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By: The United States
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By: Jane Austen
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By: Jane Austen
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By: Jane Austen
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By: Jane Austen
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By: Jane Austen
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|
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By: Nathaniel H. Bishop
The author navigates and narrates through America's inland waterways during an 1874 voyage in 12 foot boat.
|

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|
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By: William Bligh
Muntineers interrupt a breadfruit voyage, in a classic true tale of temptation, seamanship, and leadership.
|

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|
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By: Owen Chase
The true story that inspired Melville's Moby Dick, sensational in its time and still a mortal tale of the sea.
|

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|
 |
By: Erskine Childers
Two young British yachtsman discover a grave secret on the shifting tides of the North Sea coast, in what is often considered the first spy novel.
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|
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By: Erskine Childers
A young Erskine Childers, later a vehement Irish nationalist executed for his beliefs, serves in the British cavalry during the Boer War.
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By: Ignatius Valentine Chirol
|

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|
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By: Marcus Clarke
The journey of a convict illustrates the penal colony roots of Australia.
|

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|
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By: Samuel Taylor Coleridge
Water, water, everywhere,
Nor any drop to drink.
|

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|
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By: Joseph Conrad
A Dutch trader searches for riches in Borneo, in the first novel by the author of Heart of Darkness.
|

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|
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By: Joseph Conrad
A colonial underling struggles with his own decisions on a river outpost in the Far East.
|

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|
 |
By: Joseph Conrad
Separatism, militias, foreign opportunists and corruption converge in an imaginary South American country.
|

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|
 |
By: Joseph Conrad
The slovenly crew of the Narcissus adjusts to life aboard with a black crew member. Be prepared for language offensive to today's reader.
|

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|
 |
By: Joseph Conrad
Upriver, into evil. The great novel and the basis for the movie Apocalypse Now! See blog.
|

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|
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By: Joseph Conrad
|

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|
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By: Joseph Conrad
|

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|
 |
By: Joseph Conrad
|

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|
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By: Joseph Conrad
|

|
|
 |
By: Joseph Conrad
|

|
|
 |
By: James Cook
|

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|
 |
By: James Cook
|

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|
 |
By: James Fenimore Cooper
Revolutionary war espionage off the coast of England, from the author of the Leatherstocking novels.
|

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|
 |
By: James Fenimore Cooper
First in the Leatherstocking chronology but the last to be written, we meet the hero in his youth as he saves the Hutter sisters from certain death.
|

|
|
 |
By: James Fenimore Cooper
In the best-known Leatherstocking story, Natty Bumppo escorts the Munro sisters through upstate New York during the French and Indian War.
|

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|
 |
By: James Fenimore Cooper
|

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|
 |
By: James Fenimore Cooper
|

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|
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By: James Fenimore Cooper
|

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|
 |
By: E. Hamilton Currey
Piracy was a continuance of the violent politics and times of Old Europe in this British account.
|

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|
 |
By: Richard Henry Dana
A Boston Brahmin escapes his comfortable life by serving as a common sailor on a voyage up the pre-gold rush west coast.
|

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|
 |
By: Charles Darwin
Observations about finch beaks and del Fuegian natives lead to the most important book since the Bible. This is the story of the voyage that produced the insights.
|

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By: Charles Darwin
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|
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By: Daniel Defoe
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By: Charles Dickens
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By: Charles Dickens
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By: Charles Dickens
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|
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By: Fyodor Dostoyevsky
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|
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By: Fyodor Dostoyevsky
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|
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By: Arthur Conan Doyle
|

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|
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By: Arthur Conan Doyle
|

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|
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By: Arthur Conan Doyle
|

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|
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By: Sir Arthur Conan Doyle
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|
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By: Thomas Hardy
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By: Thomas Hardy
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|
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By: Thomas Hardy
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|
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By: Thomas Hardy
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|
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By: The United States
|

