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  • The Monikins is an 1835 novel, written by James Fenimore Cooper. The novel, a beast fable, was written between his composition of two of his more famous novels from the Leatherstocking Tales, The Prairie and The Pathfinder. Critic Christina Starobin compares the novel’s plot to Jonathan Swift’s Gulliver’s Travels. The novel, narrated by the main character, the English Sir John Goldencalf, is a satire. Goldencalf and the American captain Noah Poke travel on a series of humorous adventures.

    The novel is not very popular amongst readers of Cooper.A contemporary critic of the novel in The Knickerbocker described the novel with great disappointment.

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  •  The Monster (1898) is the story of an African-American coachman who is branded a ‘monster’after being hideously disfigured whilst saving his master’s son from a fire. It explores the themes of prejudice, fear and isolation in small town America.

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  • The Mysterious Stranger is a novel attempted by the American author Mark Twain. He worked on it intermittently from 1897 through 1908. Twain wrote multiple versions of the story; each involves a supernatural character called “Satan” or “No. 44”. All the versions remained unfinished (with the debatable exception of the last one, No. 44, the Mysterious Stranger).

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  • An Irishman (O’Ruddy) travels to England. On his deathbed, O’Ruddy’s father entrusted him with some papers to deliver to England. Shortly after the father’s death, O’Ruddy travels to England with the papers. Once in England, he encounters a variety of characters.

    The story is broken up into two parts. The first part is about O’Ruddy’s travel to England, his trying to fit in with the gentlemen of society, duels, and the loss of his papers. Not long after his arrival, his papers were stolen. He goes in search of the papers, and along the way meets a woman. The second part deals with the papers, but also his search for his new love, Mary.

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  • The Old Curiosity Shop tells the story of Nell Trent, a beautiful and virtuous young girl of “not quite fourteen”. An orphan, she lives with her maternal grandfather (whose name is never revealed) in his shop of odds and ends.

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  • The Open Boat is a dramatic short story based on Stephen Crane’s own real-life experience, when a ship he was sailing on to Cuba sank in high seas off the coast of Florida. He was a correspondent for an American newspaper and he was on his way to write about problems that led up to The Spanish-American War in 1898.

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  • The Outcry is a novel by Henry James published in 1911. It was originally conceived as a play. James cast the material in a three-act drama in 1909, but like many of his plays, it failed to be produced. (There were two posthumous performances in 1917.) In 1911 James converted the play into a novel, which was successful with the public. The Outcry was the last novel he was able to complete before his death in 1916. The storyline concerns the buying up of Britain’s art treasures by wealthy Americans.

    To cover the gambling debts of his daughter Kitty Imber, the widowed Lord Theign is planning to sell his beautiful painting Duchess of Waterbridge by Sir Joshua Reynolds to American billionaire Breckenridge Bender. Hugh Crimble, a young art critic, argues against the sale, saying that Britain’s art treasures should stay in the country. He is supported by Theign’s perceptive daughter, Lady Grace. When the newspapers get wind of the potential sale of the Reynolds, they raise a patriotic outcry, which delights Bender.

    The Outcry was a best-seller in the United States when it was published in 1911. During 1890–1893, when he was most engaged with the theatre, James wrote a good deal of theatrical criticism, and assisted Elizabeth Robins and others in translating and producing Henrik Ibsen for the first time in London.

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    The Outcry by: Henry James 0,99
  • This 1891 novelette by Henry James tells of an ocean voyage on a ship called The Patagonia, sailing from Boston to Liverpool. The unnamed narrator is friends with a Mrs. Nettlepoint, a woman of good family with a son names Jason. Accompanying them — somewhat unexpectedly — is a young woman named Grace Mavis, who is to marry a childhood friend whom she has not seen for ten years. 

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  • Henry James OM (1843-1916) was an Anglo-American novelist. He was one of the most important literary people of the late 19th century. James was the son of Henry James Senior, a clergyman, and the brother of William James, the psychologist and philosopher. He grew up mostly in the United States but spent the majority of his life in England. He became a British citizen in 1915. His sister, Alice James, was also a writer. In his novels, he wrote from the viewpoint of one of the characters. Some literary critics compared this to impressionist painting. In his own literary criticism, James insisted that writers be allowed the greatest possible freedom in how they looked at the world.

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  • The Pathfinder, or The Inland Sea is a historical novel by American author James Fenimore Cooper, first published in 1840. It is the fourth novel Cooper wrote featuring Natty Bumppo, his fictitious frontier hero, and the third chronological episode of the Leatherstocking Tales. The inland sea of the title is Lake Ontario.

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