Slide Rule
Nevil Shute - 1954
For 30 years there was a period when airplanes would fly when you wanted them to, but there were still fresh things to be learned on every flight, a period when airplanes were small and so easily built that experiments were cheap and new designs could fly within six months of the first glimmer in the mind of the designer."That halcyon period started about 1910 and it was in full flower after WW I when I was a young man; it died with WW II when airplanes had grown too costly and too complicated for individuals to build or even to operate. I count myself lucky that that fleeting period coincided with my youth and my young manhood, and that I had a part in it."
The Wind Blows Away Our Words
Doris Lessing - 1987
a lament for the soviet invasion of afghanistan
Brief Candles
Aldous Huxley - 1930
Three more stories - 'Chawdron', 'The Rest Cure' and 'The Claxtons' complete the volume.
Colony
Rob Grant - 2000
But by the 10th generation, things are starting to go badly wrong. The only man who can save the ship is astrophysical Dr Piers Morton. Only he's not an astrophysical engineer, he's not a doctor, he's not even Piers Morgan, and all that remains of his body is his head, his spinal column and absolutely nothing else. Better yet, somebody on board is trying to kill what's left of him...
The Promise of Love
Mary Renault - 1939
Even hospital rules could not restrain their passion.Could the people who had come before – her brother Jan, the arrestingly beautiful amoral nurse, the seductive sophisticated doctor – snatch away their happiness?Or would her faltering heart, unused to love, betray her now?
In the Springtime of the Year
Susan Hill - 1973
Suddenly alone, Ruth must cope not only with Ben's death but also with his family who view her with suspicion and hostility. Her sole companion is Ben's fourteen-year-old brother who understands Ruth's quiet determination to emerge from this tragedy with her integrity and independence intact.
The Portable Steinbeck
John Steinbeck - 1943
He wrote about inarticulate men groping to express truths “locked in wordlessness.” He wrote about America—the land and the people—as though it were one living organism, and he did so more eloquently than anyone since Walt Whitman. In an extraordinarily prolific career that lasted from 1929 to the 1960s, John Steinbeck created stories and characters that, in the words of Pascal Covici, Jr., this volume’s editor, combine “the gusto of Homer … along with the thoughtfulness of Emerson.”The Portable Steinbeck is a grand sampling of this writer’s most important works.
How to Be a Little Sod
Simon Brett - 1992
Simon Brett chronicles the day-to-day life of a baby as he systematically brings chaos and havoc to the lives of his parents.
My Turn to Make the Tea
Monica Dickens - 1951
Miss Dickens was the only woman reporter on the staff of a weekly newspaper and of course she was sent to various 'women's' functions.She sees much to interest - and amuse - her.
Do Butlers Burgle Banks?
P.G. Wodehouse - 1968
Fortunately for him, Horace Appleby, currently posing as his butler, is on hand to oblige. For Horace is, in fact, not a butler at all but the best sort of gangster, prudently concealing himself in an English country house while hiding from his rivals. Looking for peace and safety, Horace is to discover before long that the hotspots of Chicago are a whole lot more restful than the English countryside. This is the lightest of light comedies, a Wodehousean souffle from his later years.
Venture to the Interior
Laurens van der Post - 1952
Adventure, discovery, and tragedy teem in this famous account of a trek into the sinister, primeval heights of Mount Mlanje and the cloud veiled uplands of Myika.
Trapped
Dean R. Koontz - 1989
At the Lassiter farmhouse uninvited mutant rats are waiting. These rats are not just seeking shelter, warmth, and food. They're seeking the annihilation of any human who crosses their path. Meg must find the strength and courage to face the genetically enhanced rats. Trapped in her snowbound home, armed with only a shotgun and the desire to survive, Meg wages a one-woman war against creatures scientifically engineered to outwit, outrun, and outfight the human race.
Mary Rose: A Play in Three Acts
J.M. Barrie - 1920
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