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The city without Jews : A novel of our time

Hugo Bettauer

"The city without Jews : A novel of our time" by Hugo Bettauer is a novel written in the early 20th century. It imagines Vienna expelling all Jews and people of Jewish origin, and follows the political, economic, and cultural upheaval that ensues. Central figures include the hard-line Chancellor Dr. Karl Schwertfeger and ordinary Viennese such as Lotte Spineder and her lover Leo Strakosch, whose lives are torn by the new regime. The opening of the novel depicts Parliament ramming through an anti-Jewish expulsion law under Schwertfeger’s incendiary speech, its swift passage, and the city’s raucous celebrations after the last trains depart. Short vignettes show immediate fallout: a politician discovers his son‑in‑law’s Jewish origins, artists despair (one commits suicide), sex workers fear losing their clientele, and some Christians convert in solidarity. Schwertfeger’s later briefing reveals grim realities—financial shortfalls, foreign takeovers, social dislocation, and families split by lineage rules—despite public euphoria. Part Two shifts to letters and episodes that chart Vienna’s decline: Lotte writes Leo in Paris of initial cheer turning to unemployment, cultural stagnation, and a collapsing currency; department stores struggle, cafés empty, banks retreat; and finally Leo returns incognito, rents a studio, and secretly reunites with Lotte in her family’s garden. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

The despot of Broomsedge Cove

Charles Egbert Craddock

The despot of Broomsedge Cove by Charles Egbert Craddock is a novel written in the late 19th century. Set in the Great Smoky Mountains, it explores a tight-knit Appalachian community caught between religious fervor, frontier law, and personal vendettas. The story centers on Teck Jepson, a charismatic and overbearing zealot, the embattled constable Eli Strobe and his family, and Jake Baintree, a young man acquitted of a neighbor’s murder but still shadowed by suspicion. The opening of the novel lingers on the wild grandeur of the Smokies and introduces Teck Jepson, who merges Old Testament drama with local life and harbors a relentless conviction that Jake Baintree killed Samuel Keale. After tense exchanges with constable Eli Strobe and Ben Bowles, and a glimpse of Bowles’s uneasy household, Jepson wanders into a gorge at night and finds a hat and coat hidden behind a split rock—garments he believes belonged to the missing Keale. At a river baptism soon after, Jepson publicly brandishes the items and denounces Baintree, prompting the parson to refuse baptism until a confession is made, as thunder and rain scatter the crowd. In the storm’s aftermath, Jepson shelters under a cliff with Eli Strobe’s daughters, Marcella and Isabel; their wary, lively talk reveals Marcella’s worry over her father’s reelection and his principled defense of the court’s verdict, while Jepson insists Eli’s stance will cost him votes. The section closes with hints of Baintree’s odd, subdued behavior since jail and the community’s simmering conflict over guilt, grace, and power. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

Toni : Alkuperäinen kertoelma

Thilda Cederwaller

"Toni : Alkuperäinen kertoelma" by Thilda Cederwaller is a novel written in the late 19th century. It appears to be a courtly romance and intrigue centered on Princess Antonia, a mysterious shipwrecked girl who resembles her, and the power players around them. A shrewd minister pushes a dynastic marriage to a wealthy prince to rescue a state in financial trouble, while a humane physician and an incognito suitor complicate the plan. Themes of identity, duty versus choice, and compassion run through a seaside castle, court salons, and quiet country lakes. The opening of the story begins with a storm and shipwreck near the old castle of Rabenstein, where fishermen recover an unconscious young woman and ailing Princess Antonia lies under the care of Dr. Werner. The doctor notes the rescued stranger’s striking resemblance to the princess, even as a calculating minister arrives to press a political marriage between Antonia and Prince Albert, propped up by a romantic “Toni” legend. Time jumps forward: Antonia has been restored to health after travel, returns to court, charms and chafes against etiquette, and confides in Dr. Werner as he reveals the marriage scheme; she resolves not to be forced. Meanwhile, two travelers—Albert and his friend Walter—approach incognito, Albert revealing he knows the court’s plot and wishes to judge for himself, just as they glimpse two village girls singing on a lakeshore, hinting at coming crossings of class and identity. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

