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  <book id="8">
    <dc:title>The Metamorphosis</dc:title>
    <dc:author id="6">Franz Kafka</dc:author>
    <dc:identifier scheme="URI">http://feedbooks.com/book/8</dc:identifier>
    <dc:identifier scheme="URI">urn:isbn:0553213695</dc:identifier>
    <dc:language>en</dc:language>
    <dc:date>1912</dc:date>
    <dc:subject>Short Fiction</dc:subject>
    <dc:subject>Horror</dc:subject>
    <dc:description>&lt;p&gt;The Metamorphosis (German: Die Verwandlung) is a novella by Franz Kafka, first published in 1915. The story begins with a traveling salesman, Gregor Samsa, waking to find himself transformed into a &quot;monstrous vermin&quot;.&lt;/p&gt;</dc:description>
    <dc:rights>This work is available for countries where copyright is Life+70 and in the USA.</dc:rights>
    <cover>http://feedbooks.com/book/8.png</cover>
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      <pdf>http://feedbooks.com/book/8.pdf</pdf>
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  </book>
  <book id="1675">
    <dc:title>Young Goodman Brown</dc:title>
    <dc:author id="234">Nathaniel Hawthorne</dc:author>
    <dc:identifier scheme="URI">http://feedbooks.com/book/1675</dc:identifier>
    <dc:identifier scheme="URI">urn:isbn:0192836005</dc:identifier>
    <dc:language>en</dc:language>
    <dc:date>1835</dc:date>
    <dc:subject>Short Fiction</dc:subject>
    <cover>http://feedbooks.com/book/1675.png</cover>
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  </book>
  <book id="1723">
    <dc:title>Graves and Goblins</dc:title>
    <dc:author id="234">Nathaniel Hawthorne</dc:author>
    <dc:identifier scheme="URI">http://feedbooks.com/book/1723</dc:identifier>
    <dc:language>en</dc:language>
    <dc:date>1863</dc:date>
    <dc:subject>Short Fiction</dc:subject>
    <cover>http://feedbooks.com/book/1723.png</cover>
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      <pdf>http://feedbooks.com/book/1723.pdf</pdf>
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  </book>
  <book id="162">
    <dc:title>The Jungle Book</dc:title>
    <dc:author id="56">Rudyard Kipling</dc:author>
    <dc:identifier scheme="URI">http://feedbooks.com/book/162</dc:identifier>
    <dc:identifier scheme="URI">urn:isbn:0763623172</dc:identifier>
    <dc:language>en</dc:language>
    <dc:date>1894</dc:date>
    <dc:subject>Novels</dc:subject>
    <dc:subject>Fantasy</dc:subject>
    <dc:description>&lt;p&gt;The Jungle Book (1894) is a collection of stories written by Rudyard Kipling.The tales in the book (and also those in The Second Jungle Book which followed in 1895, and which includes five further stories about Mowgli) are fables, using animals in an anthropomorphic manner to give moral lessons. The verses of The Law of the Jungle, for example, lay down rules for the safety of individuals, families and communities. Kipling put in them nearly everything he knew or &quot;heard or dreamed about the Indian jungle.&quot;
&lt;/p&gt;</dc:description>
    <dc:rights>This work is available for countries where copyright is Life+70 and in the USA.</dc:rights>
    <cover>http://feedbooks.com/book/162.png</cover>
    <files>
      <pdf>http://feedbooks.com/book/162.pdf</pdf>
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  </book>
  <book id="32">
    <dc:title>The Time Machine</dc:title>
    <dc:author id="14">H. G. Wells</dc:author>
    <dc:identifier scheme="URI">http://feedbooks.com/book/32</dc:identifier>
    <dc:identifier scheme="URI">urn:isbn:0812505042</dc:identifier>
    <dc:language>en</dc:language>
    <dc:date>1895</dc:date>
    <dc:subject>Novels</dc:subject>
    <dc:subject>Science Fiction</dc:subject>
    <dc:description>&lt;p&gt;The book's protagonist is an amateur inventor or scientist living in London who is never named; he is identified simply as The Time Traveller. Having demonstrated to friends using a miniature model that time is a fourth dimension, and that a suitable apparatus can move back and forth in this fourth dimension, he builds a full-scale model capable of carrying himself. He sets off on a journey into the future.&lt;/p&gt;</dc:description>
    <dc:rights>This work is available for countries where copyright is Life+50 or in the USA (published before 1923).</dc:rights>
    <cover>http://feedbooks.com/book/32.png</cover>
    <files>
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  </book>
  <book id="673">
    <dc:title>David Copperfield</dc:title>
    <dc:author id="21">Charles Dickens</dc:author>
    <dc:identifier scheme="URI">http://feedbooks.com/book/673</dc:identifier>
    <dc:identifier scheme="URI">urn:isbn:0679783415</dc:identifier>
    <dc:language>en</dc:language>
    <dc:date>1850</dc:date>
    <dc:subject>Novels</dc:subject>
    <dc:description>&lt;p&gt;David Copperfield is the novel that draws most closely from Charles Dickens's own life. Its eponymous hero, orphaned as a boy, grows up to discover love and happiness, heartbreak and sorrow amid a cast of eccentrics, innocents, and villains. Praising Dickens's power of invention, Somerset Maugham wrote: &quot;There were never such people as the Micawbers, Peggotty and Barkis, Traddles, Betsey Trotwood and Mr. Dick, Uriah Heep and his mother. They are fantastic inventions of Dickens's exultant imagination...you can never quite forget them.&quot;&lt;/p&gt;</dc:description>
