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Tuintjes

C. M. van (Catharina Magdalena) Hille-Gaerthé

Tuintjes by C. M. van Hille-Gaerthé is a collection of short stories written in the early 20th century. The book delicately explores how gardens and small green places shape human feeling and connection—within marriages, among children, and across the final years of life. In the first story, a man’s devotion to his garden strains his marriage when his wife cuts his campanulas out of spite; yet a gentle evening—walking with their anxious child and sharing quiet tea—opens a path toward tenderness. The second follows a mother who dreams of a perfect future garden but, through her children’s messy plots, games, and the gift of a single sugared strawberry, learns to cherish the abundant life of the present. The last paints a springtime hofje where elderly women tend tiny beds, nurse old slights and friendships, and receive a visiting painter; beneath pear blossoms, small rituals and whispered sympathies glow, and the tale closes on a soft meditation about age, time, and who will live to see the fruit ripen. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

Lord Lister No. 0033: De Alarmkreet

Kurt Matull

"Lord Lister No. 0033: De Alarmkreet" by Kurt Matull and Theo von Blankensee is a serialized crime adventure story written in the early 20th century. It follows the gentleman-thief John C. Raffles (Lord Lister) and his loyal aide Charly Brand as they target a scurrilous London weekly, De Alarmkreet, whose editor Röttger and his partner “the Beautiful Guido” extort and slander for profit. Raffles mounts an elaborate sting to expose the blackmailers, protect their victims, and simultaneously outmaneuver the ever-harried Inspector Baxter. The opening of the story paints De Alarmkreet as a gaudy yet shabby scandal sheet that hides its editors and survives by shaking down the vulnerable. After the paper smears Raffles, Charly meets fur-merchant Thomas Spancer, who is being blackmailed over a shopgirl’s attempted suicide. Raffles then lures editor Röttger by posing as “Detective Marholm,” brandishing a forged “Raffles-to-Baxter” letter that suggests police collusion, which prompts Röttger and Guido to try extorting Inspector Baxter directly. The real Marholm overhears, privately contacts Raffles, and agrees to help spring the trap. Next, Raffles masquerades as “Lord Melbourne,” the supposed poisoner of his stepmother, and receives the pair in his villa with Charly disguised as a butler, setting up a “salutary lesson” as the confrontation begins. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

On the mountain : or, Lost and found

Lucy Ellen Guernsey

"On the mountain; or, Lost and found" by Lucy Ellen Guernsey is a didactic children''s novel written in the late 19th century. It centers on Fanny Lilly, a spoiled Boston girl sent to her grandmother’s mountain farm, where her pride, dishonesty, and class snobbery are challenged by firm discipline, a steady farm boy named Willy, and a wild neighbor, Sarah Leyman. The tale blends homely incidents with moral testing, emphasizing truthfulness, humility, and Christian faith amid small-town gossip and real peril. At the start of the story, Fanny returns from church full of contempt and is firmly checked by her grandmother, leading to a showdown over dinner that ends in tears, bread-and-milk, and a sketch of Fanny’s pampered past and her exile to the farm. Despite warnings, she falls in with Sarah, who helps steal a pie through the milkroom slats; when the theft is discovered, Fanny lies smoothly while Willy is questioned. Conversations reveal Fanny’s startling ignorance (even about the Holy Land), she overeats, falls ill, and then declares she will be “good,” though mostly in appearance. An errand introduces her to kindly Mrs. Cassell, Annie Mercer, and Mr. Brandon, who lends books, while Sarah confronts Fanny about confession and hypocrisy; soon after, Sarah saves Fanny from a loose bull by sacrificing the girl’s red cloak. Fanny remains fearful and evasive as mountain dangers are noted; when Sarah quietly attends a prayer meeting, Fanny slanders her to keep her and her grandmother apart, prompting Willy to rebuke Fanny’s snobbery and deceit as the opening section closes. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

