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War paint

Robert Winchester

"War paint by Robert Winchester" is a pulp western short story written in the late 1920s. Set on the Texas-Mexico border, it blends swift frontier action with a whirlwind romance, focusing on Texas Rangers, cross-border raids, and a willful society girl drawn into their dangerous world. The plot follows Elaine Webb, a wealthy New Yorker visiting her army-officer brother in Texas, who trades barbs—and sparks—with young Ranger Bud Yancey. After witnessing a sudden street gunfight that leaves Bud wounded, Elaine drifts closer to him, only to quarrel when he blocks her from driving into a fresh skirmish. Soon Garcia’s bandits mount a major raid; soldiers rush out, and Elaine, circling by back trails, stumbles upon Bud and Sam Earp, bloodied yet still pursuing the fleeing raiders above the Three C ranch. Lieutenant Webb and his men arrive in time to finish the fight. In the aftermath, as Bud is carried out, Elaine confesses her love, and the story closes on their hard-won understanding amid the dust and danger of the border. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

La Costa d'Avorio

Emilio Salgari

"La Costa d''Avorio" by Emilio Salgari is an adventure novel written in the late 19th century. It centers on Alfredo Lusarno, a Sicilian hunter-planter on the Ivory Coast, and his companion Antao as they collide with African wildlife and the feared warriors of Dahomey after the kidnapping of Alfredo’s young brother. The tale promises jungle and river perils, treachery, and a personal vendetta with the Dahomey cabecero Kalani and his Amazons. The opening of the novel finds Alfredo and Antao hunting hippopotami on the Ousme when a hidden watcher and distant gunshots hint at danger near Alfredo’s farm. After killing a charging hippo, they spot a spy, use decoy “bodies” to mislead pursuers, and hurry into the forest, where Alfredo slays a leopard to save a wounded young Amazon of Dahomey. She admits her party was sent to seize Alfredo and to attack his farm under Kalani’s orders. Racing back, they meet a servant who confirms the farm has been sacked and burned and that Alfredo’s brother Bruno has been abducted. A brief backstory reveals Kalani’s hatred and rise to power, prompting Alfredo to vow a rescue and seek aid from King Tofa. At dawn they return to the injured Amazon, who agrees to follow them, as they treat her wounds and prepare their next move. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

She who sleeps : A romance of New York and the Nile

Sax Rohmer

"She who sleeps : A romance of New York and the Nile" by Sax Rohmer is a novel written in the early 20th century. It blends New York society intrigue with Egyptian archaeology and a hint of the supernatural. The story centers on Barry Cumberland, a wealthy collector’s son haunted by a mysterious, priestess-like woman and drawn into an expedition proposed by the imposing dealer Danbazzar, whose papyrus hints at a princess preserved alive across millennia. Expect romance, occult science, and a transatlantic chase that links a modern mystery to pharaonic secrets. The opening of the story follows Barry racing through a mountain storm, glimpsing an Egyptian-looking woman on a balcony moments before crashing his car, then awakening in a hospital with a nameless rescuer and no way to trace the site. He finds the secluded house but meets only a hostile caretaker and shuttered windows, later spotting the same woman from afar in a walled garden, again behind a veil in a passing limousine, and possibly once more at a pier. Meanwhile, Barry’s father entertains Danbazzar, who unveils a unique papyrus about Princess Zalithea, a captive allegedly placed into suspended life in Seti’s time; experts authenticate the document while debating its claims, and Danbazzar reveals he has located the unopened tomb and a related formula. John Cumberland agrees to fund an excavation up the Nile, and as plans form, Barry prepares to depart—still compelled by the elusive woman whose appearances bookend the beginning. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

Les cœurs les plus farouches

James Oliver Curwood

"Les cœurs les plus farouches" by James Oliver Curwood is a novel written in the early 20th century. Set in the Canadian Arctic, it follows Sergeant William Mac Veigh of the Royal Northwest Mounted Police as a hunt for the fugitive Scottie Deane collides with themes of isolation, loyalty, and conflicting duties, especially after Mac Veigh encounters Isabelle, the outlaw’s devoted wife. The opening of the novel shows Mac Veigh stationed at desolate Pointe Fullerton, caring for his companion Pelletier, who is unraveling from loneliness, and preparing a grueling sledge run to Fort Churchill for medicine and mail. After hearing of a mysterious white couple in the barrens, he ventures out and meets a young woman hauling a “coffin,” whom he aids and protects through a storm—only to learn at dawn that she is Isabelle Deane and the coffin was a ruse to shield her living husband, Scottie; they have taken his weapons and slipped away, leaving a note appealing to his compassion. A blizzard drives in a second pursuit party led by the hard, untrustworthy Bucky Smith; Mac Veigh misleads them, then secretly follows the trail alone, determined to outfox Bucky and safeguard the couple even as he tracks them. He reads the snow for signs of their passage—fires, brief rests, and difficult crossings—closing the distance until the chase reaches a treacherous slope where the terrain itself becomes perilous. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

