Eliot George
Sortowanie
Źródło opisu
Legimi
(71)
Forma i typ
E-booki
(69)
Audiobooki
(2)
Autor
Sekuła Aleksandra
(2477)
Kozioł Paweł
(2013)
Bekker Alfred
(1846)
Vandenberg Patricia
(1483)
Kotwica Wojciech
(794)
Eliot George
(-)
Kowalska Dorota
(663)
Doyle Arthur Conan
(662)
Hackett Pete
(604)
Wallace Edgar
(594)
Buchner Friederike von
(521)
Cartland Barbara
(487)
Kochanowski Jan
(481)
Waidacher Toni
(478)
Dickens Charles
(476)
Shakespeare William
(458)
Maybach Viola
(435)
Verne Jules
(421)
Konopnicka Maria
(418)
Twain Mark
(366)
May Karl
(341)
Sienkiewicz Henryk
(337)
Krzyżanowski Julian
(309)
Otwinowska Barbara
(309)
London Jack
(306)
Mahr Kurt
(284)
Boy-Żeleński Tadeusz
(283)
Montgomery Lucy Maud
(282)
Darlton Clark
(280)
Ewers H.G
(278)
Leśmian Bolesław
(277)
Dönges Günter
(266)
Vega Lope de
(264)
Barca Pedro Calderón de la
(263)
Trzeciak Weronika
(262)
Poe Edgar Allan
(256)
Stevenson Robert Louis
(246)
Krasicki Ignacy
(244)
Austen Jane
(242)
Francis H.G
(240)
Vlcek Ernst
(231)
Conrad Joseph
(227)
Stefan Zweig
(227)
Andersen Hans Christian
(226)
Mickiewicz Adam
(225)
Barner G.F
(224)
Kipling Rudyard
(223)
Autores Varios
(222)
Chávez José Pérez
(222)
Ellmer Arndt
(221)
Kühnemann Andreas
(220)
Goethe Johann Wolfgang von
(218)
Palmer Roy
(215)
Wells H. G
(215)
Kraszewski Józef Ignacy
(213)
Oppenheim E. Phillips
(213)
Balzac Honoré de
(212)
Voltz William
(211)
Dumas Alexandre
(209)
Leblanc Maurice
(209)
Mark William
(205)
Bazán Emilia Pardo
(202)
Goliński Zbigniew
(201)
May Karol
(201)
Hałas Jacek "Stranger"
(200)
Baczyński Krzysztof Kamil
(198)
Dug Katarzyna
(198)
Howard Robert E
(196)
Wilde Oscar
(194)
Hoffmann Horst
(186)
Kafka Franz
(184)
Kneifel Hans
(183)
Alcott Louisa May
(177)
Verne Juliusz
(171)
Kobras Beatrice
(164)
Kayser-Darius Nina
(163)
McMason Fred
(162)
Jachowicz Stanisław
(161)
Prus Bolesław
(161)
Orzeszkowa Eliza
(160)
Zola Émile
(160)
Haensel Hubert
(158)
Rawinis Marian Piotr
(158)
King Stephen
(156)
Żeromski Stefan
(155)
Słowacki Juliusz
(154)
Dick Viktor
(150)
Scott Walter
(148)
Collins Wilkie
(147)
Courths-Mahler Hedwig
(145)
Suchanek Andreas
(145)
Woolf Virginia
(145)
Orwell George
(142)
Fischer Marie Louise
(141)
James Henry
(140)
Lech Justyna
(138)
Cooper James Fenimore
(136)
Anton Uwe
(135)
Grey Zane
(134)
Summaries Leader
(133)
Thurner Michael Marcus
(133)
Rok wydania
2020 - 2024
(36)
2010 - 2019
(35)
Kraj wydania
Polska
(71)
Język
polski
(71)
71 wyników Filtruj
E-book
W koszyku
Silas Marner / George Eliot. - [miejsce nieznane] : Jazzybee Verlag : Legimi, 2017.
Forma i typ
'Silas Marner' is definitely one of the authoress's most beautiful stories, the most poetical of them all—the tale of Silas Marner, who deems himself deserted and rejected utterly of God and man and to whom, in his deepest misery, in place of lost gold, a little foundling girl is sent. This tale is the most hopeful of all her books. The contemplation of the renewal of enterprise and energy, which comes with little children, and of the promise with which each new generation gilds the crown of honour for its sires, is pleasant and grateful to her.
