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  • by Louisa May Alcott
    £15.49 - 24.49

  • by Grace Miller White
    £15.49 - 24.49

  • by Lord Byron
    £19.49 - 29.99

  • by Marden Orison Swett Marden
    £16.49 - 24.49

  • by Marden Orison Swett Marden
    £12.49 - 22.49

  • by Bolton Sarah Knowles Bolton
    £14.49 - 23.49

  • by Bolton Sarah Knowles Bolton
    £15.49 - 23.49

  • by Austen Jane Austen
    £14.49 - 22.49

  • by Lawrence D. H. Lawrence
    £15.49 - 25.49

  • - The Chronicle of Her Escapades and Excursions
    by Rinehart Mary Roberts Rinehart
    £14.49 - 24.49

  • by Jules Verne
    £24.49

    Eight Hundred Leagues on the Amazon (French: La Jangada - Huit Cents lieues sur l'Amazone) is a novel by Jules Verne, published in 1881.Unlike many of his other novels, this story does not have any science fiction elements. It is an adventure novel.This novel involves how Joam Garral, a ranch owner who lives near the Peruvian-Brazilian border on the Amazon River, is forced to travel down-stream when his past catches up with him. Most of the novel is situated on a large jangada (a Brazilian timber raft) that is used by Garral and his family to float to Belém at the river's mouth. Many aspects of the raft, scenery, and journey are described in detail.

  • by Jules Verne
    £15.49

  • by Wells H. G. Wells
    £14.49 - 22.49

  • by Verne Jules Verne
    £13.49 - 22.49

  • by Godkin Edwin Lawrence Godkin
    £15.49 - 24.49

  • by Bolton Sarah Knowles Bolton
    £15.49 - 24.49

  • by Bolton Sarah Knowles Bolton
    £15.49 - 22.49

  • by Smiles Samuel Smiles
    £15.49 - 24.49

  • by Poe Edgar Allan Poe
    £14.49 - 22.49

  • - A Prose Poem
    by Poe Edgar Allan Poe
    £14.49 - 22.49

  • by Marden Orison Swett Marden
    £12.49 - 20.49

  • - A Story of the Roman Invasion
    by Henty G. A. Henty
    £16.49 - 25.49

  • - A Psychology for Beginners
    by Pyle William Henry Pyle
    £14.49 - 23.49

  • by Chertkov Vladimir Chertkov
    £14.49 - 22.49

  • - An Anthology for Walkers
    by Hilaire Belloc Et Al
    £13.49

  • by A W Duncan
    £12.49

  • - In the Light of the Higher Criticism
    by G W Foote
    £12.49

    George William Foote (11 January 1850 - 17 October 1915) was an English secularist, freethinker, republican, writer and journal editor. George William Foote was born in Plymouth, the son of William Thomas Foot (a customs officer) and Ann Winzar.In his Reminiscences of Charles Bradlaugh he recalls coming to London in January 1868 with "plenty of health and very little religion". He was taken to Cleveland Hall by a friend, and "heard Mrs. [Harriet] Law knock the Bible about delightfully. She was not what would be called a woman of culture, but she had what some devotees of 'culchaw' do not posses-a great deal of natural ability..." A few weeks later Foote heard Charles Bradlaugh speaking at the hall. He became involved with the secularism, freethought and republicanism, joining the Young Men's Secular Association, the National Secular Society, and contributing to Bradlaugh's National Reformer.In 1877 Foote joined the anti-Bradlaughites in the breakaway British Secular Union. The split was caused by several factors: Bradlaugh's alleged autocratic style; Bradlaugh's association with Annie Besant; and Bradlaugh and Besant's involvement in promoting birth control and Neo-Malthusianism. The BSU was relatively short-lived, and Foote himself was reconciled to Bradlaugh within a few years, becoming an NSS vice-president from 1882.The Secularist: A Liberal Weekly Review (1876-1877), Foote's first attempt to launch his own publication, in collaboration with George Jacob Holyoake, did not last long. In May, 1881, Foote started a serial publication called The Freethinker, which is still published. As a result of contents of this journal, Foote was charged with blasphemy, and eventually imprisoned for one year with hard labour. On receiving his sentence from Mr Justice North (a devout Catholic), Foote said "with great deliberation" to the Judge "My Lord, I thank you; it is worthy of your creed". His description of this experience was published in 1886 as Prisoner for Blasphemy.Once released, Foote continued to be active promoting his ideals, writing books and pamphlets, lecturing, and debating. Foote was well-versed in literature, and had extensive knowledge of ancient and contemporary writers, and ecclesiastical history. In 1890 Foote succeeded Bradlaugh as President of the National Secular Society and remained in that role for twenty-five years.His death was related by Chapman Cohen in The Freethinker (31 October 1915):When I saw him on the Friday (two days) before his death he said, "I have had another setback, but I am a curious fellow and may get all right again." But he looked the fact of death in the face with the same courage and determination that he faced Judge North many years ago. A few hours before he died he said calmly to those around him, "I am dying." And when the end came his head dropped back on the pillow, and with a quiet sigh, as of one falling to sleep, he passed away. (wikipedia.org)

  • by Wood Grace Wood & Burbank Emily Burbank
    £15.49 - 22.49

  • by Bede Jarrett
    £20.49

    Bede Jarrett OP (22 August 1881 - 17 March 1934) was an English Dominican friar and Catholic priest who was also a noted historian and author. Known for works including Mediæval Socialism and The Emperor Charles IV, Jarrett also founded Blackfriars Priory at the University of Oxford in 1921, formally reinstating the Dominican Order at that university for the first time since the Dissolution of the Monasteries under King Henry VIII. Born in Greenwich as Cyril Jarrett, he was the fifth of six sons to parents Colonel H.S. Jarrett, Companion of the Order of the Indian Empire (CIE), and Agnes (Beaufort) Jarrett. Beginning in 1891, Jarrett studied at Stonyhurst, and in August 1898 he joined the Order of Preachers (OP), also known as the Dominican Order, at St Dominic's Priory in London. Jarrett continued to study at the novitiate in Woodchester and became a novice on 24 September 1898 under the new name of Friar Bede. His religious name was for Bede, known as "the Venerable Bede", an early British Catholic saint sometimes called the Father of English History. On 30 August 1900, Jarrett moved to continue his studies of philosophy, theology and history at Hawkesyard Priory and received minor orders and the subdiaconate, and diaconate in 1902.Jarrett authored numerous books, prayers and articles, including five entries in the Catholic Encyclopedia. He also purchased Blackfriars, a Dominican magazine renamed New Blackfriars in the 1960s, for £40 in 1919 and persuaded publisher Basil Blackwell to publish it, which prevented it from being discontinued. Jarrett died of sudden illness on 17 March 1934. He is buried in St Mary's Roman Catholic Cemetery in Woodchester. (wikipedia.org)

  • by Duke Basil W. Duke
    £19.49 - 27.49

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