Mosses from an Old Manse

Author  Nathaniel Hawthorne Introduction by  Mary Oliver
Mosses from an Old Manse

Mosses from an Old Manse is Nathaniel Hawthorne’s second story collection, first published in 1846 in two volumes and featuring sketches and tales written over a span of more than twenty years, including such classics as “Young Goodman Brown,” “The Birthmark,” and “Rappaccini’s Daughter.” Herman Melville deemed Hawthorne the American Shakespeare, and Henry James wrote that his early tales possess “the element of simple genius, the quality of imagination. That is the real charm of Hawthorne’s writing—this purity and spontaneity and naturalness of fancy.”

Little Women

Little Women

Louisa May Alcott
Emma

Emma

Jane Austen
Jane Eyre

Jane Eyre

Charlotte Bronte
Dracula

Dracula

Bram Stoker
The Betrothed

The Betrothed

Alessandro Manzoni
The Collected Essays of Ralph Ellison The Scarlet Letter

The Scarlet Letter

Nathaniel Hawthorne
The Cossacks

The Cossacks

Leo Tolstoy
Middlemarch

Middlemarch

George Eliot
Wuthering Heights

Wuthering Heights

Emily Bronte
We

We

Yevgeny Zamyatin
The Voyage Out

The Voyage Out

Virginia Woolf
The Southern Woman

The Southern Woman

Elizabeth Spencer
The Squatter and the Don

The Squatter and the Don

Maria Amparo Ruiz de Burton
Leaves of Grass

Leaves of Grass

Walt Whitman