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  • av Mary Roberts Rinehart
    137,-

    Set during the British Suffragette Movement, The Borrowed House mixes drama, comedy, and intrigue, as a group of women devoted to The Cause plot to kidnap the prime minister. With a handsome stranger and an art theft lurking in the background and a young American woman caught in the middle, this lively and clever story unfolds into a series of unexpected twists and turns.

  • av Mary Roberts Rinehart
    137,-

    An old mansion with bedroom doors kept locked all night, always from the outside, a staff of servants summarily dismissed, and a family gripped by fear.Enter a young nurse, sent in to care for the children but really working undercover to reveal the mystery at hand. With a further secret tucked away in the attic, Locked Doors will keep you guessing until the very end.

  • av Seth Edgarde
    174,-

    Fun Size FictionThis collection of sixty-five bite-sized stories-none greater than 250 words-gives a window into many different lives, each with its own particular insight into the human experience.Seth Edgarde is the author of ten books. Short-term Parking is his first collection of micro-fiction.

  • av Mary Roberts Rinehart
    137,-

    A vintage story with a contemporary vibe . . .A student nurse falls in love with her patient in this romantic drama that takes place on the eve of America's entry into World War I.But there's more than love at stake at the city hospital: A boy's life, a doctor's reputation, and the nurse's career all hang in the balance. Add in a dangerous contagion and throw the hospital under a quarantine lockdown, and something's got to give.

  • av Mary Roberts Rinehart
    199,-

    The year is 1909, and a Washington attorney, fresh from taking a sensitive deposition in Pittsburgh, finds himself enmeshed in a murder, where he is the prime suspect. To top it all off, his train crashes on the way home, and the deposition testimony goes missing. In the meantime, he falls for a young woman who just happens to be the witness's niece and his law partner's girlfriend! As the mystery deepens, her own involvement in the case emerges.From the pen of the great Mary Roberts Rinehart, The Man in Lower Ten offers a authentic window on the world of the upper classes in the United States in the early twentieth century, when there were no airplanes, trains were the preferred method of long-distance travel, and even automobiles and telephones were not that common. And, of course, forensic science hardly existed. A fascinating book which will leave the reader in awe of how far we've come and maybe just a little nostalgic for the world that we've lost.

  • av Friedrich W Carové
    162,-

    Sarah Austin's classic translation of F. W. Carové's German Romantic masterpiece, The Story without an End, is a fairytale journey through a magic garden with dew drops and dragonflies, sunbeams and flowers, all telling their part of the tale, the unending story of nature itself, a continuing saga of wonder and fascination. Although it was written for children, the beauty of the story's images and the depth of its words will find their way into the heart of any aged reader or listener.

  • av Donald E. Westlake
    199,-

    Winston, New York--a nice town, a quiet town. Sure, there's corruption, but the streets are clean, everything works, and everyone has what they need. It's a delicate balance, all held together by private investigator Tim Smith, The Operator. Until it isn't. That's when the killing starts.

  • av Zahara Carmi
    187,-

  • av Edwin West
    187,-

  • av Bret Harte
    157,-

  • av Seth Edgarde
    142,-

  • av Seth Edgarde
    113,-

  • av Seth Edgarde
    193,-

  • av Dani Shear
    247,-

  • av Seth Edgarde
    147,-

  • av Seth Edgarde
    142,-

  • av Mary Roberts Rinehart
    193,-

    Part mystery, part hospital soap opera, and part social commentary, Mary Roberts Rinehart's 1914 novel, K., is a look at a vanished world, a social artifact from the early 20th century, complete with rowdy, old-school roadhouses, forlorn lovers, and themes of revenge, altruism, and pride, not to mention a mysterious stranger known only as K.Recent dramatic series, like The Knick, Mr. Selfridge, and Downton Abbey, have sought to give us a clear-eyed look at things as they were a century ago, but K. is the real McCoy, a time capsule taking us directly into that period and showing us life as it was before the Great War, before penicillin, before the vast changes in social norms that we now take for granted.One of the first romantic mysteries, it is also a window in on medicine as it was practiced a hundred years ago, and, as such, provides the perfect backdrop to delve into the mysteries of the human heart as well as the mysteries of our own past.