Reuben Roy's temptations

Eglanton Thorne

"Reuben Roy's temptations" by Eglanton Thorne is a novel written in the late 19th century. It is a moral coming‑of‑age tale set between village and factory, following a steady country lad whose faith and honesty are tested by city life, contrasted with a clever but vain contemporary, Owen Grant. Expect a didactic, evangelical tone, scenes of industrial Birmingham, and themes of temptation, courage, and integrity under pressure. The opening of the story introduces Reuben’s humble, hard‑working family in Ashworth and his quiet bravery guarding strawberry fields, which draws the notice of Mr. Akenside, a Birmingham factory owner who offers him work. In parallel we meet Owen, the indulged only son of aging parents, whose small lapses—keeping a booking‑office overchange, skipping church, and swaggering with fast companions—hint at a looser moral compass. In Birmingham, Reuben endures mockery, homesickness, and a hostile foreman, Nat Savage, yet finds courage in a flower‑mission text and shows kindness to Kate Barnaby, a reckless girl later horribly injured by machinery. After Reuben refuses to lie for Savage, he stumbles on a pre‑dawn theft led by Savage and an accomplice; knocked senseless, he is framed with planted goods and dismissed in disgrace, struggles to find work, and keeps the burden from his mother. A turning point comes when the injured accomplice is found in hospital; Reuben carries word back, the dying man confesses the long‑running thefts, Savage is arrested, Reuben is cleared and compensated, and he sets off home, spirit lightened as spring approaches. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

The wanderer in Africa : A tale illustrative of the thirty-second Psalm

A. L. O. E.

"The wanderer in Africa : A tale illustrative of the thirty-second Psalm." by A. L. O. E. is a didactic Christian adventure tale written in the mid-19th century. It follows the fall and repentance of young Englishman David Aspinall as he wanders in southern Africa, with Psalm 32 shaping a story of guilt, grace, and providence amid desert perils and a cruel Boer master. Blending travel hazard with moral instruction, it likely targets younger or family readers who enjoy faith-centered adventure. The opening of the tale shows David, a worn and remorseful servant to the hard-hearted Boer Hans Kuhe, keeping a lonely night watch in the African waste, where memories of home and verses from Psalm 32 awaken true repentance. Flashbacks tell how he defied his parents, fled rural Dorset for London, slid into vice, was shamed in court before his father, and then fled further to Africa to serve the Boer. Forsaken in the desert with a swollen ankle, he confesses his sins, survives on a providential melon and root, drives off wild dogs from a springbok, and keeps vigil through a lion-haunted night. At dawn a lion closes in, but two English hunters, Manners and Carlton, shoot it and befriend him; David resists the temptation to keep his cruel master’s lost purse, returns it via the hunters, and later they find the Boer stripped by Bushmen and dying from a poisoned arrow, underscoring the Psalm’s themes of confession, guidance, and deliverance. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

Hazel bloom

Julia Carter Aldrich

Hazel Bloom by Julia Carter Aldrich is a collection of lyric and devotional poems written in the late 19th century. The volume dwells on motherhood, home, nature’s cycles, Christian faith, and the moral texture of everyday joys and griefs, voiced by a contemplative, sympathetic speaker. Readers can expect meditations that move from flowers and landscapes to friendship, love, betrayal, death, and hope, seeking solace and purpose rather than spectacle. It will appeal to those who enjoy earnest, nature-rich, spiritually inflected verse. The opening of the collection frames its aim with a dedication to mothers and a “Weaver” who chooses humble threads to comfort real lives. It then shifts between meditations on mystery and calamity’s humanizing power, the restorative language of flowers and evening quiet, and love lyrics that weigh constancy, estrangement, and regret alongside lessons of hope (witch‑hazel), labor, and rest. Domestic and spiritual pieces recall a mother’s touch, prize home over wealth, honor unseen bonds of friendship, confront betrayal, challenge fatalism with will, and face death through Christian consolation; the poet also praises a freer muse over rigid forms and celebrates childhood Junes, field blossoms, and Yosemite’s grandeur. Hymnal affirmations of Resurrection, compassionate portraits of Christ, and calls to “feed my lambs” lead into personal supplication and gentle pastoral reveries, culminating in affectionate memories of a country home and its riverside landscape. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

