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  • von Ivan Sergeevich Turgenev
    26,00 €

    Ivan Turgenev published a novella in 1872 titled Torrents of Spring, often known as Spring Torrents. It features young Russian landowner Dimitry Sanin, who falls madly in love for the first time while visiting Frankfurt, Germany, and is mostly autobiographical in character. The book, which Turgenev wrote between 1870 and 1871 while he was in his forties, is regarded as one of his best. At the beginning of the novel, a middle-aged Dmitry Sanin is looking through some files in his study when he discovers a small cross that is set with garnets. This discovery transports him back in time to 1840 by thirty years. The piece, which is presented as a memory, centers on the thoughts of middle-aged and weary Sanin on his earlier love affair with young Italian woman Gemma. Sanin suddenly fell under the spell of an older Russian woman and was enthralled by her, despite the fact that she voluntarily ended her engagement with another man and announced her love for him. He shamefully ended their relationship with Gemma in order to pursue the cunning Madame Polozov, but now that he is older and wiser, he is wondering what he missed.

  • von William John Locke
    28,00 €

    The Red Planet is a study of bravery, cowardice, fear, and heroism. The story is told by Duncan Meredyth, a former English officer, and is set in a small town close to London during World War I. A high-explosive round that destroyed his legs and one of Merigold's eyes forced him and his devoted servant out of the battle. The author skillfully paints a picture of English humor, human resiliency, and national hardship in order to tell Leonard Boyce's narrative against that backdrop. A guy who appears to be heroic, he occasionally has attacks of uncontrollable, paralyzing dread, which leads him to permit disasters to occur that might have been avoided or changed at crucial points in his life. The book describes his failures and successes throughout his life as he battles that flaw. It will be difficult to forget Meredyth, Marigold, and Betty Fairfax since they are all portrayed so effectively. This book provides fascinating and realistic insight into living in England during the war.

  • von P. G. Wodehouse
    28,00 €

    The Prince And Betty is a humorous fictional book written by P. G. Wodehouse is based on a story that begins with young American John Maude, who is forced to look for work after falling in love with high-society girl Betty Silver. When offered the chance to go to the tiny island in the country, Mervo, Maude accepts. There, he is employed by wealthy personality, Benjamin Scobell, who has plans to establish a casino there that would compete with Monte Carlo. As a draw for his casino, Scobell wants Maude to pose as the vanished Prince of Mervo. Moreover, Scobell wants John to marry his stepdaughter, who is eventually Betty Silver. John shuts down the casino and attempts to orchestrate a revolution that would turn Mervo into a democratic state after Betty accuses him of being a forger. Will John and Betty get married to each other? After this democratic revolution, who will run the casino, and how will John and Betty spend their life? To read this romantic and comic story, readers can read the novel to find out the surprising result!

  • von Thomas Hardy
    27,00 €

    Two on a Tower: A Romance (1882) is a romantic melodrama novel by English author Thomas Hardy, which is one of his minor works. Two On A Tower is a story of star-crossed love in which Hardy sets the emotional lives of his two lovers against the background of the stellar universe. In his story of star-crossed lovers, Two On A Tower, Hardy depicts the emotional journeys of his two lovers against the backdrop of the cosmos. When Lady Constantine, an unhappy married woman, falls in love with Swithin St. Cleeve, an astronomer who is ten years her junior, she defies all social norms. The lovers are free to be married after her husband dies, but the revelation of an inheritance keeps them apart. This is the fullest expression of Hardy's passion for science and astronomy, as well as his most thorough treatment of the issue of love across class and age, divides.

