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Sämtliche Werke 19 : Die Erniedrigten und Beleidigten

Fyodor Dostoyevsky

"Sämtliche Werke 19 : Die Erniedrigten und Beleidigten" by Fyodor Dostoyevsky is a novel written in the mid-19th century. It unfolds as a Petersburg tale of love, pride, and humiliation, narrated by the young writer Ivan Petrovich as he looks back on a tragic year. The story centers on his bond with Natascha Ichmenyeva, her devoted but embattled parents, and their entanglement with the calculating Prince Valkovsky and his impressionable son Alyosha. Expect intimate psychology, social cruelty, and the aching vulnerability of people poised between tenderness and ruin. The opening of the novel follows Ivan’s search for a new room, his fascination with a decrepit old man and his ancient dog in a German confectionery, and a silent confrontation that ends with the dog’s sudden death and, moments later, the old man’s collapse and demise in a nearby alley. Ivan helps identify the man as Jeremias Smitt, finds his stark poverty, and then rents his cheap garret, framing his tale from a hospital bed as he prepares to recount the last, hardest year. He sketches his past: orphaned and raised with Natascha by the kind Ichmenyev family, idyllic childhood memories, and the rise and souring of their ties to Prince Valkovsky, including the prince’s biography, the banishment of Alyosha to the estate, slanders, a lawsuit, and the family’s move to Petersburg. He recalls his first literary success and a tender, tacit engagement with Natascha, before hinting that, a year later, he returns shattered, as if an unseen catastrophe has opened an abyss between them. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

Skinny McCord

Percy Keese Fitzhugh

"Skinny McCord" by Percy Keese Fitzhugh is a juvenile adventure novel written in the early 20th century. Set at Temple Camp, it follows shy, sensitive scout Skinny McCord whose fierce loyalty to his runaway half-brother, Danny, collides with the ideals and disciplines of scouting. As Danny schemes to hide in plain sight by impersonating a delayed camper, Skinny’s sudden bursts of courage thrust him into camp-wide attention and difficult choices. The opening of the novel shows Skinny losing his compass and being good-naturedly teased around the campfire, then slipping back alone to search—just as a furtive newcomer arrives at the road above camp. That boy is Danny, Skinny’s half-brother, freshly escaped from a reform school, who finds a letter about a camper named Danville Bently delaying his arrival and decides to use the identity to shelter at Temple Camp. Terrified yet loyal, Skinny sneaks his new scout suit and Handbook to Danny, then, to raise money to help him flee, pulls off two daring feats in one night and morning: “lifting” a rival patrol’s white pennant and swimming across Black Lake to win the Hiawatha prize canoe. His plan to sell the canoe to a rich, disgruntled scout, Helmer Clarkson, fails, and Skinny endures chilly treatment from his own patrol while Danny brazenly registers and blends in as a new arrival. The stage is set for a tense clash between loyalty, honesty, and identity within the bustling life of Temple Camp. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

Vintermyren : berättelse

Astrid Väring

"Vintermyren : berättelse" by Astrid Väring is a novel written in the early 20th century. It likely traces a young farmhand, Mats Jonsson, as he struggles between the pull of his home soil and the hard streets of a northern Swedish town, seeking learning, dignity, and justice. His inner battles—over love for the now‑married Anna‑Greta and against the power of the wealthy patron Grubb—unfold alongside vivid evocations of land, folklore, and social hierarchy. The opening of the novel follows Mats trudging through thawing streets, thinking of spring and the “winter bog,” whose mythic vittra mirrors his temptation and longing. He boards with the taciturn fisherman Öberg, studies among children at the poor school, and is mocked as a “bonnhyvel,” while privately he wrestles with books, numbers, and old devotional texts in search of firm truth. Memories of Anna‑Greta and fevered night‑visions nearly drive him back, but he resists through prayer and resolve. Offered a coveted free place at the elite town school—funded by Grubb, the merchant he holds responsible for his family’s ruin—he refuses rather than live indebted to an enemy. He resolves to find honest work and a straighter path to redress, as the scene closes with talk in town of draining the perilous myrland—a public concern that echoes Mats’s personal fight with the forces that swamp his life. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

Little King Davie : or, "Kings and priests unto God"