Notes d'un voyage en Corse

Prosper Mérimée

"Notes d'un voyage en Corse" by Prosper Mérimée is an archaeological travelogue written in the early 19th century. It surveys Corsica’s ancient and medieval monuments, combining field observation with brief historical sketches and cautious hypotheses about their origins. Framed as a report by France’s inspector of historic monuments, it moves from prehistoric megaliths to scarce Roman traces and then to medieval churches, noting how poverty, invasions, and geography shaped what was built and what survives. The opening of this work sets out the plan to classify Corsican monuments by epoch and begins with a rapid, sober history of the island from early contacts (Greeks, Etruscans, Carthaginians) through Rome, Arab raids, Pisan rule, and Genoese domination. Mérimée then documents pre-Roman remains—dolmens (stazzone) and standing stones (stantare) in the Taravo, Rizzanese, and Cauria valleys—recording measurements, features like carved runnels, local names and legends, and comparing them to Breton and English megaliths while pondering Celtic or Ligurian links (even glancing at physiognomy and dialect). He notes urn burials near Ajaccio and a crude gaine-shaped “idol” at Apricciani, and stresses the absence of Phoenician, Etruscan, or Sardinian-style monuments. Roman evidence proves scant and mostly at Aleria and Mariana; rough structures dubbed the Sala Reale and a small “cirque” may even be Moorish restorations rather than Roman. Brief notices on a granite quarry at Cavallo, slab-built tombs near Figari, and one late antique sarcophagus in Bonifacio lead into his transition toward assessing medieval churches. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

The wilds of Patagonia : a narrative of the Swedish expedition to Patagonia, Tierra del Fuego and the Falkland Islands in 1907-1909

Carl Skottsberg

"The wilds of Patagonia : a narrative of the Swedish expedition to Patagonia,…." by Carl Skottsberg is an exploration narrative and scientific travelogue written in the early 20th century. It chronicles a Swedish expedition across the Falkland Islands, Tierra del Fuego, and southern Patagonia, blending firsthand travel with studies in geology, botany, zoology, geography, and ethnography. Expect close observations of harsh landscapes and rich coastal life, the logistics and perils of fieldwork, and encounters with settlers, officials, and indigenous communities. The opening of this volume sets up the expedition’s origins and aims in a preface that introduces the small Swedish team, their disciplines, funding, and debts to Argentine, Chilean, and Falkland support. It then follows their arrival at Port Stanley: a portrait of the town’s institutions, social life, bleak treeless scenery, and the dramatic marine “forests” of giant kelps. Subsequent chapters recount coastal and island trips by schooner amid strong tides and gales, a glimpse of the last wild cattle and the extinct Falkland fox, seabird rookeries, evidence of vanished forests and “stone-runs,” and a long horseback traverse of West and East Falkland—with shepherd life, mountain ascents, and notable fossil plant finds in Lafonia. The narrative shifts to Punta Arenas, where Chilean naval help is secured, and includes a critical visit to the Salesian mission on Dawson Island before moving into Admiralty Inlet. From a camp in a sheltered cove, the party battles bogs and dense beech forest to reach Lago Fagnano, living on guanaco meat, ferrying loads by a canvas boat, and establishing “Expedition’s Cove.” It closes this opening stretch with vivid camp life and the start of a demanding push toward the Betbeder Pass over snowy ridges and through tangled forest. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

