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Vortaro de Esperanto
The Vortaro de Esperanto (English: Dictionary of Esperanto), published by Kazimierz Bein in 1911, was the first monolingual dictionary ever published for Esperanto.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vortaro_de_Esperanto
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Ţunţuni'r Boi
Ţunţuni'r Boi (Bengali: টুনটুনির বই) is a book by Upendrakishore Raychowdhury published in 1911.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/%C5%A2un%C5%A3uni%27r_Boi
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Thick Black Theory
Thick Black Theory (Chinese: 厚黑學; pinyin: Hòu hēi xué) is a philosophical treatise written by Li Zongwu zh:李宗吾 (1879–1943), a disgruntled politician and scholar born at the end of Qing dynasty. It was published in China in 1911, the year of the Xinhai revolution, when the Qing dynasty was overthrown.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thick_Black_Theory
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Tables of Physical and Chemical Constants and Some Mathematical Functions
Tables of Physical and Chemical Constants and Some Mathematical Functions is a reference book compiled by G. W. C. Kaye and T. H. Laby. It was first published in 1911 and is commonly known by the authors' surnames, Kaye and Laby. It is a standard text book for scientists and engineers.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tables_of_Physical_and_Chemical_Constants_and_Some_Mathematical_Functions
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Specimens of Bushman Folklore
Specimens of Bushman Folklore is a book by the linguist Wilhelm H. I. Bleek and Lucy C. Lloyd which was published in 1911.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Specimens_of_Bushman_Folklore
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Select essays of Sister Nivedita
Select Essays of Sister Nivedita (1911) is an English-language book written by Sister Nivedita, a disciple of Swami Vivekananda. The foreword of the book was written by A. J. F. Blair.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Select_essays_of_Sister_Nivedita
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Rural Denmark
Rural Denmark and Its Lessons is a non fiction book by H. Rider Haggard based on his tour of Denmark.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rural_Denmark
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The Principles of Scientific Management
The Principles of Scientific Management is a monograph published by Frederick Winslow Taylor in 1911. This influential monograph, which laid out the principles of scientific management, is a seminal text of modern organization and decision theory and has motivated administrators and students of managerial technique. Taylor was an American manufacturing manager, mechanical engineer, and then a management consultant in his later years. He is often called "The Father of Scientific Management". His approach is also often referred to as Taylor's Principles, or Taylorism.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Principles_of_Scientific_Management
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The Philosophy of 'As if'
The Philosophy of 'As if': A System of the Theoretical, Practical and Religious Fictions of Mankind (German: Die Philosophie des Als Ob) is a 1911 book by the German philosopher Hans Vaihinger, based on his dissertation of 1877. The work for which Vaihinger is best known, it was published in an English translation by C. K. Ogden in 1924. In 1935, a revised and abbreviated English translation by Ogden was published. The revised translation was based on the sixth German edition of the original work.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Philosophy_of_%27As_if%27
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Oregon Blue Book
The Oregon Blue Book is the official directory and fact book for the U.S. state of Oregon prepared by the Oregon Secretary of State and published by the Office of the Secretary's Archives Division.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oregon_Blue_Book
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Modern Chess Openings
Modern Chess Openings (usually called MCO) is an important reference book on chess openings, first published in 1911 by the British players Richard Clewin Griffith (1872–1955) and John Herbert White (1880–1920). Harry Golombek called it "the first scientific study of the openings in the twentieth century".