    <cover>http://feedbooks.com/book/673.png</cover>
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  </book>
  <author id="6">
    <name>Kafka, Franz</name>
    <birth>1883</birth>
    <death>1924</death>
    <language>de</language>
    <books>8</books>
    <downloads>81103</downloads>
    <biography>&lt;p&gt;Franz Kafka was one of the major German-language fiction writers of the 20th century. A middle-class Jew based in Prague, his unique body of writing &#8212; many incomplete and most published posthumously &#8212; has become amongst the most influential in Western literature.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;Kafka's works &#8211; including the stories Das Urteil (1913, &quot;The Judgement&quot;), In der Strafkolonie (1920, &quot;In the Penal Colony&quot;); the novella Die Verwandlung (&quot;The Metamorphosis&quot;); and unfinished novels Der Prozess (&quot;The Trial&quot;) and Das Schlo&#223; (&quot;The Castle&quot;) &#8211; have come to embody the blend of absurd, surreal and mundane which gave rise to the adjective &quot;kafkaesque&quot;.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;Source: Wikipedia&lt;/p&gt;</biography>
  </author>
  <author id="234">
    <name>Hawthorne, Nathaniel</name>
    <birth>1804</birth>
    <death>1864</death>
    <language>en</language>
    <books>99</books>
    <downloads>106692</downloads>
    <biography>&lt;p&gt;Nathaniel Hawthorne was born on July 4, 1804, in Salem, Massachusetts, where his birthplace is now a museum. William Hathorne, who emigrated from England in 1630, was the first of Hawthorne's ancestors to arrive in the colonies. After arriving, William persecuted Quakers. William's son John Hathorne was one of the judges who oversaw the Salem Witch Trials. (One theory is that having learned about this, the author added the &quot;w&quot; to his surname in his early twenties, shortly after graduating from college.) Hawthorne's father, Nathaniel Hathorne, Sr., was a sea captain who died in 1808 of yellow fever, when Hawthorne was only four years old, in Raymond, Maine.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;Hawthorne attended Bowdoin College at the expense of an uncle from 1821 to 1824, befriending classmates Henry Wadsworth Longfellow and future president Franklin Pierce. While there he joined the Delta Kappa Epsilon fraternity. Until the publication of his Twice-Told Tales in 1837, Hawthorne wrote in the comparative obscurity of what he called his &quot;owl's nest&quot; in the family home. As he looked back on this period of his life, he wrote: &quot;I have not lived, but only dreamed about living.&quot; And yet it was this period of brooding and writing that had formed, as Malcolm Cowley was to describe it, &quot;the central fact in Hawthorne's career,&quot; his &quot;term of apprenticeship&quot; that would eventually result in the &quot;richly meditated fiction.&quot;&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;Hawthorne was hired in 1839 as a weigher and gauger at the Boston Custom House. He had become engaged in the previous year to the illustrator and transcendentalist Sophia Peabody. Seeking a possible home for himself and Sophia, he joined the transcendentalist utopian community at Brook Farm in 1841; later that year, however, he left when he became dissatisfied with farming and the experiment. (His Brook Farm adventure would prove an inspiration for his novel The Blithedale Romance.) He married Sophia in 1842; they moved to The Old Manse in Concord, Massachusetts, where they lived for three years. There he wrote most of the tales collected in Mosses from an Old Manse. Hawthorne and his wife then moved to Salem and later to the Berkshires, returning in 1852 to Concord and a new home The Wayside, previously owned by the Alcotts. Their neighbors in Concord included Ralph Waldo Emerson and Henry David Thoreau.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;Like Hawthorne, Sophia was a reclusive person. She was bedridden with headaches until her sister introduced her to Hawthorne, after which her headaches seem to have abated. The Hawthornes enjoyed a long marriage, often taking walks in the park. Sophia greatly admired her husband's work. In one of her journals, she writes: &quot;I am always so dazzled and bewildered with the richness, the depth, the... jewels of beauty in his productions that I am always looking forward to a second reading where I can ponder and muse and fully take in the miraculous wealth of thoughts.&quot;&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;In 1846, Hawthorne was appointed surveyor (determining the quantity and value of imported goods) at the Salem Custom House. Like his earlier appointment to the custom house in Boston, this employment was vulnerable to the politics of the spoils system. A Democrat, Hawthorne lost this job due to the change of administration in Washington after the presidential election of 1848.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;Hawthorne's career as a novelist was boosted by The Scarlet Letter in 1850, in which the preface refers to his three-year tenure in the Custom House at Salem. The House of the Seven Gables (1851) and The Blithedale Romance (1852) followed in quick succession.