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A Passage to India

Part of Vintage Classics

Author E. M. Forster
Look inside
Paperback
$11.00 US
Knopf | Vintage
5.21"W x 7.98"H x 0.73"D  
On sale Jan 07, 2020 | 368 Pages | 978-1-9848-9946-0
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  • English Language Arts > Genre: Fiction > Historical Fiction: World > Asia
  • English Language Arts > Genre: Fiction > People & Places by Region > Asia
  • English Language Arts > Genre: Fiction > People & Places by Region > Europe
  • English Language Arts > Genre: Fiction > Social Themes > Prejudice & Racism
  • English Language Arts > Literature: British & Commonwealth > 20th Century
  • About
  • Author
  • Excerpt
  • Praise
Among the greatest novels of the twentieth century, and the basis for director David Lean’s Academy Award-nominated film, A Passage to India turns on a tragic clash of cultures in British India after the turn of the century, at the height of the Indian independence movement. Centering on an ambiguous incident between a young Englishwoman of uncertain stability and an Indian doctor eager to know his conquerors better, Forster’s book explores both the historical chasm between peoples and the eternal one between individuals struggling to ease their isolation and make sense of their humanity.
 
“A Passage to India is one of the great books of the twentieth century and has had enormous influence. We need its message of tolerance and understanding now more than ever. Forster was years ahead of his time, and we ought to try to catch up with him.” —Margaret Drabble

“The crystal clear portraiture, the delicate conveying of nuances of thought and life, and the astonishing command of his medium show Forster at the height of his powers.” —The New York Times

“[Forster is] a supreme storyteller . . . The novel seems to me more completely ‘achieved’ than anything else he wrote.” —from the new Introduction by P. N. Furbank
E. M. Forster (1879–1970) was born Edward Morgan Forster in London. He attended Tonbridge School as a day boy and went on to King's College, Cambridge, in 1897. With King's he had a lifelong connection and was elected to an Honorary Fellowship in 1946. Forster wrote six novels, four of which appeared before World War I: Where Angels Fear to Tread (1905), The Longest Journey (1907), A Room with a View (1908), and Howard's End (1910).   An interval of fourteen years elapsed before he published A Passage to India. It won both the Prix Femina Vie Heureuse and the James Tait Black Memorial Prize. Finished in 1914, his novel on homosexual themes, Maurice, was published in posthumously in 1971.   He also published two volumes of short stories; two collections of essays; a critical work, Aspects of the Novel; The Hill of Devi, a fascinating record of two visits Forster made to the Indian state of Dewas Senior; two biographies; two books about Alexandria (where he worked for the Red Cross during World War I); and, with Eric Crozier, the libretto for Benjamin Britten's opera Billy Budd. The Times called him "one of the most esteemed English novelists of his time." View titles by E. M. Forster
Chapter I

Except for the Marabar Caves—and they are twenty miles off—the city of Chandrapore presents nothing extraordinary. Edged rather than washed by the river Ganges, it trails for a couple of miles along the bank, scarcely distinguishable from the rubbish it deposits so freely. There are no bathing-steps on the river front, as the Ganges happens not to be holy here; indeed there is no river front, and bazaars shut out the wide and shifting panorama of the stream. The streets are mean, the temples ineffective, and though a few fine houses exist they are hidden away in gardens or down alleys whose filth deters all but the invited guest. Chandrapore was never large or beautiful, but two hundred years ago it lay on the road between Upper India, then imperial, and the sea, and the fine houses date from that period. The zest for decoration stopped in the eighteenth century, nor was it ever democratic. There is no painting and scarcely any carving in the bazaars. The very wood seems made of mud, the inhabitants of mud moving. So abased, so monotonous is everything that meets the eye, that when the Ganges comes down it might be expected to wash the excrescence back into the soil. Houses do fall, people are drowned and left rotting, but the general outline of the town persists, swelling here, shrinking there, like some low but indestructible form of life.

Inland, the prospect alters. There is an oval Maidan, and a long sallow hospital. Houses belonging to Eurasians stand on the high ground by the railway station. Beyond the railway—which runs parallel to the river—the land sinks, then rises again rather steeply. On the second rise is laid out the little civil station, and viewed hence Chandrapore appears to be a totally different place. It is a city of gardens. It is no city, but a forest sparsely scattered with huts. It is a tropical pleasaunce washed by a noble river. The toddy palms and neem trees and mangoes and pepul that were hidden behind the bazaars now become visible and in their turn hide the bazaars. They rise from the gardens where ancient tanks nourish them, they burst out of stifling purlieus and unconsidered temples. Seeking, light and air, and endowed with more strength than man or his works, they soar above the lower deposit to greet one another with branches and beckoning leaves, and to build a city for the birds. Especially after the rains do they screen what passes below, but at all times, even when scorched or leafless, they glorify the city to the English people who inhabit the rise, so that newcomers cannot believe it to be as meagre as it is described, and have to be driven down to acquire disillusionment. As for the civil station itself, it provokes no emotion. It charms not, neither does it repel. It is sensibly planned, with a red-brick club on its brow, and farther back a grocer’s and a cemetery, and the bungalows are disposed along roads that intersect at right angles. It has nothing hideous in it, and only the view is beautiful; it shares nothing with the city except the overarching sky.

