Dime Novels and Pulp Fiction
Copyright © 2005 Richard Seltzer
This Web page shows the table of contents of our Dime Novels and Pulp
Fiction CD. Internal links will take you to the various sections, but you
cannot get to the books themselves here on the Web. For that you need the
CD.
This CD, containing 192 books, was compiled by Richard Seltzer.
The books themselves are in the public domain and in plain text format.
You can copy them onto your hard drive for convenience, or make an archival
copy of the CD, as backup in case of damage to the original. But the collection
and its indexes, created for your convenience, are under copyright. Please
contact us first if you are interested in making copies of this CD for
commercial purposes. seltzer@samizdat.com
On the CD, you can open these books by clicking on the titles in this
index page with your Web browser or a recent Windows-based word processor.
Dime novels and pulp fiction are ephemeral works of popular fiction,
frequently published under pseudonyms. They were published in large quantities,
sold at low prices, and were printed on the cheapest paper, which deteriorates
quickly. Many turned to dust and were lost. Others have recently
been preserved in electronic form.
According to the Wikipedia Encyclopedia, "In the United States in the
late 19th century and very early 20th century, a dime novel was
a low-priced novel, typically priced at 10 cents (a dime). The original
dime novels were published in a tabloid format, but later evolved into
a more standard book format. In the United Kingdom similar books were called
penny dreadfuls, a term also referring to the denomination of coin needed
to buy one from a vendor.
"Dime novels and penny dreadfuls often involved melodramatic tales of
vice and virtue in conflict, often with strong elements of horror and cruelty.
Their main audience consisted of young and/or unsophisticated readers,
primarily male.
"Many American dime novels had inspirational themes, most notably those
written by Horatio Alger, Jr.. Respected writers such as Theodore Dreiser
and Upton Sinclair often wrote dime novels under pseudonyms. New York City-based
firm Street & Smith, founded in 1855, was one of the most prolific
publishers of the genre."
Also, according to Wikipedia, "The name 'pulp' comes from the
cheap wood pulp paper on which such magazines were printed. Magazines printed
on better paper and usually offering family-oriented content were often
called "glossies" or "slicks". Pulps were the successor to the "penny dreadfuls"
and "dime novels" of the nineteenth century. Although many respected writers
wrote for pulps, the magazines are perhaps best remembered for their fast-paced,
lurid, sensational and exploitative stories. Parallels between comic books
and pulp magazines can be drawn; for example, magazines often featured
illustrated novel-length stories of heroic characters such as The Shadow,
Doc Savage, and The Phantom Detective.
"Because of the copyright laws at the time, there were distinct lines
of this sort of magazine in Britain as well. These magazines, called "story
papers", were distributed throughout the British Empire. Characters such
as Sexton Blake and Nelson Lee were similar characters there. At the time,
there was no global media market, so even though these were written in
the same language, there was no recognition of the characters by each nation,
just as in much of television today.
"Pulp covers were famous for their half-dressed damsels in distress,
usually awaiting a rescuing hero."
This collection is just the beginning. I plan to add new titles as they
become available. Suggestions welcome. Please contact me at seltzer@samizdat.com
Intended for use with Windows and Linux PCs and recent Macs (OS X),
this Dime Novel and Pulp Fiction CD with 192 books in plain text,
is available for $19 at our online store. http://store.yahoo.com/samizdat/dime.html
For details about this publishing service, check the readme
document. You can contact us at seltzer@samizdat.com,
B&R
Samizdat Express, 33 Gould St., West Roxbury, MA 02132-002. 617-469-2269.
User's Guide: Suggestions
on how to get the most out of your books on CD ROM
If you would like
to have your PC (with speakers) read these texts aloud to you, while they
are displayed in text on the screen, see below about the free ReadPlease
software that we have included on this CD.