  • von James Oliver Curwood
    27,00 €

    The Valley Of Silent Men A Story Of The Three River Country is a fictional story book written by James Oliver Curwood. James Kent, who is terminally sick and may not have many days left to live, chooses to confess to a murder in order to save the life of an innocent man. No one, especially Marette, an enigmatic girl who had just recently appeared in Athabasca Landing, believed his confession. When Kent's sickness changes and his death is postponed, he decides to know more about the girl, with whom he ends up falling in love, despite the fact that she won't tell him anything about her background or what she knows about the crime. In the furthest regions of the Great White North, where three major rivers-the Athabasca, the Slave, and the McKenzie-flow and where something is hidden. It is a story of intrigue, suspense, action, and-above all-love.

  • von Thomas Bailey Aldrich
    27,00 €

    The Stillwater Tragedy is a murder mystery novel by Thomas Bailey Aldrich. The novel takes place in a small industrial town in New England whose peace is first shattered by the death of one of its important residents and then quickly followed by a general strike of all the trade unions. This book showcases Mr. Aldrich's ability and charisma as a storyteller. A hard and delicate touch is used to express the tragedy itself, the solving of the mystery surrounding it, and the love that shines through the entire narrative. The popularity of the narrative is assured, as is the stunning grace and precision with which it is told. The novel stands out for its style, realism, comedy, and how it treats its characters in addition to its charming, wholesome love story.

  • von Myrtle Reed
    28,00 €

    The garden had been deserted for a quarter of a century. Only a few lone blossoms managed to rise above the weeds throughout several summers. Frail ghosts of dead flowers were released from milkweed and thistles at night. As always, Miss Evelina Grey felt the icy, iron hand clutching her heart mercilessly as she awakened. She resembled some ethereal, disembodied kind of grief in her frailty. Anthony Dexter took his time getting ready and kept having the nagging sensation that something terrible had happened. Finally, he recalled that he had seen a ghost on the grounds of Evelina Grey's old home shortly before dark. He was silently surprised by a spirit carrying something he had forgotten long ago. Ralph Dexter was accused of the long-forgotten atrocities the village's young boys committed. Miss Mehitable brought the record up to the point at which he departed Rushton for college after receiving entrance preparation from his father. Nothing could be done since he was unable to lash out at his own father with his hand. Ralph had no idea that his father had observed his expression. Now he understood why Miss Evelina had declined to provide him with the man's name. When she begged him to leave her, he was also aware of the heinous temptation she was battling.

  • von R. Austin Freeman
    25,00 €

    The Uttermost Farthing is a fiction book written by R. Austin Freeman. The story begins with the murder of Humphrey Challoner's wife killed by a bullet from a robber at his home. Mr. Challoner is a wealthy genius man, and he collected the robber's fingerprints as well as part of his hair, which his wife was holding in her hand. He owns a private museum that houses a collection of human and animal skeletons as well as skulls that have shrunk. He hands over the museum and the archives to his doctor, who then makes known the Museum Archives, which contain the tales of how the skeletons were acquired and how Mr. Challoner ultimately tracked out the person who killed his wife. It's an interesting fictional detective story that will keep the readers interested to read on the story!

  • von Joseph Conrad
    25,00 €

    Joseph Conrad wrote a novella titled The End of the Tether in 1902. It was compiled and published by William Blackwood in Youth, a Narrative and Two Other Stories in 1902. Youth and Heart of Darkness were the other two tales in the collection. The protagonist of the tale is Henry Whalley, a widowed merchant service captain who was once known as the daredevil Harry Whalley, captain of the clipper Condor. He had been saving all of his life, but a banking collapse had cost him virtually everything. He had barely enough money left over to buy the Fair Maid as a bark "to play with" in his retirement. The event that shifts Whalley's trajectory is a letter from his daughter asking for financial assistance. In order to maintain himself and protect his remaining capital, he sells his ship, sends his daughter the needed amount of money, and forms a partnership with Massy, a man about whom he harbors grave concerns. He is now a stockholder and captain of the ship Sofala according to the agreement with Massy. Massy won the lottery when he bought the Sofala, and now that he's in debt, he's hoping for more good fortune.

