All Books

“How to Make Rugs”, written by Candace Wheeler, was first published in 1902. Wheeler was a notable American interior and textile designer associated with the Arts and Crafts movement.
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Arnold Bennett published How to Live on Twenty-Four Hours a Day in 1908 to help ordinary people reclaim their time and live more intentionally. In a brisk and practical tone, Bennett challenges readers to confront how they spend their daily hours and encourages them to invest time in self-improvement and personal growth. Rather than offering lofty philosophies, he delivers a direct and accessible guide for anyone striving to live with greater purpose.
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How I Found Livingstone by Henry M. Stanley tells the thrilling story of his expedition to find the missing explorer and missionary Dr. David Livingstone. Stanley navigates uncharted African landscapes, facing disease, extreme terrain, and uncertainty, while documenting encounters with local peoples and the challenges of exploration. This narrative captures both the adventure and determination that defined one of the most famous search missions of the 19th century.
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Hot Shot’s Mistake is book 1 in the Tennessee Thunderbolts hockey romance series. If you love workplace romances and small-town vibes, you’ll adore the heat and sweet that erupts between reformed bad boy Devon Hardt and grief-stricken physical therapist Mila Lewis. Hot Shot’s Mistake is set around Knoxville, TN and establishes the foundation of a heartwarming series filled with hockey, love, friendship, humor, and the significance of finding your place among a chosen family.
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More than a decade after returning home from Afghanistan, Jake Freeman is still tormented by the emotional consequences of war. Desperate for a better life, he enlists the help of a VA doctor who prescribes a motorcycle tour of the Western States. Jake hopes an adventure like this can quiet the chaos in his mind, so he leaves his familiar world behind and rides his Harley north toward Bend, Oregon.
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Discover the novel called a “brilliant read, funny and poignant, with an insider’s knowledge of Wall Street” that plunges readers into the financial sector’s ruthless heart, where fortune, ambition, and betrayal collide in the rise and devastating fall of a financial titan. (New York Times bestselling author Elliott Ackerman)
Told from the perspectives of those in and around the pathways of money and power, High Finance is a debut novel that takes us inside one of the most volatile p… Read More

Three weeks on the Oklahoma Best Sellers list!
Three first place awards at The BookFest® in Women’s Historical Fiction, 20th Century Historical Romance, and Women’s Historical Romance!
In May 1941, Bartlesville, Oklahoma, hums with talk of spring flowers, fishing derbies, and the growing war in Europe. And for the Blackwell sisters, who reside in a quiet neighborhood boarding house, the winds of change are blowing.
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THERE’S MORE THAN ONE EARTH TO STEAL FROM
The Heist On Alpha Extended Special Edition includes the action-packed graphic novel, two spin-off short comics, and over 60 pages of extras. Immerse yourself in a high-octane adventure across alternate versions of Earth that reinvents the heist genre for a new generation.
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Welcome to the Shameless Billionaire Club.
Guaranteed to be a little dark, twisted, and very shameless.
USA Today Bestselling Author Dakota Willink delivers the first book in The Stone Saga, a steamy, provocative, and emotionally-gripping dark romantic suspense.
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Joseph Conrad’s Heart of Darkness, first published in 1899, remains one of the most powerful and haunting explorations of human nature and colonialism. The novella takes readers on a journey into the depths of the African Congo, where the line between civilization and savagery blurs in disturbing ways.
 
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“Heart of Darkness” is a novella written by Joseph Conrad, first published in 1899. It is considered one of the most important works in English literature and a classic of modernist literature. The story is framed as a narrative within a narrative and is primarily set in the Congo Free State (now the Democratic Republic of the Congo) during the late 19th century, during the height of European colonialism in Africa.
The novella follows the journey of Charles Marlow, an English seaman and narr… Read More

