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One copy is available
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Over the River and Into the Woods (1950) is a novel by the American writer Ernest Hemingway. The title is derived from the last words of American Civil War Confederate General Thomas J. "Stonewall" Jackson.
The booklet "On Love" by Ralph Waldo Emerson is a Croatian edition of the famous essay from the collection Essays: First Series (1841), one of the foundational texts of American transcendentalism.
"The Hunt for the Two-Faced Goose" is a humorous story by Mark Twain in which the author depicts human greed, gullibility, and a tendency to exaggerate through comic situations.
Upton Sinclair sharply criticizes the relationship between art and capital throughout history. He shows how money and power have always influenced literature, painting, and music, and how great artists were often prisoners of the "golden chain."
A documentary-drama in which London, living among the poor of London's East End in 1902, bears poignant witness to the misery, hunger, and humiliation of the lowest strata of English society in Edwardian England.
Satirical prose, composed of six monologues by Lowell Schmaltz, a typical American traveling salesman, who sings the praises of the American way of life, President Coolidge, business, and "Nordic" superiority.