Ta pozycja jest dostępna przez Internet. Rozwiń informację, by zobaczyć szczegóły.
Dostęp do treści elektronicznej wymaga posiadania kodu dostępu, który można odebrać w bibliotece.
E-book
W koszyku
Forma i typ
Silas Marner is the third novel by George Eliot, published in 1861. An outwardly simple tale of a linen weaver, it is notable for its strong realism and its sophisticated treatment of a variety of issues ranging from religion to industrialisation to community. The novel is set in the early years of the 19th century. Silas Marner, a weaver, is a member of a small Calvinist congregation in Lantern Yard, a slum street in an unnamed city in Northern England. He is falsely accused of stealing the congregation's funds while watching over the very ill deacon. Two clues are given against Silas: a pocket knife, and the discovery in his own house of the bag formerly containing the money. There is the strong suggestion that Silas' best friend, William Dane, has framed him, since Silas had lent his pocket knife to William shortly before the crime was committed. Silas is proclaimed guilty. The woman Silas was to marry breaks their engagement and later marries William. With his life shattered and his heart broken, Silas leaves Lantern Yard and the city. Marner travels south to the Midlands and settles near the rural village of Raveloe, where he lives alone, choosing to have only minimal contact with the residents. He comes to adore the gold he earns and hoards from his weaving. The gold is stolen by Dunstan ("Dunsey") Cass, a dissolute younger son of Squire Cass, the town's leading landowner. Silas sinks into a deep gloom, despite the villagers' attempts to aid him. Dunsey disappears, but little is made of this not unusual behaviour, and no association is made between him and the theft. Godfrey Cass, Dunsey's elder brother, also harbours a secret. He is married to, but estranged from, Molly Farren, an opium-addicted woman of low birth living in another town. This secret prevents Godfrey from marrying Nancy Lammeter, a young woman of high social and moral standing.
Ta pozycja jest dostępna przez Internet. Rozwiń informację, by zobaczyć szczegóły.
Dostęp do treści elektronicznej wymaga posiadania kodu dostępu, który można odebrać w bibliotece.
E-book
W koszyku
Silas Marner / George Eliot. - [miejsce nieznane] : Jovian Press : Legimi, 2017.
Forma i typ
Embittered by a false accusation, disappointed in friendship and love, the weaver Silas Marner retreats into a long twilight life alone with his loom. . . and his gold. Silas hoards a treasure that kills his spirit until fate steals it from him and replaces it with a golden-haired founding child. Where she came from, who her parents were, and who really stole the gold are the secrets that permeate this moving tale of guilt and innocence. A moral allegory of the redemptive power of love, it is also a finely drawn picture of early nineteenth-century England in the days when spinning wheels hummed busily in the farmhouses, and of a simple way of life that was soon to disappear.
Ta pozycja jest dostępna przez Internet. Rozwiń informację, by zobaczyć szczegóły.
Dostęp do treści elektronicznej wymaga posiadania kodu dostępu, który można odebrać w bibliotece.
E-book
W koszyku
Silas Marner / George Eliot. - [miejsce nieznane] : BookRix : Legimi, 2018.
Forma i typ
Silas Marner is the third novel by George Eliot, published in 1861. An outwardly simple tale of a linen weaver, it is notable for its strong realism and its sophisticated treatment of a variety of issues ranging from religion to industrialisation to community. In Silas Marner, Eliot combines symbolism with a historically precise setting to create a tale of love and hope. On one level, the book has a strong moral tract: the bad character, Dunstan Cass, gets his just deserts, while the pitiable character, Silas Marner, is ultimately richly rewarded, and his miserliness corrected. The novel explores the issues of redemptive love, the notion of community, the role of religion, the status of the gentry and family, and impacts of industrialisation. While religion and religious devotion play a strong part in this text, Eliot concerns herself with matters of ethics and interdependence of faith and community.
Ta pozycja jest dostępna przez Internet. Rozwiń informację, by zobaczyć szczegóły.
Dostęp do treści elektronicznej wymaga posiadania kodu dostępu, który można odebrać w bibliotece.
E-book
W koszyku
Silas Marner / George Eliot. - [miejsce nieznane] : epubli : Legimi, 2018.