The strange house : or, A moment's mistake

Catharine Shaw

"The strange house : or, A moment''s mistake" by Catharine Shaw is a novel written in the late 19th century. The story blends domestic drama, a gentle mystery, and Christian moral themes as young governess Gertrude Ashlyn joins the Shaddock family near Hampstead and becomes uneasy about the secretive neighbor in the “Strange House.” Alongside her work with spirited pupils—especially sensitive Hugh and trouble-prone Randall—runs her sister Rose’s ongoing search for a missing child and a quiet current of unspoken love from family friend Otto. It promises a tale of home life, conscience, and providence threaded through with a suburban mystery. The opening of the story sets two lines in motion: the Shaddock boys witness a policeman seize their furtive neighbor while unexplained lights gleam in his supposedly solitary house, and far away by the sea Gertrude accepts a governess post as her widowed mother’s eyesight fails, leaving Otto to wrestle with his feelings. On arrival, Gertrude meets brisk Mollie, sober Daisy, bullied Hugh, and impish Randall, endures a chaotic household, and quietly steadies herself with prayer. Conway pokes into the neighbor’s habits; a marmalade prank hints at Randall’s mischief; and a chance spill from the neighbor’s basket—rice, sewing, and a small pair of mended child’s shoes—stirs Gertrude’s memory of Rose’s vanished little Lester. The narrative then reveals a woman and man hiding a child in that house, letters addressed to “X. Y. Z.”, and a late-night dash to a Highgate school where their older boy, Johnnie, dies after begging his mother to return the abducted child to his real mother. Rose, reading Gertrude’s letter, resolves to visit, while a bank-note mishap at the Shaddocks’ ends with Randall blaming Hugh and their mother misjudging the case, leaving tensions high as the opening section closes. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

The two countesses

Marie von Ebner-Eschenbach

"The two countesses" by Marie von Ebner-Eschenbach is a novel written in the late 19th century. It juxtaposes two aristocratic women—impulsive, witty Muschi and reflective, principled Paula—each facing courtship, convention, and the pull between love and social ambition within the Austro-Hungarian nobility. Expect lively social comedy, sharp character sketches, and probing questions about integrity, vanity, and how marriages are made. The beginning of the novel alternates between Countess Muschi’s breezy letters and Countess Paula’s earnest memoirs. Muschi, bored at Sebenberg, sizes up a visiting Swabian suitor, spars with his pedantry, stages pranks and hunts, then deftly redirects his proposal to her demure friend Clara Aarheim—securing their engagement while revealing her own restless standards. In contrast, Paula recalls a sheltered upbringing, a crisis of conscience that ended her enthusiasm for hunting, and a deepening intellectual life (sparked by Don Quixote) as her family steers her toward the proud Count Taxen. At soirées she encounters the idealistic, unlucky Baron Schwarzburg, whose integrity captivates her, even as gossip swirls and her parents press the advantageous match with Taxen. The opening closes with Paula refusing to feign affection for the approved suitor and bracing for a family confrontation. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

Paras ystävätär : Avioliittoromaani

Martti Wuori

"Paras ystävätär : Avioliittoromaani" by Martti Wuori is a marriage novel written in the early 20th century. It portrays an intense friendship between the wealthy school-leaver Toini Karppi and her younger schoolmate Hillevi, whose beauty and precocious poise draw admiring eyes and stir rivalries. As the ambitious lawyer Herbert Hursti courts Toini, a subtle triangle forms, testing loyalty, class sensibilities, and the boundaries of female friendship on the brink of marriage. The opening follows a school recess where Toini openly dotes on Hillevi and invites her to lavish birthday dances at the Karppi home, provoking classmates’ envy. At the ball, Hillevi’s striking looks and dancing captivate the room—and catch Herbert’s eye—while his ongoing attentions to Toini advance toward an unspoken understanding. A summer in Baden-Baden cements the engagement, after which Hillevi’s hurt surfaces briefly before she reconciles and frequents the couple’s company, masking deeper feelings with tact and charm. Preparations intensify as the groom shifts into diplomatic service and the family readies a grand church wedding, with the narrative poised at the decorated altar as the ceremony approaches. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

Torpan tyttö : Kaksinäytöksinen näytelmä

Kaarlo Luoto

"Torpan tyttö : Kaksinäytöksinen näytelmä by Kaarlo Luoto" is a stage play written in the early 20th century. The drama centers on a crofter’s daughter whose integrity collides with class prejudice and collaboration with the Russian authorities, turning a hopeful betrothal into a grave moral test. Hilma, the diligent daughter of torppari Mäkelä and Katri, is courted by Ville, heir to the wealthy Heinämäki farm. Though Heinämäki first insults her and tries to bully the family—going so far as to buy their tenancy to evict them—public esteem for Hilma (a prize from the folk college and an offer to teach handicrafts) softens him, and the betrothal is set. At the celebration, however, it emerges that Heinämäki and Ville have sold a prime strip of shoreline to Russians for fortification. Hilma condemns the sale as a betrayal of the nation, breaks the engagement, and refuses to support cowardice for gain. Desperate, Ville shoots himself; Heinämäki collapses into madness, raving about medals and land, and must be restrained. The community affirms Hilma’s courage, framing the tragedy as the price of moral compromise rather than the fault of the “torpan girl.” (This is an automatically generated summary.)

