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Books published by Akasha Classics

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  • by Baroness Orczy & Baroness Emmuska
    £12.49

  • by Zane Grey
    £11.99

  • by Jules Verne
    £14.49 - 23.49

  • by Bram Stoker
    £21.49

    From the author who brought you Dracula comes a dark tale of possession and ancient magic. An eccentric archeologist has become obsessed with the mummy of the Egyptian queen Tera. His attempts to raise her from the dead have left him in a catatonic stupor. It now falls on his daughter Margaret and the young lawyer Malcolm Ross to discover the secrets of this ancient curse in time to stop Tera from inflicting her will on Victorian England. Bram Stoker¿s spine-tingling novel, based on his own interest in Egyptology, helped give rise to a new horror genre featuring mummies.

  • by Herman Hesse
    £9.99 - 18.49

  • by Howard Pyle
    £21.99

  • by Howard Pyle
    £20.49

  • by Ferdinand Ossendowski
    £12.49 - 21.49

  • by Friedrich Nietzsche
    £19.99

    Are traditional notions of morality actually the means of enslaving the human spirit? This is the claim of Friedrich Nietzsche in Beyond Good and Evil. Nietzsche is one of the most controversial of European philosophers. His bold attacks on Christianity, and the advocacy of a fearless approach to the uncertainties of life, have earned him both criticism and praise from disparate quarters. This book embodies the author¿s attempt to summarize and enhance his previous work. Beyond Good and Evil is Nietzsche at his most concise and systematic, and is a good starting point for the novice.

  • by Jack London
    £20.49

  • by Rudyard Kipling
    £10.99 - 19.99

  • by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle
    £11.99 - 20.49

  • by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle
    £10.99 - 19.99

  • by L Frank Baum
    £18.49

  • by Jack London
    £11.99

  • by Elizabeth Vov Arnim
    £16.99

  • by Jules Verne
    £19.99

  • by Henry David Thoreau
    £9.99 - 16.99

  • by Frederick Winslow Taylor
    £13.49

    The Principles of Scientific Management, by Frederick Winslow Taylor - Akasha Classics, AkashaPublishing.Com - President Roosevelt in his address to the Governors at the White House, prophetically remarked that "The conservation of our national resources is only prelimi-nary to the larger question of national efficiency." The whole country at once recognized the importance of conserving our material resources and a large movement has been started which will be effective in accomplishing this object. As yet, however, we have but vaguely appreciated the importance of "the larger question of increasing our national efficiency." We can see our forests vanishing, our water-powers going to waste, our soil being carried by floods into the sea; and the end of our coal and our iron is in sight. But our larger wastes of human effort, which go on every day through such of our acts as are blundering, ill-directed, or inefficient, and which Mr. Roosevelt refers to as a, lack of "national efficiency," are less visible, less tangible, and are but vaguely appreciated.

  • by George Bernard Shaw
    £16.99

  • by Bernard Shaw & George Bernard Shaw
    £9.99 - 16.99

  • by George Bernard Shaw
    £16.99

  • by Thomas More
    £13.49

    Utopia, by Thomas More - Akasha Classics, AkashaPublishing.Com - Sir Thomas More, son of Sir John More, a justice of the King's Bench, was born in 1478, in Milk Street, in the city of London. After his earlier education at St. Anthony's School, in Threadneedle Street, he was placed, as a boy, in the household of Cardinal John Morton, Archbishop of Canterbury and Lord Chancellor. It was not unusual for persons of wealth or influence and sons of good families to be so established together in a relation of patron and client. The youth wore his patron's livery, and added to his state. The patron used, afterwards, his wealth or influence in helping his young client forward in the world. Cardinal Morton had been in earlier days that Bishop of Ely whom Richard III. sent to the Tower; was busy afterwards in hostility to Richard; and was a chief adviser of Henry VII., who in 1486 made him Archbishop of Canterbury, and nine months afterwards Lord Chancellor. Cardinal Morton - of talk at whose table there are recollections in "Utopia" - delighted in the quick wit of young Thomas More. He once said, "Whoever shall live to try it, shall see this child here waiting at table prove a notable and rare man." At the age of about nineteen, Thomas More was sent to Canterbury College, Oxford, by his patron, where he learnt Greek of the first men who brought Greek studies from Italy to England - William Grocyn and Thomas Linacre. Linacre, a physician, who afterwards took orders, was also the founder of the College of Physicians. In 1499, More left Oxford to study law in London, at Lincoln's Inn, and in the next year Archbishop Morton died.

  • by Professor John (University of Sao Paulo) Milton
    £16.99

  • by Jack London
    £16.99

  • by Charlotte M Yonge
    £9.99

  • by Oscar Wilde
    £10.99

  • by Thomas Hardy
    £11.99

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