Forma i typ
Zu der Zeit, als noch die Spinnräder in den Bauerhäusern lustig schnurrten und selbst vornehme Damen in Seide und Spitzenbesatz ihr Spinnrad von poliertem Eichenholz zum Spielzeug hatten, da sah man wohl in ländlichen Bezirken oder tief im Gebirge gewisse bleiche kleine Gestalten, die neben dem kräftigen Landvolk wie die Überbleibsel eines verdrängten Stammes aussahen. Die Schäferhunde bellten wütend, wenn so ein fremdländisch aussehender Mann vorbeikam – denn welcher Hund mag einen Menschen leiden, der unter einem schweren Packen gebückt geht? – und ohne diese geheimnisvolle Last gingen jene blassen Leute selten über Land. Den Schäfern selbst war es zwar sehr wahrscheinlich, in dem Packen sei nichts als Garn und Stücke Leinen, aber ob sich diese Weberei, so unentbehrlich sie sein mochte, ganz ohne Hilfe des Bösen betreiben ließe, das war ihnen nicht so sicher. In jener fernen Zeit hing sich der Aberglaube leicht an jeden und jedes, was überhaupt ungewöhnlich war oder auch nur selten und vorübergehend vorkam, wie die Besuche des Hausierers oder Scherenschleifers. Wo diese Herumtreiber zu Hause seien oder von wem sie stammten, wußte kein Mensch, und was konnte man sich bei jemand denken, wenn man nicht wenigstens einen kannte, der seinen Vater oder Mutter kannte?! Für die Bauern von damals war die Welt außerhalb des Bereichs ihrer unmittelbaren Anschauung etwas Unbestimmtes und geheimnisvolles; für ihren an die Scholle gefesselten Sinn war ein Wanderleben eine so unklare Vorstellung wie das Leben der Schwalben im Winter, die mit dem Frühlinge heimkehrten, und selbst wenn sich ein Fremder dauernd bei ihnen niederließ, blieb fast immer ein Rest von Mißtrauen gegen ihn bestehen, so daß es niemand überrascht hätte, wenn der Fremdling nach langer tadelloser Führung schließlich doch mit einem Verbrechen endete – zumal, falls er im Rufe stand, gescheit zu sein, oder besonders geschickt war in seinem Gewerbe. Jede Begabung, sei es im raschen Gebrauch der Zunge oder in …
Ta pozycja jest dostępna przez Internet. Rozwiń informację, by zobaczyć szczegóły.
Dostęp do treści elektronicznej wymaga posiadania kodu dostępu, który można odebrać w bibliotece.
E-book
W koszyku
Forma i typ
Silas Marner George Eliot - "Silas Marner", is the story of its title character, a weaver who when falsely accused of theft retreats to a life of exile focusing on his work in solitude and the amassing of gold from his earnings. After carrying on this way for a period of fifteen years Silas returns one day to his cottage to find his stash of gold stolen. While deeply depressed by the loss of his treasure, Silas soon finds consolation in the unexpected adoption of a lovely young girl, Eppie.
Ta pozycja jest dostępna przez Internet. Rozwiń informację, by zobaczyć szczegóły.
Dostęp do treści elektronicznej wymaga posiadania kodu dostępu, który można odebrać w bibliotece.
E-book
W koszyku
Forma i typ
Der junge Leinenweber Silas Marner verliert durch eine Intrige seines besten Freundes nicht nur seine Verlobte, sondern auch seinen Platz in der Gemeinde. Er sieht sich gezwungen, seine nordenglische Heimat zu verlassen, und zieht in das kleine Bauerndorf Raveloe. Dort erwartet ihn, der auch hier zum Außenseiter wird, ein bescheidenes, von Arbeit geprägtes Dasein. Als ihm sein gesammelter Goldschatz und damit sein letzter Lebensinhalt genommen wird, scheint er endgültig ein gebrochener Mann. Doch auf wundersame Weise kommt ein Findelkind in sein Haus – und öffnet ihm die Augen für die Schönheit der Welt. Als sich der Vater des Mädchens zu erkennen gibt, droht dieses Glück aber erneut in Gefahr zu geraten … Mit erzählerischer Raffinesse und psychologischem Feingefühl verknüpft George Eliot die schicksalsträchtige Existenz ihrer Hauptfigur zu einer bewegenden Geschichte um die Licht- und Schattenseiten des Menschseins.
Ta pozycja jest dostępna przez Internet. Rozwiń informację, by zobaczyć szczegóły.
Dostęp do treści elektronicznej wymaga posiadania kodu dostępu, który można odebrać w bibliotece.
