Wydawca: KtoCzyta.pl
Max Brand
It is the continuing saga of Max Brands finest heroine, Jack Jacqueline Boone. Jack is blessed and cursed by the cross of Meilan when she meets Dix Van Dyck. Dix Van Dyck, is being persecuted by an evil sheriff, named Onate. Dix, perhaps too fond of action and excitement, had stayed out of trouble on the strength of his boyish charm and the verdict of suicide passed on those who drew their guns on him. Strangely enough, it is Jackie Boone and a beautiful Yaqui Indian girl named Dolores, who has an evil side that come to Van Dykes aid repeatedly in a novel bursting with larger-than-life action.
Edith Wharton
Originally published in 1901, Crucial Instances is the second collection of six short stories connected, as the title suggests, by a hinging moment in the narrative through which the plot alters dramatically. The contents included the following: The Duchess at Prayer, The Angel at the Grave, The Recovery, Copy: A Dialogue, The Rembrandt, The Moving Finger and The Confessional.This is a great collection of stories, where Edith Wharton shows her wide range of talents, from those with a bit of a horror feel, to ones which just make the reader feel good. There is one Dialogue or play, several written in third person, several in first person, written from a mans point of view and some from a womans. All of them are carefully crafted to show a particular attitude or character or scene in great detail. Highly recommended!
Cud mniemany. Czyli Krakowiacy i górale
Wojciech Bogusławski
Cud Mniemany, czyli Krakowiacy i Górale to opera komiczna, uznawana za jedno z najwybitniejszych dzieł polskiego oświecenia. Osadzona w realiach wsi podkrakowskiej opisuje aktualne wydarzenia społeczne oraz polityczne na tle insurekcji kościuszkowskiej. Autorem jest Wojciech Bogusławski polski aktor, śpiewak operowy, dramatopisarz, reżyser, tłumacz, propagator ideologii oświecenia, dyrektor Teatru Narodowego w Warszawie, żyjący w latach 17571829.
Julia Duszyńska
Cudaczek-wyśmiewaczek to zbiór osiemnastu opowiadań dla dzieci o tytułowym Cudaczku-Wyśmiewaczku, czyli maleńkim stworzeniu chowającym się we włosach i ubraniach dzieci. Karmi się on ich złym zachowaniem, do którego nieustannie namawia. Kiedy dziecko zaczyna grymasić lub jest niegrzeczne, Cudaczek wyśmiewa się z niego, a ze śmiechu pęcznieje mu brzuszek. Na szczęście istnieje sposób, aby uwolnić się od tego małego złośliwca.
Wiktor Gomulicki
Miłosny trójkąt pomiędzy bogatą panną Basią Szeliżanką, zakochanym w niej Giano oraz Jerzym Zawiślakiem. Nie brak w nim namiętności, nutki grozy i mroku. Wszystko to rozgrywa się w XVII-wiecznej Warszawie, na tle ówczesnych obyczajów mieszczan, kupców, a nawet samego króla.
Arthur Morrison
Spirit of Old Essex draws together Arthur Morrisons lost treasure of a novel Cunning Murrell, a jocular tale of witchcraft, old salts, pugilists, smuggling and country life long lost, together with additional background information on Morrisons research and inspiration. Cunning Murrell is a fictionalized biography of James Murrell, also known as Cunning Murrell, who was an English cunning man, or professional folk magician. In this capacity, he reportedly employed magical means to aid in healing both humans and animals, exorcising malevolent spirits, countering witches, and restoring lost or stolen property to its owner.
E. Phillips Oppenheim
It was a brilliant good Saturday morning before the harvest, and the large market and curves of the streets in Norwich proceed with a continuous crowd of farmers, livestock, dealers, county ladies with opinions that are adhering to shopping. Frantsinin on the London Street is filled up quickly: a very nice sight for worshiping a small owner who is standing in the upper corner of the room, managing his midridons operations, rubbing his hands and smiling, kindly begging each beginner. Without a doubt, he is keen to see this market day come up a little more than once a week, and that every Saturday was as wonderful as today.
Curious Happenings to the Rooke Legatees
E. Phillips Oppenheim
Five people were seated around a table in the private office of a well-known solicitor in Lincolns Inn. Their expressions and general attitude were sufficiently disturbed to suggest that their gathering was of no ordinary moment. A grey-haired, untidy looking woman in seedy black was tapping the mahogany table in front of her with long, ill-cared for nails, and breathing quickly. A fat, red-cheeked man, with a waistcoat the lower buttons of which failed to connect, with blue watery eyes and a loose, but good-humoured, mouth, was whistling softly to himself.