A sailor boy with Dewey : or, Afloat in the Philippines

Edward Stratemeyer

"A sailor boy with Dewey : or, Afloat in the Philippines" by Edward Stratemeyer is a juvenile adventure novel written in the late 19th century. It follows Oliver Raymond, a plucky American teenager bound for Manila who is shipwrecked in a typhoon and plunged into dangers among hostile islanders and warring forces as he struggles to reunite with friends and reach safety. Key figures include his loyal chum Dan Holbrook, the steady mate Tom Dawson, and the drunken, menacing Captain Kenny. Expect fast-paced nautical peril, jungle escapes, and the path toward Commodore Dewey’s campaign. The opening of the story follows Oliver from a business-tinged “holiday” trip toward Manila aboard the schooner Dart to a violent hurricane, a collision with a Chinese vessel, and a desperate abandonment of ship in small boats that separates him from Dan. Oliver’s boat, led by second mate Watt Brown and burdened by the treacherous Captain Kenny, survives a brutal night at sea and reaches the Luzon coast; Dawson’s boat later appears, but Dan is feared drowned. While foraging and scouting, the survivors encounter grisly signs of local warfare, a giant bat attack, and the Dart stranded up the coast—only to be confronted by Tagal tribesmen who seize the wreck and capture the castaways. A lightning-splintered storm enables Oliver and Dawson to escape through a flooded forest, elude pursuit (and a cayman), glimpse a distant battle between Spanish troops and insurgents, link up with the Chinese cook Ah Sid, and ready a small boat to run for Subig Bay—just as unseen figures approach. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

Saïd the fisherman

Marmaduke William Pickthall

"Saïd the fisherman" by Marmaduke William Pickthall is a novel written in the early 20th century. It appears to be a picaresque tale set in the eastern Mediterranean, following a poor but ambitious fisherman whose superstition, pride, and quick wits drive him from his coastal town into a string of risky encounters. Through Saïd’s brushes with Ottoman soldiers, crafty villagers, a mendicant, and a Christian missionary’s household, the story weighs luck against fate and pokes at human folly with sly humor. Expect vivid local color, moral ambiguity, and an anti-hero propelled as much by vanity as by need. The opening of the novel shows Saïd losing the day’s earnings to galloping officers and then discovering his hidden savings stolen after his wife is lured out by a voice mimicking his friend Abdullah’s—who then “advises” him to flee and opportunistically claims Saïd’s home and gear. Saïd and his wife, Hasneh, set out; soldiers confiscate his donkey, he’s struck and humiliated, and on the road he learns from a beggar about a generous Frankish preacher, robs a camel-driver for ransom, and abandons the ailing Hasneh in a village, promising vaguely to send for her. Seeking the missionary’s help, he is chased off by a servant, sneaks back to steal a fine robe and fez, and escapes after the servant falls into a pit; dressed in his new finery, he bluffs his way into deference at a roadside khan. The section closes with Saïd basking in mistaken status as talk of soldiers and war stirs around him, setting the tone for a journey of gambles, imposture, and shifting fortune. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

Die Flucht der Beate Hoyermann : Roman

Thea von Harbou

"Die Flucht der Beate Hoyermann : Roman" by Thea von Harbou is a novel written in the early 20th century. It likely blends travel adventure with espionage and wartime suspense, following Beate Hoyermann and her husband Gerhard as a carefree journey through Japan turns into a hazardous bid for escape under political suspicion and looming conflict. Themes of cultural encounter, natural catastrophe, and the creeping onset of war frame their peril. The opening of the novel follows Beate through bustling Japanese streets to a hilltop temple, interweaving her and Gerhard’s world travels with sharp, curious observations of Africa, America, and Japan. Gerhard confides they are being shadowed by Japanese police; at the theater their friend Tystendal brings the shattering news of the Archduke’s assassination and hints at wider war. That night an earthquake and fire destroy the nearby city; Beate drags her distraught maid Yuki from the water as boats capsize in the blazing bay, and afterward they discover Gerhard’s papers have been rifled. Weeks of rain and a mysteriously absent ship delay their departure, until a German‑speaking stranger warns that the authorities suspect Gerhard as a spy and will quietly prevent their return to Europe, revealing a pervasive, efficient surveillance that now entangles them. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