E-book
W koszyku
Forma i typ
Although the shortest of George Eliot’s novels „Silas Marner” is a cherished masterwork and a moving story of redemption by the one of the Victorian era’s most accomplished novelists. Published in 1861, the author charts the life of the cataleptic, miserly weaver Silas Marner. Arriving in insular Raveloe after a wrongful expulsion from his Calvinist community in the north, Silas is a foreign and outcast figure, left alone to accumulate a useless fortune through his loom in the dawn of the new industrial age. His unhappy life is rendered unrecognizable when his fortune is stolen and he adopts a child Eppie. „Silas Marner: The Weaver of Raveloe” is a tender and affecting tale of sin and repentance set in a vanished rural world and holds the reader’s attention until the last page as Eppie’s bonds of affection for Silas are put to the test.
Ta pozycja jest dostępna przez Internet. Rozwiń informację, by zobaczyć szczegóły.
Dostęp do treści elektronicznej wymaga posiadania kodu dostępu, który można odebrać w bibliotece.
E-book
W koszyku
Forma i typ
This carefully edited collection has been designed and formatted to the highest digital standards and adjusted for readability on all devices. Contents: Adam Bede (1859) The Lifted Veil (1859) The Mill on the Floss (1860) Silas Marner (1861) Romola (1863) Brother Jacob (1864) Felix Holt, the Radical (1866) Middlemarch (1871/72) Daniel Deronda (1876) Mary Ann Evans (1819 – 1880), better known by her pen name George Eliot, was an English novelist, journalist and translator. She was one of the leading writers of the Victorian era. Her novels, largely set in provincial England, are well known for their realism and psychological insight.
Ta pozycja jest dostępna przez Internet. Rozwiń informację, by zobaczyć szczegóły.
Dostęp do treści elektronicznej wymaga posiadania kodu dostępu, który można odebrać w bibliotece.
E-book
W koszyku
Forma i typ
George Eliot prepared for the press a few essays which she had written before she became famous. These essays she left, with the injunction that no fugitive writings of hers prior to 1857 should be republished, other than those thus prepared. Then they have been published as a volume in Harper's edition of the Works of George Eliot. The subjects presented are, Worldliness and Other-Worldliness, (the poet Young.) German Wit, (Henrich Heine). Evangelical Teaching, (Dr. Cumming.) Influence of Rationalism, (Mr. Lecky's History.) Natural History of German Life, (The books of W. H Richl.) and an Address to Working Men, by Felix Holt.
Ta pozycja jest dostępna przez Internet. Rozwiń informację, by zobaczyć szczegóły.
Dostęp do treści elektronicznej wymaga posiadania kodu dostępu, który można odebrać w bibliotece.
E-book
W koszyku
Forma i typ
George Eliot rises to the forefront from amongst prominent Victorian novelists alongside the likes of Charles Dickens or Thomas Carlyle. Her novels capture the pastoral setting of old England: a countryside still devoid of railways and the bustle of city life outside of London. The natures of her characters are psychologically complex and fully developed as they struggle over moral duty, love, vice, and rebirth. Many of her characters strive to do what is right but instead reflect the adage that the road to hell is paved with good intentions. Contents: Middlemarch The Mill on the Floss Silas Marner The Lifted Veil
Ta pozycja jest dostępna przez Internet. Rozwiń informację, by zobaczyć szczegóły.
Dostęp do treści elektronicznej wymaga posiadania kodu dostępu, który można odebrać w bibliotece.
E-book
W koszyku
Forma i typ
'The Lifted Veil' was George Eliot's trip into the fantastic and horror fiction of the Victorian era. The novella, originally written in 1859, is all about extrasensory perception, the essence of physical life, possible life after death, and the power of fate.
Ta pozycja jest dostępna przez Internet. Rozwiń informację, by zobaczyć szczegóły.
Dostęp do treści elektronicznej wymaga posiadania kodu dostępu, który można odebrać w bibliotece.
E-book
W koszyku
The Lifted Veil / George Eliot. - [miejsce nieznane] : KtoCzyta.pl : Legimi, 2022.
Forma i typ
During a period of illness, Latimer first discovers he is able to read other peoples’ minds and see visions of the future. Rather than being a gift, this strange phenomenon increasingly becomes a curse. But the one thing that keeps him going is his love for Bertha. But everything changes when Latimer finally does gain sporadic insight into Bertha’s mind... and finds her thoughts are much more sinister than he had anticipated... In this dark novella George Eliot explores clairvoyance, fate and the possibility of life after death.
