3. Alice in Wonderland by Lewis Carroll
4.Antony and
Cleopatra by Shakespeare
5. Around the world in 80 days by Jules Verne
6. As You Like It by Shakespeare
7. A Tale of Two Cities by Charles Dickens
8. Beauty and the Beast by Bayard Taylor
9. David Copperfield by Charles Dickens
10. Don Quixote by Miquel de Cervantes
11. Dr.Jekyll and Mr.Hyde by Robert Louis Stevenson
12. Great Expectations by Charles Dickens
13. Gullivers Travels by Jonathan Swift
15. Hunchback of Notre Dame by victor Hugo
17. Journey to the Center of the Earth by Jules Verne
18. Julius Caeser by Shakespeare
19. Love Labours Lost by Shakespeare
21. Merchant of Venice by Shakespeare
22. Moon and Sixpence by Somerset Maugham
23. Much ado About Nothing by Shakespeare
24. Of Human Bondage by Somerset Maugham
25.Oliver Twist by
Charles Dickens
26. Othello by William Shakespeare
28. Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen
29. Robinson Crusoe by Daniel Defoe
30.Romeo and Juliet
by Shakespeare
31. Sense and Sensibility by Jane Austen
32. Sons and Lovers by D.H.Lawrence
34. Taming of the Shrew by William Shakespeare
35. Tarzan the Terrible by Edgar rice Burroughs
36. The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle
37. The Adventures of Tom Sawyer by Mark Twain
38. The Arabian Nights Entertainments by Andrew Lang
39. The Blue Lagoon by H de Vere Stacpoole
40. The Comedy of Errors by William Shakespeare
41. The Jungle Book by Rudyard Kipling
42. The Man who knew too much by Gilbert K.
45. Women in Love by D.H.Lawrence
46. Treasure Island by Robert Louis Stevenson
47. The
Three Musketeers by Alexandre
Dumas
48.Canterbury
Tales, and Other Poems by Chaucer, Geoffrey,
51.King Lear by
William Shakspeare
52.Mankind in the
Making by H.G.Wells
53.A Midsummer
Nights Dream by William Shakespeare
54. Paradise
Regained by John Milton
55.The first men
in the Moon by H.G.Wells
56. Merry
Adventures of Robinhood
byHoward Pyle
57. The Odyssey by
Homer and translated by Samuel Butler
58. The Pickwick
Papers by Charles Dickens
59. The Prince and
the Pauper by Mark Twain
60. The Rape of Lucrece by William
Shakespeare
61. The Time
Machine by H.G.Wells
62. Treasure Island
by Robert Louis Stevenson
63. War and Peace
by Leo Tolstoy
64. Wuthering
Heights by Emily Bronte
65.
Forbidden
Flowers by Nancy Friday
66. The
Confessions of Jean Jacqueb Roubbeau translated into English
67.
Man in the
Iron Mask by Alexandar
Dumas
68.
Biography of
Abraham Lincoln
69.
The Cinderalla
70.
Disappearance
of Lady by Conon Doyle
71.
Scandal in
Bohemia by Conon Doyle
72.
Valley of
Fear by Conon Doyle
73.
The Hound of
the Baskervilles by Conon Doyle
74.
Importance
of being Earnest by Oscar Wilde
75.
Second
Jungle Book by Rukyard
Kipling
76.
Kidnapped by
Rudyard Kipling
77.
Grand
collection of Shakespeare works
78. Collection of
Jules Varne Science Fictions
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79.
R.K.Narayan’s Three Story-Books
This e-book contains three
story books of R.K.Narayan viz: Bachelor of Arts, Man Eater of Malgudi and
Swami and Friends. R.K.Naryan’s style of English writing and presentation of
events so vividly that it is very pertinent to learn his art of writing in
simple language but with beautiful expression. This e-book contains 293 pages.
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80. Passage to
India
This famous Indian book
contains 142 pages.
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81. The Satanic Verses by Salman
Rushdie
This international
famous but controversial book contains 378 pages.
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This is an interesting novel for modern times.
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83.
The
Dangerous Dimension : Selected fiction works by L.Ron Hubbard
The 1930s and 1940s
were a vibrant, seminal time for a gigantic audience of eager readers, probably
the largest per capita audience of readers in American history, and it was a golden age. The
sheer volume of tales released during this wondrous golden age remains
unmatched in any other period of literary history. L. Ron Hubbard’s Stories
from the Golden Age has something for every taste, every reader. This e-book contains
68 pages
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85. Concise
Encyclopedia of Languages of the World
In this book, the world’s
leading experts describe many of the languages of the world. It is estimated
that there are more than 250 established language families in the world, and
over 6800 distinct languages, many of which are threatened or endangered; this
volume provides the most comprehensive survey available on a large proportion
of these. It contains 377 articles on specific languages or language families
Each language article gives a brief description of the language and its
speakers, together with any known or hypothesized genetic relationships, and
highlights interesting phonological, semantic, and syntactic features.
Similarly, the articles on language families outline the membership and
distribution of the family and highlight any particular phonological, semantic,
or syntactic features common to the family. The articles describe the sounds,
meaning, structure, and family relationships of the languages, and have been
chosen to illustrate the range and diversity of human language; and the articles
in this volume provide fascinating insights into the structure, history, and
development of language families and individual languages; they highlight the
diversity of the world’s languages, from the thriving to the endangered and
extinct. This e-book is the definitive resource
on the languages of the world in one compact volume, and no other single volume
matches the coverage of languages or the authority of the contributors of this Concise Encyclopedia of
Languages of the World
which contains 1320 printable pages.