The sky too has its changes, but they are less marked than those of the vegetation and the river. Clouds map it up at times, but it is normally a dome of blending tints, and the main tint blue. By day the blue will pale down into white where it touches the white of the land, after sunset it has a new circumference—orange, melting upwards into tenderest purple. But the core of blue persists, and so it is by night. Then the stars hang like lamps from the immense vault. The distance between the vault and them is as nothing to the distance behind them, and that farther distance, though beyond color, last freed itself from blue.

The sky settles everything—not only climates and seasons but when the earth shall be beautiful. By herself she can do little—only feeble outbursts of flowers. But when the sky chooses, glory can rain into the Chandrapore bazaars or a benediction pass from horizon to horizon. The sky can do this because it is so strong and so enormous. Strength comes from the sun, infused in it daily, size from the prostrate earth. No mountains infringe on the curve. League after league the earth lies flat, heaves a little, is flat again. Only in the south, where a group of fists and fingers are thrust up through the soil, is the endless expanse interrupted. These fists and fingers are the Marabar Hills, containing the extraordinary caves.

Chapter II

Abandoning his bicycle, which fell before a servant could catch it, the young man sprang up on to the veranda. He was all animation. “Hamidullah, Hamidullah! am I late?” he cried.

“Do not apologize,” said his host. “You are always late.”

“Kindly answer my question. Am I late? Has Mahmoud Ali eaten all the food? If so I go elsewhere. Mr. Mahmoud Ali, how are you?”

“Thank you, Dr. Aziz, I am dying.”

“Dying before your dinner? Oh, poor Mahmoud Ali!”

“Hamidullah here is actually dead. He passed away just as you rode up on your bike.”

“Yes, that is so,” said the other. “Imagine us both as addressing you from another and a happier world.”

“Does there happen to be such a thing as a hookah in that happier world of yours?”

“Aziz, don’t chatter. We are having a very sad talk.”

The hookah had been packed too tight, as was usual in his friend’s house, and bubbled sulkily. He coaxed it. Yielding at last, the tobacco jetted up into his lungs and nostrils, driving out the smoke of burning cow dung that had filled them as he rode through the bazaar. It was delicious. He lay in a trance, sensuous but healthy, through which the talk of the two others did not seem particularly sad—they were discussing as to whether or no it is possible to be friends with an Englishman. Mahmoud Ali argued that it was not, Hamidullah disagreed, but with so many reservations that there was no friction between them. Delicious indeed to lie on the broad veranda with the moon rising in front and the servants preparing dinner behind, and no trouble happening.

“Well, look at my own experience this morning.”

“I only contend that it is possible in England,” replied Hamidullah, who had been to that country long ago, before the big rush, and had received a cordial welcome at Cambridge.

“It is impossible here. Aziz! The red-nosed boy has again insulted me in Court. I do not blame him. He was told that he ought to insult me. Until lately he was quite a nice boy, but the others have got hold of him.”

“Yes, they have no chance here, that is my point. They come out intending to be gentlemen, and are told it will not do. Look at Lesley, look at Blakiston, now it is your red-nosed boy, and Fielding will go next. Why, I remember when Turton came out first. It was in another part of the Province. You fellows will not believe me, but I have driven with Turton in his carriage—Turton! Oh yes, we were once quite intimate. He has shown me his stamp collection.”

“He would expect you to steal it now. Turton! But red-nosed boy will be far worse than Turton!”

“I do not think so. They all become exactly the same, not worse, not better. I give any Englishman two years, be he Turton or Burton. It is only the difference of a letter. And I give any Englishwoman six months. All are exactly alike. Do you not agree with me?”

“I do not,” replied Mahmoud Ali, entering into the bitter fun, and feeling both pain and amusement at each word that was uttered. “For my own part I find such profound differences among our rulers. Red-nose mumbles, Turton talks distinctly, Mrs. Turton takes bribes, Mrs. Red-nose does not and cannot, because so far there is no Mrs. Red-nose.”

“Bribes?”

“Did you not know that when they were lent to Central India over a Canal Scheme, some Rajah or other gave her a sewing machine in solid gold so that the water should run through his state.”

“And does it?”

“No, that is where Mrs. Turton is so skillful. When we poor blacks take bribes, we perform what we are bribed to perform, and the law discovers us in consequence. The English take and do nothing. I admire them.”

“We all admire them. Aziz, please pass me the hookah.”

“Oh, not yet—hookah is so jolly now.”

“You are a very selfish boy.” He raised his voice suddenly, and shouted for dinner. Servants shouted back that it was ready. They meant that they wished it was ready, and were so understood, for nobody moved. Then Hamidullah continued, but with changed manner and evident emotion.

“But take my case—the case of young Hugh Bannister. Here is the son of my dear, my dead friends, the Reverend and Mrs. Bannister, whose goodness to me in England I shall never forget or describe. They were father and mother to me, I talked to them as I do now. In the vacations their Rectory became my home. They entrusted all their children to me—I often carried little Hugh about—I took him up to the Funeral of Queen Victoria, and held him in my arms above the crowd.”

“Queen Victoria was different,” murmured Mahmoud Ali.
Copyright © 2021 by E. M. Forster. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
“A Passage to India is one of the great books of the twentieth century and has had enormous influence. We need its message of tolerance and understanding now more than ever. Forster was years ahead of his time, and we ought to try to catch up with him.” –Margaret Drabble

“The crystal clear portraiture, the delicate conveying of nuances of thought and life, and the astonishing command of his medium show Forster at the height of his powers.” –The New York Times

“[Forster is] a supreme storyteller . . . The novel seems to me more completely ‘achieved’ than anything else he wrote.” –from the new Introduction by P. N. Furbank

About

Among the greatest novels of the twentieth century, and the basis for director David Lean’s Academy Award-nominated film, A Passage to India turns on a tragic clash of cultures in British India after the turn of the century, at the height of the Indian independence movement. Centering on an ambiguous incident between a young Englishwoman of uncertain stability and an Indian doctor eager to know his conquerors better, Forster’s book explores both the historical chasm between peoples and the eternal one between individuals struggling to ease their isolation and make sense of their humanity.
 