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|
 |
By: Jane Austen
|

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|
 |
By: Jane Austen
|

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|
 |
By: Jane Austen
|

|
|
 |
By: Jane Austen
|

|
|
 |
By: Jane Austen
|

|
|
 |
By: Nathaniel H. Bishop
The author navigates and narrates through America's inland waterways during an 1874 voyage in 12 foot boat.
|

|
|
 |
By: William Bligh
Muntineers interrupt a breadfruit voyage, in a classic true tale of temptation, seamanship, and leadership.
|

|
|
 |
By: Owen Chase
The true story that inspired Melville's Moby Dick, sensational in its time and still a mortal tale of the sea.
|

|
|
 |
By: Erskine Childers
Two young British yachtsman discover a grave secret on the shifting tides of the North Sea coast, in what is often considered the first spy novel.
|

|
|
 |
By: Erskine Childers
A young Erskine Childers, later a vehement Irish nationalist executed for his beliefs, serves in the British cavalry during the Boer War.
|

|
|
 |
By: Ignatius Valentine Chirol
|

|
|
 |
By: Marcus Clarke
The journey of a convict illustrates the penal colony roots of Australia.
|

|
|
 |
By: Samuel Taylor Coleridge
Water, water, everywhere,
Nor any drop to drink.
|

|
|
 |
By: Joseph Conrad
A Dutch trader searches for riches in Borneo, in the first novel by the author of Heart of Darkness.
|

|
|
 |
By: Joseph Conrad
A colonial underling struggles with his own decisions on a river outpost in the Far East.
|

|
|
 |
By: Joseph Conrad
Separatism, militias, foreign opportunists and corruption converge in an imaginary South American country.
|

|
|
 |
By: Joseph Conrad
The slovenly crew of the Narcissus adjusts to life aboard with a black crew member. Be prepared for language offensive to today's reader.
|

|
|
 |
By: Joseph Conrad
Upriver, into evil. The great novel and the basis for the movie Apocalypse Now! See blog.
|

|
|
 |
By: Joseph Conrad
|

|
|
 |
By: Joseph Conrad
|

|
|
 |
By: Joseph Conrad
|

|
|
 |
By: Joseph Conrad
|

|
|
 |
By: Joseph Conrad
|

|
|
 |
By: James Cook
|

|
|
 |
By: James Cook
|

|
|
 |
By: James Fenimore Cooper
Revolutionary war espionage off the coast of England, from the author of the Leatherstocking novels.
|

|
|
 |
By: James Fenimore Cooper
First in the Leatherstocking chronology but the last to be written, we meet the hero in his youth as he saves the Hutter sisters from certain death.
|

|
|
 |
By: James Fenimore Cooper
In the best-known Leatherstocking story, Natty Bumppo escorts the Munro sisters through upstate New York during the French and Indian War.
|

|
|
 |
By: James Fenimore Cooper
|

|
|
 |
By: James Fenimore Cooper
|

|
|
 |
By: James Fenimore Cooper
|

|
|
 |
By: E. Hamilton Currey
Piracy was a continuance of the violent politics and times of Old Europe in this British account.
|

|
|
 |
By: Richard Henry Dana
A Boston Brahmin escapes his comfortable life by serving as a common sailor on a voyage up the pre-gold rush west coast.
|

|
|
 |
By: Charles Darwin
Observations about finch beaks and del Fuegian natives lead to the most important book since the Bible. This is the story of the voyage that produced the insights.
|

|
|
 |
By: Charles Darwin
|

|
|
 |
By: Daniel Defoe
|

|
|
 |
By: Charles Dickens
|

|
|
 |
By: Charles Dickens
|

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|
 |
By: Charles Dickens
|

|
|
 |
By: Fyodor Dostoyevsky
|

|
|
 |
By: Fyodor Dostoyevsky
|

|
|
 |
By: Arthur Conan Doyle
|

|
|
 |
By: Arthur Conan Doyle
|

|
|
 |
By: Arthur Conan Doyle
|

|
|
 |
By: Sir Arthur Conan Doyle
|

|
|
 |
By: Thomas Hardy
|

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|
 |
By: Thomas Hardy
|

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|
 |
By: Thomas Hardy
|

|
|
 |
By: Thomas Hardy
|

|
|
 |
By: The United States
|

|
|
 |
By: Jane Austen
|

|
|
 |
By: Jane Austen
|

|
|
 |
By: Jane Austen
|

|
|
 |
By: Jane Austen
|

|
|
 |
By: Jane Austen
|

|
|
 |
By: Nathaniel H. Bishop
The author navigates and narrates through America's inland waterways during an 1874 voyage in 12 foot boat.
|

