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Index
Cover
Title Page
Copyright
Contents
The Wind in the Willows
Title Page
Copyright
Contents
Illustrations
Introduction
The Wind in the Willows
I: The River Bank
II: The Open Road
III: The Wild Wood
IV: Mr. Badger
V: Dulce Domum
VI: Mr. Toad
VII: The Piper at the Gates of Dawn
VIII: Toad’s Adventures
IX: Wayfarers All
X: The Further Adventures of Toad
XI: “Like Summer Tempests Came His Tears”
XII: The Return of Ulysses
Reading Group Guide
Biographical Note
Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland
Title Page
Copyright
Biographical Note
Contents
Introduction by A. S. Byatt
A Note on the Text
Alice’s Adventures In Wonderland
I. Down the Rabbit-Hole
II. The Pool of Tears
III. A Caucus-Race and a Long Tale
IV. The Rabbit Sends in a Little Bill
V. Advice from a Caterpillar
VI. Pig and Pepper
VII. A Mad Tea-Party
VIII. The Queen’s Croquet-Ground
IX. The Mock Turtle’s Story
X. The Lobster Quadrille
XI. Who Stole the Tarts ?
XII. Alice’s Evidence
Through the Looking-Glass
Author’s Preface
I. Looking-glass House
II. The Garden of Live Flowers
III. Looking-glass Insects
IV. Tweedledum and Tweedledee
V Wool and Water
VI. Humpty Dumpty
VII. The Lion and the Unicorn
VIII. “It’s My Own Invention”
IX. Queen Alice
X. Shaking
XI. Waking
XII. Which Dreamed It?
An Easter Greeting
Christmas Greetings
Notes
Reading Group Guide
About the Illustrator
Peter Pan
Title Page
Copyright
Biographical Note
Contents
Illustrations
Introduction by Anne McCaffrey
A Note On The Text
Chapter I: Peter Breaks Through
Chapter II: The Shadow
Chapter III: Come Away, Come Away!
Chapter IV: The Flight
Chapter V: The Island Come True
Chapter VI: The Little House
Chapter VII: The Home Under the Ground
Chapter VIII: The Mermaids’ Lagoon
Chapter IX: The Never Bird
Chapter X: The Happy Home
Chapter XI: Wendy’s Story
Chapter XII: The Children Are Carried Off
Chapter XIII: Do You Believe in Fairies?
Chapter XIV: The Pirate Ship
Chapter XV: “Hook or Me This Time”
Chapter XVI: The Return Home
Chapter XVII: When Wendy Grew Up
Reading Group Guide
The Three Musketeers
Title Page
Copyright
Biographical Note
Contents
Introduction by Alan Furst
Author’s Preface
The Three Musketeers
I. The Three Gifts of Monsieur d’Artagnan the Elder
II. The Antechamber of Monsieur de Tréville
III. The Audience
IV. Of Athos and His Shoulder, of Porthos and His Baldric, and of Aramis and His Handkerchief
V. His Majesty’s Musketeers and the Cardinal’s Guards
VI. His Majesty King Louis XIII
VII. Home Life of the Musketeers
VIII. Concerning a Court Intrigue
IX. D’Artagnan to the Fore
X. Concerning a Mousetrap in the Seventeenth Century
XI. In Which the Plot Thickens
XII. George Villiers, Duke of Buckingham
XIII. Of Monsieur Bonacieux
XIV. The Man of Meung
XV. Men of Law and Men of the Sword
XVI. Wherein Monsieur Pierre Séguier, Chancellor of France and Keeper of the Seals, Looks More Than Once for a Bell to Ring as Lustily as He Was Wont to Do of Yore
XVII. Of Monsieur Bonacieux and His Lady
XVIII. Lover and Husband
XIX. Plan of Campaign
XX. The Journey
XXI. Lady Clark
XXII. In Which Their Majesties Dance La Merlaison, a Favorite Ballet of the Kings
XXIII. The Rendezvous
XXIV. The Lodge
XXV. Of What Happened to Porthos
XXVI. Of Aramis and His Thesis
XXVII. Of Athos and His Wife
XXVIII. The Return
XXIX. Of the Hunt for Campaign Outfits
XXX. Milady
XXXI. Englishmen and Frenchmen
XXXII. A Dinner at the House of an Attorney-at-Law
XXXIII. The Soubrette and Her Mistress
XXXIV. Concerning the Respective Outfits of Aramis and Porthos
XXXV. At Night All Cats Are Gray
XXXVI. Dreams of Vengeance
XXXVII. Of Milady’s Secret
XXXVIII. How Athos Without Lifting a Finger Procured His Equipment for the Campaign
XXXIX. A Vision
XL. Wherein D’Artagnan Meets His Eminence and Milady Speeds Him Off to War
XLI. The Siege of La Rochelle
XLII. Of Anjou Wine and Its Salubrious Virtues
XLIII. At the Sign of the Red Dovecote
XLIV. Of the Utility of Stovepipes
XLV. Husband and Wife
XLVI. The Bastion Saint-Gervais
XLVII. The Council of the Musketeers
XLVIII. A Family Affair
XLIX. Fatality
L. Of an Intimate Conversation Between Brother and Sister
LI. Of an Officer Out on a Stroll
LII. Captivity: The First Day
LIII. Captivity: The Second Day
LIV. Captivity: The Third Day
LV. Captivity: The Fourth Day
LVI. Captivity: The Fifth Day
LVII. How Milady Employed the Technique of Classical Tragedy to Prepare a Modern One
LVIII. Escape
LIX. Of What Occurred at Portsmouth on August 23, 1628
LX. Of What Was Happening in France
LXI. Of What Occurred at the Convent of the Carmelite Nuns in Bethune
LXII. Of Two Varieties of Demons
LXIII. Of Wine and Water
LXIV. The Man in the Red Cloak
LXV. Day of Judgment
LXVI. Of How Judgment Was Accomplished
LXVII. Of the Cardinal, His Agent and a Lieutenant’s Commission
LXVIII. Epilogue
Commentary
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