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Modern_Chess_Openings
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The Mind of Primitive Man
The Mind of Primitive Man is a 1911 book by anthropologist Franz Boas which takes a critical look at the concept of primitive culture. The work challenged widely held racist and eugenic claims about race and intelligence, particularly white supremacy.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Mind_of_Primitive_Man
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An Inquiry into the Good
An Inquiry into the Good (Japanese: 善の研究, Zen no kenkyū) is a 1911 book by Kitaro Nishida, the foremost Japanese philosopher of the 20th century and founding father of the Kyoto School.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/An_Inquiry_into_the_Good
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History of Larimer County, Colorado
History of Larimer County, Colorado is a work of history published in 1911 by Ansel Watrous. The book was the first published comprehensive history of Larimer County, Colorado in the United States. It was republished in 1972 by the Cache la Poudre chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Larimer_County,_Colorado
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Heredity in Relation to Eugenics
Heredity in Relation to Eugenics is a book by American eugenicist Charles Benedict Davenport, published in 1911. It was printed and published with money and support of the Carnegie Institution. The book was widely used as a text for medical schools in the United States and abroad.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heredity_in_Relation_to_Eugenics
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The Grocer's Encyclopedia
The Grocer's Encyclopedia (New York, 1911) is a book about the growing, preparation, and marketing of foods that was written and published by Artemas Ward, an author and an advertising and marketing innovator who also developed several other successful businesses that brought him great wealth with which he was very generous, becoming noted as a philanthropist.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Grocer%27s_Encyclopedia
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A Glossary of the Tribes and Castes of the Punjab and North-West Frontier Province
A Glossary of the Tribes and Castes of the Punjab and North-West Frontier Province is an ethnological study of areas of present-day Pakistan and India.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A_Glossary_of_the_Tribes_and_Castes_of_the_Punjab_and_North-West_Frontier_Province
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Floor Games
Floor Games is a book published in 1911 by H. G. Wells. This light-hearted volume argues in a humorously dictatorial tone that "The jolliest indoor games for boys and girls demand a floor." Illustrated with photographs and drawings, it briefly describes a number of games that can be played on "well lit and airy" floors with "four main groups" of toys: soldiers about two inches high (Wells regrets the "curse of militarism" that makes civilians hard to find), largish wooden bricks, boards and planks, and electric railway rolling-stock and rails. Various remarks show that the book is based on Wells's experience of playing such games with his two sons, George Philip "Gip" Wells (1901-1985) and Frank Richard Wells (1903-1982), identified here only by their initials.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Floor_Games
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Farmers of Forty Centuries
In 1909, American agronomist F.H. King toured China, Korea and Japan, studying traditional fertilization, tillage and general farming practices. He wrote his observations and findings in Farmers of Forty Centuries, Or Permanent Agriculture in China, Korea, and Japan (1911, published shortly after his death by his wife, Carrie Baker King; numerous facsimile reprintings, including Courier Dover Publications, ISBN 0-486-43609-8, and Rodale Press, ISBN 0-87857-867-6). King lived in an era preceding synthetic nitrogen fertilizer production and before the use of the internal combustion engine for farm machinery, yet he was profoundly interested in the challenge of farming the same soils in a 'permanent' manner, hence his interest in the agricultural practices of ancient cultures. In recent years, his book became an important organic farming reference.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Farmers_of_Forty_Centuries
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Every Boy's Library (Boy Scouts of America Edition)
The Every Boy's Library: Boy Scout Edition refers to a collection of 73 books that were published under the backing of the Boy Scouts of America. Every title was selected by the Scouts Library Commission, and were branded towards Scouts and included themes that would be of interest to young boys in the Scouting movement. These re-released many classic novels as well as newer works by those associated with the Scouting movement, include Ernest Thompson Seton and Daniel Carter Beard. This series of reprints was published by Grosset & Dunlap from 1911 with reprints and editions lasting until the mid-1930s. Each edition includes a letter "To The Public" by then Chief Scout Executive James E. West. 30 original works were commissioned, as referenced by the original list in the back page of each edition.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Every_Boy%27s_Library_(Boy_Scouts_of_America_Edition)
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Encyclopædia Britannica Eleventh Edition
The Encyclopædia Britannica Eleventh Edition (1910–1911) is a 29-volume reference work, an edition of the Encyclopædia Britannica. It was developed during the encyclopaedia's transition from a British to an American publication. Some of its articles were written by the best-known scholars of the time. This edition of the encyclopedia is now in the public domain, but the outdated nature of some of its content makes its use as a source for modern scholarship problematic. Some articles have special value and interest to modern scholars as cultural artifacts of the 19th and early 20th centuries.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Encyclop%C3%A6dia_Britannica_Eleventh_Edition
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Dictionary of Received Ideas
The Dictionary of Received Ideas (or Dictionary of Accepted Ideas; in French, Le Dictionnaire des idées reçues) is a short satirical work collected and published in 1911–13 from notes compiled by Gustave Flaubert during the 1870s, lampooning the clichés endemic to French society under the Second French Empire. It takes the form of a dictionary of automatic thoughts and platitudes, self-contradictory and insipid. It is often paired with the Sottisier (a collection of stupid quotations taken from the books of famous writers).
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dictionary_of_Received_Ideas
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Dictionary of Christian Biography and Literature to the End of the Sixth Century
A Dictionary of Christian Biography and Literature to the End of the Sixth Century A.D., with an Account of the Principal Sects and Heresies is a 1911 religious encyclopedia of biographies.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dictionary_of_Christian_Biography_and_Literature_to_the_End_of_the_Sixth_Century
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Diccionario de argentinismos
Diccionario de argentinismos is an authoritative dictionary of the Spanish language as occurring in Argentina prior to 1911. It was published in 1911 under the auspices of the Comisión Nacional del Centenario (Argentine National Commission on the Centenary) and printed in Buenos Aires by Imprenta de Coni Hermanos (Coni Brothers Press).