Nellie Hellis

"Little King Davie : or, "Kings and priests unto God" by Nellie Hellis" is a children’s religious novella written in the late 19th century, during the Victorian era. The book follows a poor London crossing-sweeper whose brush with tragedy becomes the path to faith, dignity, and service, embodying the theme that even the lowliest can be “kings and priests unto God.” Davie Scott, a small, underfed boy with a loving mother and a harsh past, earns coppers sweeping streets until a sermon about “kings and priests unto God” stirs him. Rushing to meet the preacher, he is run over and taken to hospital, where his sweetness and remarkable singing comfort other patients and earn him the name “King Davie.” With the practical kindness of Dr. Scott and Lady Cloudesley, and the gospel counsel of the visiting preacher, Mr. Kilmarnock, Davie finds faith and slowly recovers. A convalescent stay and improved home life follow; he becomes a church chorister and attends school through Lady Cloudesley’s help, then later moves with his family to a cathedral town under Mr. Kilmarnock’s care. There, healthier and joyful, Davie sings and serves, his quiet fidelity strengthening his mother’s faith, and the tale closes with the hope that his “kingly” service will endure beyond this life. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

Through unknown ways : An Old-World story

Lucy Ellen Guernsey

"Through unknown ways: An Old-World story" by Lucy Ellen Guernsey is a historical novel written in the late 19th century. Set during the late Stuart era, it follows Dolly (Dorothy), a penniless but educated gentlewoman serving as companion to the sharp-tongued Lady Corbet, who keeps a secret diary of her trials, faith questions, and small hopes in London near Whitehall. Drawn between the kindness of Mrs. Williams, the patronage of Lady Clarenham and her kinsman Mr. Studley, and the charm of the dashing Captain Morley, Dolly navigates class and conscience amid mounting religious and political tensions. Hints of a family mystery—a sealed locket from Sir Charles Corbet—and the looming turmoil of the Monmouth period frame a story of moral testing and quiet courage. The opening of the novel unfolds as Dolly is given a small room and a hidden cabinet in Sir Charles Corbet’s long-closed house; finding blank books, she resolves to keep a journal. She recounts her past—soldier father dead abroad, capable mother ruined by a sanctimonious cheat, schooling at Hackney, then orphaned service under Lady Corbet—and Sir Charles’s deathbed gift of a secret locket she must not open. From her new window near the park she glimpses court life as Charles II sickens and dies, James II ascends, and the city shifts mood; she meets the kind Lady Clarenham and earnest Mr. Studley, reads “The Pilgrim’s Progress,” and endures Lady Corbet’s stinginess and scorn. Captain Morley pays gallant court, provoking Ursula Robertson’s jealousy, while Mrs. Williams warns Dolly to guard her reputation; Morley departs north on military business. A stark scene follows when Dr. Bates and Mr. Pendergast solicit help for the prosecuted Richard Baxter: Lady Corbet grudges a pittance, but Dolly quietly gives her own gold. As rumors of unrest spread, Ursula’s betrothed Mr. Andrews dies and she hastily resolves to wed the wealthy Mr. Jackson—likely out of pique at news of Morley—leaving Dolly soberly chronicling these first turns of fortune and conscience. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

Lost Island

Ralph Henry Barbour

"Lost Island" by Ralph Henry Barbour and H. P. Holt is a seafaring adventure novel written in the early 20th century. It follows Brooklyn teenager Dave Hallard, a born sailor, who is stirred by tales of the South Seas and a mysterious wreck—the bark Hatteras—rumored to have carried a fortune in platinum. Drawn by the promise of adventure, he ships out, learns the hard realities of life at sea, and crosses paths with storms, derelicts, and distant islands. Expect classic nautical thrills—salvage gambles, shipboard rivalries, and hints of treasure—told as a coming‑of‑age voyage under the Southern Cross. The opening of the novel begins with Dave hearing an old mariner’s account of sighting the wreck of the Hatteras near the Fanning–Christmas Islands and, at home, learning from his father’s clippings that the lost ship once carried platinum. Fired by the sea’s lure, he quietly signs on to the steamer Pacific Queen, leaves a note for his family, and endures rough apprenticeship: a kind but gruff cook (Barnes), a hostile mate (Quick), seasickness, and hard work. Mid‑voyage the crew tries to tow a derelict, the Miriam; she founders, the dories are nearly sucked down in the whirlpool, and Dave helps spot and save a drowning sailor. After rounding Cape Horn, he decides to leave the ship at Auckland to escape the mate’s rancor, boards briefly with kind locals, then—strapped for options—signs onto the decrepit tramp Kingfisher for Australia, immediately regretting the choice as its engineer decries the failing machinery. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

