maurice Leblanc
    259,-

    Arsène Lupin is a collection of stories by Maurice Leblanc recounting the adventures of Arsène Lupin, Arsene Lupin is a gentleman, who "operates only in châteaux and salons" and "man of a thousand disguises: in turn a chauffeur, detective, bookmaker, Russian physician, Spanish bull-fighter, commercial traveler, robust youth and decrepit old man." This master thief resembles Robin Hood in that he steals not for his own benefit, but for the benefit of others. The urbane scoundrel is involved in a series of amusing shenanigans in this book. The stories are sequential in nature, but they can also be enjoyed as stand-alone stories.

  • av Maurice Leblanc
    245,-

    This is a classic novel by Maurice Leblanc that features the master thief Arsine Lupin and the famous detective Herlock Shlomes. In this book, Lupin and Sholmes engage in a thrilling battle of wits and skill as they try to outsmart each other. Lupin is a charming and cunning thief who always manages to stay one step ahead of the law, while Sholmes is a brilliant detective who uses his keen observation skills to solve even the most complex cases. As the two men face off against each other, they both realize that they have met their match. The novel is filled with twists and turns as Lupin and Sholmes engage in a game of cat-and-mouse that keeps readers on the edge of their seats. With its gripping plot, memorable characters, and clever writing, the novel is a must-read for anyone who loves mystery and suspense.

  • av Ralph Waldo Emerson
    275,-

    Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-82) was an American essayist, poet, and popular philosopher who began his career as a Unitarian minister in Boston but rose to international prominence as a lecturer and author of essays such as ""Self-Reliance,"" ""History,"" ""The Over-Soul,"" and ""Fate."" Emerson developed a metaphysics of process, an epistemology of moods, and a ""existentialist"" ethics of self-improvement based on English and German Romanticism, Neoplatonism, Kantianism, and Hinduism. From his friend Henry David Thoreau to John Dewey, he influenced generations of Americans, and in Europe, Friedrich Nietzsche, who takes up Emersonian themes like power, fate, the uses of poetry and history, and the critique of Christianity.This collection of Emerson's brilliant essays includes the following:1.The American Scholar2.Compensation3.Self-Reliance4.Friendship5.Heroism6.Manners7.Gifts8.Nature9.Shakspeare; Or, The Poet10.Prudence11.Circles

  • av David Alan Binder
    169,-

  • av Gerhard Plenert
    275,-

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