From USA Today bestselling and multiple Bram Stoker Award-winning author David Niall Wilson HEART OF A DRAGON – Book 1 of The DeChance Chronicles – Donovan DeChance is a mage and investigator specializing in tracking down, archiving, and protecting dangerous books, documents, and objects. When a local Voodoo Houngan endangers the city, Donovan and a band of unlikely allies stand in her way.
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Jacob Abbott’s Hannibal provides an engaging look into the life of one of history’s most brilliant military leaders. The book follows Hannibal from his youth in Carthage through his legendary campaigns against Rome, including his astonishing march across the Alps. Abbott brings Hannibal’s courage, intelligence, and determination into focus, showing how his leadership influenced the course of ancient warfare.
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William Shakespeare’s Hamlet is one of the most well-known and enduring plays of all time. The play tells the story of Prince Hamlet of Denmark, who is seeking revenge for the murder of his father, the king. Along the way, he must confront his own doubts and fears, and ultimately make a decision about what he believes is right. The play is known for its complex characters, dramatic plot, and themes of betrayal, madness, and the consequences of inaction.
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The first of William Harrison Ainsworth’s seven “Lancashire novels”, the book is based on the Gunpowder Plot of 1605, an unsuccessful attempt to blow up the Houses of Parliament. Ainsworth embellished the facts of the actual event, and added supernatural elements to the story.
NOTE: The number of books available match the year of the Gunpowder Treason.
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“Gulliver’s Travels” is a novel by Jonathan Swift, first published in 1726. It is a satirical work that tells the story of Lemuel Gulliver, a ship’s surgeon who travels to several imaginary lands, where he encounters different societies and cultures.
The book is divided into four parts, each describing Gulliver’s experiences in a different land. In the first part, Gulliver visits the land of Lilliput, where he encounters tiny people, who are about six inches tall. In the second part, h… Read More

“Grimms’ Fairy Tales,” compiled by the renowned brothers Jacob and Wilhelm Grimm, this beloved anthology brings together a treasure trove of German folklore and fairy tales. Originally published in 1812 as “Children’s and Household Tales,” the collection showcases a rich tapestry of oral traditions passed down through the ages.
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Greedy Gavin isn’t just greedy; he’s epically, gloriously, catastrophically greedy.
Warning: This book contains poodle-eating crocodiles, Faeries that poop in your mouth, and military cave squirrels.
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Great Expectations by Charles Dickens, first published in 1861 and set in 19th-century London, is a coming-of-age story that follows the life of an orphan named Pip as he navigates the complexities of the world and his own personal growth. Pip grapples with social class, love, guilt, and the consequences of his actions in this timeless Dickens classic.
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Author Mark Towse crafts a tale of the enduring power of friendship, set against the bleak backdrop of a decaying Northern English town. As the sky rains blood and a gaping sinkhole disgorges the townsfolk’s darkest nightmares from the past, Towse’s vivid prose unearths the horror lurking beneath the surface of this dying community, highlighting the resilience of the human spirit in the face of unspeakable terrors.
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The long-awaited Ogmios Team Adventure Sequel to the bestselling book Silver.
“I am Solomon. Remember my name.” How could the world forget? The cardinals were dead, murdered with the eyes of the world watching. The people that were supposed to protect them had failed spectacularly. The promise had been for forty days and forty nights of fear. Now the dying has begun with that first burning body in Trafalgar Square.
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Go the F**k to Sleep is a bedtime book for parents who live in the real world, where a few snoozing kitties and cutesy rhymes don’t always send a toddler sailing blissfully off to dreamland. 
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Gentlemen Prefer Blondes by Anita Loos is a sparkling and satirical portrayal of the Jazz Age, offering readers a witty glimpse into the lives of its glamorous, gold-digging heroines. With humor and charm, Loos captures the frivolity, ambition, and allure of a bygone era.
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Jacob Abbott’s Genghis Khan presents an engaging portrait of one of history’s most enigmatic and influential figures. Through Abbott’s vivid storytelling, readers journey into the life of Genghis Khan, a man who rose from humble beginnings to unite the Mongol tribes and establish one of the largest empires in history. Abbott’s narrative captivates with its blend of historical facts and dramatic elements, making Genghis Khan’s story both informative and entertaining.
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