Many Marriages

Sherwood Anderson

Many Marriages by Sherwood Anderson is a novel written in the early 20th century. It follows John Webster, a Midwestern washing-machine manufacturer whose sudden inner awakening disrupts his settled marriage and draws him toward his secretary, Natalie Swartz. Through sensuous imagery and introspective monologue, the book probes love, desire, conscience, and the constraints of modern respectability as Webster questions his roles as husband, father, and businessman. The opening of the novel frames an “Explanation” to magazine readers and a foreword meditating on the terror of direct actions in love, then plunges into Webster’s day of upheaval. At work and in town, he experiences a torrent of heightened perceptions and symbols—the body-as-house, black laborers singing, a green stone—while testing his world against these revelations. He studies his wife Mary’s heaviness, his daughter Jane’s unread face, and the quiet dignity of their servant Katherine; he wanders parks and streets, considers escaping to Chicago for anonymous indulgence, then returns to find Natalie freshly bathed and dressed, wordlessly affirming their bond as he kneels with his head in her lap. Town employees notice; the bookkeeper frets and gossips, while Webster spends evenings with Natalie, imagines leaving his business and family, walks into the countryside speaking of love and openness, and, back at home, lies awake sensing the community’s judgment and the stark exposure of private lives—like rooms revealed after a fire. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

Round the world in any number of days

Maurice Baring

"Round the world in any number of days" by Maurice Baring is a travelogue written in the early 20th century. With urbane wit and a light, essayistic touch, it follows a long sea voyage from England through the Mediterranean and Suez to Ceylon, Australia, and New Zealand, blending portside sketches, shipboard vignettes, and literary reflections. Expect cultural commentary, humorous asides, and keen-eyed descriptions rather than practical guidance or strict itinerary. The opening of this travelogue sets sail from strike-tangled Tilbury on an under-staffed liner, moves past a nostalgic glimpse of Plymouth, and offers brisk, vivid stops—Gibraltar in a blink, Naples in blazing color and song—before coaling at Port Said amid conjurors and cookie-cutter fortune-tellers. Crossing the Red Sea’s stifling heat (with a stoker’s tragic leap), the narrator reads and reminisces—Dumas, Hugo, Trollope—then drifts into monsoon talk, ship-music, and brisk opinions about Australian sensitivities and travel criticism, even imagining an “Australian” Chesterton. Ceylon appears in rickshaws, fans, and incomparable mangoes; later come a mock-dramatic authorial skit at sea, a ghost-story unmasked as a wayward figurehead, and a near-mishap leaving Fremantle. Adelaide prompts sharp notes on the hard lives and poor pay of merchant seamen; Melbourne flashes by; Sydney proves lively, its booksellers deft, and Andrew Lang is warmly remembered before transfer to a new ship bound for New Zealand. On board, poker, “Monte Cristo,” card-fortune jokes, school politics, and musings on modern criticism fill the days. Arrival in Wellington brings the famed wind anecdote, knife-edged hills, and prosperous streets; inland near Palmerston, the landscape recalls Siberia, children ride like centaurs, and rugby’s amateur passion is contrasted with England’s professionalism. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

Blonde duinen

Jac. P. (Jacobus Pieter) Thijsse

Blonde duinen by Jac. P. Thijsse is an illustrated popular natural history book written in the early 20th century. It offers guided rambles through the Dutch coastal dunes, using vivid observation and approachable explanations to reveal how plants, animals, and landscapes fit together. Expect seasonal field sketches that blend storytelling with fieldcraft, encouraging readers—especially the young—to notice, collect, and care about the living world. The opening of the work sets out a friendly preface: these “nature albums” are meant to put good color plates and real outdoor experience within easy reach, so that young people learn nature by seeing. It quickly shifts into lively dune vignettes: a teacher’s cheerful “rabbit hunt” with pupils for skulls becomes a lesson in snares, scavengers, and rabbit life (burrows, frosty signs, rampant breeding, evening grazing). A birch-dale chapter follows with bark and fungus, then moths and larvae as masters of disguise (buff-tip, peppered moth, emerald), plus birds such as nightingale, song thrush, willow warbler, and a few deft plant notes (violets’ self-fertilizing flowers, garlic mustard with orange-tip). A June evening piece captures flowers closing and opening, moth- and hawk-moth pollination, and the arrival of bats, toads, hedgehogs, shrews, nightjars, grasshopper warblers, and stone-curlews. A hot June afternoon rounds it out with hedgerow and dune blooms, June beetles in roses, leafcutter bees fashioning brood cells, climbing bryony, showy ragwort and mullein feeders, and small passerines like tree pipit and whinchat—set against the brood-parasitic cuckoo. Overall, these first chapters read as gently didactic rambles that model how to notice, name, and connect dune life. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

