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Second in the Bryce series. It's Ann and Stephen's special day. Family and friends gather to help them celebrate, each with a story to tell. Peter's memories of Susan; the discovery of Elliston House, derelict, holding echoes of its previous occupants. Sisters, Alice and Audrey, one having raised children apparently abandoned by the other. Peter's difficult childhood with a father figure harbouring double standards. The consequences of his sister's naivety. Trust betrayed and a disappearance lead to an underground nightmare. Can happiness be sealed for more than one generation of the Bryce family?
George MacDonald (1824-1905) was a Scottish author, poet, and Christian minister. He was a pioneering figure in the field of fantasy literature and the mentor of fellow writer Lewis Carroll. This edition includes: George MacDonald by Annie Matheson Fantasy Fiction: The Princess and the Goblin The Princess and Curdie Phantastes At the Back of the North Wind The Lost Princess: A Double Story The Day Boy and the Night Girl The Flight of the Shadow Lilith: A Romance Adela Cathcart The Portent and Other Stories Dealings with the Fairies Stephen Archer and Other Tales Realistic Fiction: David Elginbrod (The Tutor's First Love) Alec-Forbes of Howglen (The Maiden's Bequest) Robert Falconer (The Musi...
THE STORY: The scene is the bedroom of a house in provincial England, where a senile old woman lies on her deathbed, attended by her two middle-aged daughters. One of them, Jean, has stayed at home and has borne the brunt of her mother's illness, f
This volume contains three of Strindberg's most famous plays, spanning twenty years of prodigious creativity and recurrent personal crises: The Father, which displays Strindberg's suspicion of women at its most implacable, 'powerful and profound' (Guy de Maupassant); Miss Julie (1888), which he called his masterpiece, and in which he presents with startling modernity the conflict between sexual passion and social position; and The Ghost Sonata (1907), written in physical pain and spiritual torment, which is a phantasmagoric dream play, 'a direct source for the Theatre of the Absurd' (Martin Esslin)."Michael Meyer is the translator most actors turn to when seeking a definitive text" (Sunday Times)
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