Join us on a literary world trip!
Add this book to bookshelf
Grey
Write a new comment Default profile 50px
Grey
Subscribe to read the full book or read the first pages for free!
All characters reduced
The Complete Novels of the Brontë Sisters - cover

The Complete Novels of the Brontë Sisters

Charlotte Brontë, Emily Bronte, Anne Brontë

Publisher: e-artnow

  • 0
  • 0
  • 0

Summary

E-artnow presents to you the complete novels of the greatest British novelists of all time, the extraordinary Brontë sisters. 
This collection includes: 
Charlotte Brontë:
Jane Eyre
Shirley
Villette
The Professor
Emma 

Emily Brontë:
Wuthering Heights 

Anne Brontë:
Agnes Grey 
The Tenant of Wildfell Hall
Available since: 03/07/2022.
Print length: 2800 pages.

Other books that might interest you

  • The Case of Vincent Pyrwhtt - From their pens to your ears genius in every story - cover

    The Case of Vincent Pyrwhtt -...

    Barry Pain

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Barry Eric Odell Pain was born at 3 Sydney Street in Cambridge on 28th September 1864. He was one of 4 children. 
    He was educated at Sedbergh School and then Corpus Christi College, Cambridge. 
    In 1889, Cornhill Magazine published his short story ‘The Hundred Gates’.  This opened the way for Pain to advance his literary career on several fronts. He became a contributor to Punch and The Speaker, as well as joining the staff of both the Daily Chronicle and Black and White.  
    Pain was also a noted and prominent contributor to The Granta and from 1896 to 1928 a regular contributor to the Windsor Magazine. 
    It is often said that Pain was discovered by Robert Louis Stevenson, who compared his work to that of Guy de Maupassant.  It’s an apt comparison. Pain was a master of disturbing prose but was also able to inject parody and light comedy into many of his works.  A simple premise could in his hands suddenly expand into a world very real but somehow emotionally fraught and on the very edge of darkness. 
    Barry Pain died on 5th May 1928 in Bushey, Hertfordshire.
    Show book
  • The Three Musketeers Volume 3 - cover

    The Three Musketeers Volume 3

    Alexandre Dumas

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    In "The Three Musketeers Volume 3" by Alexandre Dumas, the thrilling exploits of d'Artagnan and his comrades reach new heights as they confront escalating dangers. Amidst court intrigues and romantic entanglements, the Musketeers face treacherous foes, including the cunning Milady de Winter and Cardinal Richelieu's agents. Loyalties are tested as secrets unravel, propelling them through daring duels and perilous missions. Dumas weaves a rich tapestry of adventure, friendship, and honor, ensuring a captivating conclusion to this timeless epic.
    Show book
  • Rilla of Ingleside - cover

    Rilla of Ingleside

    L. M. Montgomery

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    "Rilla is Anne and Gilbert Blythe’s youngest daughter, an excitable 15-year-old who is unaware of how the world works, and is only interested in having fun. But the world is on the brink of a global war, and soon Rilla’s family and life are turned upside down, as several of her brothers enlist in the army and are sent to fight overseas.The book follows Rilla’s life through the duration of World War I, as she grows up quickly from the responsibilities put on young women in this time. She adopts an orphaned child and raises him, runs the local Junior Red Cross, falls in love with a soldier just before he deploys, and even assists in the elopement of a soldier to his beloved.This novel captures the anxiety of living with one’s family away at war, as well as captures the unique perspective of a woman’s life at home during the First World War (and is the only Canadian novel that shows this perspective written by a contemporary of the war). Through the sadness and bleak moments brought to the world in this war, and the loss that the Blythes face, there is yet again hope to be found in the love of the families and neighbors of Ingleside."
    Show book
  • The Complete Christmas Books and Stories - cover

    The Complete Christmas Books and...

    Charles Dickens

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Kindle a Fire Against the Winter Chill with the Stories That Created Christmas.
    