Boblen

Edith Øberg

Boblen by Edith Øberg is a novel written in the early 20th century. It centers on the intense, unequal friendship between Gudrun Haavaldsen, a poor, impulsive girl from a crowded home, and Berit Sørlie, the immaculate, sunlit child next door whom Gudrun idolizes as “the Bubble.” Through schoolroom rituals, a coveted garden, dollhouse play, and talk of futures, it probes class difference, social polish, ambition, and the pains of adolescent attachment. The opening of the novel follows Gudrun spying through a fence at Berit on a swing, then meeting her at school and being seated beside her. Gudrun tutors Berit in arithmetic, is welcomed to the garden for coffee and waffles, and their bond forms—devotion from Gudrun, cool control from Berit—shaped by manners, language, and status. Gudrun remakes herself: she studies hard, drops rough play, cleans in a bookshop, and feeds their shared fantasies with magazine images, while Berit sets boundaries and refuses sentiment. At middle school a fashionable classmate, Else, draws Berit away; a brutal class favorite, Leif, repels Gudrun in a telling mimosa-plant scene. As autumn brings a shabby coat for Gudrun and a piano for Berit, jealousy and snobbery sharpen; Gudrun overhears Else and Berit belittling her, confronts Berit, and they quarrel. The section closes with Berit moving her things and seat to Else’s side, leaving Gudrun to wander off alone in the cold, devastated. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

Lummox

Fannie Hurst

"Lummox" by Fannie Hurst is a novel written in the early 20th century. It centers on Bertha, a big, working-class domestic servant in New York whose awkward speech masks a deep, lyrical inner life. Through her, the story explores class, exploitation, longing, and the clash between brute labor and refined art, particularly in her orbit around the Farley household and its poet son, Rollo. The opening of the novel follows Bertha from her rough Front Street origins and loveless upbringing under Annie Wennerberg into six grinding years as the Farleys’ cook in Gramercy Park. Quietly enraptured by beauty—music, words, fabrics—she is noticed and briefly embraced by Rollo, who later turns her into poetry while pursuing a society debutante. When Bertha becomes pregnant and cannot make him acknowledge it, she leaves, drifts back to Front Street, and endures humiliating employment searches before taking night work as a charwoman. She gives birth suddenly and, destitute, surrenders the child to a respectable couple for adoption, then resumes her precarious round of jobs—her vast, mute inner life intact amid the city’s indifference. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

The dryad : a novel

Justin H. (Justin Huntly) McCarthy

"The dryad : a novel" by Justin H. McCarthy is a novel written in the early 20th century. Set amid medieval Frankish-ruled Greece, it weaves chivalric romance with lingering Greek pagan enchantment as a rough soldier of fortune, a high-minded young prince, and an immortal forest nymph collide. The likely focus is on the clash between cynicism and idealism, the endurance of the old gods’ magic, and a perilous love between mortal and immortal, chiefly through Simon of Rouen, Rainouart of the Rock, and the dryad Argathona. The opening of the novel follows Simon of Rouen into the Eleusinian wood, where his coarse wit, empty purse, and misanthropic “lantern for honesty” contrast sharply with a young knight he meets reading the Romance of the Rose. After spitefully directing lurking thieves toward the knight, Simon naps and wakes to Argathona, a dryad who claims ancient lineage and effortless strength, rebuffing his clumsy advances and compelling him to aid the ambushed rider. She races him to the scene, summons a terror-storm to scatter the robbers, and tends the wounded youth—Rainouart—whose life and vigor revive under her touch. As Simon fetches water, Argathona and Rainouart exchange tender words that flower into first love; he offers lifelong devotion, even to dwell in the forest, while she, bound to the greenwood, hesitates and goes to seek a healing herb. Meanwhile, Simon returns unseen, spies on their meeting, steals the knight’s cherished book, and, torn between envy and pity, toys with darker thoughts over the helpless rival. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