86. Encyclopedia of
Language and Education
This encyclopedia
consists of 10 volumes and contains 3881 printable pages. In this Encyclopedia of
Language and Education,
the stated topics in each volume’s table of contents are complemented by
several cross-cutting thematic strands recurring across the volumes, including
the classroom/pedagogic side of language and education; issues of identity in
language and education; language ideology and education; computer technology
and language education; and language rights in relation to education. Each of
the ten volumes presents core information and is international in scope, as
well as diverse in the populations it covers. The scholars contributing to the
Encyclopedia hail from all continents of our globe and from 41 countries; they
represent a great diversity of linguistic, cultural, and disciplinary
traditions.
______________________________________________________________________
This book is written
to help you to improve your knowledge of idioms in English. Idioms are fixed
expressions whose meaning is not immediately obvious looking at the individual
words in the idiom. Here you learn about the meanings of idioms and about how
they are used. This book focuses just on those idioms which the modern students
needs to know and it aims to provide the information and practice which will
help you understand and use them correctly. There are a great number of idioms
in English, but the 1000 or so idioms which are worked in this book were all
selected from those identified as significant based on computer searches of
huge language database. This e-book contains 190 pages and while preparing this
e-book a little bit clarity is lost.
88.The
Encyclopedia of Twentieth-Century Fiction - 3 Volumes
Falsehoods are more powerful than facts. Matthew Restall and Amara
Solari’s ingenious reconstruction of an amazing story—how Maya mathematics
morphed into modern millenarianism—tells us a lot about the Maya. Their book
tells us even more about ourselves: how and why, with every emotion from
solemnity to derision, we respond to prophets who claim to foresee the end of
time. Witty, scholarly, insightful, and fast-paced—this is the thinking
person’s guide to the next pop-apocalypse. (Felipe Fernández-Armesto )
Well, here’s a much-needed breath of fresh,
rational air. A welcome counterpoint to the seemingly endless end-of-the-world
tomes, this well-documented, well-presented book (written by a pair of history
professors) explores the origins of the alleged Mayan prediction that the world
will end on December 21, 2012. For conspiracy buffs, the authors’ conclusions
will prove decidedly disheartening. For example: they show that there is no
hard evidence that the Mayan calendar has any predictive function; the Long
Count calendar (which is key to the 2012 date) has a purely arbitrary start
date, rendering the 2012 date meaningless; and (despite common misperception)
the Mayans were not especially apocalyptic in outlook. The authors have a
simple mission, ‘to explain what the 2012 fuss is all about,’ and they do it
admirably. They don’t go as far as saying the world won’t end in December 2012,
but they do say this: there is no evidence, either historical or textual, that
the Mayans were predicting the end of the world in 2012 or any other year. (Booklist
)
Media are full of doomsday predictions related to the Maya Long Count
calendar end date, December 21, 2012, in today’s Western calendar. Restall and
Solari take a serious look at Maya calendar development, archaeology, and
history to seek the truth behind the so-called Maya doomsday prophecy, which
adherents believe may forecast the end of the world. The authors see no
evidence that Long Count calendar dates for the future, carved on stone
monuments at Maya archaeological sites in Mexico and Central America, indicate
predictions of doom. Their thorough examination of Maya carvings, images, and
writings leads them to the conclusion that the preconquest Maya were not
particularly millenarian. By contrast, their Spanish conquerors came from a
culture steeped in eschatological thinking. The authors effectively provide
scholarly evidence to back up their hypothesis that millenarianism probably
came via the Spanish and is not intrinsic to the traditional Maya worldview and
to debunk prophecies of doom. VERDICT This readable analysis based on credible
scholarship is a needed and balanced counterpoint to the many sensationalist
works on the Maya doomsday prophecy as 2012 approaches. Highly recommended for
all seeking a reasoned perspective on Maya calendar systems
89. Use the Right
Word: Modern Guide to Synonyms and Related Words
English has the largest
vocabulary and the most synonyms of any language in the world. This e-book
contains synonyms and related words, lists of antonyms, copious
cross-references, a complete and legible index This e-book contains 726 pages.
90. Oxford-Duden
Pictorial English Dictionary
This is a dictionary
produced by Oxford Press with pictorial explanatory notes for each term
contained in this dictionary. This e-book consists of 414 printable pages and
is useful for students.
91.
Alls Well That
Ends Well by William Shakespeare
This is a literary
work, as it is, without any comments, or explanations. This e-book contains 667
pages.
92. English for
Academic Correspondence and Socializing
This book is for PhD students,
researchers, lecturers, and professors in any discipline whose first language
is not English. The book will teach you how to use English to carry out
everyday activities in your academic work, such as writing emails, dealing with
referees and editors, making phone calls, and socializing at conferences. The
book is divided into seven parts—see the Contents on page xi. The Contents page
also acts as a summary of each chapter. Each chapter begins with a very quick
summary of its importance. This is followed either by advice from experts in
writing and communication or by interesting factoids. Most of the comments from
the experts were commissioned specifically for this book. This e-book contains
352 pages.
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