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
- Pharoh
- The Parsonage
- The Peat Moor
- "Hope's clad in April green"
- At the fair
- Two friends
- A good conscience
- Romance and Reality
- Withered leaves
- The battle of Waterloo
- Volume XVIII Mystery tales, reprint of The Lock and Key Library: North Europe Stories, by Julian Hawthorne. Includes:https://archive.org/details/mysterytalesincl00berguoft
- The Queen of Spades, Pushkin
- The General's Will, Vera Jelihovsky
- Crime and Punishment, Fyoodor Dostoyevsky
- The Safety Match, Anton Chekhoff
- Knights of Industry, Vsevolod Krestovski
- The Amputated Arms, Jorgen Wilhelm Bergsoe
- The Manuscript, Otto Larssen
- The Sealed Room, Bernhard Ingemann
- The Rector of Veilbye, Steen Steensen Blicher
- The Living Death, Ferencz Molnar
- Thirteen at Table, Maurus Jokai
- The Dancing Bear, Etienne Barsony
- The Tower Room, Arthur Elck
- Volume XIXDanish folk taleshttps://openlibrary.org/b/OL7030540M/Danish_folk_tales
- Volume XXThe wonderful adventures of Nils
Notes and References
- 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 .