|
|
 |
By: William Bligh
Muntineers interrupt a breadfruit voyage, in a classic true tale of temptation, seamanship, and leadership.
|

|
|
 |
By: Owen Chase
The true story that inspired Melville's Moby Dick, sensational in its time and still a mortal tale of the sea.
|

|
|
 |
By: Erskine Childers
Two young British yachtsman discover a grave secret on the shifting tides of the North Sea coast, in what is often considered the first spy novel.
|

|
|
 |
By: Erskine Childers
A young Erskine Childers, later a vehement Irish nationalist executed for his beliefs, serves in the British cavalry during the Boer War.
|

|
|
 |
By: Ignatius Valentine Chirol
|

|
|
 |
By: Marcus Clarke
The journey of a convict illustrates the penal colony roots of Australia.
|

|
|
 |
By: Samuel Taylor Coleridge
Water, water, everywhere,
Nor any drop to drink.
|

|
|
 |
By: Joseph Conrad
A Dutch trader searches for riches in Borneo, in the first novel by the author of Heart of Darkness.
|

|
|
 |
By: Joseph Conrad
A colonial underling struggles with his own decisions on a river outpost in the Far East.
|

|
|
 |
By: Joseph Conrad
Separatism, militias, foreign opportunists and corruption converge in an imaginary South American country.
|

|
|
 |
By: Joseph Conrad
The slovenly crew of the Narcissus adjusts to life aboard with a black crew member. Be prepared for language offensive to today's reader.
|

|
|
 |
By: Joseph Conrad
Upriver, into evil. The great novel and the basis for the movie Apocalypse Now! See blog.
|

|
|
 |
By: Joseph Conrad
|

|
|
 |
By: Joseph Conrad
|

|
|
 |
By: Joseph Conrad
|

|
|
 |
By: Joseph Conrad
|

|
|
 |
By: Joseph Conrad
|

|
|
 |
By: James Cook
|

|
|
 |
By: James Cook
|

|
|
 |
By: James Fenimore Cooper
Revolutionary war espionage off the coast of England, from the author of the Leatherstocking novels.
|

|
|
 |
By: James Fenimore Cooper
First in the Leatherstocking chronology but the last to be written, we meet the hero in his youth as he saves the Hutter sisters from certain death.
|

|
|
 |
By: James Fenimore Cooper
In the best-known Leatherstocking story, Natty Bumppo escorts the Munro sisters through upstate New York during the French and Indian War.
|

|
|
 |
By: James Fenimore Cooper
|

|
|
 |
By: James Fenimore Cooper
|

|
|
 |
By: James Fenimore Cooper
|

|
|
 |
By: E. Hamilton Currey
Piracy was a continuance of the violent politics and times of Old Europe in this British account.
|

|
|
 |
By: Richard Henry Dana
A Boston Brahmin escapes his comfortable life by serving as a common sailor on a voyage up the pre-gold rush west coast.
|

|
|
 |
By: Charles Darwin
Observations about finch beaks and del Fuegian natives lead to the most important book since the Bible. This is the story of the voyage that produced the insights.
|

|
|
 |
By: Charles Darwin
|

|
|
 |
By: Daniel Defoe
|

|
|
 |
By: Charles Dickens
|

|
|
 |
By: Charles Dickens
|

|
|
 |
By: Charles Dickens
|

|
|
 |
By: Fyodor Dostoyevsky
|

|
|
 |
By: Fyodor Dostoyevsky
|

|
|
 |
By: Arthur Conan Doyle
|

|
|
 |
By: Arthur Conan Doyle
|

|
|
 |
By: Arthur Conan Doyle
|

|
|
 |
By: Sir Arthur Conan Doyle
|

|
|
 |
By: Thomas Hardy
|

|
|
 |
By: Thomas Hardy
|

|
|
 |
By: Thomas Hardy
|

|
|
 |
By: Thomas Hardy
|

|
|
 |
By: The United States
|

|
|
 |
By: Jane Austen
|

|
|
 |
By: Jane Austen
|

|
|
 |
By: Jane Austen
|

|
|
 |
By: Jane Austen
|

|
|
 |
By: Jane Austen
|

|
|
 |
By: Nathaniel H. Bishop
The author navigates and narrates through America's inland waterways during an 1874 voyage in 12 foot boat.
|