“A Passage to India is one of the great books of the twentieth century and has had enormous influence. We need its message of tolerance and understanding now more than ever. Forster was years ahead of his time, and we ought to try to catch up with him.” —Margaret Drabble

“The crystal clear portraiture, the delicate conveying of nuances of thought and life, and the astonishing command of his medium show Forster at the height of his powers.” —The New York Times

“[Forster is] a supreme storyteller . . . The novel seems to me more completely ‘achieved’ than anything else he wrote.” —from the new Introduction by P. N. Furbank

Author

E. M. Forster (1879–1970) was born Edward Morgan Forster in London. He attended Tonbridge School as a day boy and went on to King's College, Cambridge, in 1897. With King's he had a lifelong connection and was elected to an Honorary Fellowship in 1946. Forster wrote six novels, four of which appeared before World War I: Where Angels Fear to Tread (1905), The Longest Journey (1907), A Room with a View (1908), and Howard's End (1910).   An interval of fourteen years elapsed before he published A Passage to India. It won both the Prix Femina Vie Heureuse and the James Tait Black Memorial Prize. Finished in 1914, his novel on homosexual themes, Maurice, was published in posthumously in 1971.   He also published two volumes of short stories; two collections of essays; a critical work, Aspects of the Novel; The Hill of Devi, a fascinating record of two visits Forster made to the Indian state of Dewas Senior; two biographies; two books about Alexandria (where he worked for the Red Cross during World War I); and, with Eric Crozier, the libretto for Benjamin Britten's opera Billy Budd. The Times called him "one of the most esteemed English novelists of his time." View titles by E. M. Forster

Excerpt

Chapter I

Except for the Marabar Caves—and they are twenty miles off—the city of Chandrapore presents nothing extraordinary. Edged rather than washed by the river Ganges, it trails for a couple of miles along the bank, scarcely distinguishable from the rubbish it deposits so freely. There are no bathing-steps on the river front, as the Ganges happens not to be holy here; indeed there is no river front, and bazaars shut out the wide and shifting panorama of the stream. The streets are mean, the temples ineffective, and though a few fine houses exist they are hidden away in gardens or down alleys whose filth deters all but the invited guest. Chandrapore was never large or beautiful, but two hundred years ago it lay on the road between Upper India, then imperial, and the sea, and the fine houses date from that period. The zest for decoration stopped in the eighteenth century, nor was it ever democratic. There is no painting and scarcely any carving in the bazaars. The very wood seems made of mud, the inhabitants of mud moving. So abased, so monotonous is everything that meets the eye, that when the Ganges comes down it might be expected to wash the excrescence back into the soil. Houses do fall, people are drowned and left rotting, but the general outline of the town persists, swelling here, shrinking there, like some low but indestructible form of life.

Inland, the prospect alters. There is an oval Maidan, and a long sallow hospital. Houses belonging to Eurasians stand on the high ground by the railway station. Beyond the railway—which runs parallel to the river—the land sinks, then rises again rather steeply. On the second rise is laid out the little civil station, and viewed hence Chandrapore appears to be a totally different place. It is a city of gardens. It is no city, but a forest sparsely scattered with huts. It is a tropical pleasaunce washed by a noble river. The toddy palms and neem trees and mangoes and pepul that were hidden behind the bazaars now become visible and in their turn hide the bazaars. They rise from the gardens where ancient tanks nourish them, they burst out of stifling purlieus and unconsidered temples. Seeking, light and air, and endowed with more strength than man or his works, they soar above the lower deposit to greet one another with branches and beckoning leaves, and to build a city for the birds. Especially after the rains do they screen what passes below, but at all times, even when scorched or leafless, they glorify the city to the English people who inhabit the rise, so that newcomers cannot believe it to be as meagre as it is described, and have to be driven down to acquire disillusionment. As for the civil station itself, it provokes no emotion. It charms not, neither does it repel. It is sensibly planned, with a red-brick club on its brow, and farther back a grocer’s and a cemetery, and the bungalows are disposed along roads that intersect at right angles. It has nothing hideous in it, and only the view is beautiful; it shares nothing with the city except the overarching sky.

The sky too has its changes, but they are less marked than those of the vegetation and the river. Clouds map it up at times, but it is normally a dome of blending tints, and the main tint blue. By day the blue will pale down into white where it touches the white of the land, after sunset it has a new circumference—orange, melting upwards into tenderest purple. But the core of blue persists, and so it is by night. Then the stars hang like lamps from the immense vault. The distance between the vault and them is as nothing to the distance behind them, and that farther distance, though beyond color, last freed itself from blue.

The sky settles everything—not only climates and seasons but when the earth shall be beautiful. By herself she can do little—only feeble outbursts of flowers. But when the sky chooses, glory can rain into the Chandrapore bazaars or a benediction pass from horizon to horizon. The sky can do this because it is so strong and so enormous. Strength comes from the sun, infused in it daily, size from the prostrate earth. No mountains infringe on the curve. League after league the earth lies flat, heaves a little, is flat again. Only in the south, where a group of fists and fingers are thrust up through the soil, is the endless expanse interrupted. These fists and fingers are the Marabar Hills, containing the extraordinary caves.

