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Alcott, Louisa

Anderson, Sherwood

Bangs, John Kendrick

Baum, L Frank

Bellamy, Edward

Cather, Willa

Chopin, Kate

Christie, Agatha

Churchill, Winston

Corelli, Marie

Crane, Stephen

Daviess, Maria Thompson

Deland, Margaret

Dickens, Charles

Dos Passos, John

Doyle, Arthur Conan

Dreiser, Theodore

Faulkner, William

Fisher, Dorothy Canfield

Fitzgerald, F Scott

Forster, EM

Fox, John Jr

Frederic, Harold

Gilman, Charlotte Perkins

Grant, Robert

Grey, Zane

Hardy, Thomas

Hegan, Alice Caldwell

Hemingway, Ernest

Hesse, Hermann

Hodgson Burnett, Frances

Howells, William Dean

Hughes, Thomas

Hutchinson, A.S.M.

Jacobs, Harriet

James, Henry

Jerome, Jerome K

Keller, Helen

Lewis, Sinclair

Marks, Percy

Morris, William

Norris, Frank

Parker, Gilbert

Poole, Ernest

Sinclair, Upton

Stratton-Porter, Gene

Tarkington, Booth

Thoreau, Henry David

Toomer, Jean

Trollope, Anthony

Twain, Mark

Verne, Jules

Wells, HG

Wharton, Edith

Wilde, Oscar

Wister, Owen

Wodehouse, P.G.

Woolf, Virginia

Wright, Harold Bell

Henry James



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Daisy Miller (1877)

This famous novel by Henry James portrays the courtship of the beautiful American girl Daisy Miller by Winterbourne, a sophisticated compatriot of hers. His pursuit of her is hampered by her own flirtatiousness, which is frowned upon by the other expatriates when they meet in Switzerland and Italy.


Washington Square (1881)

Washington Square by Henry James is a novel written during the late 19th century. The plot revolves around Catherine Sloper, the daughter of Dr. Austin Sloper, a successful physician in New York. The story delves into themes of social status, parental expectations, and self-identity, as Catherine navigates her father's disappointment in her perceived mediocrity and unfulfilled romantic aspirations.


What Maisie Knew (1897)

When Beale and Ida Farange are divorced, the court decrees that their only child, the very young Maisie, will shuttle back and forth between them, spending six months of the year with each. The parents are immoral and frivolous, and they use Maisie to intensify their hatred of each other.