Unisciti a noi in un viaggio nel mondo dei libri!
Aggiungi questo libro allo scaffale
Grey
Scrivi un nuovo commento Default profile 50px
Grey
Iscriviti per leggere l'intero libro o leggi le prime pagine gratuitamente!
All characters reduced
The Traitor - A Short Story - cover

The Traitor - A Short Story

Baroness Emmuska Orczy

Casa editrice: Al-Mashreq eBookstore

  • 0
  • 0
  • 0

Sinossi

The Traitor is a gripping early tale by Baroness Orczy that foreshadows the suspense and intrigue of her later works. Set in the perilous days of Revolutionary France, the story explores the thin line between loyalty and betrayal, where a single act of treachery can condemn friends, lovers, or family to the guillotine. With her flair for atmosphere and tension, Orczy paints a portrait of desperate choices in a world ruled by suspicion and fear. Short yet powerful, The Traitor delivers an emotional punch, reminding readers that courage and betrayal often walk hand in hand in times of upheaval.
Disponibile da: 01/09/2025.
Lunghezza di stampa: 32 pagine.

Altri libri che potrebbero interessarti

  • The Short Stories of Henry W Nevison - Though more famous for exposing slavery as a journalist was also a talented story writer - cover

    The Short Stories of Henry W...

    Henry W Nevinson

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Henry Woodd Nevinson was born on October 11th, 1856. 
    Nevinson was schooled at Shrewsbury School and at Christ Church, Oxford. John Ruskin influenced his time at Oxford. Fascinated by German Culture he spent some time at Jena before publishing, in 1884, Herder & His times, a study on Johnann Gottfried Herder. 
    In 1897 he became the Daily Chronicle's reporter for the Greco-Turkish War. He was also noted for his reporting on the Second Boer War. 
    During the 1880s Nevinson had attached his politics to Socialism and by 1889 had joined the Social Democratic Federation. 
    In 1904, he was hired by Harper's Monthly Magazine to report on a supposed trade in slaves from Angola to the cocoa plantations of São Tomé. He produced evidence of people being trafficked to settle debts or seized by Portuguese agents and taken in shackles to the coastal towns. Once there he wrote that Portuguese officials "freed" them and continued the charade by declaring they were now voluntary workers who agreed to go to São Tomé for five years. Despite severe ill health he continued to follow the slaves to São Tomé. He found plantation conditions so appalling that one in five workers died each year. His account was serialised from August 1905 and then published as ‘A Modern Slavery’ in 1906. 
    He was also a suffragist, being one of the founders in 1907 of the Men's League for Women's Suffrage. 
    In 1914 he co-founded the Friends' Ambulance Unit and later in World War I, as a war correspondent, was wounded during the infamous Gallipoli campaign. 
    E. M. Forster described Nevinson's book, ‘More Changes, More Chances’ in 1925 as "exciting", and that "He has brought to the soil of his adoption something that transcends party-generosity, recklessness, a belief in conscience joined to a mistrust of principles". 
    A committed Socialist Nevinson could see, during the 20s and 30s, the foundations of a titanic struggle began to gather its forces. He would later state "I detest the cruel systems of persecution and suppression now existing under Hitler in Germany, Mussolini in Italy and Stalin in Russia". 
    Nevinson married Margaret Wynne Jones and, after her death in 1933, he married his long-time lover, and fellow suffragist, Evelyn Sharp. 
    Henry W. Nevinson died on November 9th, 1941. 
     
    01 - Henry W. Nevinson. A Short Story Volume - An Introduction 
    02 - St George of Rochester by Henry W. Nevinson 
    03 - The Aristocrat of Labour by Henry W. Nevinson
    Mostra libro
  • Somnium: The Dream - Or Posthumous Work on Lunar Astronomy - cover

    Somnium: The Dream - Or...

    Johannes Kepler

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    The Renaissance gave us a lot of things, including the earliest science fiction that relates to modern science. The book would now be called hard sci fi, as it leans heavily into the known orbital mechanics of the moon.Somnium (Latin for "The Dream") — full title: Somnium, seu opus posthumum De astronomia lunari — is a novel written in Latin in 1608 by Johannes Kepler. It was first published in 1634 by Kepler's son, Ludwig Kepler, several years after the death of his father. In the narrative, an Icelandic boy and his witch mother learn of an island named Levania (the Moon) from a daemon. Somnium presents a detailed imaginative description of how the Earth might look when viewed from the Moon, and is considered the first serious scientific treatise on lunar astronomy. Carl Sagan and Isaac Asimov have referred to it as one of the earliest works of science fiction. - From the wiki
    Mostra libro
  • Connective Tissue - cover

    Connective Tissue

    Eleanor Thom

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    South-West Scotland, 2010. Air-traffic controller Helena's baby is born with unexplained paralysis. Faced with an unforgiving medical establishment, she turns to the Jewish grandmother she never knew, unfolding the past in search of answers. Berlin, 1937. Single mother and kitchen hand Dora struggles in a city growing increasingly hostile, with questions being asked of bloodlines and identity. Will she always be alone? And how long will she and her daughter be able to call this home? Based on extensive research into Eleanor Thom's lost family history, Connective Tissue is a story of migration, motherhood, and our need to know the people and places that make us.
    Mostra libro
  • Sarai - A Novel - cover

    Sarai - A Novel

    Jill Eileen Smith

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Sarai, the last child of her aged father, is beautiful, spoiled, and used to getting her own way. Even as a young girl, she is aware of the way men look at her, including her half brother Abram. When Abram finally requests Sarai's hand, she asks one thing—that he promise never to take another wife as long as she lives. Even her father thinks the demand is restrictive and agrees to the union only if Sarai makes a promise in return—to give Abram a son and heir. Certain she can easily do that, Sarai agrees. 
     
     
     
    But as the years stretch on and Sarai's womb remains empty, she becomes desperate to fulfill her end of the bargain—lest Abram decide that he will not fulfill his. To what lengths will Sarai go in her quest to bear a son? And how long will Abram's patience last? 
     
     
     
    Jill Eileen Smith thrilled readers with The Wives of King David series. Now she brings to life the strong and celebrated wives of the patriarchs, beginning with the beautiful and inscrutable Sarai.
    Mostra libro
  • Pursuit of Paradise - cover

    Pursuit of Paradise

    Thomas N. Smith

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    This is the story of an East Texas farm boy, the war in the Pacific, and love. Based on true events, Red Smith leaves his farm, experiences the horrors of war, and returns a man, wanting only to go back to work on the farm.
    Mostra libro
  • The Rhythm of Grace on Standalone Mountain - cover

    The Rhythm of Grace on...

    Jeffery L. Deal

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Hundreds of years before Europeans first viewed the Appalachians, a Native American girl growing up in the shadow of Currahee Mountain becomes a skilled warrior and sets out on a quest to save her family from ruin. Half a millennium later, another girl, living under the same mountain and enduring similar hardships, faces a terrible decision. In order to save her family, she must face betrayal, degradation, and violence at the hands of murderous fanatics. The lives of these two girls converge during a devastating flood that hits the small town of Toccoa, Georgia.
    Mostra libro