    Before the modern holiday was defined by tinsel and toys, it was a season of "carols, candles, and ghosts." This comprehensive collection brings together the complete seasonal works of the masters of the genre, led by the incomparable Charles Dickens. These stories transformed the holiday from a simple date on the calendar into a worldwide celebration of mercy, family, and the human heart's capacity for change.
    
    Inside this festive collection, you will discover:
    
    The Architecture of the "Carol": Experience the definitive blueprints for the modern holiday story—where a hardened heart is melted by memory, pity, and a vision of the future.
    
    The Tradition of the Winter Ghost: Explore the eerie, "cozy-chilling" world of the Victorian fireside, where spirits serve as moral guides and the supernatural helps us see the natural world more clearly.
    
    Social Conscience in the Snow: Delve into narratives that use the holiday backdrop to champion the poor and the marginalized, reminding readers that "charity, mercy, and forbearance" are the true business of mankind.
    
    The Atmosphere of the Hearth: Immerse yourself in the sensory details of a 19th-century Christmas—the steam of the pudding, the glow of the fire, and the joyous noise of a crowded family table.
    
    These stories are the reason we say "Merry Christmas." Their influence on our cultural imagination is permanent, making this volume an essential cornerstone for any library of classic literature, holiday traditions, and inspirational storytelling.
    
    Invite the spirits of the season into your home. Buy "The Complete Christmas Books and Stories" today and rediscover the true meaning of the holiday.
    Show book
  • The Cat That Walked by Himself - The First Jungle Book - cover

    The Cat That Walked by Himself -...

    Rudyard Kipling

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    'The Cat that Walked by Himself' is one of the most well-loved of Kipling's Just So Stories.
    This is a story about a cat who liked to walk wherever he wanted. Everything happened at those times when the animals were wild. They lived separately from people. The man was also wild. But he met the woman. She found a nice dry cave and made it their house. They were happy there. One evening the wild dog came to the cave. The woman promised the dog tasty bones for guarding her cave. Later the wild cow and the wild horse also came. She promised fresh grass to the cow and the horse for fresh milk and help with the housework. The cat watched it. He also wanted to be near fire and drink warm milk. Still the cat wanted to walk by himself as usual. The woman did not need such an animal. She needed useful animals. So she made a bargain with the cat.
    Show book
  • Kate Chopin - A Short Story Collection - Hugely influential early American feminist writer - cover

    Kate Chopin - A Short Story...

    Kate Chopin

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Katherine O'Flaherty was born on the 8th February 1850 in St Louis, Missouri to parents of French and Irish descent. 
    At age 5, she was sent to the Sacred Heart Academy and, apart from a 2 year period at home when her father died, remained there until graduating in 1868.  Whilst there she began writing and became an avid reader of almost anything that crossed her path.   
    Kate married Oscar Chopin in 1870 and the couple moved to New Orleans, and later to the rural setting of Cloutierville, Louisiana to raise their 6 children.  
    In 1882 her husband died leaving her in a deep trench of debt.  Despite her best efforts to turn the businesses around they were sold, and she moved the family back to St Louis and the financial help of her mother.  Sadly, her mother died within the year.  Kate, now struggling with depression, pushed herself to write and gained a local reputation as a writer of short stories that captured the local color and vibrancy of her surroundings.   
    By the early 1890’s her short stories were published nationally.  With this widespread audience also came negative reviews, controversy, and cries of immorality as themes such as interracial relationships, the rights of women and other burning issues of the day were written about. 
    Despite the criticism, which unnerved her, she continued to write though in the main her works, around 100 short stories and two novels, were not attributed with any literary worth. 
    Kate Chopin died from a brain haemorrhage in St Louis Missouri on the 22nd of August 1904.  She was 54. 
    For much of the 20th Century her work was forgotten and out of print.  It was only in early 1970’s, with the rise of feminism and the call for a more just society that she was given the status her works had long described and shone a literary light at.  She is now safely revered as one of America’s great authors.
    Show book