The Einstein See-Saw
Miles John Breuer
Publisher: Booklassic
Summary
In their pursuit of an unscrupulous scientist, Phil and Ione are swung into hyperspace—marooned in a realm of strange sights and shapes.
Publisher: Booklassic
In their pursuit of an unscrupulous scientist, Phil and Ione are swung into hyperspace—marooned in a realm of strange sights and shapes.
Nerves is a story by Anton Chekhovs, first published: 1895. Three friends, Mayer (a medical student), Rybnikov (a student of the arts), and Vassilyev (a law student), decide to go out one night to get some girls. Mayer and Rybnikov had to spend some time convincing Vassilyev to come along, as he was far more fastidious and cautious than his friends. Vassilyev himself is envious of his friends, who live their lives in a much more carefree fashion. The three friends visit several different houses containing the girls, but Vassilyev finds himself more eager to talk to the girls and treat them to fancy drinks than to pay his money to get something more. He tries to understand the lives the fallen women are living, but he grows more and more disgusted with them...Show book
A gripping collection of classic stories in which the central figures are highly dangerous female characters - ranging from the creepy and unsettling to the utterly terrifying.• Miss Cornelius by W. F. Harvey• Mrs. Amworth by E. F. Benson• Miss Mary Pask by Edith Wharton• Escape – Three and Sixpence by Winifred Holtby• Skinflint by J. S. Fletcher• The Greatest Good of the Greatest Number by Gertrude Atherton• Carmilla by Joseph Sheridan Le Fanu• Mrs. Raeburn’s Waxwork by Eleanor Smith• Where their Fire is not Quenched by May Sinclair• The Operation by Violet Hunt• Pomegranite Seed by Edith Wharton• Satan’s Circus by Eleanor Smith• The Cold Embrace by Mary E. Braddon• The Devil of the Marsh by H. B. Marriott-Watson• The Death of Halpin Frayser by Ambrose Bierce• The Lovely Lady by D. H. Lawrence• The Snow by Hugh WalpoleShow book
A young widower copes with the travails of fatherhood, isolation, grief and a potential cockroach infestation, while seeking escape from a recurring dream that grows increasingly sinister.Show book
Adeline Virginia Woolf was an English author, essayist, publisher, and writer of short stories, regarded as one of the foremost modernist literary figures of the twentieth century. During the interwar period, Woolf was a significant figure in London literary society and a member of the Bloomsbury Group. Her most famous works include the novels Mrs. Dalloway (1925), To the Lighthouse (1927), and Orlando (1928), and the book-length essay A Room of One's Own (1929), with its famous dictum, "A woman must have money and a room of her own if she is to write fiction."The slim book Monday or Tuesday offers an excursion into Virginia Woolf's early excursions in "stream of consciousness" writing she was to become famous for; including her so-termed "Moments of being," in a format of a collection of short stories mainly concerned with people's thoughts as well as psychology in general, the human and particularly female condition, and aesthetics which inspired and engaged her much of the time helping other writers to find publication through her and her husband Leonard Woolf's "Hogarth Press." (Summary from Wikipedia and LizMourant)Show book
Sleeping Beauty and Other Tales by Beatrix Potter, Charles Perrault, Joseph Jacobs, and Rudyard KiplingShow book
New York Times bestselling author Laura Lippman has been hailed as one of the best crime fiction writers in America today, winning virtually every major award in the genre. The author of the enormously popular series featuring Baltimore P.I. Tess Monaghan as well as three critically lauded stand-alone novels, Lippman now turns her attention to short stories—and reveals another level of mastery. In Femme Fatale, a chance encounter in a Starbucks introduces a 68-year-old widow to the world of fetish porn and to a way out of her money worries.Show book