Book picks similar to
The Bells and Other Poems by Edgar Allan Poe
poetry
classics
1001-books-no-they-are-coming-no
1001-books-2-read-during-covid19
Collected Poems and Translations
Ralph Waldo Emerson - 1867
Collected Poems and Translations gathers both published and unpublished work - poems left in manuscript at his death and hitherto available only in drastically edited or specialized scholarly versions - to offer all readers for the first time the full range of Emerson's poetry.
Phenomenal Woman: Four Poems Celebrating Women
Maya Angelou - 1995
They celebrate women with a majesty that has inspired and touched the hearts of millions.These memorable poems have been reset and bound in a beautiful edition--a gift to keep and to give.
Wireless: A Short Story
Agatha Christie - 1925
Harter has a heart condition. Her nephew, Charles, who lives with her, buys her a radio for amusement, but strange messages come from it. Could her dead husband really be sending her messages? And why is he warning that her life is in danger?
NextWave: Agents of H.A.T.E., Vol. 2: I Kick Your Face
Warren Ellis - 2007
But don't worry, it's never too late to join the party. First up, the Nextwave Squad faces an army of Mindless Ones. Yes, insanely powerful stone men without faces. You cannot miss it.Collecting Nextwave: Agents of H.A.T.E. #7-12.
A Little Gold Book of Ghastly Stuff
Neil Gaiman - 2011
"Before You Read This" (first published as Todd Klein print)"Featherquest" (first published in Imagine #14)"Jerusalem" (first broadcast by BBC Radio 4)"Feminine Endings" (first published in Four Letter Word)"Orange" (first published in The Starry Rift)"Orphee" (first published in Orphee (CD))"Ghosts in the Machines" (first published in The New York Times[3])"The Annotated Brothers Grimm: Grimmer Than You Thought" (first published in The New York Times[4])"Black House" (first published in The Washington Post)"Summerland" (first published in The Washington Post)"The View from the Cheap Seats" (first published in The Guardian[5])"Once Upon a Time" (first published in The Guardian[6])"Introduction to Hothouse" (first published in Hothouse)"Entitlement Issues" (first published at Neil Gaiman's Blog[7]))"Freedom of Icky Speech" (first published at Neil Gaiman's blog[8]))"Harvey Awards Speech 2004" (first published at Neil Gaiman's blog[9]))"Nebula Award Speech 2005" (first published at Neil Gaiman's blog[10]))"Conjunctions" (first published in Mythic Delirium #20)
Machines of the Dead
David Bernstein - 2012
The island of Manhattan is quarantined. Helicopters guard the airways while gunships patrol the waters. Bridges and tunnels are closed off. Anyone trying to leave is shot on sight. For Jack Warren, survival is out of his hands when a group of armed military men kidnap him and his infected wife from their apartment and bring them to a bunker five stories below the city. There, Jack learns a terrible truth and the reason why the dead have risen. With the help of a few others, he must find a way to escape the bunker and make it out of the city alive.