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The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes
Arthur Conan Doyle
In this foundational collection of Sherlock Holmes stories, Dr. John Watson recounts twelve of his friend's most remarkable investigations. From a king desperate to recover a compromising photograph from the brilliant Irene Adler, to a pawnbroker hired by the mysterious 'Red-Headed League,' Holmes applies his legendary powers of observation and deduction to unravel puzzles that baffle the official police. Each case—whether a sinister plot involving a deadly 'speckled band,' a bizarre disappearance on a wedding day, or a robbery scheme hidden behind an absurd job offer—reveals not only Holmes's method but also the hidden strangeness lurking beneath the surface of Victorian London. This volume establishes the iconic partnership and the core tenets of detective fiction.
Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea
Jules Verne
When a mysterious sea monster terrorises global shipping lanes, marine biologist Professor Aronnax joins a naval expedition to hunt it down. The hunt ends catastrophically: Aronnax, his servant Conseil, and the harpooner Ned Land are thrown overboard and taken prisoner aboard the Nautilus — a technologically impossible submarine commanded by the brilliant, tormented Captain Nemo. What follows is a compulsive ten-month journey through every ocean on Earth: from the coral forests of the Pacific to the ruins of Atlantis, the pearl beds of Ceylon, and the ice of the South Pole. Nemo is simultaneously Aronnax's captor, patron, and mystery. His contempt for nations, his generosity toward the oppressed, and his capacity for cold-blooded vengeance leave Aronnax — and the reader — unable to fully condemn him.
Rip Van Winkle
Washington Irving
Rip Van Winkle, a good-natured but idle man living in a Dutch-American village, seeks refuge from his nagging wife in the Kaatskill Mountains. There, he encounters a silent, ghostly party playing ninepins and drinks their potent liquor, falling into a deep, enchanted sleep. He awakens to a world utterly changed: his gun is rusted, his beard is long, and twenty years have passed. Returning to his village, he finds the portrait of King George replaced by General Washington, his wife deceased, and his children grown. Initially a stranger, Rip’s incredible story is eventually accepted, and he finds a new, peaceful life as a living relic of the past, free from domestic tyranny in a newly independent nation.
