Fiction Books
The Master Builder
This work by 19th Century Norwegian playwright Henrik Ibsen, presents an intriguing portrait of one man's consuming desire for success. Download it today!
The Ripper: Redux
A maverick director travels to 1888 to film the murders of Jack the Ripper.
The Hound of the Baskervilles
Excellent classic! Download it today!
Conspiracy
Did Bush and Cheney plan 9/11? The middle-aged protagonist of Conspiracy, a 60,000 word novel set in present-day Washington D.C., felt he’d as much chance of uncovering a story that had eluded the major media as bedding his young braless co-reporter. Download this FREE e-Book today!
The Magnificent Lovers
By French playwright, Moliere. The King, who would have nothing but what was magnificent in all that he undertook, wished to give his Court an entertainment that would comprise all that the stage could furnish. To facilitate the execution of so vast an idea, and to link so many different things...
Dark Lady of the Sonnets
A short play by Irish playwright, George Bernard Shaw, with focus on the mystery surrounding English playwright, William Shakespeare's dark lady character subject in the sonnets that he wrote. Download it now!
The Money Story
All characters and events in this story are fictional. The aim of this e-book is not to teach history, but to show how trade and the introduction of currency may have affected life on the tropical shores of Sarawak.
Disraeli Avenue
“I lived in Disraeli Avenue, in between Gladstone Street and Campbell-Bannerman Road.” The neighbors all pronounced it as “ Dizz- rah- el-lee” (four syllables) Avenue. My mother’s house was a semi-detached type on a street with 31 similar-looking houses. They looked identical but I knew...
The School for Husbands
In this play by French playwright Moliere, young lovers are backed by elders, and aided by clever servants. Download it today!
Philoctetes
By Greek tragedian, Sophocles. Son of Poias in Greek mythology, Philoctetes by gift acquired the bow and arrow of Hercules, by lighting the pyre on which the hero was consumed alive. On his way to the Trojan War, Philoctetes was bitten by a snake; and because the odor from his wound and his cries...