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diccionario_de_argentinismos
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Deeside (book)
Deeside is book published in 1911 describing the geography, and history of Deeside, in Aberdeenshire, Scotland.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deeside_(book)
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Cochin State Manual
The Cochin State Manual was a 1911 CE publication of the then-princely state of Cochin, detailing the social, economic, and historical conditions of the state. It was compiled by C. Achutha Menon (1862-1937), secretary to the Devaswom of Cochin, and bore close similarity to the district manuals and gazetteers of the British Raj.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cochin_State_Manual
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The Book of Ceremonial Magic
The Book of Ceremonial Magic by Arthur Edward Waite was originally called The Book of Black Magic and of Pacts. It is an attempt to document various famous grimoires, explain the history behind them (refuting many of the legends surrounding them), discuss the theology contained therein (e.g. raising the question why good angels would be summoned to kill an enemy), and to synthesize many famous grimoires into one system.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Book_of_Ceremonial_Magic
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Anthology of Modern Serbian Lyric
Jovan Jovanović Zmaj
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anthology_of_Modern_Serbian_Lyric
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America's National Game
America's National Game is a book by Albert Spalding, published in 1911 detailing the early history of the sport of baseball. Much of the story is told first-hand, since Spalding had been involved in the game, first as a player and later an administrator, since the 1850s. In addition to his personal recollections, he had access to the records of Henry Chadwick, the game's first statistician and archivist. Spalding was, however, known to aggrandise his role in the major moments in baseball's history.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/America%27s_National_Game
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Political Parties (book)
Political Parties: A Sociological Study of the Oligarchical Tendencies of Modern Democracy (German: Zur Soziologie des Parteiwesens in der modernen Demokratie; Untersuchungen über die oligarchischen Tendenzen des Gruppenlebens) is a book by sociologist Robert Michels, published in 1911 and first introducing the concept of iron law of oligarchy. It is considered one of the classics of social sciences, in particular sociology and political science. It was translated to Italian as Sociologia del partito politico nella democrazia moderna: studi sulle tendenze oligarchiche degli aggregati politici by Alfredo Polledro in 1912, and then translated from the Italian to English by Eden Paul and Cedar Paul for Hearst's International Library Co. in 1915.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Political_Parties_(book)
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The Cruise of the Snark
The Cruise of the Snark (1911) is a non-fictional, illustrated book by Jack London chronicling his sailing adventure in 1907 across the south Pacific in his ketch the Snark. Accompanying London on this voyage was his wife Charmian London and a small crew. London taught himself celestial navigation and the basics of sailing and of boats during the course of this adventure and describes these details to the reader. He visits exotic locations including the Solomon Islands and Hawaii, and his first-person accounts and photographs provide insight into these remote places at the beginning of the 20th century.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Cruise_of_the_Snark
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The Countess Cathleen
The Countess Cathleen is a verse drama by William Butler Yeats in blank verse (with some lyrics). It was dedicated to Maud Gonne, the object of his affections for many years.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Countess_Cathleen
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Jedermann
Jedermann is a 1911 adaptation by the Austrian playwright Hugo von Hofmannsthal of a late 15th-century English morality play The Somonyng of Everyman (The Summoning of Everyman), usually referred to simply as Everyman. Jedermann has been performed annually at the Salzburg Festival since 1920. The play was made into a film in 1961.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jedermann
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The Miracle (play)
The Miracle (German: Das Mirakel) is a 1911 play written by Karl Vollmöller and directed by Max Reinhardt, from which three movie versions were later adapted. The play first appeared as a spectacle-pantomime in Germany in 1911.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Miracle_(play)
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Fanny's First Play
Fanny's First Play is a 1911 play by George Bernard Shaw. It was first performed as an anonymous piece, the authorship of which was to be kept secret. However, critics soon recognised it as the work of Shaw. It opened at the Little Theatre in the Adelphi in London on 19 April 1911 and ran for 622 performances. The mystery over the authorship helped to publicise it. It had the longest run of any of Shaw's plays. A second production opened on Broadway on September 16, 1912 for 256 performances. The play toured the provinces in England in the same year.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fanny%27s_First_Play
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Disraeli (play)
Disraeli is a biographical play by the British writer Louis N. Parker, which was first staged in 1911. The play was commissioned by the actor George Arliss who saw a portrayal of the Victorian British statesman Benjamin Disraeli as an ideal vehicle for his stage career. It was written in London during 1910. Parker suffered from writer's block at one point and received some assistance from Arliss. Parker included a subplot lifted from the 1839 play Richelieu by Edward Bulwer-Lytton which was later the subject of some controversy. He added a number of fictitious characters to add excitement and drama to the story. The real role of Lionel de Rothschild in the purchase was changed to that of the fictional banker Meyers. The play premièred at Wallack's Theatre in New York City on 18 September 1911.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Disraeli_(play)