We publish plain text books (unencrypted) on CD, and we want to provide
a simple way for customers and other interested people to share their insights
into how to get the most out of this new way of reading and studying. To
do so we have set up an email discussion group at Yahoo. All are welcome
to join and to post here, but I'll manage this group in "moderated" style,
filtering messages before they go out to the whole group, to control the
volume of the messages and to make sure that they are on-topic. Tips and
information that would be helpful to people you have plain text books on
CD are welcome -- including examples of how you are using yours, suggestions
for improvement, suggestions for future CDs, and useful/interesting
texts found on the Web that should be included in future CDs. To subscribe,
go to the discussion group Web site at http://groups.yahoo.com/group/plaintextbooksoncd
or send a blank email to plaintextbooksoncd-subscribe@yahoogroups.com
Table of Contents
Intended for use with Windows and Linux PCs and recent Macs (OS X),
this Dime Novel and Pulp Fiction CD with 192 books in plain text,
is available for $19 at our online store. http://store.yahoo.com/samizdat/dime.html
Horatio Alger, Jr. (1834-1899)
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Andy Grant's Pluck
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Bound to Rise
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Brave and Bold
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The Cash Boy
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Cast Upon the Breakers
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Do and Dare
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Driven from Home, or Carl Crawford's Experience
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The Errand Boy, or How Phil Brent Won Success
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Facing the World
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Frank's Campaign, or the Farm and the Camp
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From Canal Boy to President or the Boyhood and manhood of James Garfield,
1881
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Hector's Inheritance
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Helping Himself
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Herbert Carter's Son
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Jack's Ward
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Joe the Hotel Boy, or Winning by Pluck
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Joe's Luck
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Making His Way
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Nothing to Eat
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Only an Irish Boy
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Paul Prescott's Charge
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Paul the Peddlar, or the Fortunes of a Young Street Merchant
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Phil the Fiddler
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Ragged Dick
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The Story Boy
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Timothy Crump's Ward
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The Young Explorer
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The Young Musician
Victor Appleton (pseudonym used by the Stratemeyer Syndicate)
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The Moving Picture Boys at Panama or Stirring Adventures Along the Great
Canal, 1915
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Tom Swift Among the Fire Fighters
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Tom Swift and His Aerial Warship
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Tom Swift and His Air Glider
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Tom Swift and His Air Scout
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Tom Swift and His Airship
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Tom Swift and His Big Tunnel
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Tom Swift and His Electric Locomotive
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Tom Swift and His Electric Runabout
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Tom Swift and His Electric Rifle
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Tom Swift and His Giant Cannon
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Tom Swift and His Great Searchlight
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Tom Swift and His Motor Boat
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Tom Swift and His Motor Cycle
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Tom Swift and His Photo Telephone
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Tom Swift and His Sky Racer
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Tom Swift and His Submarine Boat
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Tom Swift and His Undersea Search
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Tom Swift and His War Tank
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Tom Swift and His Wireless Message
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Tom Swift and His Wizard Camera
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Tom Swift and the Diamond Makers
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Tom Swift in Captivity
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Tom Swift in the Caves of Ice
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Tom Swift in the City of Gold
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Tom Swift in the Land of Wonders
B.M. Bower (pseudonym of Bertha M. Sinclair)
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Cabin Fever
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Casey Ryan
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Chip of the Flying U
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Cow-Country
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The Flying U's Last Stand
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The Flying U Ranch
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Good Indian
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The Gringos
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The Heritage of the Sioux
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Her Prairie Knight
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Jean of the Lazy A
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Lonesome Land
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The Lonesome Trail and Other Stories
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The Long Shadow
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The Look-Out Man
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The Lure of Dim Trails
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The Phantom Herd
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The Range Dwellers
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Rowdy of the Cross L
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Skyrider
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Starr, of the Desert
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The Thunder Bird, 1917
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Trail of the White Mule
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The Uphill Climb
Max Brand (pseudonym of Frederick Schiller Faust) (1892 - 1944)
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Alcatraz, 1922
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Black Jack, 1922
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Bull Hunter
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Gunman's Reckoning, 1921
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Harrigan, 1918
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The Night Horseman, 1920
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The Rangeland Avenger, 1922
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Riders of the Silences, 1919
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Ronicky Doone
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The Seventh Man
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Trailin, 1919
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The Untamed, 1919
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The Way of the Lawless, 1921
Edgar Rice Burroughs (1875 - 1950)
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At the Earth's Core
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The Beasts of Tarzan
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The Chessmen of Mars
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The Efficiency Expert
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The Gods of Mars
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Jungle Tales
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The Land that Time Forgot
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The Lost Continent