The mid of the maintop

Arthur Lee Knight

"The mid of the maintop by Arthur Lee Knight" is a juvenile naval adventure story from the late 19th century Victorian era. Set during British anti-slavery patrols off East Africa, it centers on courage, seamanship, and duty as a frigate’s crew hunts slavers and faces peril ashore and afloat. The story opens with H.M.S. Forte in a storm, where midshipman Jack Villiers is swept overboard and presumed dead. Later, a cutter under young Thring discovers a dhow in the Joo-joo river and, after a rough boarding fight, learns Jack is alive but carried inland by Arab slavers. The frigate launches a naval brigade that storms a fortified village ruled by Sooltan Shah, blasting the gate and fighting hand-to-hand while their officer is wounded. Meanwhile, Jack frees himself by cunning, tunnels out of his hut, hides in a tree, and escapes by canoe downriver. He reunites with the boats as the force withdraws, and the tale closes on fellowship restored after brisk action, narrow escapes, and the disruption of the slavers’ trade. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

The adventures of Twinkly Eyes the little Black Bear

Allen Chaffee

The adventures of Twinkly Eyes the little Black Bear by Allen Chaffee is a children’s nature adventure written in the early 20th century. The story follows a lively black bear cub named Twinkly Eyes (and his brother Woof) as he learns survival skills in the woods through playful mishaps and close calls. Episodic encounters with porcupines, snakes, storms, bees, rabbits, a lynx, and even a curious farm boy mix humor with gentle peril, while slipping in simple natural-history lessons. It’s a warm, instructive woodland romp designed to nurture empathy for wildlife. The opening of the story shows Twinkly shoved into a lake by his brother, rescued by their watchful mother, and hastily taught to swim—and to climb—when a black snake slithers near and a prickly porcupine family commandeers their pond and tree. A thunderstorm brings practical guidance about sheltering among safer trees, while Mother Bear warns that lightning and men with guns are the true dangers. As seasons turn, Twinkly grows bolder: he’s misled by a jay toward squirrel nests, then braves a bee tree for honey, gets badly stung, falls, and cools the swelling with clay before dozing off satisfied. He spies the secretive Cottontail clan (and later their moonlit “bunny ball”), tries to ambush a rabbit but falls asleep, and narrowly evades a fox alert. A meeting with a farm boy ends with Twinkly stealing a trout and outwitting an attempted treetop capture, while Mother Bear coolly teaches new cubs to fish. Further episodes include mistaking a wasp nest for a bee trove despite a porcupine’s warning and a young lynx learning the hard way why porcupine quills demand respect. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

A millionaire at sixteen : or, The cruise of the Guardian-Mother

Oliver Optic

“A millionaire at sixteen : or, The cruise of the Guardian-Mother” by Oliver Optic is a juvenile adventure novel written in the late 19th century. It follows Louis Belgrave, a level‑headed sixteen-year-old who has unexpectedly become a millionaire, as he embarks on sea-going adventures shaped by duty to his mother, guidance from a prudent trustee, and the lure of world travel. Expect nautical action, moral tests, and a globe‑trotting premise centered on yachting, with figures like the genial Uncle Moses, the seasoned Captain Ringgold, and a menacing former stepfather complicating the voyage. The opening of the story sets up Louis’s fortune, character, and intentions: after good‑natured sparring with his trustee about wealth and prudence, he plans to buy a modest schooner for quiet cruising with his mother. A suave stranger, “Mr. Frinks Fobbington,” offers a too‑good‑to‑be‑true yacht inspection at Southfield; Louis goes with his mother, Captain Ringgold, and his friend Felix. Once aboard, the schooner unexpectedly gets under way, and Louis discovers it is actually the Maud, commanded by his mother’s disreputable former husband, with “Fobbington” revealed as the mate. As a blow rises and the crew traps Ringgold and Felix below, Louis tends to his seasick mother, steels her resolve against the villain, then slips through a pantry passage, pries open the lower hatch, and frees his companions. The section closes with the group regrouping in the second cabin amid worsening weather, learning they are bound for England, and preparing to resist. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

The trail of deception

W. C. (Wilbur C.) Tuttle

"The trail of deception" by W. C. Tuttle is a Western novel written in the early 20th century. It follows Jim Bailey, a down-on-his-luck city bookkeeper who assumes the identity of “Jim Meade” to claim the Lazy H ranch in Arizona at the urging of a scheming lawyer, Ed McLean, drawing him into rustling, murder, and small-town suspicion while Mary Deal and the mysterious cowhand Skeeter Smith complicate his path. The opening of this novel shows Bailey declared dead after his roommate dies wearing Bailey’s suit and watch, prompting Bailey to take a letter meant for the roommate and travel to Pinnacle City under the alias “Jim Meade.” There he learns a new will leaves the Lazy H to a nephew named Jim Meade, not to Mary Deal who was raised by the deceased rancher; the banker is wary, the townspeople resent him, and three drunken allies of Mary bungle a prank-turned-threat. After a fatal bank shooting removes the skeptical banker, McLean installs Bailey at the ranch, where Bailey’s painful attempts to become a cowhand lead him to stumble upon covert branding; rustlers kill his horse and he barely escapes, rescued by Skeeter, who later pressures McLean and hints at knowing the real Meade. Tensions spike when Bailey punches McLean in town, and the section ends with Tellurium and Archibald plotting a holdup as masked men enter McLean’s office, tightening the knot of conspiracy and danger. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