Herinneringen

Selma Lagerlöf

Herinneringen by Selma Lagerlöf is a collection of autobiographical reminiscences written in the early 20th century. It traces the author’s path from a prophetic birth at the family estate Mårbacka through illness, avid reading, first encounters with theater, education, and the slow, determined making of a writer. Along the way she reflects on the genesis of her major works and on travels—including to Jerusalem—that shaped her themes and resolve. The focus is intimate and reflective, centered on how a life of stories becomes a life in literature. The opening of this memoir begins with the night of the author’s birth, when Aunt Wennervik’s card reading predicts frail health, much travel, lifelong work, and a life with books. Childhood illness keeps her indoors, where a lurid adventure novel awakens her desire to write; a winter in Stockholm restores her strength and introduces the stage, leading to home theatricals and dreams of playwriting, followed by the heady discovery of writing her first lines of verse. As a young woman she endures anxious days awaiting admission to the teachers’ seminary and succeeds, convinced she must gain knowledge to earn her living and to write well; later, in Jerusalem, a sand-divining seer assures her the book she plans about Swedish settlers there will come to fruition. A companion piece, “A Tale of a Tale,” shows how the legends of Wermland and the atmosphere of Mårbacka grew—after false starts and a prize-winning excerpt—into the episodic, romantic form of Gösta Berling’s saga, aided by the patronage that gave her a year to finish. The section closes by shifting back to Jerusalem with a parable-like vignette about a dream interpreter slighted during a royal visit and a Western traveler’s dream of Christ ascending the minaret of El Azhar, where the excerpt breaks off. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

From sawdust to Windsor Castle

Whimsical Walker

From sawdust to Windsor Castle by Whimsical Walker is a memoir written in the early 20th century. It charts the life of a British clown and circus–pantomime performer from a harsh childhood and fairground apprenticeships through international circus circuits to big‑top fame and command performances. Expect bustling backstage anecdotes, animal‑training exploits, and a front‑row view of popular entertainment from the circus ring to Drury Lane. The opening of this memoir follows Walker from a stepmother’s beatings in Hull to running away at nine and hustling for work in fairs and booths—tumbling, touting for a photographer, and posing as a “living head.” He drifts through early pantomime at Whitby and a first taste of London before real training under circus proprietor Pablo Fanque, who makes him a clown and drills him in horses, vaulting, and discipline. A string of itinerant engagements brings pratfalls and peril—stage collapses, a botched double somersault, a slack‑rope scare, a lion‑tamer’s death, and endless practical jokes—alongside abortive stabs at “serious” acting at Astley’s and in mumming booths. We see provincial circuits, rough lodging‑house comedy, and brushes with notoriety, from meeting the executioner Marwood to a farcical day in court. He then sails to America, survives a brutal storm and a spilled jar of whisky, plays New York during the blowing up of Hell Gate, and meets culture clashes that make clowning risky, before trekking by caravan across the prairies with Native guides. After side trips to Java and Australia and witnessing a New York “spiritualist” swindle, he joins Barnum and Bailey, bonds with a newborn elephant, and is dispatched under sealed orders to secure the famed “Jumbo.” This opening section closes with the uproar over Jumbo’s sale, legal wrangles, a canny publicity delay, and the eventual shipment and celebrated American arrival of the beloved beast. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

Ingrid

Selma Lagerlöf

Ingrid by Selma Lagerlöf is a novel written in the late 19th century. Set in Sweden, it follows Gunnar Hede, a gifted violinist and heir desperate to save the Monnikshut estate, and Ingrid, a gentle orphan whose life intersects with his. Mixing folk-legend atmosphere with romance and moral struggle, it explores art, duty, love, and the pull of home. The opening follows Gunnar Hede in Uppsala as a blunt friend warns him that his family estate is failing and his violin obsession has stalled his studies. After a street performance reveals his power to move crowds, Gunnar resolves to earn money, later taking to the road as a peddler; a disastrous winter drive with hundreds of goats and a broken engagement unhinge him, and he becomes the half-mad wanderer people call “Geitebok.” The scene shifts to Roglanda, where the dreamy, put-upon Ingrid, adopted by a poor pastor’s family, falls gravely ill, lapses into a trance, and is buried as if dead. On a blazing Sunday, the wandering Hede avoids the church, plays his violin by a fresh grave, and—troubled by a sound—unscrews the coffin, reviving Ingrid. Terrified of being seen in her shroud, she persuades him to hide her in his pack and carry her to the parsonage, arriving as the household prepares for her funeral. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