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The Mad King
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The Monster Men
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The Mucker
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The Oakdale Affair
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Out of Time's Abyss
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The Outlaw of Torn
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Pellucidar
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The People that Time Forgot
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A Princess of Mars
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The Return of Tarzan
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The Son of Tarzan
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Tarzan and the Jewels of Opar
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Tarzan of the Apes
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Tarzan the Terrible
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Tarzan the Untamed
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Thuvia, Maid of Mars
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The Warlord of Mars
Allen Chapman (pseudonym used by the Stratemeyer Syndicate)
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Bart Stirling's Road to Success
Alice Emerson (pseudonym used by the Stratemeyer Syndicate)
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Betty Gordon in Washington
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Betty Gordon at Boarding School or the Treasure of Indian Chasm, 1921
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Betty Gordon at Mountain Camp
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Ruth Fielding at Snow Camp
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Ruth Fielding in Motion Pictures
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Ruth Fielding on Cliff Island
Howard Garis (1873 - 1962)
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Buddy and Brighteyes Pigg
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The Curlytops on Star Island or Camping Out with Grandpa
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Daddy Takes Us Skating
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Daddy Takes Us to the Garden
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Sammy and Susie Littletail, 1910
O. Henry (pseudonym of William Sydney Porter) (1862 - 1910)
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Cabbages and Kings
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The Proem
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"Fox-in-the-Morning"
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The Lotus and the Bottle
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Smith
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Caught
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Cupid's Exile Number Two
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The Phonograph and the Graft
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Money Maze
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The Admiral
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The Flag Paramount
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The Shamrock and the Palm
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The Remnants of the Code
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Shoes
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Ships
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Masters of Arts
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Dickey
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Rouge et Noir
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Two Recalls
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The Vitagraphoscope
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The Four Million
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Tobin's Palm
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The Gift of the Magi
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A Cosmopolite in a Cafe
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Between Rounds
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The Skylight Room
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A Service of Love
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The Coming-Out of Maggie
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Man about Town
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The Cop and the Anthem
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An Adjustment of Nature
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Memoirs of a Yellow Dog
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The Love-Philtre of Ikey Schoenstein
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Mammon and the Archer
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Springtime a la Carte
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The Green Door
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From the Cabby's Seat
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An Unfinished Story
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The Caliph, Cupid and the Clock
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Sisters of the Golden Circle
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The Romance of a Busy Broker
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After Twenty Years
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Lost on Dress Parade
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By Courier
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The Furnished Room
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The Brief Debut of Tildy
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The Gentle Grafter
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The Octopus Marooned
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Jeff Peters as a Personal Magnet
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Modern Rural Sports
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The Chair of Philanthromathematics
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The Hand That Riles the World
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The Exact Science of Matrimony
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A Midsummer Masquerade
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Shearing the Wolf
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Innocents of Broadway
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Conscience in Art
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The Man Higher Up
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A Tempered Wind
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Hostages to Momus
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The Ethics of Pig
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Heart of the West
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Hearts and Crosses
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The Ransom of Mack
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Telemachus, Friend
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The Handbook of Hymen
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The Pimienta Pancakes
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Seats of the Haughty
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Hygeia at the Solito
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An Afternoon Miracle
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The Higher Abdication
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Cupid a la Carte
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The Caballero's Way
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The Sphinx Apple
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The Missing Chord
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A Call Loan
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The Princess and the Puma
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The Indian Summer of Dry Valley Johnson
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Christmas by Injunction
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A Chaparral Prince
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The Reformation of Calliope
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Options
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"The Rose of Dixie"
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The Third Ingredient
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The Hiding of Black Bill
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Schools and Schools
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Thimble, Thimble
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Buried Treasure
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To Him Who Waits
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He Also Serves
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The Moment of Victory
