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    Mythologies

    1,650 L

    In this magnificent collection of essays, Barthes explores the myths of mass culture taking subjects as diverse as wrestling.

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    Narcissus And Goldmund

    1,700 L

    A gripping, vivid novel which brings to life Europe in the Middle Ages, in all its beauty and horror.

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    Never Grow Up

    2,100 L

    It’s rotten when you’re very small, You hardly get a say at all.It’s “No!” and “Quiet!” and “That’s enough!” By golly, life – it can be tough . . .

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    Nineteen Eighty -Four 

    3,250 L

    Nineteen Eighty-Four by George Orwell is a dystopian novel that portrays a totalitarian society where personal freedom is non-existent.

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    North and South

    500 L

    ‘But the cloud never comes in that quarter of the horizon from which we watch for it.’

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    Northanger Abbey

    2,750 L

    Mansfield Park is largely considered to be one of Jane Austen’s most ambitious novels, a darkly satirical glimpse into morality and social mobility within the nineteenth-century British class system.

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    Northanger Abbey

    1,500 L

    In Bath, Catherine Morland meets Henry, a suitor and a fellow devotee of Gothic novels who invites her to his family home, Northanger Abbey. Ruins, locked doors, dark corridors… how could she refuse?

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    Notes from Underground & Other Stories 

    650 L

    Notes from Underground & Other Stories by Fyodor Dostoevsky. With an Introduction and Notes by David Rampton, Department of English, University of Ottowa. 

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    Notes on a cuff and other stories

    1,350 L

     “Notes on the Cuff,” a comically autobiographical account of how the tenacious young writer managed to begin his literary career despite famine, typhus, civil war, the wrong political affiliation, and the Byzantine Moscow bureaucracy.

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    Oh say can you say?

    1,000 L

    Oh Say Can You Say? is a children’s book written and illustrated by Theodor Geisel under the pen name Dr. Seuss, and published in 1979 by Random House. It is a collection of 22 tongue-twisters. It was Dr. Seuss’s last beginner book.

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    Oh The Places You’ll Go

    1,000 L

    Oh, the Places You’ll Go! is a book written and illustrated by children’s author Dr. Seuss. It was first published by Random House on January 22, 1990. It was his last book to be published during his lifetime. The book concerns the journey of life, its challenges and joys.

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    Oh thinks you can Dr. Seuss

    1,000 L

    Oh the Thinks you Can Think introduces various questions about the nature of thought, imagination, reality, art, and representation. Full of puns and silly rhymes, this classic Dr. Seuss book will challenge young readers to puzzle through philosophical questions of imagination, reality and art.

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    Oh, Baby, the Places You’ll Go!

    1,000 L

    Dr. Seuss, also known as Theodor Seuss Geisel, is one of the most beloved children’s book authors of all time. From The Cat in the Hat to Oh, the Places You’ll Go!, his iconic characters, stories, and art style have had a lasting influence on generations of children and adults. The books he wrote and illustrated under the name Dr. Seuss (along with others he wrote but did not illustrate, under the pseudonyms Theo. LeSieg and Rosetta Stone) have been published in fifty languages. Hundreds of millions of copies have found their way into homes and hearts around the world. Dr. Seuss’s long list of awards includes Caldecott Honors, the Pulitzer Prize, and eight honorary doctorates. Works based on his original stories have won three Oscars, three Emmys, three Grammys, and a Peabody.

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    Old Man Goriot

    1,300 L

    This pessimistic case study of bourgeois society’s ills after the French Revolution tells the intertwined stories of Eugène de Rastignac, an ambitious but penniless young man, and old Goriot, a father who sacrifices everything for his children.

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    Oliver Twist

    500 L

    Oliver Twist; or, The Parish Boy’s Progress, is the second novel by English author Charles Dickens. Oliver Twist unromantically portrays the sordid lives of criminals, and exposes the cruel treatment of the many orphans in London in the mid-19th century.

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    Oliver Twist

    2,750 L

    ‘The power of Dickens is so amazing, that the reader at once becomes his captive’ WILLIAM MAKEPEACE THACKERAY