Labyrintti : Romaani

Édouard Estaunié

"Labyrintti : Romaani" by Édouard Estaunié is a novel written in the early 20th century. It follows Jean Pesnel, who is determined to repair his family’s honor after his banker father’s ruin, and his younger half-brother André, as a confession and an unexpected inheritance draw them into a moral labyrinth of guilt, truth, and duty. Set around Le Puy and a secluded ancestral estate, the story probes how past actions shape lives and how the drive to make amends can collide with self-interest. The opening of the book presents an urgent letter and package sent to André Cabriès at sea by Jean, who admits a hidden responsibility for a web of events and asks André to read his full confession; André does not reply. The narrative then shifts to Jean’s account: his father’s bank failure in Puy defines his life, he vows to repay the debts, raises André, and learns two stinging truths—his aunt, Madame de Castérac, helped trigger the collapse by withdrawing funds, and their old home is scornfully called the “House of the Bankrupts.” Summoned back by notary Bourdoin, Jean discovers the aunt has died; he is likely heir, and she secretly bought that very house. At her estate, a hidden hoard of banknotes—over two million—is found with no will, making him the legal heir. Despite the notary’s objections, Jean resolves to repay the old creditors, spends a restless first night at the estate, visits the dust-choked city house, and returns to set public notices in motion, exhilarated that restitution can finally begin. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

La marque des quatre

Arthur Conan Doyle

La marque des quatre by Arthur Conan Doyle is a detective novel written in the late 19th century. It follows Sherlock Holmes and Dr. Watson as they investigate Miss Mary Morstan’s troubling case involving her missing father, mysterious pearls sent annually, and whispers of a hidden treasure tied to soldiers from India. The opening of the novel presents Holmes’s restless intellect and cocaine use, his method of observation and deduction (demonstrated through a revealing analysis of Watson’s watch), and the arrival of Miss Morstan with her story: her father vanished years earlier, she has since received yearly rare pearls, and a new letter invites her to a secret meeting. Holmes and Watson accompany her to the rendezvous, are whisked through foggy London to Thaddeus Sholto, who recounts how his father, Major Sholto, concealed Captain Morstan’s sudden death during a quarrel about a trove from India, hid the treasure, feared a one‑legged man, and died amid a mysterious intrusion marked “The Sign of Four.” Thaddeus explains that his twin, Bartholomew, has just found the treasure in a concealed garret, and the group rushes to Pondicherry Lodge, where a wary gatekeeper and a distraught housekeeper deepen the unease. At the top of the house they find Bartholomew’s laboratory locked; through the keyhole they glimpse his ghastly, frozen face, and as Holmes and Watson break down the door, the scene of the first crisis comes into view. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

The wooing of Rosamond Fayre

Berta Ruck

"The wooing of Rosamond Fayre" by Berta Ruck is a novel written in the early 20th century. It’s a light, witty romance about love set in motion by misdirected letters and mistaken identity, moving from an English country house to a French seaside village on the eve of war. The story centers on capable, charming Rosamond Fayre, dutiful philanthropist Eleanor Urquhart, and Eleanor’s adventurous cousin and fiancé, Ted Urquhart, whose courtship-by-post takes an unexpected turn. At the start of the story, Rosamond, hired as Eleanor’s secretary at Urquhart’s Court, is asked to write Eleanor’s weekly letters to Ted abroad—and even to sign them—despite her misgivings. Her first carefully neutral note, scented by slipped-in rose petals, prompts Ted’s intrigued reply and, soon after, an impulsive, unannounced return to England. Finding Eleanor away at a French Holiday Hostel for working girls (with Rosamond temporarily in charge), he travels there incognito, rescues two of the girls from a cliff mishap with Rosamond’s help, and—mistaking Rosamond for his fiancée—becomes instantly fascinated. Invited to tea at the Hostel, he withholds his name while Pansy, a flamboyant “Principal Boy,” leads the chatter; the scene ends with Ted plotting to continue his anonymous wooing of the woman he believes is Eleanor. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