  • von Mark Twain
    19,00 €

    The novel Tom Sawyer, Detective was written by Mark Twain in 1896. It is a continuation of Tom Sawyer Abroad (1876), The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn (1884), and The Adventures of Tom Sawyer (1876). (1894). In this parody of the wildly famous detective novels of the day, Tom Sawyer tries to investigate a mysterious murder. The story is recounted in Huck Finn's first-person narrative style, just like in Adventures of Huckleberry Finn. The plot of the novel, according to a 1909 accusation made by Danish schoolteacher Valdemar Thoresen in an essay published in the magazine Maaneds, was lifted verbatim from Steen Blicher's short story The Vicar of Weilby. Twain's secretary sent a note to Mr. Thoresen explaining that Mr. Clemens had not read the book you mentioned or any translations or adaptations of it that he was aware of. Blicher's work had been translated into German but not English. Twain/Clemens had the same right to utilize the subject matter as Blicher because it predated Blicher (the 1626 trial of Pastor Sren Jensen Quist of Vejlby).

  • von Grant Allen
    24,00 €

    The Woman Who Did (1895) is a novel written by Grant Allen. The story opens where the Cambridge-educated Herminia Barton, a clergyman's daughter, who relocates to London and begins a career as a teacher. She meets and falls in love with the lawyer Alan Merrick, and the two of them go to Italy together. However, Merrick passes away from typhoid before their daughter Dolores is born. Herminia cannot inherit any of Merrick's money due to legal quirks. Herminia raises her daughter as a single mother after moving back to England. Dolores, her daughter is ashamed of her mother's unmarried state. The story shows how a woman handles her tough situation. Read the complete novel to know what sacrifice Herminia made for her daughter.

  • von Francis Brett Young
    24,00 €

    The Tragic Bride is a novel based on a true event which is written by Francis Brett Young. The story of Frances Shea, wife of Reggie Kray, is one of the most tragic stories of the Sixties. Frances was lured into an outwardly glamorous world of nightclubs, expensive clothes, and showbiz parties, but soon discovered the real world of the Kray Twins, where violence, drink, drugs, and terror dominated everything. She broke away and briefly enjoyed other relationships, but Reggie would never let her go. Frances and her family were intricately entwined with the Twins' descent from gangland extortion and cruelty into senseless murder and mayhem by the time she wed Reggie in their 'Wedding of the Year' in 1965. Frances passed away from a heroin overdose two years later. Now, 50 years later, the truth about the life of Frances Shea and her short marriage to Reggie Kray is finally revealed in this novel. This book explodes the myths surrounding the marriage and reveals how the effect of this tragic, doomed relationship haunted the lives of Frances's loved ones right to the end.

  • von G. A. Henty
    26,00 €

    For lovers of the genre, this assortment of perilous maritime voyages makes a fantastic companion audiobook. Prepare yourself for high-stakes adventures rife with peril and thrills as G. A. Henty introduces you to a collection of stories about the Pacific pirates. Since this historical fiction is primarily marketed to young adults, you are sure to have a good time. G. A. Henty tells the story of pirates in India and the perilous seas they ply, of a shipwreck that leaves the Channel Islands survivors stranded, of an exciting set piece when a dam in California threatens to burst and to top it all off, he tells the thrilling tale of a daring escape from pirate captivity in China. G. A. Henty understands how to write an action-packed story about deadly sea brigands, and he chose a fantastic location for his collection of tales. Mike Harris, a seasoned voice actor who knows the value of building suspense with each syllable, narrates Among Malay Pirates and Other Tales of Peril and Adventure.