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The Head-Hunter
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No Story
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The Higher Pragmatism
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Best-Seller
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Rus in Urbe
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A Poor Rule
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Roads of Destiny
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Roads of Destiny
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The Guardian of the Accolade
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The Discounters of Money
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The Enchanted Profile
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"Next to Reading Matter"
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Art and the Bronco
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Phoebe
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A Double-dyed Deceiver
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The Passing of Black Eagle
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A Retrieved Reformation
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Cherchez la Femme
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Friends in San Rosario
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The Fourth in Salvador
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The Emancipation of Billy
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The Enchanted Kiss
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A Departmental Case
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The Renaissance at Charleroi
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On Behalf of the Management
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Whistling Dick's Christmas Stocking
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The Halberdier of the Little Rheinschloss
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Two Renegades
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The Lonesome Road
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Sixes and Sevens
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The Last of the Troubadours
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The Sleuths
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Witches' Loaves
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The Pride of the Cities
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Holding up a Train
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Ulysses and the Dogman
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The Champion of the Weather
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Makes the Whole World Kin
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At Arms with Morpheus
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The Ghost of a Chance
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Jimmy Hayes and Muriel
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The Door of Unrest
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The Duplicity of Hargraves
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Let me Feel your Pulse
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October and June
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The Church with an Overshot Wheel
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New York by Campfire Light
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The Adventures of Shamrock Jolnes
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The Lady Higher Up
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The Greater Coney
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Law and Order
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Transformation of Martin Burney
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The Caliph and the Cad
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The Diamond of Kali
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The Day We Celebrate
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Strictly Business
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Strictly Business
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The Gold that Glittered
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Babes in the Jungle
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The Day Resurgent
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The Fifth Wheel
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The Poet and the Peasant
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The Robe of Peace
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The Girl and the Graft
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The Call of the Tame
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The Unknown Quantity
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The Thing's the Play
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A Ramble in Aphasia
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A Municipal Report
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Psyche and the Pskyscraper
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A Bird of Bagdad
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Compliments of the Season
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A Night in New Arabia
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The Girl and the Habit
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Proof of the Pudding
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Past One at Rodney's
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The Venturers
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The Duel
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"What You Want"
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The Trimmed Lamp
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The Trimmed Lamp
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A Madison Square Arabian Night
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The Rubaiyat of a Scotch Highball
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The Pendulum
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Two Thanksgiving Day Gentlemen
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The Assessor of Success
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The Buyer from Cactus City
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The Badge of Policeman O'Room
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Brickdust Row
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The Making of a New Yorker
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Vanity and Some Sables
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The Social Triangle
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The Purple Dress
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The Foreign Policy of Company 99
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The Lost Blend
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A Harlem Tragedy
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"The Guilty Party" -- an East Side Tragedy
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According to Their Lights
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A Midsummer Knight's Dream
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The Last Leaf
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The Count and the Wedding Guest
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The Country of Elusion
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The Ferry of Unfulfilment
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The Tale of a Tainted Tenner
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Elsie in New York
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The Voice of the City
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The Voice of the City
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The Complete Life of Johns Hopkins
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A Lickpenny Lover
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Dougherty' Eye-Opener
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Little Speck in Garnered Fruit
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The Harbinger
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While the Auto Waits
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Comedy in Rubber
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One Thousand Dollars
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Defeat of the City
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Shocks of Doom
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Plutonian Fire
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Nemesis and the Candyman
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Squaring the Circle
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Roses, Ruses, and Romance
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Four Roses