The sociable ghost : Being the adventures of a reporter who was invited by the sociable ghost to a grand banquet, ball, and convention under the ground of old Trinity churchyard. A true tale of the things he saw and did not see while he was not there.

Olive Harper

The sociable ghost : Being the adventures of a reporter who was invited by the…. by Olive Harper is a satirical supernatural novel written in the early 20th century. Set in and beneath New York’s Trinity Churchyard, it follows a young newspaper man and a loquacious “Sociable Ghost” through a night of ghostly revels—banquets, dances, and conventions—used to lampoon high society, publishers, and pious pretenses. The tone is comic and irreverent, mixing urban history with witty afterlife etiquette and class commentary. The opening of the novel finds a heartbroken reporter brooding in Trinity churchyard, where the graves stir and a sardonic ghost borrows his pipe and whiskey, then guides him through a cemetery tour laced with jokes about epitaphs, cherub carvings, “passports” for the dead, and the folly of memorial sentiment. The ghost explains this is the one night ghosts may freely walk, previews an underground convention and ball, mocks mediums, and gossips about the famous (including a vignette of John Jacob Astor’s spirit happily working an old baling press). Led through the Lawrence tomb into a vast, flower-lit hall curated by a grand social impresario, the reporter witnesses a chaotic card-room episode where a hulking professional gambler unwillingly teaches six lady ghosts poker with beans, and then hears a “mended ghost” recount the brutal mishandling of remains during a church vault relocation. The section closes as a sumptuous banquet begins, the reporter is welcomed to a prime seat, and a spirited quarrel over manners—knives, saucers, and “civilization”—sets the satirical tone for what follows. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

Songs and rhymes of a lead miner

Thomas Grierson Gracie

"Songs and rhymes of a lead miner" by Thomas Grierson Gracie is a collection of poems and songs written in the early 20th century. The volume evokes the work, landscape, and community life of Wanlockhead and the Lowther Hills, told in Scots dialect and plainspoken English. It mingles nature sketches, mining-life vignettes, village customs, and music-making with elegies and patriotic verses shaped by the Great War. Expect intimate local color, moral reflections, and occasional humor from a miner-musician’s point of view. The opening of the collection begins with a candid preface in which the author recounts a hard childhood in Wanlockhead, years as a lead and coal miner, his love of the fiddle, and his turn to rhyming during wartime, stressing that he writes for ordinary folk and thanking local editors and friends. It then moves through descriptive pieces: moonlit winter vistas over the Lowthers that prompt a prayer for peace, comic and lively accounts of fishing trips and a grouse meet, a breathless otter hunt, a graveside procession, and lyrical walks along Mennock Burn and the Heights of Glendyne. Village life and memory follow—an old-time wedding, affection for a family wall clock amid modern inventions, a satire of a sour “Curmudgeon,” praise of local rivers and a memorial seat—before a series of in memoriam poems for townsfolk and soldiers, tributes to volunteers, and a tender lament for a pit pony. The Songs section mixes nostalgia and courtship with mining humor (“Level No. 6,” an emergency pump), recruiting and morale numbers, and local portraits, while the Miscellaneous pieces turn to social critique (“Scunner’t”), a toast to an absent friend, and a closing, unfinished portrait of the miner’s steadfastness. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

Palvelusväkeä : Yksinäytöksinen huvinäytelmä

Roderich Benedix

"Palvelusväkeä : Yksinäytöksinen huvinäytelmä by Roderich Benedix" is a one-act comedic play, most akin to a light social farce, likely written in the late 19th century. Set entirely in a manor house kitchen, it explores the lives of servants—flirtations, jealousy, gossip, and superstition—leading to a sudden stroke of luck that reshapes their futures. In the kitchen bustle, maid Hanna and stablehand Pekka are engaged, but the bookkeeper Aukusti flirts with Hanna, provoking the spiteful jealousy of the lady’s maid Anna. Slander travels upstairs: Pekka is summarily dismissed (under the pretext of a lame horse), and Hanna is fired for supposed impropriety. Ristiina the cook, guided by a vivid dream, splits a raffle ticket with Hanna; soon Reetta brings news that their ticket has won a major prize. Fortune reverses the injustice: Pekka and Hanna can now marry and start a life of their own, while the steady coachman Juronen—long prudent and patient—proposes to Ristiina, and they plan to open a well-run eatery. Amid banter and quick turns, camaraderie and chance triumph over malice and class-bound pettiness. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