  • von Edgar Rice Burroughs
    21,00 €

    The People That Time Forgot is a fantasy book by American author Edgar Rice Burroughs, this is Burroughs's second book in his Caspak trilogy. The pulpy male adventure is found in The Land that Time Forgot. In the first tale, a shipbuilder named Bowen Tyler and his love interest Lys La Rue is on a cruise ship headed for France when a German U-boat sinks it. Following a grueling series of action scenes, the couple and their devoted dog are left stranded on an uncharted continent known as Caprona, or Caspak by the locals. Then, the story takes a turn to Tom Billings, secretary of the Tyler shipbuilding business embarks on a rescue mission to the ancient island of Caspak in order to save his friend, but after his aircraft is shot down by a pterodactyl, he is forced to enlist the aid of a stunning cavewoman to navigate the increasingly sophisticated human societies that live there. In the sequel, the book prompts a hunt for the missing survivors aboard the yacht "Toreador" under the direction of Billings, a former Tyler classmate. This story can take the readers to an adventurous emotion that how Tom Billings successfully turned his rescue mission!

  • von Victor Appleton
    24,00 €

    Tom Swift And His Big Tunnel Or The Hidden City Of The Andes is written by Victor Appleton. The story begins with the Titus Brothers Contractors company has won a government contract in Peru to blast a tunnel through a mountain and connect two isolated railroad lines. The deadline is drawing near, and the contractors have literally run into a brick wall since the rock is too hard to blast using standard methods. Mr. Job Titus wants to engage Tom Swift to create a unique blasting powder to aid in completing the dig since he has heard of Tom Swift and his enormous cannon. Later on, the story comes with Mr. Damon, Tom's good friend, being invested in a business that procures cinchona bark from Peru but prompting Mr. Tom will be invited Damon to travel with him to Peru so they can find the problem's origin. In the end, Tom, Mr. Damon, and Koku, Tom's giant, embark on Peru and encounter Professor Swyington Bumper, who is on a lifelong quest to locate the lost city of Pelone. When Professor Bumper discovers that Tom is headed to the same general area, Rimac, he decides to join the company. To discover the whole story readers should read the book!

  • von Arthur Griffiths
    23,00 €

    "The Rome Express" is a crime thriller novel by Arthur Griffith. The narration opens on One morning in March, as the Rome Express, the direttissimo, or most direct, approached Paris, the passengers of the sleeping car became aware that something was seriously wrong with the vehicle. The worst thing was confirmed when the porter forced open door number 7 of the first-class carriage after knocking on it but getting no response. This story has a turn when the victim of the stabbing was found lying dead. The law naturally takes its course, thus M. Floçon, a detective, was called in to look into the case and when he speaks with the passenger, he learns a shocking fact about the deceased. To know the shocking fact, readers should read this complete book which is interestingly written by Sir Griffth.

  • von Victor Appleton
    24,00 €

    Tom Swift And His War Tank Or Doing His Bit For Uncle Sam written by Victor Appleton. The popular science fiction and adventure series, in which the character develops incredible wartime inventions to rescue the day, was set at the time of the First World War. The United States joins in The Great War and everyone has war fever. Ned Newton has quit his job to sell liberty bonds, and Tom Swift is secretly developing a new tank for use in combat. The project is so secret that Tom does not even let his close friends know, and German nationals try to steal his tank. Tom's tank is bigger and able to travel at twice the speed of current models, with a maximum of 12 miles per hour. At the expense of limited firepower with four unspecified machine guns, the tank has heavier armor plating than the British tanks. Moreover, the interesting part to know is how Tom invented a war tank and then what happened next, which is possible after reading the novel!

  • von Thomas Hardy
    21,00 €

    Romantic Adventures of a Milkmaid is a long short story written by Thomas Hardy before 1883. The story revolves around Margery, a young, delicate, and stunning woman from a lower class. James Hayward, who works in a kiln, is her fiancé. Margery unwittingly saves a man from suicide when she comes upon him while walking to her grandmother's house one day. The man, who happens to be a Baron, is appreciative of her. Margery responds that her most cherished wish is to attend a ball and dance like a royal woman. James offers to fulfill any of her wishes. Margery's wish that live life to the fullest is fulfilled by the Baron. She quickly develops feelings for the Baron, who also expresses interest in her. Both parties are conscious of the barriers preventing such a connection, though. Margery and the Baron are very different socially, and she is already betrothed to a young man who loves her and is unwilling to leave her. This tale by Kipling tracks Margery's psychological development in a setting ruled by both real and fantastical powers.