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City of Dreadful Night
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Easter of the Soul
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Fool-Killer
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Transients in Arcadia
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Rathskeller and the Rose
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Clarion Call
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Extradited from Bohemia
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Philistine in Bohemia
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From Each According to His Ability
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Memento
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Waifs and Strays
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The Red Roses of Tonia
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Round The Circle
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The Rubber Plant's Story
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Out of Nazareth
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Confessions of a Humorist
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The Sparrows in Madison Square
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Hearts and Hands
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The Cactus
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The Detective Detector
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The Dog and the Playlet
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A Little Talk About Mobs
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The Snow Man
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Whirligigs
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The World and the Door
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The Theory and the Hound
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Hypotheses of Failure
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Calloway's Code
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A Matter of Mean Elevation
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"Girl"
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Sociology in Serge and Straw
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The Ransom of Red Chief
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Two Deperate Men
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The Marry Month of May
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A Technical Error
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Suite Homes and their Romance
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The Whirligig of Life
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A Sacrifice Hit
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The Roads We Take
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A Blackjack Bargainer
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The Song and the Sergeant
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One Dollar's Worth
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A Newspaper Story
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Tommy's Burglar
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A Chaparral Christmas Gift
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A Little Local Color
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Georgia's Ruling
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Blind Man's Holiday
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Madame Bo-Peep of the Ranches
Laura Lee Hope (pseudonym used by the Stratemeyer Syndicate)
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The Bobbsey Twins at School
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The Bobbsey Twins at Snow Lodge
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The Bobbsey Twins at the County Fair
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The Bobbsey Twins in the Country
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The Bobbsey Twins in a Great City
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The Bobbsey Twins in the Great West
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The Bobbsey Twins on a Houseboat
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The Bobbsey Twins at Meadowbrook
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The Bobbsey Twins at the Sea Shore
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The Bobbsey Twins in Washington
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Bunny Brown and His Sister Sue
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Bunny Brown and His Sister Sue Playing Circus
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The Moving Picture Girls Under the Palms or Lost in the Wilds of Florida
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The Outdoor Girls in Army Service
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The Outdoor Girls at Rainbow Lake
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The Outdoor Girls at Wild Rose Lodge
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The Outdoor Girls of Deepdale, 1913
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The Outdoor Girls at the Hostess House
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Six Little Bunkers at Grandma Bell's
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The Story of a Bold Tin Soldier
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The Story of Calico Clown
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The Story of a Lamb on Wheels
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The Story of a White Rocking Horse
Colonel Prentiss Ingraham
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Adventures of Buffalo Bill from Boyhood to Manhood
Margaret Penrose (pseudonym used by the Stratemeyer Syndicate)
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The Motor Girls on Cedar Lake
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Motor Girls on Waters Blue
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Dorothy Dale's Queer Holidays
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Dorothy Dale's Camping Days
Roy Rockwood (pseudonym used by the Stratemeyer Syndicate)
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Dave Dashaway and His Hydroplane
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Jack North's Treasure Hunt
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Through Space to Mars
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Through the Air to the North Pole, 1906
Charles Alden Seltzer
Garrett P. Serviss (1851-1929)
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A Columbus of Space
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Curiosities of the Sky, 1909
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The Moon Metal
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The Second Deluge, 1912
Burt Standish (pseudonym)
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Frank Merriwell's Nobility or the Tragedy of the Ocean Tram, 1899
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Frank Merriwell at Yale
Arthur Winfield (pseudonym used by the Stratemeyer Syndicate)
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The Rover Boys in Business
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The Rover Boys in Camp
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The Rover Boys in the Jungle
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The Rover Boys in New York
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The Rover Boys on the Great Lakes
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The Rover Boys on the Ocean
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The Rover Boys on the River
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The Rover Boys Out West
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The Rover Boys at School
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The Rover Boys at College
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The Rover Boys in the Mountains
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The Rover Boys on Land and Sea
Clarence Young (pseudonym used by the Stratemeyer Syndicate)
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Jack Ranger's Western Trip
-
The Motor Boys on the Pacific
Intended for use with Windows and Linux PCs and recent Macs (OS
X), this Dime Novel and Pulp Fiction CD with 192 books in plain
text, is available for $19 at our online store. http://store.yahoo.com/samizdat/dime.html
How to
install and use the free ReadPlease software included on this CD
Click here if you would like to install this software. When you click
on that link, you will be asked wheter you want to save it on your computer
or just run it. Choose Save -- it will only take about 10 Mbytes; so choose
Save. Then select which version you want to install and the directory that
you'd like to put it in. When the rapid, automatic installation is done,
you will be able to open ReadPlease by clicking on an icon on your desktop.