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Mixed Marriage (play)
Mixed Marriage by St John Greer Ervine was written for the Abbey Theatre, Dublin, where it premiered in 1911.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mixed_Marriage_(play)
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The Little Cafe (play)
The Little Cafe (French:Le petit café) is a French comedy play written by Tristan Bernard which was first performed in 1911. An English-language musical version The Little Cafe was successfully staged in the United States in 1913.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Little_Cafe_(play)
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The Lunar Trilogy
Trylogia Księżycowa (The Lunar Trilogy or The Moon Trilogy) is a science-fiction series written by the Polish writer Jerzy Żuławski between 1901 and 1911. It has been translated into Russian, Czech, German and Hungarian, and has been reprinted several times in Poland.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trylogia_Ksi%C4%99%C5%BCycowa
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Mr. Perrin and Mr. Traill
Mr. Perrin and Mr. Traill is a 1948 British drama film directed by Lawrence Huntington and starring David Farrar, Edward Chapman and Raymond Huntley. It is based on the 1911 novel of the same title by Hugh Walpole. Walpole based the novel on his experiences as a teacher at Epsom College, but shifted the school's setting to the Cornish coast.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mr._Perrin_and_Mr._Traill
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Mother
Mothers are women who inhabit or perform the role of bearing some relation to their children, who may or may not be their biological offspring. Thus, dependent on the context, women can be considered mothers by virtue of having given birth, by raising their child(ren), supplying their ovum for fertilization, or some combination thereof. Such conditions provide a way of delineating the concept of motherhood, or the state of being a mother. Women who meet the third and first categories usually fall under the terms 'birth mother' or 'biological mother', regardless of whether the individual in question goes on to parent their child. Accordingly, a woman who meets only the second condition may be considered an adoptive mother, and those who meet only the third a surrogacy mother.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mother
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The Harvester
The Harvester is a 1936 American comedy film directed by Joseph Santley and written by Homer Croy, Robert Lee Johnson, Elizabeth Meehan and Gertrude Orr. The film stars Alice Brady, Russell Hardie, Ann Rutherford, Frank Craven, Cora Sue Collins and Emma Dunn. The film was released on April 18, 1936, by Republic Pictures.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Harvester
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The Tale of Timmy Tiptoes
The Tale of Timmy Tiptoes is a children's book written and illustrated by Beatrix Potter, and published by Frederick Warne & Co. in October 1911. Timmy Tiptoes is a squirrel believed to be a nut-thief by his fellows, and imprisoned by them in a hollow tree with the expectation that he will confess under confinement. Timmy is tended by Chippy Hackee, a friendly, mischievous chipmunk who has run away from his wife and is camping-out in the tree. Chippy urges the prisoner to eat the nuts stored in the tree, and Timmy does so but grows so fat he cannot escape the tree. He regains his freedom when a storm topples part of the tree. The tale contrasts the harmonious marriage of its titular character with the less than harmonious marriage of the chipmunk.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Tale_of_Timmy_Tiptoes
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The Centaur
The Centaur is a novel by John Updike, published by Alfred A. Knopf in 1963. It won the U.S. National Book Award for Fiction. Portions of the novel first appeared in Esquire and The New Yorker.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Centaur
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The Devil's Dictionary
The Devil's Dictionary is a satirical dictionary written by American journalist and author Ambrose Bierce. Originally published in 1906 as The Cynic's Word Book, it features Bierce's witty and often ironic spin on many common English words. Retitled in 1911, it has been followed by numerous "unabridged" versions compiled after Bierce's death, which include definitions absent from earlier editions.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Devil%27s_Dictionary
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Nouvelle Revue Française
La Nouvelle Revue Française (NRF, or The New French Review in English) is a literary magazine based in France.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nouvelle_Revue_Fran%C3%A7aise
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The Good Soldier Švejk
The Good Soldier Švejk (pronounced ), also spelled Schweik or Schwejk) is the abbreviated title of an unfinished satirical/dark comedy novel by Jaroslav Hašek. The original Czech title of the work is Osudy dobrého vojáka Švejka za světové války, literally The Fateful Adventures of the Good Soldier Švejk During the World War. It is the most translated novel of Czech literature.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Good_Soldier_%C5%A0vejk
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Mona Lisa
The Mona Lisa (Italian: Monna Lisa or La Gioconda , French: La Joconde) is a half-length portrait of a woman by the Italian artist Leonardo da Vinci, which has been acclaimed as "the best known, the most visited, the most written about, the most sung about, the most parodied work of art in the world".