  • von E. M. Forster
    29,00 €

    English author E. M. Forster's 1908 book A Room with a View is about a young woman living in the conservative society of Edwardian England. The story, which is set in both Italy and England, blends a love story with an amusing investigation of English society at the turn of the 20th century. In 1985, Merchant Ivory created a successful film adaptation. A Room with a View was named number 79 on The Modern Library's list of the top 100 English-language books published in the 20th century (1998). Early 1900s England's upper middle-class women are starting to live more autonomous, risk-taking lives when the book is set. In the first chapter, Miss Lucy Honeychurch travels through Italy with her overly picky spinster cousin Miss Charlotte Bartlett, who also serves as a chaperone. The women of the Pensione Bertolini in Florence are whining about their accommodations when the book opens. Despite being promised apartments with views of the River Arno, they were given ones that looked out onto a dull courtyard. Forster began writing the "Lucy novel," a book with an Italian setting, toward the end of 1902. He neglected it in 1903 and 1904 in order to focus on other tasks.

  • von Victor Appleton
    24,00 €

    Tom Swift in Captivity, or, A Daring Escape by Airship is an American juvenile science fiction novel which is written by Vector Appleton. Sir, Victor Appleton wrote more than 6 books in the same series with unique stories. The narration of this book opens with Sam Preston who is the owner of a circus, searching for a fresh draw for his sideshow. Mr. Preston is aware of a location in the South American forests where a race of giants dwells. Mr. Preston gives Tom a task to go get one while also helping to locate and save a missing hunter. Tom is given a princely sum to go find one or two of these creatures because Sam's show "must contain such a creature." Coincidentally, Preston has lost track of the person he was originally assigned to on this mission. To find the giants, Tom is competing with an immoral circus competitor. Tom must be the first to capture a giant, save the hunter, and flee the race of giants. Read to know, has Tom achieved his goal, given by Mr. Preston?

  • von Arthur M. Winfield
    26,00 €

    The Rover Boys at School was the first widely read and acclaimed series of young readers' adventure books. The story focuses on Sam and Tom's experiences at an American military college. The book opens with conversation between Sam and Tom. Sam says that he heard Uncle Randolph tell Aunt Martha that he wouldn't keep them in the house another week. Sam and Tom, The Rover Boys are excited to go to military college. Then, one of the main incident of The Rover Boys are well-liked in school, with the exception of Mr. Crabtree, the assistant headmaster. They resist him, but later pull a few nasty pranks on the headmaster. The boys believe it is wonderful and the Captain who owns and runs the school is a fine, fair man. They are mostly good people, save for when Tom pulls shady pranks. After reading the The Rover Boys At School, readers will love all these stories revolving around the sporting events of a main teacher and naughty students.

  • von G. K Chesterton
    26,00 €

    A Short History Of England is a book written by G. K. Chesterton which has a beginning of the popular histories are all, nearly without exception, written against the people, and in them, the populace is either ignored or elaborately proved to have been wrong. Green's "A Short History of the English People" seems to have been thought too short for the people to be properly mentioned. There is much in contemporary literature for portraits of men like Henry II. or Edward I, but this did not seem to have been found or even sought. A popular Encyclopedia appeared some years ago, professing among other things to teach English History to the masses. It would be absurd to pretend to have achieved proportion, but the author will confess to some attempt to correct a disproportion. English history is misread especially, he thinks because the crisis is missed. It is usually put about the period of the Stuarts, and many of the memorials suffer from the same visitation. The House of Commons became, for good or evil, a great organ of government, surviving the Church, the monarchy, and the mob; it did many great and not a few good things.