Helen Vardon's confession

R. Austin (Richard Austin) Freeman

Helen Vardon’s Confession by R. Austin Freeman is a detective novel written in the early 20th century. It centers on Helen Vardon, a solicitor’s daughter, whose father’s misapplied trust funds lead to blackmail and a coerced marriage proposal. The narrative promises a blend of domestic tragedy, romance, and crime as Helen’s sacrifice draws her into deeper peril. The opening of the novel presents Helen deciding to set down her story after glimpsing a first white hair, a small shock that recalls past terrors. She overhears a devastating conversation: her father has improperly used trust money, faces possible imprisonment, and a powerful acquaintance, Lewis Otway, offers to cover the loss if she will marry him. Fearing her father may take a desperate way out, Helen secretly meets Otway, signs a written promise to marry under strict conditions, and obtains his letter that temporarily removes the threat, which she delivers unseen to calm her father. Over the next days she hides her plan, writes a brief farewell-explanation, and arranges a clandestine ceremony. At the mission church, numb and detached, she stands with Otway as the hurried, hushed marriage service begins, her vows spoken as a grim act of rescue rather than love. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

The movie boys in the jungle : or, Lively times among the wild beasts

Victor Appleton

"The Movie Boys in the Jungle: or, Lively Times Among the Wild Beasts" by Victor Appleton is a juvenile adventure novel written in the early 20th century. It follows moving-picture operators Joe Duncan and Blake Stewart as they head to Africa to rescue Joe’s sister Jessie from a troubled mission station while filming wild animals in their native habitats. Alongside Joe’s father and the gloom-prone comedian C. C. Piper, they balance a rescue mission with a daring contract to capture authentic jungle footage. Expect travel, peril, and resourceful camerawork amid wild beasts and wary tribes. The opening of the story shows Joe and Blake finishing lighthouse scenes on the California coast before learning that Joe’s sister, first thought to be in China, has instead gone to a remote station in Africa. En route east with their theatrical company, their train sideswipes a circus train; the boys film the chaos (including a briefly freed lion), impressing circus manager Harry Stone, who hires them to obtain true jungle animal pictures. They sail via Naples and Suez—where grim news reports say Jessie’s mission has been raided and the missionaries carried into the interior—yet press on with Mr. Duncan and a newly revealed shipmate, C. C. Piper. Reaching Mombasa, they take the Uganda Railway toward Victoria Nyanza, film buffalo and a rhino near the line, hire veteran guide Sergeant Hotchkiss, assemble a safari with native porters led by “Happy One,” and prepare to cross the lake to Entebbe to begin the search in earnest. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

Magyar könyv : Egy csapat elbeszélés

Ernő Szép

"Magyar könyv : Egy csapat elbeszélés" by Ernő Szép is a collection of short stories written in the early 20th century. In lyrical, image-rich prose it portrays Hungarian village and small-town life, where everyday routines, petty cruelties, and sudden tenderness mingle. The likely focus is intimate character portraits—an imperious elderly matron, her stoic factotum, and unruly boys—set against the rhythms and losses of a rural world. The opening of the collection follows Karacsné nagyasszony, an eighty-year-old fixture on her porch, and her servant Iszpász Sámuel, amid painstakingly rendered scenes of evening milking: seven cows with distinct names, neighbors’ servants queuing for warm milk, and the perpetual sweeping beneath a great mulberry tree. A street urchin, Három Pista, raids the tree, prompting Karacsné’s fury and Iszpász’s hapless threats with a pitchfork. When a sudden foot-and-mouth outbreak kills all seven cows, the tone softens: another boy, Császi, returns to the tree and Karacsné, subdued by loss, permits him—and soon a troop of children—to eat the fallen fruit. The section closes with a brief, rhapsodic meditation on childhood’s sharp sweetness, echoing the eper’s taste and the fleeting mercy that tempers the old woman’s hardness. (This is an automatically generated summary.)