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mona_Lisa
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Modern Electrics
Modern Electrics was a technical magazine for the amateur radio experimenter. It was created by Hugo Gernsback and began publication in April 1908. The magazine was initially intended to provide mail-order information for radio parts and to promote the amateur radio hobby, but it later became a vehicle for technology-based fiction stories. The first fiction appeared in the April, 1911 issue, and the series of 12 installments by Hugo Gernsback would later be published as the science fiction novel Ralph 124C 41+.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Modern_Electrics
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Zuleika Dobson
Zuleika Dobson, full title Zuleika Dobson, or, an Oxford love story, is a 1911 novel by Max Beerbohm, a satire of undergraduate life at Oxford. It was his only novel, but was nonetheless very successful. This satire includes the famous line "Death cancels all engagements" and presents a corrosive view of Edwardian Oxford.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zuleika_Dobson
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The Wild Geese (Mori novel)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Wild_Geese_(Mori_novel)
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The White Peacock
The White Peacock is a novel by D. H. Lawrence published in 1911. Lawrence started the novel in 1906 and then rewrote it three times. The early versions had the working title of Laetitia.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_White_Peacock
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What a Life! (novel)
What A Life! is a work of satirical fiction by Edward Verrall Lucas and George Morrow published in 1911. The book is best known for its inventive narrative technique: the story takes the reader through the life of an upper-class British gentleman, with the plot being dictated by the book's illustrations, which the authors took from a copy of Whiteley's General Catalogue (Whiteley's was a London department store at the time). It was included in the 1936 MOMA exhibition "Fantastic Art, Dada, and Surrealism".
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/What_a_Life!_(novel)
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Wellen (novel)
Wellen (lit. Waves), published in English in 1929 as Tides, is a novel by Eduard von Keyserling that was first published in German in 1911. Set during a long hot summer in a small fishing village somewhere on the Baltic Sea, most likely on the Curonian Spit, it depicts a group of aristocratic city-dwellers spending their holidays in that remote part of the German Empire. However, rather than painting a rural idyll, Keyserling focuses on the follies of a doomed fin de siècle society whose self-imposed repressions eventually lead to catastrophe.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wellen_(novel)
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Wandering Stars (novel)
Wandering Stars (Yiddish: Blonzhende Stern or Blundzhende Shtern) is a novel by Sholem Aleichem, serialized in Warsaw newspapers from 1909 to 1911. In it, Leibel, the son of a wealthy shtetl family, falls in love with cantor's daughter Reizel, and both fall for a traveling Yiddish theatre group. Separating and becoming successful performers in the West, under the names of Leo Rafalesco and Rosa Spivak, they eventually find each other again in America.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wandering_Stars_(novel)
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Under Western Eyes
Under Western Eyes (1911) is a novel by Joseph Conrad. The novel takes place in St. Petersburg, Russia, and Geneva, Switzerland, and is viewed as Conrad's response to the themes explored in Crime and Punishment; Conrad was reputed to have detested Dostoevsky. It is also, some say, Conrad's response to his own early life; his father was a famous revolutionary imprisoned by the Russians, but, instead of following in his father's footsteps, at the age of sixteen Conrad left his native land forever.:89 Indeed, while writing Under Western Eyes, Conrad suffered a weeks-long breakdown during which he conversed with the novel's characters in Polish.:244
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Under_Western_Eyes
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A True Woman
A True Woman (The Heart of a Woman), was written by Baroness Orczy (best known for The Scarlet Pimpernel series) and was first published in 1911.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A_True_Woman
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Triste Fim de Policarpo Quaresma
Triste Fim de Policarpo Quaresma (in English: The Tragic Fate of Policarpo Quaresma) is a novel by Pre-Modernist Brazilian writer Lima Barreto. The work was published under feuilleton form in 1911, from August to October in the Jornal do Commercio. The focus of the work is the nationalism in the early years of the First Brazilian Republic and criticism to the middle-class and the bureaucratic government. The work is comical in the beginning, transiting to harsh criticisms by the end. These critics demystify the figure of the president Floriano Peixoto (1891–1894), known as the Marechal de Ferro ("The Iron Marshal"), and also of the Brazilian military.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Triste_Fim_de_Policarpo_Quaresma
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The Tree of Knowledge
The Tree of Knowledge (Spanish: El árbol de la ciencia) is a novel written by Pío Baroja. It was published in 1911, although the action takes place between 1887 and 1898. It is a semi-autobiographical work divided into two symmetrical parts (I-III and V–VII) separated by a long philosophical conversation between the protagonist and his uncle, doctor Iturrioz (IV).
