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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

Booth Tarkington



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Magnificent Ambersons (1918)

The novel and trilogy trace the growth of the United States through the declining fortunes of three generations of the aristocratic Amberson family in an upper-scale Indianapolis neighborhood, between the end of the Civil War and the early part of the 20th century, a period of rapid industrialization and socio-economic change in America.


Penrod (1914)

The book follows the misadventures of Penrod Schofield, an eleven-year-old boy growing up in the pre-World War I Midwestern United States, in a similar vein to The Adventures of Tom Sawyer.


Seventeen (1916)

a humorous novel by Booth Tarkington that gently satirizes first love, in the person of a callow 17-year-old, William Sylvanus Baxter. Seventeen takes place in a small city in the Midwestern United States shortly before World War I.


The Midlander (1923)

The Midlander by Booth Tarkington is a novel written in the early 20th century. The story explores the lives of the Oliphant brothers, Harlan and Dan, who represent contrasting personalities and social ideals against the backdrop of their affluent upbringing. The novel delves into themes of class, identity, and the negotiation of familial expectations as the brothers navigate their relationships and the societal pressures of their time.


The Turmoil (1915)

The Turmoil tells the intertwined stories of the Sheridans, whose integrity wanes as their wealth increases, and the Vertrees, who remain noble but impoverished.