Continental Classics Explained

Continental Classics is a series of books.

Contents

Volume ITaras Bulba: A Tale of the Cossacks by Nicolai V. Gogol translated by Isabel F. Hapgood
Volume IISebastopol by Leo Tolstoy
Volume IIIThe Crushed Flower and Other Stories, by Leonid Andreev translated by Herman Bernstein.https://archive.org/details/crushedfloweroth00andriala
Volume IVThe Career of a Nihilist by S. Stepniak [pseud.]
Volume V Parisian points of view by Ludovic Halevy translated by Edith V. B. Matthews, with an introduction by Brander Matthews.https://archive.org/details/parisianpointsof00haluoft
Volume VI The Crime of Sylvestre Bonnard (Member of the institute) by Anatole France, translation and introduction by Lafcadio Hearn.https://archive.org/details/thecrimeofsylves00franiala
Volume VII & Volume VIIIFor the Right by Karl Emil Franzos translated by Julie Sutter. Preface by George MacDonald.
Volume IX Black Diamonds by Maurus Jokai translated by Frances A. Gerard.https://archive.org/details/blackdiamondsnov00jkuoft
Volume XDame Care (Frau Sorge) by Hermann Sudermann tr. from the German by Bertha Overbeck.
Volume XIThe New god, A Tale Of The Early Christians by Richard Voss
Volume XII and XIIIDebit and Credit by Gustav Freytag, translated from German by L. C. C., with a preface by Christian Charles Josias Bunsen.https://archive.org/details/debitcredit01freyuofthttps://archive.org/details/debitcredit02freyuoft
Volume XIV Spanish, Italian and Oriental tales, including stories by I. M. Palmarini, Camillo Boito, Antonio Fogazzaro and Pedra de Alarcon.https://archive.org/details/spanishitalianor00palmuoft
Volume XVModern Ghosts, with introduction by George William Curtis.https://archive.org/details/modernghostssele00curtuoft
Volume XVI The house by the medlar-tree by Giovanni Verga translated by Mary A. Craig with an introduction by W. D. Howells.https://archive.org/details/housebymedlartre00verghttps://archive.org/details/housebymedlartre00verguoft[1]
Volume XVIIThe battle of Waterloo and other stories, by Alexander Kielland, translated from Norwegian by William Archer, with an introduction by H. H. Boyesen. Includes:https://archive.org/details/battleofwaterloo00kielialahttps://archive.org/details/battleofwaterloo00kieluoft
Volume XVIII Mystery tales, reprint of The Lock and Key Library: North Europe Stories, by Julian Hawthorne. Includes:https://archive.org/details/mysterytalesincl00berguoft
Volume XIXDanish folk taleshttps://openlibrary.org/b/OL7030540M/Danish_folk_tales
Volume XXThe wonderful adventures of Nils

Notes and References

  1. Book: Twentieth-Century Italian Literature in English Translation. An Annotated Bibliography 1929-1997 . Robin Healey . University of Toronto Press . 1998 . 0-8020-0800-3 . 54 .