The girls at his billet

Berta Ruck

"The Girls at His Billet" by Berta Ruck is a novel written in the early 20th century. Set on England’s east coast during wartime, it blends romantic comedy and home-front life as three spirited sisters under a strict aunt find their dull village transformed by an army training camp and the arrival of a billeted young officer. Narrated by the sharp-tongued youngest sister, the story promises flirtations, clashes, and shifting loyalties as khaki invades their “hen-party” household. The opening of the novel follows Elizabeth (“Rattle”), her sisters Evelyn and Nancy, and their aunt in the dreary village of “Mud Flats” as news arrives that troops will be billeted locally. Rattle cleverly maneuvers her aunt into accepting an officer, and after much excited preparation and card-fortune “omens,” Second-Lieutenant Frank Lascelles turns up early, overhears Rattle’s cheeky “Billet Boy” talk, and sparks instant mutual antagonism—though he charms everyone else. Daily life fills with training scenes, ration details, and his irrepressible presence, while a tall, quiet officer named Curtis and another, Masters, are invited to a small supper. After a brief sisterly truce, Rattle finds a “new interest”: secretly answering a newspaper ad from a “Lonely and Unpopular Subaltern,” penning a candid, sympathetic letter that hints at her own isolation and sets up a parallel thread to the household’s khaki tensions. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

The tomb of Ts'in

Edgar Wallace

"The tomb of Ts'in" by Edgar Wallace is an adventure-thriller novel written in the early 20th century. It centers on a dangerous hunt for the legendary tomb of China’s First Emperor, mixing crime, espionage, and archaeology. The key players include the flamboyant adventurer Captain Ted Talham, the brilliant Italian sleuth Signor Tillizinni, the poised Yvonne Yale, and the ruthless Mr. Soo, all entangled with a murderous secret society and a priceless jade clue. The opening of the story introduces the stakes through repeated attempts to rob a ship’s safe carrying a Chinese Embassy mailbag, leading Tillizinni to the Ambassador, whose historical article about the First Emperor’s burial becomes the catalyst for intrigue. Talham rescues Yvonne from Chinese pursuers in Hyde Park and deciphers the inscription on her ancient jade bracelet—directions that seem to point toward the tomb—before persuading her to let him hold it for safety. Soon after, the Ambassador is found strangled and a Chinese assailant shot dead in a bureau drawer; a vital envelope is empty, and the suave Mr. Soo emerges as a formidable rival, mobilizing his secret-society network. As deceptions multiply—a fake bracelet is swapped, two burglars (Talham and Tillizinni) collide in de Costa’s house, and a bomb nearly kills the detective—the strands tighten around the tomb’s secret, with social niceties masking a deadly contest for the true jade clue. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

The children

Edith Wharton

The children by Edith Wharton is a novel written in the early 20th century. It follows Martin Boyne, a middle‑aged engineer, who becomes entangled with the glamorous yet chaotic Wheater clan—especially teen caretaker Judith, her delicate twin Terry, and a volatile mix of full-, half-, and step‑siblings—while their wealthy parents drift between yachts and hotels. The story explores modern divorce and remarriage and the cost of adult caprice on children who are determined to keep themselves together. The opening of the novel finds Boyne on a cruise from Algiers, where he notices Judith minding a baby and a swarm of children and ends up sharing a cabin with her twin, Terry. Through Judith and the governess, Miss Scope, he learns the family tangle: the Wheater parents split and remarried disastrously (to a movie star and an Italian prince), then reunited; the brood now includes “steps” Bun, Beechy, and Zinnie alongside Judith, Terry, and Blanca, with baby Chip adored by the parents. A day trip to Monreale shows Judith’s flair for mothering even as high art leaves her cold, deepening Boyne’s interest. When Terry begs for an education, Boyne agrees to help, stays on to meet the parents in Venice, and secures a cultivated tutor, Gerald Ormerod. Over breakfast at the modest pension where the children stay, Judith refuses school for herself, vowing never to leave the tribe, and hints that Joyce may prefer to keep the tutor in Venice for her own amusement. The section closes with Boyne uncomfortably aware of adult currents swirling around the children he has begun to care about. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