  • von Jules Verne
    24,00 €

    The Underground City is a novel with mystery and adventurous elements, set in a huge fantastic coal mine in Scotland. The story begins with James Starr, a mining engineer, receiving a letter from Mr. Ford, the retired overman of the now-depleted Aberfoyle mine. In the letter, Mr. Ford makes reference to new discoveries that have been made underground and invites Starr to visit. Starr receives a second letter at the same time asking him not to go. Unfazed, Starr joins Ford's son at the station, and both of them travel to the former mineshaft where Starr meets Mr. Ford, who actually resides in the mine in a cottage with his wife and kid, after cheerfully descending the 1,500-foot ladder. Now, the story is set in a coal mine that has been restored and is now prosperous. Later on, the story can amaze you with the pioneering of an underground city with electric lighting, a railway, and a central lake which is an interesting part to read How can people live and thrive 1500 feet below the surface of the earth?

  • von D. H. Lawrence
    20,00 €

    When the miners threaten to go on strike, Gerald Barlow, the colliery master in Touch and Go, behaves in accordance with form and is disdainful and unwavering. It's not their narrative; it's his. Gerald has modernized the pit and dehumidified the employees since his father before him was too lenient with the guys, and he has nothing but contempt for their efforts to exert authority.They make an effort each day. They lack the intellect to run contemporary business, hence they could never do it. They are not intelligent living forms. The owners might not have much, but Labour does not. They are merely mechanical cubes that can do one or two moves before being finished. They are as ignorant of life as a lawnmower.The villain is unmistakably the Labour representative, Job Arthur Freer, who cosies up to Gerald in secret and joyfully accepts a pocketful of pricey cigars before turning on his master after receiving a pounding from him.The third and final act will inevitably have a final confrontation. When it did, nothing noteworthy happened, and the play abruptly ended as if there had been a curfew on the theatre and the time had run out. Oliver, a friend of Gerald's, did give a rambling speech about Capital and Labour battling over the same stick, but it was essentially meaningless.

  • von G. K Chesterton
    25,00 €

    A happy and innocent people who were primarily shepherds and farmers formerly resided on an island. Not in an idolatrous manner, but rather as the golden crown of the deity that all such children perceive almost as clearly as the sun, they worshipped the sun. They devised a beautiful Gothic-style cathedral under the new inspiration. But this brilliant scheme was never completely carried out. People who view schoolchildren as just barbaric and wooden make the error of forgetting how much of schoolchildren's lives are public and ceremonial.Like dogs, boys have a romantic ritual that doesn't necessarily reflect who they are. Therefore, the notion that a little aversion to tourist attractions is caused by a fundamental mismatch between the concepts of unique shrines and awards must be rejected. The Duc de Chambertin-Pommard was a little but vibrant remnant of an aristocratic family, whose members were almost exclusively atheists until the French Revolution. The Sentimentalist and the Imperialist of the Roosevelt school sway back and forth between them. He wants the benefits of achievement without the risks or the best of both worlds. Asia may be held as a slave by Europe, but this is not acceptable since it would be irresponsible. However, he made sure that Dickens was countered with the appropriate caution and criticism.

  • von L. Frank Baum
    25,00 €

    L. Frank Baum's ninth book, The Scarecrow of Oz, is set in the Land of Oz. The story starts with Cap'n Bill who is a sea captain with a wooden peg leg, and a little child named Trot. They set off from California for a little journey on a quiet day, in their rowboat. They are shortly joined by an Ork, a winged creature. Then, they meet the Bumpy Man, a purveyor of sugar and molasses. Later in the story, they reach a place named Jinxland which is cut off from the rest of the Oz by a range of high mountains. The story turns when Cap'n Bill is turned into a grasshopper by Blinkie who is a witch. They get into a series of problems, now how will they overcome their situation? The story takes lots of twists and turns which is beautifully penned by L. Frank Baum. The characters of the story make the book interesting to read.