Chapter II

Abandoning his bicycle, which fell before a servant could catch it, the young man sprang up on to the veranda. He was all animation. “Hamidullah, Hamidullah! am I late?” he cried.

“Do not apologize,” said his host. “You are always late.”

“Kindly answer my question. Am I late? Has Mahmoud Ali eaten all the food? If so I go elsewhere. Mr. Mahmoud Ali, how are you?”

“Thank you, Dr. Aziz, I am dying.”

“Dying before your dinner? Oh, poor Mahmoud Ali!”

“Hamidullah here is actually dead. He passed away just as you rode up on your bike.”

“Yes, that is so,” said the other. “Imagine us both as addressing you from another and a happier world.”

“Does there happen to be such a thing as a hookah in that happier world of yours?”

“Aziz, don’t chatter. We are having a very sad talk.”

The hookah had been packed too tight, as was usual in his friend’s house, and bubbled sulkily. He coaxed it. Yielding at last, the tobacco jetted up into his lungs and nostrils, driving out the smoke of burning cow dung that had filled them as he rode through the bazaar. It was delicious. He lay in a trance, sensuous but healthy, through which the talk of the two others did not seem particularly sad—they were discussing as to whether or no it is possible to be friends with an Englishman. Mahmoud Ali argued that it was not, Hamidullah disagreed, but with so many reservations that there was no friction between them. Delicious indeed to lie on the broad veranda with the moon rising in front and the servants preparing dinner behind, and no trouble happening.

“Well, look at my own experience this morning.”

“I only contend that it is possible in England,” replied Hamidullah, who had been to that country long ago, before the big rush, and had received a cordial welcome at Cambridge.

“It is impossible here. Aziz! The red-nosed boy has again insulted me in Court. I do not blame him. He was told that he ought to insult me. Until lately he was quite a nice boy, but the others have got hold of him.”

“Yes, they have no chance here, that is my point. They come out intending to be gentlemen, and are told it will not do. Look at Lesley, look at Blakiston, now it is your red-nosed boy, and Fielding will go next. Why, I remember when Turton came out first. It was in another part of the Province. You fellows will not believe me, but I have driven with Turton in his carriage—Turton! Oh yes, we were once quite intimate. He has shown me his stamp collection.”

“He would expect you to steal it now. Turton! But red-nosed boy will be far worse than Turton!”

“I do not think so. They all become exactly the same, not worse, not better. I give any Englishman two years, be he Turton or Burton. It is only the difference of a letter. And I give any Englishwoman six months. All are exactly alike. Do you not agree with me?”

“I do not,” replied Mahmoud Ali, entering into the bitter fun, and feeling both pain and amusement at each word that was uttered. “For my own part I find such profound differences among our rulers. Red-nose mumbles, Turton talks distinctly, Mrs. Turton takes bribes, Mrs. Red-nose does not and cannot, because so far there is no Mrs. Red-nose.”

“Bribes?”

“Did you not know that when they were lent to Central India over a Canal Scheme, some Rajah or other gave her a sewing machine in solid gold so that the water should run through his state.”

“And does it?”

“No, that is where Mrs. Turton is so skillful. When we poor blacks take bribes, we perform what we are bribed to perform, and the law discovers us in consequence. The English take and do nothing. I admire them.”

“We all admire them. Aziz, please pass me the hookah.”

“Oh, not yet—hookah is so jolly now.”

“You are a very selfish boy.” He raised his voice suddenly, and shouted for dinner. Servants shouted back that it was ready. They meant that they wished it was ready, and were so understood, for nobody moved. Then Hamidullah continued, but with changed manner and evident emotion.

“But take my case—the case of young Hugh Bannister. Here is the son of my dear, my dead friends, the Reverend and Mrs. Bannister, whose goodness to me in England I shall never forget or describe. They were father and mother to me, I talked to them as I do now. In the vacations their Rectory became my home. They entrusted all their children to me—I often carried little Hugh about—I took him up to the Funeral of Queen Victoria, and held him in my arms above the crowd.”

“Queen Victoria was different,” murmured Mahmoud Ali.
Copyright © 2021 by E. M. Forster. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.

Praise

“A Passage to India is one of the great books of the twentieth century and has had enormous influence. We need its message of tolerance and understanding now more than ever. Forster was years ahead of his time, and we ought to try to catch up with him.” –Margaret Drabble

“The crystal clear portraiture, the delicate conveying of nuances of thought and life, and the astonishing command of his medium show Forster at the height of his powers.” –The New York Times

“[Forster is] a supreme storyteller . . . The novel seems to me more completely ‘achieved’ than anything else he wrote.” –from the new Introduction by P. N. Furbank