Ta pozycja jest dostępna przez Internet. Rozwiń informację, by zobaczyć szczegóły.
Dostęp do treści elektronicznej wymaga posiadania kodu dostępu, który można odebrać w bibliotece.
E-book
W koszyku
Forma i typ
In the 'Mill on the Floss' the persons on whom the chief interest is supposed to depend are Tom and Maggie Tulliver, the children of a rough, honest, hot-tempered, obstinate, litigious miller. Old Tulliver is ruined by a lawsuit about "erigation," and has a stroke of paralysis, from which he recovers so far as to carry on the management of the mill under the new owner, Wakem, a lawyer whom he regards as the cause of his misfortunes. But, although determined to serve Wakem faithfully, he makes a solemn resolution of vengeance against him and his, and causes Tom to record it in the family Bible. Tom suits himself to the change of circumstances, and, by means of his aunt's husband, Mr. Deane, who is a partner in the firm, he finds employment under Guest and Company, the principal merchants in the neighbouring town of St. Ogg's. After a few years, by means of Tom's earnings and his father's savings, the Tulliver creditors are paid in full; but the old miller, in returning triumphant from a dinner given on the occasion, falls in with his master and enemy Wakem, quarrels with him, horsewhips him, and dies of the excitement and exertion...
Ta pozycja jest dostępna przez Internet. Rozwiń informację, by zobaczyć szczegóły.
Dostęp do treści elektronicznej wymaga posiadania kodu dostępu, który można odebrać w bibliotece.
E-book
W koszyku
Forma i typ
The Mill on the Floss is a novel by George Eliot, first published in three volumes in 1860 by William Blackwood. The first American edition was published by Thomas Y. Crowell Co., New York. The novel spans a period of 10 to 15 years and details the lives of Tom and Maggie Tulliver, siblings growing up at Dorlcote Mill on the River Floss at its junction with the more minor River Ripple near the village of St. Ogg's in Lincolnshire, England. Both the river and the village are fictional. The novel is initially set in the late 1820s or early 1830s – a number of historical references place the events in the book after the Napoleonic Wars but before the Reform Act of 1832. (In chapter 3, the character Mr. Riley is described as an "auctioneer and appraiser thirty years ago," placing the opening events of the novel in approximately 1829, thirty years before the novel's composition in 1859. Additionally, in chapter 8, Mr. Tulliver and Mr. Deane discuss the Duke of Wellington and his "conduct in the Catholic Question," a conversation that could only take place after 1828 when Wellington became Prime Minister and supported a bill for Catholic Emancipation). The novel includes autobiographical elements, and reflects the disgrace that George Eliot (Mary Ann Evans) herself experienced while in a lengthy relationship with a married man, George Henry Lewes. Maggie Tulliver is the central character of the book. The story begins when she is 9 years old, 13 years into her parents' marriage. Her relationship with her older brother Tom, and her romantic relationships with Philip Wakem (a hunchbacked, sensitive, and intellectual friend) and with Stephen Guest (a vivacious young socialite in St. Ogg's and assumed fiancé of Maggie's cousin Lucy Deane) constitute the most significant narrative threads. Tom and Maggie have a close yet complex bond, which continues throughout the novel.
Ta pozycja jest dostępna przez Internet. Rozwiń informację, by zobaczyć szczegóły.
Dostęp do treści elektronicznej wymaga posiadania kodu dostępu, który można odebrać w bibliotece.
E-book
W koszyku
Forma i typ
The Mill on the Floss is a novel by George Eliot. Like other novels by George Eliot, The Mill on the Floss articulates the tension between circumstances and the spiritual energies of individual characters struggling against those circumstances. A certain determinism is at play throughout the novel, from Mr Tulliver's grossly imprudent inability to keep himself from "going to law", and thereby losing his patrimony and bankrupting his family, to the series of events which sets Maggie and Stephen down the river and past the point of no return. People such as Mr Tulliver are presented as unable to determine their own course rationally, and forces, be it the drift of the river or the force of a flood, are presented as determining the courses of people for them. On the other hand, Maggie's ultimate choice not to marry Stephen, and to suffer both the privation of his love and the ignominy of their botched elopement demonstrates a final triumph of free will. Critics assert that Maggie's need for love and acceptance is her underlying motivation throughout The Mill on the Floss, and the conflicts that arise in the novel often stem from her frustrated attempts at gaining this acceptance. Alan Bellringer has commented, "The two main themes of the novel, growing up and falling in love, lend themselves to amusement, but it is stunted growth and frustrated love that are emphasized." Commentators have often focused on the constant rejection of Maggie's talents and mannerisms by her family and society. Even the cultural norms of her community deny her intellectual and spiritual growth, according to Elizabeth Ermarth, "They are norms according to which she is an inferior, dependent creature who will never go far in anything, and which consequently are a denial of her full humanity."