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Tree_of_Knowledge
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Tom Swift in the Caves of Ice
Tom Swift in the Caves of Ice, or, The Wreck of the Airship, is Volume 8 in the original Tom Swift novel series published by Grosset & Dunlap.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tom_Swift_in_the_Caves_of_Ice
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Tom Swift and His Wireless Message
Tom Swift and His Wireless Message, or, The Castaways of Earthquake Island, is Volume 6 in the original Tom Swift novel series published by Grosset & Dunlap.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tom_Swift_and_His_Wireless_Message
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Tom Swift and His Sky Racer
Tom Swift and His Sky Racer, or, The Speediest Flight on Record, is Volume 9 in the original Tom Swift novel series published by Grosset & Dunlap.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tom_Swift_and_His_Sky_Racer
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Tom Swift and His Electric Rifle
Tom Swift and His Electric Rifle; or, Daring Adventures in Elephant Land is a young adult novel written by Stratemeyer Syndicate writers using the pen name Victor Appleton. It is Volume 10 in the original Tom Swift novel series published by Grosset & Dunlap.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tom_Swift_and_His_Electric_Rifle
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Tom Swift Among the Diamond Makers
Tom Swift Among the Diamond Makers, Or, The Secret of Phantom Mountain, is Volume 7 in the original Tom Swift novel series published by Grosset & Dunlap.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tom_Swift_Among_the_Diamond_Makers
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Suffragette Sally
Suffragette Sally is a suffrage novel by Gertrude Colmore (1855 – 1926) published in 1911. It is part of a string of novels written to further the cause of the women’s movement by gaining empathy from its readers. Following its three female protagonists through the militant campaign of the Women’s Social and Political Union, the novel examines both gender and class. The novel references many historic events and people, both by their known aliases and their real names.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Suffragette_Sally
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The Story Girl
The Story Girl is a 1911 novel by Canadian author L. M. Montgomery. It narrates the adventures of a group of young cousins and their friends who live in a rural community on Prince Edward Island, Canada.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Story_Girl
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Sie Po Giok
Tjerita Sie Po Giok, atawa Peroentoengannja Satoe Anak Piatoe (better known by the short title Sie Po Giok) is a 1911 children's novel from the Dutch East Indies (now Indonesia) written by Tio Ie Soei in vernacular Malay. It tells the story of Sie Po Giok, a young orphan who faces several challenges while living with his uncle in Batavia (now Jakarta). The story, which has been called the only work of children's literature produced by Chinese Malay writers, has been read as promoting traditional gender roles and questioning Chinese identity.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sie_Po_Giok
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The Secret Garden
The Secret Garden is a novel by Frances Hodgson Burnett. It was initially published in serial format starting in the autumn of 1910, and was first published in its entirety in 1911. It is now one of Burnett's most popular novels, and is considered to be a classic of English children's literature. Several stage and film adaptations have been produced.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Secret_Garden
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The Sea Fairies
The Sea Fairies is a children's fantasy novel written by L. Frank Baum, illustrated by John R. Neill, and published in 1911 by the Reilly & Britton Company, the publisher of Baum's series of Oz books. Baum dedicated the book to the otherwise-unknown "Judith of Randolph, Massachusetts" — most likely one of the child readers who corresponded with the author.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Sea_Fairies
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Sa Ngalan ng Diyos
Sa Ngalan ng Diyos ("In the Name of God") is a Tagalog-language novel written in 1911 by Filipino author Faustino Aguilar. Controversially, it illustrated how greedy Jesuit priests schemed, manipulated, and took advantage of Carmen, a young, naive, pious, and affluent heiress. The 191-page book was published in Manila by the Limbagan at Aklatan Ni I.R. Morales (Printing Press and Library of I.R. Morales) during the American period in Philippine history (1898–1946).
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sa_Ngalan_ng_Diyos
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The Root of Evil
The Root of Evil is a 1911 novel by Thomas Dixon, Jr..
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Root_of_Evil
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Red Eve
Red Eve is a novel by H Rider Haggard set in the reign of Edward III.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Red_Eve
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Ralph 124C 41+
Ralph 124C 41+, by Hugo Gernsback, is an early science fiction novel, written as a twelve-part serial in Modern Electrics magazine beginning in April 1911. It was compiled into novel/book form in 1925. While one of the most influential science fiction stories of all time, modern critics tend to pan the novel and few people read it today. The title itself is a play on words, ( 1 2 4 C 4 1 + ) meaning "One to foresee for one another".
