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Pictures from Italy |
Charles Dickens (1812 - 1870) |
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Poor Folk |
Fyodor Dostoyevsky (1821 - 1881) |
The story takes the form of exchanged letters between two impoverished Russians living in the mid nineteenth century who live across the street from each other. What happens when one comes into some money? Poor Folk was Dostoyevsky's first novel, the title evocative of the profound story within. |
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Postsingular http://www.rudyrucker.com/postsingular/ |
Rudy Rucker ( - ) http://www.rudyrucker.com |
"Rudy Rucker should be declared a National Treasure of American Science Fiction. Someone simultaneously channeling Kurt Gödel and Lenny Bruce might start to approximate full-on Ruckerian warp-space, but without the sweet, human, splendidly goofy Rudy-ness at the core of the singularity." --- William Gibson, author of Pattern Recognition
"Rudy Rucker is the most consistently brilliant imagination working in SF today" --- Charles Stross, author of Accelerando
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This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 License |
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President Barack Obama: In His Own Words |
Barack Obama ( - ) http://www.america.gov/publications/books.html |
These pages share President Obama's words with our global readership. This book includes the complete text of the 44th President's Inaugural Address. Also featured are extended excerpts from eight other significant campaign and pre-presidential speeches. It is our hope that while the book itself is small, readers will discover that the vision captured in its pages is large.
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Pride and Prejudice |
Jane Austen (1775 - 1817) |
The arrival of eligible bachelor Mr. Fitzwilliam Darcy to the neighbourhood is exciting news for Mrs. Bennet who is determined to secure good matches for her five daughters. But her daughter Elizabeth, a woman of quick mind and even quicker tongue, is not impressed. Love and marriage in 19th century England can be tricky subjects and a comedy of manners ensues. Will Elizabeth ever succumb to the charms of Mr. Darcy? Jane Austen delights us in Pride and Prejudice, her most famous novel. |
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Protagoras |
Plato (427BC - 348BC) |
Set in dialogue form, the main players in this work are a young Socrates and an elderly sophist, Protagoras. Unusual to Plato's works, Protagoras also employs a cast of many others in the dialogue. In it, Plato once again explores the concept of virtue and whether or not it can be taught. Is virtue actually knowledge? And if so, can knowledge not be taught and thus also virtue? |
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Pygmalion |
George Bernard Shaw (1856 - 1950) |
Shaw uses a re-telling of Ovid's classical tale of the sculptor who falls in love with his statue of the perfect woman to promote his feminist views and satirize the British class system. In the play Professor Higgins plans to present the cockney flower girl Eliza Doolittle as a duchess. Pygmalion both delighted and scandalised Edwardian audiences in 1914. The actress who played the role of Eliza was considered to have risked her career by speaking the line "Not bloody likely!". Later used as the basis for the film MyFair Lady starring Audrey Hepburn. |
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