Yksin Lontoossa

Hesba Stretton

Yksin Lontoossa by Hesba Stretton is a novel written in the late 19th century. Set amid the streets around Holborn and the Strand, it follows gentle old newsvendor James Oliver, who unexpectedly becomes guardian to a deserted little girl, Dolly, and bonds with a street boy, Tony. The story promises a tender, faith-infused portrait of poverty, loneliness, and small acts of kindness in the great city. The opening of the novel shows a sweltering London evening, Oliver’s cramped shop-home, and his wistful talk with his sister about their past and his estranged daughter, Susanna. After Charlotta leaves, a woman abandons Dolly in the shop; Oliver keeps the child despite Tony’s offer to take her. A note reveals Dolly is Susanna’s daughter, sent to mend the rift, but another letter soon explains Susanna has chosen to follow her soldier husband to India, leaving Dolly in Oliver’s care. Oliver’s joy mixes with worry over age, poverty, and failing memory, while Tony becomes a nightly lodger, absorbs Oliver’s simple Christian comfort, prays for honest work, and—helped by Dolly buying him a broom—finally starts sweeping a busy crossing and earns his first coins. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

Slighted love : or, At her heart's expense

Mrs. Miller, Alex. McVeigh

"Slighted love : or, At her heart's expense" by Mrs. Alex. McVeigh Miller is a novel written in the late 19th century. It follows Italy Vale, a striking young woman determined to clear her mother’s name after her father’s murder, as she enters her wealthy kinsman’s New England home and confronts old scandals, dangerous secrets, and fraught romances. The story weaves melodrama and mystery around inheritance, social stigma, and the hazards of love, with key figures including the reserved heir Francis Murray, the charming Percy Seabright, and the volatile Mrs. Dunn. The opening of the story reveals Italy’s mother confessing that Italy’s father was murdered and that she herself was tried and acquitted, yet condemned by public opinion; years later, after her mother’s death, Italy goes to Francis Murray’s seaside estate, The Lodge, suspecting him because he benefited from the entail. Tension rises as Italy somnambulates into his library in search of her father’s missing diary, Francis confronts her motives, and she flees to Boston to seek her mother’s old lawyer. There she is deceived by a clerk, Craig Severn, lured to a private house, and nearly assaulted before a mysterious shot kills him; found later walking in her sleep, she is retrieved by Francis and brought back. She meets Percy Seabright—her father’s friend—and faints; newspapers soon report Severn’s body found with a bullet wound. Emmett Harlow gently courts Italy and is refused, while jealous Alys Audenreid and her aunt Mrs. Dunn bristle; during a yacht outing Italy is pushed overboard, rescued by Ralph Allen and Francis, and Mrs. Dunn spitefully accuses Emmett before Francis quells the charge. These chapters set the central quest—finding the truth behind the murder and the missing diary—amid simmering jealousy, peril, and uncertain loyalties. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

Le cas étrange du docteur Jekyll; Un logement pour la nuit

Robert Louise Stevenson

"Le cas étrange du docteur Jekyll; Un logement pour la nuit" by Stevenson is a collection of fiction written in the late 19th century. It pairs a Gothic investigation into the bond between the esteemed Dr. Jekyll and the menacing Mr. Hyde with an additional tale likely set in medieval Paris. The main thread follows lawyer Mr. Utterson as he probes the unsettling overlap between public respectability and hidden vice in Victorian London. The opening of the collection introduces Mr. Utterson, who hears Enfield’s story of a cruel, small man named Hyde using a key to a mysterious door and producing a dubious cheque linked to Dr. Jekyll. Troubled by Jekyll’s will that favors Hyde, Utterson seeks and confronts Hyde, confirms his access to Jekyll’s home, and soon learns of the savage murder of Sir Danvers Carew; Hyde disappears, while police find evidence in his Soho rooms. Jekyll disavows Hyde and shows a note, which Utterson’s clerk remarks resembles Jekyll’s handwriting; Lanyon then falls fatally ill after a secret rupture with Jekyll and dies, leaving a sealed packet, while Jekyll grows reclusive. The section ends as Poole, Jekyll’s servant, fearfully begs Utterson to come at once, implying something is terribly wrong behind the locked laboratory door. (This is an automatically generated summary.)