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ralph_124C_41%2B
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The Quest for Fire
The Quest for Fire (French: La Guerre du feu) is a 1911 Belgian novel by "J.-H. Rosny", the pseudonym of two brothers; the author was likely the elder of the two, Joseph Henri Honoré Boex (1856 – 1940). It was first published in English in 1967.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Quest_for_Fire
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The Prodigal Judge
The Prodigal Judge is a novel written by American novelist Vaughan Kester and published in 1911.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Prodigal_Judge
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Peter and Wendy
Peter Pan; or, the Boy Who Wouldn't Grow Up or Peter and Wendy is J. M. Barrie's most famous work, in the form of a 1904 play and a 1911 novel. Both versions tell the story of Peter Pan, a mischievous little boy who can fly, and his adventures on the island of Neverland with Wendy Darling and her brothers, the fairy Tinker Bell, the Lost Boys, and the pirate Captain Hook. The play and novel were inspired by Barrie's friendship with the Llewelyn Davies family. Barrie continued to revise the play for years after its debut until publication of the play script in 1928.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peter_and_Wendy
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The Outcry
The Outcry is a novel by Henry James published in 1911. This light comedy was originally conceived as a play. James cast the material in a three-act drama in 1909, but like so many of his plays, it failed to be produced. (There were two posthumous performances in 1917.) In 1911 James converted the play into a novel, which was successful with the public. The Outcry was the last novel he was able to complete before his death in 1916. The storyline concerns the buying up of Britain's art treasures by wealthy foreigners, especially Americans. While hardly a subject of life-and-death significance, James' novel treats the idea in a busy, cheerful, appealing manner.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Outcry
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The New Machiavelli
The New Machiavelli is a 1911 novel by H. G. Wells that was serialized in The English Review in 1910. Because its plot notoriously derived from Wells's affair with Amber Reeves and satirized Beatrice and Sidney Webb, it was "the literary scandal of its day."
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_New_Machiavelli
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Moving the Mountain (novel)
Moving the Mountain is a feminist utopian novel written by Charlotte Perkins Gilman. It was published serially in Perkins Gilman's periodical The Forerunner and then in book form, both in 1911. The book was one element in the major wave of utopian and dystopian literature that marked the later nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. The novel was also the first volume in Gilman's utopian trilogy; it was followed by the famous Herland (1915) and its sequel, With Her in Ourland (1916).
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moving_the_Mountain_(novel)
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Mother Carey's Chickens (novel)
Mother Carey's Chickens is a novel by Kate Douglas Wiggin published in 1911 by Houghton Mifflin.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mother_Carey%27s_Chickens_(novel)
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Miranda of the Balcony
Miranda of the Balcony is a novel by the British writer A.E.W. Mason which was first published in 1911.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Miranda_of_the_Balcony
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Mga Anak-Bukid
Mga Anak-Bukid (literally "Children of the Farmlands", the title can be translated simply as "The Farmlanders") is a 1911 Tagalog-language novel written by Filipino novelist Rosauro C. Almario. Published by the Limbagang Cultura Filipina in Manila, Philippines, the novel narrates how the Filipinos who became the so-called pensionados undermined the traditional values and mores in the Philippines, including the people who acted as supporters and upholders of those conventional customs and norms.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mga_Anak-Bukid
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The Mahatma and the Hare
The Mahatma and the Hare: A Dream Story is a novel by H. Rider Haggard.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Mahatma_and_the_Hare
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The Lunar Trilogy
Trylogia Księżycowa (The Lunar Trilogy or The Moon Trilogy) is a science-fiction series written by the Polish writer Jerzy Żuławski between 1901 and 1911. It has been translated into Russian, Czech, German and Hungarian, and has been reprinted several times in Poland.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Lunar_Trilogy
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The Lair of the White Worm
The Lair of the White Worm (also known as The Garden of Evil) is a horror novel by Irish author Bram Stoker. It is partly based on the legend of the Lambton Worm. The book was published in 1911 by Rider and Son in the UK, the year before Stoker's death, with colour illustrations by Pamela Colman Smith. In 1925, it was republished in a highly abridged and rewritten form. Over a hundred pages were removed, the rewritten book having only twenty-eight chapters instead of the original forty. The final eleven chapters were cut down to only five, leading some critics to complain that the ending was abrupt and inconsistent. In 1988, it was adapted into a film by Ken Russell.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Lair_of_the_White_Worm
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Ladies Whose Bright Eyes
Ladies Whose Bright Eyes is a novel by Ford Madox Ford. It was written in 1911 and extensively revised in 1935 and published under Ford's common pseudonym Daniel Chaucer.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ladies_Whose_Bright_Eyes
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Just Patty
Just Patty is Jean Webster's sixth novel, published in 1911. Prequel to When Patty Went to College book.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Just_Patty
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Jours de famine et de détresse
Jours de famine et de détresse is a Belgian novel by Neel Doff. It was first published in 1911.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jours_de_famine_et_de_d%C3%A9tresse
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Jenny (novel)
Jenny is a novel by the Norwegian writer Sigrid Undset, published in 1911, and regarded as Undset's literary breakthrough. The novel is set in Rome and later in Norway. The protagonist "Jenny Winge" tries to make a career as a painter. Being the lover of her fiancé's father results in a child, who dies shortly after the birth. She later commits suicide.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jenny_(novel)
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Jennie Gerhardt
Jennie Gerhardt is a 1911 novel by Theodore Dreiser.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jennie_Gerhardt
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The Iron Woman (novel)
The Iron Woman is a novel of manners by the American writer Margaret Deland (1857–1945) set in the 19th century fictional locale of Mercer, an Ohio River community that represents Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Iron_Woman_(novel)
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The Hampdenshire Wonder
The Hampdenshire Wonder is a 1911 science fiction novel by J.D. Beresford. It is one of the first novels to involve a wunderkind. The child in it is named Victor Stott and he is the son of a famous cricket player. This origin is perhaps a reference to H.G. Wells's father Joseph Wells. The novel concerns his progress from infant to almost preternaturally brilliant child. Victor Stott is subtly deformed to allow for his powerful brain. One prominent, and unpleasant, character is the local minister. As J.D. Beresford's father was a minister, and Beresford was himself partially disabled, some see autobiographical aspects to the story. However this is unproven.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Hampdenshire_Wonder
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The Garnet Bracelet
The Garnet Bracelet (Гранатовый браслет, Granatovy braslet) is a short novel by Alexander Kuprin, first published in Zemlya (Land) almanac, Vol. 6, 1911. Maxim Gorky, who among others praised the novel, saw it as "the sign of a new literature coming."