Ta pozycja jest dostępna przez Internet. Rozwiń informację, by zobaczyć szczegóły.
Dostęp do treści elektronicznej wymaga posiadania kodu dostępu, który można odebrać w bibliotece.
E-book
W koszyku
Forma i typ
If you had to choose between the love of a lifetime and your relationship with your family, who would you pick? In „The Mill on the Floss” by George Eliot, the author draws on her own experiences when writing the tale of the complicated relationship between a young woman Maggie and her brother Tom Tulliver during a time when women had limited choices. Maggie’s often tormented battle to do her duty and belong on the one hand, and to be herself, wild and natural on the other, propels her from one crisis to another. As the Tulliver fortunes decline and fall, the rift between Maggie and her family becomes almost irreconcilable. But Maggie’s biggest mistake of all is to fall in love with Stephen Guest who is engaged to another woman. This novel is a masterpiece of ambiguity in which moral choice is subjected to the hypocrisy of the Victorian age.
Ta pozycja jest dostępna przez Internet. Rozwiń informację, by zobaczyć szczegóły.
Dostęp do treści elektronicznej wymaga posiadania kodu dostępu, który można odebrać w bibliotece.
E-book
W koszyku
Forma i typ
Set in the late 1820s and 1830s, after the Napoleonic Wars, the novel spans a period of 10 to 15 years and details the life of Maggie Tulliver, and her brother Tom, growing up at Dorlcote Mill on the River Floss at its junction with the more minor River Ripple near the village of St Ogg's in Lincolnshire, England. The story begins when Maggie is 9 years old, 13 years into her parents' marriage. Main focus of the story is on her relationship with her older brother Tom, and her romantic relationships with Philip Wakem (a hunchbacked, sensitive and intellectual friend) and with Stephen Guest (a vivacious young socialite in St Ogg's and assumed fiancé of Maggie's cousin Lucy Deane) constitute the most significant narrative threads.
Ta pozycja jest dostępna przez Internet. Rozwiń informację, by zobaczyć szczegóły.
Dostęp do treści elektronicznej wymaga posiadania kodu dostępu, który można odebrać w bibliotece.
E-book
W koszyku
Forma i typ
Wherever Mrs. Eliot places her touch, she leaves the impression of the profound insight, the serene wisdom, the fine observation, and the subtle humor which so graciously signalize her nature. The short essays in this book are stamped with all of the writer's peculiarities of thought and style, and are witty, suggestive, and delightful. The book is studded with fine thoughts and fine expressions. It is the peculiar characteristic of George Eliot's observations—and one exemplified in this her last work perhaps more than in any previous one—that she always puts in the best language thoughts which appear to have been in the reader's mind often before. In these pages they are crystallized.
Ta pozycja jest dostępna przez Internet. Rozwiń informację, by zobaczyć szczegóły.
Dostęp do treści elektronicznej wymaga posiadania kodu dostępu, który można odebrać w bibliotece.
E-book
W koszyku
Forma i typ
ESTJ are organized and dedicated; they know that the path of good is difficult to follow and are willing to help others in this task. In this book you will find two classic novels specially selected to please the tastes of the ESTJ. These are works by renowned authors that will surely bring reflections, insights and fun to people with this kind of personality. For ESTJ, we chose: - White Fang by Jack London. - Middlemarch by George Eliot.For more books that will suit you, be sure to check out our collection 7 Short Stories your Myers-Briggs Type Will Love!
Ta pozycja jest dostępna przez Internet. Rozwiń informację, by zobaczyć szczegóły.
Dostęp do treści elektronicznej wymaga posiadania kodu dostępu, który można odebrać w bibliotece.
Pozycja została dodana do koszyka. Jeśli nie wiesz, do czego służy koszyk, kliknij tutaj, aby poznać szczegóły.
Nie pokazuj tego więcej