Pyhä Yrjänä, eli Runous, rakkaus ja raha : kolminäytöksinen huvinäytelmä

Lauri Haarla

"Pyhä Yrjänä, eli Runous, rakkaus ja raha: kolminäytöksinen huvinäytelmä" by Haarla is a three-act comedy play written in the early 20th century. It’s a sharp, metatheatrical satire where a penniless writer engineers a charity staging of the Saint George legend to pit poetry, love, and money against one another in a small-city milieu. The comedy revolves around the ambitious actor Eevert Urpia, the powerful mayor Adam Bilde, Bilde’s captivated wife Ruth, the exacting critic Ihanelma Palmu, and the barber–balladeer Polle, as desire and finance clash on and off the stage. Expect playful irreverence about cultural authority, sly plotting, and romantic entanglements that threaten public respectability. The opening of the play sets the scene in the mayor’s grand home, where the impoverished playwright Hans Korp spars with a vain actor, a cautious theater director, and a self-important critic, while secretly ferrying a note from Ruth to the actor Urpia. Spotting a chance to turn life into drama, Korp rewrites the pious Saint George pageant into a bolder love-and-revolt piece: during rehearsal the crowd (egged on by Lill’ Margit) cries down the “king,” Urpia’s Saint George openly woos Ruth-as-princess, and the enraged mayor storms in, vowing to fire Urpia. At the start of the second act in the “Nubia” restaurant, Polle pines for Lill’ Margit, Selma pleads and is rebuffed by Urpia, and Ruth arrives, determined to choose love; Korp insists they need cunning, not blunt confession, to outwit the mayor. He then stage-manages a farcical trap with Lill’ Margit on a sofa and Bilde arriving alone, a setup poised to compromise the mayor just as other guests begin to enter. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

Aamukellot

Adolf Schmitthenner

"Aamukellot" by Adolf Schmitthenner is a historical novella written in the early 20th century. Set in a Renaissance German town under Elector Ottheinrich, it follows a young stranger, Sabinus, who kills a court servant in a quarrel at a dance and is condemned to be shot at dawn. The tale centers on Veronika, a compassionate local girl, and the Elector himself as conscience, mercy, and public justice collide around the fate of the condemned youth. The opening of the story shows a crowd escorting the wounded, captured Sabinus through town, where Ottheinrich intervenes, has his bonds loosened, questions him about the fatal brawl over Veronika, and fixes the execution to the end of the morning bells. That night Veronika, desperate to save him, secretly enters the church, climbs the tower, removes one bell’s clapper and muffles another, then at dawn keeps the third bell ringing without pause so the signal to shoot never comes, throwing the town into panic over “bewitched” bells. Seeing both the girl’s courage and a way to temper justice with mercy, Ottheinrich slips into the tower, restores the bells with Veronika, and quietly arranges Sabinus’s release and flight to fight honorably in Hungary, while his aide prepares horses, clothes, money, and a letter of introduction. The section closes with the Elector’s private rescue plan in motion and a promise to Veronika that, if Sabinus returns with honor, he will seek her hand on the young man’s behalf. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

The sea girl

Ray Cummings

The Sea Girl by Ray Cummings is a science fiction novel written in the early 20th century. Set in a near-future 1990 of sub-sea freighters and airliners, it pits humanity against a baffling undersea menace as oceans mysteriously recede and ships vanish without a trace. The story centers on navigator Geoffry Grant, the driven oceanographer Dr. Plantet, his practical daughter Polly, and the dreamer Arturo, who glimpses a girl inside a strange metallic globe beneath the waves. Their intertwined paths lead to a daring deep-sea expedition and an uncanny encounter with a “sea girl” on a remote Micronesian atoll. The opening of the novel follows escalating Pacific disasters, a glimpse of a luminous undersea globe with a young woman’s face, and worldwide anomalies—abnormal tides, quakes, and volcanoes venting steam—culminating in Dr. Plantet’s stark conclusion that Earth’s honeycombed crust is draining the oceans and that a hidden human-like civilization may be rising to challenge the surface. As governments mobilize and censorship lifts, he builds the Dolphin, a revolutionary craft rated to two thousand fathoms, and sets out with Grant and Polly to scout the Pacific deeps. On the eve of departure, Arturo vanishes, leaving a note and secretly flying to the reported “mermaid” atoll, where he meets a shy, intelligent sea girl and begins to win her trust. Meanwhile, the Dolphin searches westward across the basin, finds no enemy sign, then receives Arturo’s urgent midnight call to rendezvous at the island. The section closes with Arturo waiting by a cave on the moonlit shore after the girl slips back into the water’s darkness. (This is an automatically generated summary.)
Book cover of "What Is Public Domain? A Simple Guide for Book Lovers"