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    Jun 16, 2020
  • Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea
    Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea
    Jules Verne
    $10.00 US
    Paperback
    Jun 16, 2020
  • Sherlock Holmes: The Complete Novels and Stories, Volume I
    Sherlock Holmes: The Complete Novels and Stories, Volume I
    Arthur Conan Doyle
    $16.00 US
    Paperback
    Apr 14, 2020
  • Sherlock Holmes: The Complete Novels and Stories, Volume II
    Sherlock Holmes: The Complete Novels and Stories, Volume II
    Arthur Conan Doyle
    $14.95 US
    Paperback
    Apr 14, 2020
  • Little Women
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    Louisa May Alcott
    $10.00 US
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    Nov 12, 2019
  • Leaves of Grass
    Leaves of Grass
    Walt Whitman
    $14.00 US
    Paperback
    May 28, 2019
  • Whose Body?
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    The First Lord Peter Wimsey Mystery
    Dorothy L. Sayers
    $9.95 US
    Paperback
    Apr 30, 2019
  • New Hampshire
    New Hampshire
    Robert Frost
    $10.00 US
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    Jan 22, 2019
  • My Antonia
    My Antonia
    Introduction by Jane Smiley
    Willa Cather
    $10.00 US
    Paperback
    Mar 06, 2018
  • All Passion Spent
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    Vita Sackville-West
    $15.00 US
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    Jul 11, 2017
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    The Rights of Man
    H. G. Wells
    $10.00 US
    Paperback
    Mar 21, 2017
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    The Time Machine
    H. G. Wells
    $10.00 US
    Paperback
    Mar 21, 2017
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    William Blake
    $17.00 US
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    Dec 13, 2016
  • The Mayor of Casterbridge
    The Mayor of Casterbridge
    Thomas Hardy
    $11.00 US
    Paperback
    Nov 08, 2016
  • Tess of the D'Urbervilles
    Tess of the D'Urbervilles
    Thomas Hardy
    $10.00 US
    Paperback
    Mar 03, 2015
  • The Prince and the Pauper
    The Prince and the Pauper
    Mark Twain
    $11.00 US
    Paperback
    Feb 03, 2015
  • Pudd'nhead Wilson
    Pudd'nhead Wilson
    Mark Twain
    $13.00 US
    Paperback
    Feb 03, 2015
  • Walden & Civil Disobedience
    Walden & Civil Disobedience
    Henry David Thoreau
    $11.00 US
    Paperback
    Aug 26, 2014
  • The Scarlet Letter
    The Scarlet Letter
    A Romance
    Nathaniel Hawthorne
    $8.00 US
    Paperback
    Aug 26, 2014
  • The Red Badge of Courage
    The Red Badge of Courage
    Stephen Crane
    $8.95 US
    Paperback
    Feb 25, 2014
  • The Call of the Wild & White Fang
    The Call of the Wild & White Fang
    Jack London
    $9.00 US
    Paperback
    Feb 25, 2014
  • The Age of Innocence
    The Age of Innocence
    Edith Wharton
    $11.00 US
    Paperback
    Jun 05, 2012
  • The House of Mirth
    The House of Mirth
    Edith Wharton
    $11.00 US
    Paperback
    Jun 05, 2012
  • Ethan Frome
    Ethan Frome
    Edith Wharton
    $10.00 US
    Paperback
    Jun 05, 2012
  • The Custom of the Country
    The Custom of the Country
    Edith Wharton
    $12.00 US
    Paperback
    Jun 05, 2012
  • Great Expectations
    Great Expectations
    Charles Dickens
    $7.95 US
    Paperback
    Jan 10, 2012
  • David Copperfield
    David Copperfield
    Charles Dickens
    $12.00 US
    Paperback
    Jan 10, 2012
  • Oliver Twist
    Oliver Twist
    Charles Dickens
    $10.00 US
    Paperback
    Jan 10, 2012
  • Hard Times
    Hard Times
    Charles Dickens
    $9.00 US
    Paperback
    Jan 10, 2012
  • Bleak House
    Bleak House
    Charles Dickens
    $13.00 US
    Paperback
    Jan 03, 2012
  • A Christmas Carol
    A Christmas Carol
    And Other Christmas Books
    Charles Dickens
    $11.00 US
    Paperback
    Nov 29, 2011
  • The Fifth Queen
    The Fifth Queen
    Ford Madox Ford
    $15.95 US
    Paperback
    Oct 04, 2011
  • O Pioneers!
    O Pioneers!
    Introduction by Elaine Showalter
    Willa Cather
    $24.95 US
    Hardcover
    Sep 06, 2011
  • The Canterbury Tales
    The Canterbury Tales
    A Prose Version in Modern English
    Geoffrey Chaucer
    $11.00 US
    Paperback
    Jul 12, 2011
  • Dracula
    Dracula
    Bram Stoker
    $11.00 US
    Paperback
    Jun 14, 2011
  • The Adventures of Tom Sawyer
    The Adventures of Tom Sawyer
    A Novel
    Mark Twain
    $9.00 US
    Paperback
    Apr 06, 2010
  • The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn
    The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn
    Mark Twain
    $9.00 US
    Paperback
    Apr 06, 2010
  • The Original Frankenstein
    The Original Frankenstein
    Mary Shelley
    $16.00 US
    Paperback
    Sep 08, 2009
  • Great Tales and Poems of Edgar Allan Poe
    Great Tales and Poems of Edgar Allan Poe