  • av Jeff Bernhardt
    215,-

  • av Seth Edgarde
    126,-

  • - A Comedy in Two Acts
    av Joanne Keegan
    152,-

    "As a guest gift for the wonderful wine, I will eat you last," yawns Polyphemus the Cyclops, in Joanne Keegan's wonderous, phantasmagoric comedy based on Homer's epic poem, the Odyssey.Laying down a comedic play for school-age students on a classical substrate may seem ambitious for some, but for others, it is an opportunity to expand the imagination.The result is more than just a clever piece of drama-it is an inspired work of art in its own right, a wild ride to open up students' dramatic talents and expose them to an age-old classic.The Odyssey provides age-appropriate and accessible material, parts for over twenty students, and strong roles for both male and female actors, all while retaining the flavor of Homer's classic in the context of an original and imaginative play, with adventure, humor, and, of course, a cast of colorful characters!

  • av Jessie Dumont
    153,-

  • av Seth Edgarde
    122,-

    Dawn breaks, and Emily Williams awakens, hungover and alone in an unfamiliar park. A crazy night with too much to drink and not enough self-control. But, as she soon discovers, she's not quite alone.A drunken hookup . . .A night in the park . . .And now he's dead, and she can't remember.What's a girl to do?

  • av Alan Marshall
    182,-

    Donald Westlake's nearly forgotten pulp sleaze classic, Man Hungry, is actually one of his first published novels, a 1959 literary take on the genre, complete with lesbians, prostitutes, a swinging college campus, and a washed-up writer-turned-writing professor who's been unable to reprise the success of his bestselling first novel. And, oh yeah, a certain salacious young college junior who's hungry for more than just an education.Apart from its steamy content, Man Hungry is actually a fine novel and a fascinating glimpse into the development of one of our most prolific and talented writers. It's all there-hints of his dark style, flawed and wanton characters, and the old familiar haunts, including the first appearance of the fictional Monequois College in the equally made-up town of Monequois, New York, which subsequently appears in at least a half dozen Westlake novels under at least four of his pen names.If you're a Westlake fan, a fan of the genre, or just looking for a great vintage read, this new edition of Man Hungry from Blackbird Books will satisfy your appetite!

  • av Seth Edgarde
    166,-

  • av Orrie Hitt
    180,-

  • - Jewish and Christian Clergy Reflect on Transformative Passages from the Five Books of Moses
     
    193,-

  • av Edwin West
    171,-

    New York, 1960 . . .Take one lesbian editor, well-done, add one sexually curious intern, and one all-man co-editor. Mix thoroughly at a posh Park Avenue women's magazine, and you have another Donald Westlake classic. Cast in the mold of Mad Men with Madison Avenue advertising swapped out for New York's "smart publishing set," this new edition from Blackbird Books sports its original Robert Maguire cover and will take you back to that arousing time and place.

  • av John B. Allan
    171,-

  • av Mary Roberts Rinehart
    182,-

    The Circular Staircase, Mary Roberts Rinehart's classic tale of murder and intrigue in a pre-World War I mansion, is evocative yet strangely modern, a sort of CSI: Downton Abbey, with butlers and maids sprinkled in amongst the bodies and evidence.With elements of romance, white collar crime, class, race, poverty, and privilege, it's a story told with such a deft hand that it will keep you guessing right to the end, all the while keeping you entertained with the trappings of the gilded age and a hint of the supernatural.Sporting its famous 1952 Mapback jacket with original cover painting by Robert Stanley, this new edition from Blackbird Books is a must for all mystery readers.

  • av Seth Edgarde
    159,-

    A Wall Street felon serving his sentence at New York's Rikers Island Prison, Sterling Walsh desperately needs to set his life straight. But he gets more than he bargained for when he accepts an FBI offer to infiltrate a Muslim sleeper cell.Set in the dark corners of New York City's five boroughs, Hart Island is a soul-stirring tale of revenge and redemption.

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