|
|
 |
By: William Bligh
Muntineers interrupt a breadfruit voyage, in a classic true tale of temptation, seamanship, and leadership.
|

|
|
 |
By: Owen Chase
The true story that inspired Melville's Moby Dick, sensational in its time and still a mortal tale of the sea.
|

|
|
 |
By: Erskine Childers
Two young British yachtsman discover a grave secret on the shifting tides of the North Sea coast, in what is often considered the first spy novel.
|

|
|
 |
By: Erskine Childers
A young Erskine Childers, later a vehement Irish nationalist executed for his beliefs, serves in the British cavalry during the Boer War.
|

|
|
 |
By: Ignatius Valentine Chirol
|

|
|
 |
By: Marcus Clarke
The journey of a convict illustrates the penal colony roots of Australia.
|

|
|
 |
By: Samuel Taylor Coleridge
Water, water, everywhere,
Nor any drop to drink.
|

|
|
 |
By: Joseph Conrad
A Dutch trader searches for riches in Borneo, in the first novel by the author of Heart of Darkness.
|

|
|
 |
By: Joseph Conrad
A colonial underling struggles with his own decisions on a river outpost in the Far East.
|

|
|
 |
By: Joseph Conrad
Separatism, militias, foreign opportunists and corruption converge in an imaginary South American country.
|

|
|
 |
By: Joseph Conrad
The slovenly crew of the Narcissus adjusts to life aboard with a black crew member. Be prepared for language offensive to today's reader.
|

|
|
 |
By: Joseph Conrad
Upriver, into evil. The great novel and the basis for the movie Apocalypse Now! See blog.
|

|
|
 |
By: Joseph Conrad
|

|
|
 |
By: Joseph Conrad
|

|
|
 |
By: Joseph Conrad
|

|
|
 |
By: Joseph Conrad
|

|
|
 |
By: Joseph Conrad
|

|
|
 |
By: James Cook
|

|
|
 |
By: James Cook
|

|
|
 |
By: James Fenimore Cooper
Revolutionary war espionage off the coast of England, from the author of the Leatherstocking novels.
|

|
|
 |
By: James Fenimore Cooper
First in the Leatherstocking chronology but the last to be written, we meet the hero in his youth as he saves the Hutter sisters from certain death.
|

|
|
 |
By: James Fenimore Cooper
In the best-known Leatherstocking story, Natty Bumppo escorts the Munro sisters through upstate New York during the French and Indian War.
|

|
|
 |
By: James Fenimore Cooper
|

|
|
 |
By: James Fenimore Cooper
|

|
|
 |
By: James Fenimore Cooper
|

|
|
 |
By: E. Hamilton Currey
Piracy was a continuance of the violent politics and times of Old Europe in this British account.
|

|
|
 |
By: Richard Henry Dana
A Boston Brahmin escapes his comfortable life by serving as a common sailor on a voyage up the pre-gold rush west coast.
|

|
|
 |
By: Charles Darwin
Observations about finch beaks and del Fuegian natives lead to the most important book since the Bible. This is the story of the voyage that produced the insights.
|

|
|
 |
By: Charles Darwin
|

|
|
 |
By: Daniel Defoe
|

|
|
 |
By: Charles Dickens
|

|
|
 |
By: Charles Dickens
|

|
|
 |
By: Charles Dickens
|

|
|
 |
By: Fyodor Dostoyevsky
|

|
|
 |
By: Fyodor Dostoyevsky
|

|
|
 |
By: Arthur Conan Doyle
|

|
|
 |
By: Arthur Conan Doyle
|

|
|
 |
By: Arthur Conan Doyle
|

|
|
 |
By: Sir Arthur Conan Doyle
|

|
|
 |
By: Thomas Hardy
|

|
|
 |
By: Thomas Hardy
|

|
|
 |
By: Thomas Hardy
|

|
|
 |
By: Thomas Hardy
|

|
|