G.A. Henty was a 19th century novelist, special correspondent, and Imperialist. His best-known works are historical adventures. While most of the 122 books he wrote were for children, he also wrote adult novels, non-fiction such as The March to Magdala (1868) and Those Other Animals (1891), short stories for the likes of The Boy's Own Paper, and edited the Union Jack, a weekly boys magazine. Wulf the Saxon is an action filled story of the Norman conquest. The adventure begins "From one of the side doors of the palace a page, some fifteen or sixteen years of age, ran down the steps in haste. He was evidently a Saxon by his fair hair and fresh complexion, and any observer of the time would have seen that he must, therefore, be in the employment of Earl Harold, the great minister, who had for many years virtually ruled England in the name of its king."
A Final Reckoning: A Tale of Bush Life in Australia
G.A. Henty
bookCondemned as a Nihilist: A Story of Escape from Siberia
G.A. Henty
bookThe Dragon and the Raven
G.A. Henty
bookThrough Russians Snows
G.A. Henty
bookWulf the Saxon
G.A. Henty
bookIn the Reign of Terror
G.A. Henty
bookBy Sheer Pluck: A Tale of the Ashanti War
G.A. Henty
bookNo Surrender! A Tale of the Rising in La Vendee
G.A. Henty
bookOut with Garibaldi: A Story of the Liberation of Italy
G.A. Henty
bookIn Times of Peril: A Tale of India
G.A. Henty
bookWinning His Spurs: A Tale of the Crusades
G.A. Henty
bookA Jacobite Exile
G.A. Henty
book
Nostromo : A Tale of the Seaboard
Joseph Conrad
audiobookbookThe Stars, My Brothers
Edmond Hamilton
bookThe Canterville Ghost
Oscar Wilde
bookGambler's World
Keith Laumer
audiobookbookProject Mastodon
Clifford D. Simak
bookRomeo and Juliet
William Shakespeare
audiobookbookSpace Tug
Murray Leinster
audiobookbookGreylorn
Keith Laumer
audiobookbookSilas Marner
George Eliot
audiobookbookMeasure for Measure
William Shakespeare
bookA Voyage to Arcturus
David Lindsay
audiobookbookNotes from the Underground
Fyodor Dostoyevsky
book