When running ReadPlease, click on File, then Open, and browse to the
texts you are interested on the CD (or any other text file you have). Click
on Play and it will start "reading" the book aloud to you. Highlight a
chunk of text (of any size) with your browser and then click on Selection,
and it will read the text you selected. Controls in the right column allow
you to change the speed of the voice (with a sliding bar), change the font
size (with a sliding bar), and switch among four different voices (with
the right and left arrows).
When you run ReadPlease, you see the text, with yellow highlighting
moving from one word to the next, while you hear that same text. And you
can at any time edit the text in the video window. Just position your cursor,
click you mouse, and type whatever you like -- for instance, annotation
or marks to show where you last stopped reading. Then save the edited file
on your hard drive.
Please keep in mind that ReadPlease is their software not ours. They
are the experts on it. They have even better versions with even clearer,
more natural voices, which they sell. You can listen to samples at their
Web site www.readplease.com, where you can also see detailed help files.
And you can contact them at: ReadPlease Corporation, 121 Cherry Ridge Road,
Thunder Bay, ON, Canada P7G 1A7. Phone: 807-474-7702
Tips for using/enjoying the texts on this CD:
The easiest way to get started is to click on My Computer, then on your
CD drive, then on index.html. (That should bring you to here, in Word or
your Web browser, or WordPad or Notepad, depending on your computer's setup.)
From the index, click on an individual work to see the full text in
your browser or in Word. Click "Back" in your browser to return here.
Use the "find" function in your browser (under Edit/Find in both Netscape
and IE) to find any word or phrase within a document.
When you stop reading, jot down the last phrase (a unique set of words)
so you can search for that the next time you want to read and easily find
the spot where you left off.
If you just want to read and if you have a large screen, use your browser
and under View increase the type size to meet your taste.
If you just want to read and you have a small screen, try using WordPad
or Word.
If you want to take notes while you read, first save the file on your
hard drive, then open it in WordPad or Word, enter your notes with the
text (making them distinctive with bold or italic or by enclosing them
in brackets] as you go along, and save the entire file, with those changes,
when you are done.
If you use Word, you can Select All [under Edit], and modify the font
and type size (to make the letters larger and easier to read) [under Format
and Font], and save the files on your hard drive [under File, Save As]
with whatever changes you have made (including notes you made while reading).
Note regarding copyright: On our "Classic Collections"
CDs, we include works published in the US before 1923, works from Australia
and Canada when the author died 50 years or more ago, and works from the
European Union (including the United Kingdom and Ireland) when the author
died 70 years or more ago. NB -- Due to The European Union's extension
of copyright by 20 years to 70 years after the death of the author many
works which had been in the public domain under the previous law are now
once again under copyright. Hence we are unable to include on our CDs some
popular writers whose works are still readily available over the Internet.
This site is published by B&R Samizdat Express, 33 Gould St., West
Roxbury, MA 02132-002. 617-469-2269 seltzer@samizdat.com
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