    Edgar Allan Poe
    $14.00 US
    Paperback
    Sep 01, 2009
  • Jane Eyre
    Jane Eyre
    Charlotte Bronte
    $9.00 US
    Paperback
    Apr 07, 2009
  • Villette
    Villette
    Charlotte Bronte
    $17.00 US
    Paperback
    Apr 07, 2009
  • The Shadow-Line
    The Shadow-Line
    A Confession
    Joseph Conrad
    $10.00 US
    Paperback
    Oct 09, 2007
  • Emma
    Emma
    Jane Austen
    $10.00 US
    Paperback
    Sep 04, 2007
  • Persuasion
    Persuasion
    Jane Austen
    $7.00 US
    Paperback
    Sep 04, 2007
  • Pride and Prejudice
    Pride and Prejudice
    Jane Austen
    $9.00 US
    Paperback
    Sep 04, 2007
  • Notes from Underground
    Notes from Underground
    Introduction by Richard Pevear
    Fyodor Dostoevsky
    $26.00 US
    Hardcover
    Mar 23, 2004
  • Oliver Twist
    Oliver Twist
    Charles Dickens, George Cruikshank
    $8.00 US
    Paperback
    Oct 09, 2001
  • Hard Times
    Hard Times
    Charles Dickens
    $10.00 US
    Paperback
    Jul 10, 2001
  • Great Expectations
    Great Expectations
    Charles Dickens
    $11.00 US
    Paperback
    Feb 13, 2001
  • David Copperfield
    David Copperfield
    Charles Dickens
    $8.95 US
    Paperback
    Nov 28, 2000
  • The Collected Tales of Nikolai Gogol
    The Collected Tales of Nikolai Gogol
    Nikolai Gogol
    $20.00 US
    Paperback
    Jun 29, 1999
  • The Collected Poems of Langston Hughes
    The Collected Poems of Langston Hughes
    Langston Hughes
    $22.00 US
    Paperback
    Oct 31, 1995
  • Dubliners
    Dubliners
    James Joyce
    $11.00 US
    Paperback
    Apr 06, 1993
  • A Tale of Two Cities
    A Tale of Two Cities
    Introduction by Simon Schama
    Charles Dickens
    $30.00 US
    Hardcover
    Feb 23, 1993
  • Collected Stories of Willa Cather
    Collected Stories of Willa Cather
    Willa Cather
    $16.95 US
    Paperback
    Dec 01, 1992
  • Death Comes for the Archbishop
    Death Comes for the Archbishop
    Introduction by A. S. Byatt
    Willa Cather
    $22.00 US
    Hardcover
    Jun 30, 1992
  • The Aeneid
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    Introduction by Philip Hardie
    Virgil
    $28.00 US
    Hardcover
    Jun 30, 1992
  • The Panther & the Lash
    The Panther & the Lash
    Langston Hughes
    $13.95 US
    Paperback
    Feb 04, 1992
  • One of Ours
    One of Ours
    Willa Cather
    $14.95 US
    Paperback
    Nov 05, 1991
  • Bleak House
    Bleak House
    Introduction by Barbara Hardy
    Charles Dickens
    $32.00 US
    Hardcover
    Oct 15, 1991
  • Stories
    Stories
    Katherine Mansfield
    $16.95 US
    Paperback
    May 07, 1991
  • Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde
    Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde
    Robert Louis Stevenson
    $9.00 US
    Paperback
    May 07, 1991
  • The Ink Dark Moon
    The Ink Dark Moon
    Love Poems by Ono no Komachi and Izumi Shikibu, Women of the Ancient Court of Japan
    Izumi Shikibu, Ono no Komachi
    $17.00 US
    Paperback
    Oct 03, 1990
  • The Ways of White Folks
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    Stories
    Langston Hughes
    $17.00 US
    Paperback
    Sep 12, 1990
  • Selected Poems of Langston Hughes
    Selected Poems of Langston Hughes
    A Classic Collection of Poems by a Master of American Verse
    Langston Hughes
    $17.00 US
    Paperback
    Sep 12, 1990
  • Three Classic African-American Novels
    Three Classic African-American Novels
    Clotel, Iola Leary, The Marrow of Tradition
    William W. Brown, Frances Ellen Watkins Harper, Charles Chesnutt
    $21.00 US
    Paperback
    Aug 11, 1990
  • A Tale of Two Cities
    A Tale of Two Cities
    Charles Dickens
    $12.00 US
    Paperback
    Jul 14, 1990
  • Death Comes for the Archbishop
    Death Comes for the Archbishop
    Willa Cather
    $16.00 US
    Paperback
    Jun 16, 1990
  • The Sorrows of Young Werther
    The Sorrows of Young Werther
    Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
    $12.00 US
    Paperback
    Jun 16, 1990
  • A Room with a View
    A Room with a View
    E.M. Forster
    $11.00 US
    Paperback
    Oct 23, 1989
  • The Awakening and Selected Stories
    The Awakening and Selected Stories
    Kate Chopin
    $10.00 US
    Paperback
    Feb 21, 2023
  • God's Trombones
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    Seven Negro Sermons in Verse
    James Weldon Johnson
    $11.00 US
    Paperback
    Feb 21, 2023
  • Boris Godunov, Little Tragedies, and Others
    Boris Godunov, Little Tragedies, and Others
    The Complete Plays
    Alexander Pushkin
    $17.00 US
    Paperback
    Jan 17, 2023
  • Men Without Women
    Men Without Women
    Ernest Hemingway
    $12.00 US
    Paperback
    Jan 03, 2023
  • To the Lighthouse
    To the Lighthouse
    Virginia Woolf
    $10.00 US
    Paperback
    Jan 03, 2023
  • The Sun Also Rises
    The Sun Also Rises
    Ernest Hemingway
    $12.00 US
    Paperback
    Jan 25, 2022
  • Enough Rope