  • von Anne Bronte
    27,00 €

    Anne Bronte, an English novelist, published her first book, Agnes Grey, in 1847. (writing under the pen name of ""Acton Bell""). Agnes Grey is upset that she is treated like a kid by everyone. She finally secures a position with the Bloomfield family as a governess. Agnes had no idea that the Bloomfields would be as wealthy and vicious as they are. The eldest Bloomfield child, Tom, is very cruel and has even tortured small animals.Agnes starts by going to see Nancy Brown, a frail elderly woman who needs assistance reading the Bible. When she first meets Mr. Edward Weston, the new curate, he chooses some wild primroses for her. Agnes receives a note from Mary, who is now wed to Mr. Richardson, the clergyman of a parish close to their house. Mary is Agnes' sister. Mary begs Agnes to come and informs her that their father is dying. When Agnes finally arrives, her father is already dead. She departs from Ashby Park and goes back home. She meets Mr. Weston a few months after she first comes; he had been seeking her ever since he moved to the neighborhood parsonage. They had three kids together after he makes the marriage proposal.

  • von Russell H. Conwell
    23,00 €

    The well-known American Baptist clergyman, orator, philanthropist, lawyer, and author Russell Conwell explains how prosperity is a spiritual notion and the outcome of one's spiritual beliefs in the current book, Acres of Diamonds. This book demonstrates where to seek to find a fortune. Conwell created opportunities for countless millions of people because he had the belief that ""all good things are achievable."" Acres of Diamonds is a reflection of his fundamental conviction that every one of us is here on Earth primarily to be of service to others. Conwell was a preacher who founded two hospitals where no one has ever turned away due to financial hardship, as well as Temple University. He was a well-known professor as well.The main plot concerns a Persian farmer who, ironically, lost a sizable amount of money while searching for a diamond mine when, in fact, his farmland-which he had sold to pay for his search-actually contained acres of diamonds. Conwell provides several further instances of tales centered around commodities like gold, oil, etc. Remember that the grass isn't always greener on the other side and don't dismiss your current situation, knowledge, and connections too fast. Despite some rambling, it's still a fantastic narrative with a timeless moral.

  • von Victor Appleton
    24,00 €

    Tom Swift And His Aerial Warship Or The Naval Terror Of The Seas written by Victor Appleton. The Great War, often known as World War I, was well underway when the story was written in 1915. The narration starts with Tom introducing his most recent invention to his friend Ned Newton. While having this conversation they both observed fire breaking out in one of the sheds where explosives are kept. Then, an investigation reveals that the fire was intentionally started after it had been extinguished. Moreover, Tom has asked Lieutenant Marbury from the Navy to inspect his new airship as he is ready to present it to the US government. Later on, Marbury warns Tom of a potential scheme to destroy his inventions, both old and new. Tom Swift dismisses the concept, but he quickly learns otherwise when foreign spies with an unknown motive commandeer his new airship. In this tale, Tom resolves the problem of excessive weapon recoil by creating a massive airship for military usage. The story has a unique and thriller ending which should be read!

  • von Mabel Thorne
    25,98 €

    The Sheridan Road Mystery is a mystery novel written by Paul and Mabel Thorne. This story will take you to a police officer responding to a call in one of Chicago's most upscale neighborhoods who hear a shooting, but upon further inquiry, no victim or witnesses are found. In this tale, a police officer is making his routine nighttime rounds in one of Chicago's most upscale neighborhoods when he hears a gunshot. However, after a thorough inquiry, the corpse is not found. The police officer and the neighbors, who assert to have heard the shooting and the altercation, suffer significantly as a result. Detective Sergeant Dave Morgan, one of Chicago's top detectives, is tasked with solving this mystery. Although there are just the thinnest of leads, Detective Sergeant Morgan quickly concludes that something has happened and someone has vanished. Will Sir Morgan get to know the bottom of this uptown mysterious story? Read to know how Detective Moran has solved this mystery!

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