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;In 1852, he wrote the campaign biography of his old friend Franklin Pierce. With Pierce's election as president, Hawthorne was rewarded in 1853 with the position of United States consul in Liverpool. In 1857, his appointment ended and the Hawthorne family toured France and Italy. They returned to The Wayside in 1860, and that year saw the publication of The Marble Faun. Failing health (which biographer Edward Miller speculates was stomach cancer) prevented him from completing several more romances. Hawthorne died in his sleep on May 19, 1864, in Plymouth, New Hampshire while on a tour of the White Mountains with Pierce. He was buried in Sleepy Hollow Cemetery, Concord, Massachusetts. Wife Sophia and daughter Una were originally buried in England. However, in June 2006, they were re-interred in plots adjacent to Nathaniel.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;Nathaniel and Sophia Hawthorne had three children: Una, Julian, and Rose. Una was a victim of mental illness and died young. Julian moved out west, served a jail term for embezzlement and wrote a book about his father. Rose married George Parsons Lathrop and they became Roman Catholics. After George's death, Rose became a Dominican nun. She founded the Dominican Sisters of Hawthorne to care for victims of incurable cancer.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;Source: Wikipedia&lt;/p&gt;</biography>
  </author>
  <author id="24">
    <name>Twain, Mark</name>
    <birth>1835</birth>
    <death>1910</death>
    <language>en</language>
    <books>13</books>
    <downloads>135953</downloads>
    <biography>&lt;p&gt;Samuel Langhorne Clemens (November 30, 1835 &#8212; April 21, 1910), better known by the pen name Mark Twain, was an American humorist, satirist, writer, and lecturer. Twain is most noted for his novels Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, which has since been called the Great American Novel, and The Adventures of Tom Sawyer. He is also known for his quotations. During his lifetime, Clemens became a friend to presidents, artists, leading industrialists, and European royalty.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;Clemens enjoyed immense public popularity, and his keen wit and incisive satire earned him praise from both critics and peers. American author William Faulkner called Twain &quot;the father of American literature.&quot;&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;Source: Wikipedia&lt;/p&gt;</biography>
  </author>
  <author id="12">
    <name>Lovecraft, Howard Phillips</name>
    <birth>1890</birth>
    <death>1937</death>
    <language>en</language>
    <books>79</books>
    <downloads>355205</downloads>
    <biography>&lt;p&gt;Howard Phillips Lovecraft was an American author of fantasy, horror and science fiction.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;He is notable for blending elements of science fiction and horror; and for popularizing &quot;cosmic horror&quot;: the notion that some concepts, entities or experiences are barely comprehensible to human minds, and those who delve into such risk their sanity. Lovecraft has become a cult figure in the horror genre and is noted as creator of the &quot;Cthulhu Mythos,&quot; a series of loosely interconnected fictions featuring a &quot;pantheon&quot; of nonhuman creatures, as well as the famed Necronomicon, a grimoire of magical rites and forbidden lore. His works typically had a tone of &quot;cosmic pessimism,&quot; regarding mankind as insignificant and powerless in the universe.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;Lovecraft's readership was limited during his life, and his works, particularly early in his career, have been criticized as occasionally ponderous, and for their uneven quality. Nevertheless, Lovecraft&#8217;s reputation has grown tremendously over the decades, and he is now commonly regarded as one of the most important horror writers of the 20th Century, exerting an influence that is widespread, though often indirect.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;Source: Wikipedia&lt;/p&gt;</biography>
  </author>
  <author id="16">
    <name>Poe, Edgar Allan</name>
    <birth>1809</birth>
    <death>1849</death>
    <language>en</language>
    <books>131</books>
    <downloads>334849</downloads>
    <biography>&lt;p&gt;Edgar Allan Poe was an American poet, short story writer, playwright, editor, critic, essayist and one of the leaders of the American Romantic Movement. Best known for his tales of the macabre and mystery, Poe was one of the early American practitioners of the short story and a progenitor of detective fiction and crime fiction. He is also credited with contributing to the emergent science fiction genre.Poe died at the age of 40. The cause of his death is undetermined and has been attributed to alcohol, drugs, cholera, rabies, suicide (although likely to be mistaken with his suicide attempt in the previous year), tuberculosis, heart disease, brain congestion and other agents.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;Source: Wikipedia&lt;/p&gt;</biography>
  </author>
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