Markham Tom


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The Clue


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Limitations A Novel


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"Limitations" by E. F. Benson is a notion-frightening and private photo that looks at how hard it's miles for human beings to get together with every other while society puts limits on them. Benson book, which got here out in 1913, is ready the lives of its characters and the problems that arise whilst people's wants and needs conflict with what society expects of them. The story is commonly about the Forsytes, a rich own family who has to deal with the limits that society puts on them. Benson paints a complex photo of what it's like to be human as the character’s cope with love, choice, and social norms. The story is complete of mental snap shots that take a look at the issues humans face as they try to find happiness. When Benson writes, it is clear that he is eager to examine and has a deep understanding of how humans connect to every different. He seems at the anxiety between private success and social tasks through the lens of the Forsytes. Class, morals, and the always-gift gaze of society are all woven into the memories of the characters. The book "Limitations" by way of E. F. Benson suggests how good a creator he turned into and the way well he ought to analyze complex human conduct.




The Graysons


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Tom Markham, the Scout. A Military Drama


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Reprint of the original, first published in 1876.




The Century


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The Land of Joy


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Reproduction of the original: The Land of Joy by Ralph Henry Barbour







I Told You I Wasn't Perfect


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In 1968, 24-year old Denny McLain turned the baseball world upside down by winning 31 games for the Detroit Tigers. McLain was also a musician. After he won both the MVP and Cy Young Awards in '68, he cut two albums for Capitol Records and played the Hammond organ in a three-week stint in Las Vegas. But winning games and performing on stage were never enough for McLain. He was driven by an insatiable thirst for attention and adventure and in 1969, flying back from a dental appointment in Detroit that he could have rescheduled, Denny arrived 20 minutes after he was supposed to have thrown out the first pitch of the All-Star Game in Washington, D.C. McLain recounts his fabulous success in one of baseball's most exciting eras, as well as his rapid fall from glory, two prison stints, and a horrific personal tragedy. It's one of the most compelling baseball memoirs to come along in a generation.