Part memoir, part writing guide, Stephen King reflects on his life, his near-fatal accident, and the craft principles that have made him one of the most productive writers in American literature.
Anne Elliot, at 27, is considered past her prime — but the man she loved and lost eight years ago has returned. Austen's final completed novel is her most emotionally mature, trading wit for a quieter, more aching register.
Two teenagers from feuding Verona families fall in love and die for it in the span of five days. Shakespeare's greatest love story is also his most formally perfect tragedy — the balcony scene, the potion plot, the final tomb — all locked into a structure so tight it compels a fatal outcome from the very first line.
Edmond Dantès is wrongly imprisoned, escapes after fourteen years, acquires a vast fortune, and returns to Paris as the mysterious Count of Monte Cristo to execute a perfectly planned revenge on those who destroyed his life. Dumas's epic is the greatest revenge story ever told — intricate, theatrical, and utterly compelling.
Bilbo Baggins, a respectable, unadventurous hobbit, is swept away by the wizard Gandalf and thirteen dwarves on a quest to reclaim a mountain kingdom from the dragon Smaug. The predecessor to The Lord of the Rings — shorter, lighter in tone, and the perfect entry point to Middle-earth.
Two young men have invented fictional alter egos to escape social obligations — Jack Worthing has invented 'Ernest' in town, and Algernon Moncrieff has invented a sickly friend 'Bunbury' in the country. Wilde's masterpiece of comic drama is the funniest play in the English language, a vehicle for some of the most memorable epigrams ever written, and beneath the surface glitter a perfectly constructed satire of Victorian earnestness, sincerity, and the institution of marriage.
The first volume of Robert Caro's biography of Lyndon Johnson traces his origins in the Texas Hill Country through his early political career and first campaign for the Senate — a portrait of consuming ambition and political genius.
Robert Caro's Pulitzer Prize-winning biography of Robert Moses, the unelected master planner who shaped New York City for four decades and accumulated more power than any other American in the 20th century.
D'Artagnan arrives in Paris from Gascony, nearly duels Athos, Porthos, and Aramis, and promptly makes them all friends. Together the four Musketeers serve King Louis XIII while foiling the schemes of Cardinal Richelieu and the mysterious Milady de Winter. Dumas's greatest adventure novel is relentless entertainment — swashbuckling, witty, morally simple, and structurally impeccable.
The final volume of In Search of Lost Time returns to the narrator's childhood world — now transformed by war and age — and arrives at the great epiphany: the experience of involuntary memory that he finally understands as the material of which his novel must be made.
Jim Hawkins, a young inn-keeper's son, sets sail with squire and doctor to find buried pirate treasure — and finds the charismatic, dangerous Long John Silver along the way. Stevenson's adventure novel invented the pirate genre and remains the definitive treasure-hunt story.
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