Moon of madness

Sax Rohmer

"Moon of madness" by Sax Rohmer is a novel written in the early 20th century. It blends romantic adventure with espionage, following narrator George Decies as he’s drawn into Major Edmond O’Shea’s covert mission to stop Communist agents from smuggling documents that could imperil a royal figure. Set chiefly in sun-drenched Madeira, it centers on wilful debutante Nanette, her earnest suitor Jack Kelton, the enigmatic O’Shea, and the predatory Gabriel da Cunha. Expect flirtation, danger, and a cat‑and‑mouse pursuit that turns a holiday idyll into high-stakes intrigue. The opening of the novel introduces the party at Reid’s Hotel in Funchal, where Nanette’s reckless charm and Jack’s devotion collide with the arrival of O’Shea and the sinister da Cunha. After Nanette’s near-scandalous escapades and a tense night at the casino, O’Shea reveals his mission: recover a black dispatch-box tied to a royal scandal, now in da Cunha’s orbit. When Nanette secretly meets da Cunha at his hill bungalow, Jack and Decies—led by O’Shea—race up a goat track; Jack is felled in a brutal fight, O’Shea drops da Cunha and seizes the box. O’Shea then departs, breaking Nanette’s heart with a calculated “goodbye,” but returns covertly when it’s learned the letters were photographed; with Macalister acting for da Cunha, Nanette boldly outswims pursuit at a moonlit harbour to snatch the portfolio from a motor cruiser and deliver it to O’Shea, setting the stage for further danger as the Reds try again. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

Law-star for an outlaw

W. C. (Wilbur C.) Tuttle

"Law-star for an outlaw by W. C. Tuttle" is a Western crime novelette written in the mid-20th century. The story centers on Irish Delaney, a hard-riding cowhand who returns to Dancing Flats to clear his uncle’s name and take on a secret vigilante outfit known as the Night Hawks. Irish finds his uncle Hank Farley posthumously framed as the infamous Ghost Rider, while the Night Hawks terrorize locals with threats and “justice” notes. After a robbery and the murder of Al Briggs put suspicion on him, Irish survives an ambush, escapes a kidnapping to the abandoned Lost Goose mine, and prevents a booby-trap from killing the sheriff and deputy. Tracking leads—and the scent on a forged decoy letter—bring him to a showdown at the old 74 ranch, where Buck French is wounded and the revered minister is unmasked as an ex-forger named Strickland, the real Ghost Rider and mastermind of the Night Hawks; the stolen money lies hidden under the church. With the plot exposed and order restored, Irish quietly reveals he’s now a Deputy U.S. Marshal with a family, having returned not for glory but to see justice done. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

Skeeter Bill comes to town

W. C. (Wilbur C.) Tuttle

"Skeeter Bill comes to town by W. C. Tuttle" is a Western novelet written in the mid-20th century. The story centers on a lanky, straight-shooting cowhand who returns to a dusty cattle town and stirs up trouble for the real culprits behind a notorious bank robbery. It blends range feuds, saloon politics, and a clever unraveling of a frame-up. Skeeter Bill Sarg rides back to Yellow Butte to honor the twelfth birthday of his namesake, the son of his jailed friend Hooty Edwards—convicted for a bank job Skeeter doubts he committed. As Skeeter visits old allies like fiery rancher Fuzzy Davis and his stern wife, strange attacks begin: a dummy he rigs at a fenced spring is riddled at dawn, and later he’s ambushed outside Margie Edwards’ house, where outlaw Dutch Held is secretly shot dead by his own partner. At the packed inquest, Skeeter springs a trap with bold bluff and sharper shooting, exposing a ring led by cattleman Sam Keenan, aided by saloon front man Slim Lacey and deadly foreman Johnny Greer. Lacey confesses to drugging Hooty’s drinks to set him up while Keenan looted the bank and tried to pressure Margie. With the plot laid bare and Keenan finished, Hooty’s name is set to be cleared, Margie is granted the Tumbling K, and Skeeter quietly seals it all with a simple gift: “Happy Birthday” to the boy. (This is an automatically generated summary.)