    Enough Rope
    A Book of Light Verse
    Dorothy Parker
    $11.00 US
    Paperback
    Jan 25, 2022
  • Sister Carrie
    Sister Carrie
    Theodore Dreiser
    $9.95 US
    Paperback
    Dec 28, 2021
  • The Art of War
    The Art of War
    Sun Tzu
    $9.95 US
    Paperback
    Dec 21, 2021
  • Wuthering Heights
    Wuthering Heights
    Emily Bronte
    $8.00 US
    Paperback
    Dec 07, 2021
  • A Passage to India
    A Passage to India
    E. M. Forster
    $12.00 US
    Paperback
    Aug 10, 2021
  • An American Tragedy
    An American Tragedy
    Theodore Dreiser
    $12.00 US
    Paperback
    May 25, 2021
  • The Waste Land and Other Poems
    The Waste Land and Other Poems
    T. S. Eliot
    $10.00 US
    Paperback
    May 11, 2021
  • Fifty-Two Stories
    Fifty-Two Stories
    Anton Chekhov
    $18.00 US
    Paperback
    Jan 19, 2021
  • Mrs. Dalloway
    Mrs. Dalloway
    Virginia Woolf
    $11.00 US
    Paperback
    Jan 05, 2021
  • In Our Time
    In Our Time
    Ernest Hemingway
    $11.00 US
    Paperback
    Jan 05, 2021
  • The Great Gatsby
    The Great Gatsby
    F. Scott Fitzgerald
    $16.00 US
    Paperback
    Jan 05, 2021
  • Manhattan Transfer
    Manhattan Transfer
    John Dos Passos
    $9.95 US
    Paperback
    Jan 05, 2021
  • The Prince
    The Prince
    Niccolo Machiavelli
    $9.00 US
    Paperback
    Oct 13, 2020
  • The Wealth of Nations
    The Wealth of Nations
    Adam Smith
    $16.00 US
    Paperback
    Oct 13, 2020
  • The Count of Monte Cristo
    The Count of Monte Cristo
    Alexandre Dumas
    $12.00 US
    Paperback
    Jun 16, 2020
  • Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea
    Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea
    Jules Verne
    $10.00 US
    Paperback
    Jun 16, 2020
  • Sherlock Holmes: The Complete Novels and Stories, Volume I
    Sherlock Holmes: The Complete Novels and Stories, Volume I
    Arthur Conan Doyle
    $16.00 US
    Paperback
    Apr 14, 2020
  • Sherlock Holmes: The Complete Novels and Stories, Volume II
    Sherlock Holmes: The Complete Novels and Stories, Volume II
    Arthur Conan Doyle
    $14.95 US
    Paperback
    Apr 14, 2020
  • Little Women
    Little Women
    Louisa May Alcott
    $10.00 US
    Paperback
    Nov 12, 2019
  • Leaves of Grass
    Leaves of Grass
    Walt Whitman
    $14.00 US
    Paperback
    May 28, 2019
  • Whose Body?
    Whose Body?
    The First Lord Peter Wimsey Mystery
    Dorothy L. Sayers
    $9.95 US
    Paperback
    Apr 30, 2019
  • New Hampshire
    New Hampshire
    Robert Frost
    $10.00 US
    Paperback
    Jan 22, 2019
  • My Antonia
    My Antonia
    Introduction by Jane Smiley
    Willa Cather
    $10.00 US
    Paperback
    Mar 06, 2018
  • All Passion Spent
    All Passion Spent
    Vita Sackville-West
    $15.00 US
    Paperback
    Jul 11, 2017
  • The Rights of Man
    The Rights of Man
    H. G. Wells
    $10.00 US
    Paperback
    Mar 21, 2017
  • The Time Machine
    The Time Machine
    H. G. Wells
    $10.00 US
    Paperback
    Mar 21, 2017
  • Poems
    Poems
    William Blake
    $17.00 US
    Paperback
    Dec 13, 2016
  • The Mayor of Casterbridge
    The Mayor of Casterbridge
    Thomas Hardy
    $11.00 US
    Paperback
    Nov 08, 2016
  • Tess of the D'Urbervilles
    Tess of the D'Urbervilles
    Thomas Hardy
    $10.00 US
    Paperback
    Mar 03, 2015
  • The Prince and the Pauper
    The Prince and the Pauper
    Mark Twain
    $11.00 US
    Paperback
    Feb 03, 2015
  • Pudd'nhead Wilson
    Pudd'nhead Wilson
    Mark Twain
    $13.00 US
    Paperback
    Feb 03, 2015
  • Walden & Civil Disobedience
    Walden & Civil Disobedience
    Henry David Thoreau
    $11.00 US
    Paperback
    Aug 26, 2014
  • The Scarlet Letter
    The Scarlet Letter
    A Romance
    Nathaniel Hawthorne
    $8.00 US
    Paperback
    Aug 26, 2014
  • The Red Badge of Courage
    The Red Badge of Courage
    Stephen Crane
    $8.95 US
    Paperback
    Feb 25, 2014
  • The Call of the Wild & White Fang
    The Call of the Wild & White Fang
    Jack London
    $9.00 US
    Paperback
    Feb 25, 2014
  • The Age of Innocence
    The Age of Innocence
    Edith Wharton
    $11.00 US
    Paperback
    Jun 05, 2012
  • The House of Mirth
    The House of Mirth
    Edith Wharton
    $11.00 US
    Paperback
    Jun 05, 2012
  • Ethan Frome
    Ethan Frome
    Edith Wharton
    $10.00 US
    Paperback
    Jun 05, 2012
  • The Custom of the Country
    The Custom of the Country
    Edith Wharton
    $12.00 US
    Paperback
    Jun 05, 2012
  • Great Expectations
    Great Expectations
    Charles Dickens
    $7.95 US
    Paperback
    Jan 10, 2012
  • David Copperfield
    David Copperfield
    Charles Dickens
    $12.00 US
    Paperback
    Jan 10, 2012
  • Oliver Twist
    Oliver Twist
    Charles Dickens
    $10.00 US
    Paperback
    Jan 10, 2012
  • Hard Times
    Hard Times
    Charles Dickens
    $9.00 US
    Paperback
    Jan 10, 2012
  • Bleak House
    Bleak House
    Charles Dickens
    $13.00 US
    Paperback
    Jan 03, 2012
  • A Christmas Carol
    A Christmas Carol
    And Other Christmas Books
    Charles Dickens
    $11.00 US
    Paperback
    Nov 29, 2011
  • The Fifth Queen
    The Fifth Queen
    Ford Madox Ford
    $15.95 US
    Paperback
    Oct 04, 2011
  • O Pioneers!
    O Pioneers!
    Introduction by Elaine Showalter
    Willa Cather
    $24.95 US
    Hardcover
    Sep 06, 2011
  • The Canterbury Tales
    The Canterbury Tales
    A Prose Version in Modern English
    Geoffrey Chaucer
    $11.00 US
    Paperback
    Jul 12, 2011
  • Dracula
    Dracula
    Bram Stoker
    $11.00 US
    Paperback
    Jun 14, 2011
  • The Adventures of Tom Sawyer
    The Adventures of Tom Sawyer
    A Novel
    Mark Twain
    $9.00 US
    Paperback
    Apr 06, 2010
  • The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn
    The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn
    Mark Twain
    $9.00 US
    Paperback
    Apr 06, 2010
  • The Original Frankenstein
    The Original Frankenstein
    Mary Shelley
    $16.00 US
    Paperback
    Sep 08, 2009
  • Great Tales and Poems of Edgar Allan Poe
    Great Tales and Poems of Edgar Allan Poe
    Edgar Allan Poe
    $14.00 US
    Paperback
    Sep 01, 2009
  • Jane Eyre
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    Charlotte Bronte
    $9.00 US
    Paperback
    Apr 07, 2009
  • Villette
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    Charlotte Bronte
    $17.00 US
    Paperback
    Apr 07, 2009
  • The Shadow-Line
    The Shadow-Line
    A Confession
    Joseph Conrad
    $10.00 US
    Paperback
    Oct 09, 2007
  • Emma
    Emma
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    $10.00 US
    Paperback
    Sep 04, 2007
  • Persuasion
    Persuasion
    Jane Austen
    $7.00 US
    Paperback
    Sep 04, 2007
  • Pride and Prejudice
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    Jane Austen
    $9.00 US
    Paperback
    Sep 04, 2007
  • Notes from Underground
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    Introduction by Richard Pevear
    Fyodor Dostoevsky
    $26.00 US
    Hardcover
    Mar 23, 2004
  • Oliver Twist
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    Charles Dickens, George Cruikshank
    $8.00 US
    Paperback
    Oct 09, 2001
  • Hard Times
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    Charles Dickens
    $10.00 US
    Paperback
    Jul 10, 2001
  • Great Expectations
    Great Expectations
    Charles Dickens
    $11.00 US
    Paperback
    Feb 13, 2001
  • David Copperfield
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    Charles Dickens
    $8.95 US
    Paperback
    Nov 28, 2000
  • The Collected Tales of Nikolai Gogol
    The Collected Tales of Nikolai Gogol
    Nikolai Gogol
    $20.00 US
    Paperback
    Jun 29, 1999
  • The Collected Poems of Langston Hughes
    The Collected Poems of Langston Hughes
    Langston Hughes
    $22.00 US
    Paperback
    Oct 31, 1995
  • Dubliners
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    James Joyce
    $11.00 US
    Paperback
    Apr 06, 1993
  • A Tale of Two Cities
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    Introduction by Simon Schama
    Charles Dickens
    $30.00 US
    Hardcover
    Feb 23, 1993
  • Collected Stories of Willa Cather
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    $16.95 US
    Paperback
    Dec 01, 1992
  • Death Comes for the Archbishop
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    Introduction by A. S. Byatt
    Willa Cather
    $22.00 US
    Hardcover
    Jun 30, 1992
  • The Aeneid
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    Introduction by Philip Hardie
    Virgil
    $28.00 US
    Hardcover
    Jun 30, 1992
  • The Panther & the Lash
    The Panther & the Lash
    Langston Hughes
    $13.95 US
    Paperback
    Feb 04, 1992
  • One of Ours
    One of Ours
    Willa Cather
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    Paperback
    Nov 05, 1991
  • Bleak House
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    Introduction by Barbara Hardy
    Charles Dickens
    $32.00 US
    Hardcover
    Oct 15, 1991
  • Stories
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    Katherine Mansfield
    $16.95 US
    Paperback
    May 07, 1991
  • Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde
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    Robert Louis Stevenson
    $9.00 US
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    May 07, 1991
  • The Ink Dark Moon
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    Stories
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    Sep 12, 1990
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    William W. Brown, Frances Ellen Watkins Harper, Charles Chesnutt
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    Jul 14, 1990
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  • The Sorrows of Young Werther
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