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Garnet_Bracelet
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The Four Men: a Farrago
The Four Men: A Farrago is a novel by Hilaire Belloc that describes a 140-kilometre (90 mi) long journey on foot across the English county of Sussex from Robertsbridge in the east to Harting in the west. As a "secular pilgrimage" through Sussex, the book has parallels with his earlier work, the religious pilgrimage of The Path to Rome (1902). "The Four Men" describes four characters, Myself, Grizzlebeard, the Poet and the Sailor, each aspects of Belloc's personality, as they journey in a half-real, half-fictional allegory of life. Subtitled "a Farrago", meaning a 'confused mixture', the book contains a range of anecdotes, songs, reflections and miscellany. The book is also Belloc's homage to "this Eden which is Sussex still" and conveys Belloc's "love for the soil of his native land" of Sussex.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Four_Men:_a_Farrago
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The Forged Coupon
The Forged Coupon (Russian: Фальшивый купон, Fal'shivyi kupon) is a novella in two parts by Leo Tolstoy. Though he first conceived of the story in the late 1890s, he did not begin writing it until 1902. After struggling for several years, he finally completed the story in 1904; however, it was not published until some of Tolstoy's shorter works were collected and anthologized after his death in 1910.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Forged_Coupon
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The Flying Girl
The Flying Girl is a novel written by L. Frank Baum, author of the Oz books. It was first published in 1911. In the book, Baum pursued an innovative blending of genres to create a feminist adventure melodrama. The book was followed by a sequel, The Flying Girl and Her Chum, published the next year, 1912. Both books were illustrated by Joseph Pierre Nuyttens, the artist who also illustrated Baum's Annabel and Phoebe Daring in 1912.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Flying_Girl
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Fermina Márquez
Fermina Márquez is a short novel in twenty chapters written by French writer Valery Larbaud. It was considered for the Prix Goncourt in 1911 but did not win. Nonetheless, it is still considered to be a minor classic of French literature and one of Larbaud's best known works along with his Diary of A.O. Barnabooth.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fermina_M%C3%A1rquez
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Fantômas
Fantômas (French: ) is a fictional character created by French writers Marcel Allain (1885–1969) and Pierre Souvestre (1874–1914).
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fant%C3%B4mas
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The Family (Tōson Shimazaki novel)
The Family is a Japanese novel written by Tōson Shimazaki, first serialized in 1910–11 under the title Ie (家). This autobiographical novel deals with the disintegration of two provincial families, the Koizumis and the Hashimotos.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Family_(T%C5%8Dson_Shimazaki_novel)
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Exploits and Opinions of Dr. Faustroll, Pataphysician
Exploits and Opinions of Dr. Faustroll, Pataphysician (original title in French: Gestes et opinions du docteur Faustroll pataphysicien : Roman néo-scientifique suivi de Spéculations). A novel by French Symbolist author Alfred Jarry which influenced Surrealism, it features Doctor Faustroll (an allusion to Doctor Faustus), a scientist who is born in 1898 in Circassia at the age of 63, and who dies the same year at the same age.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Exploits_and_Opinions_of_Dr._Faustroll,_Pataphysician
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Ethan Frome
Ethan Frome is a novel published in 1911 by the Pulitzer Prize-winning American author Edith Wharton. It is set in the fictitious town of Starkfield, Massachusetts. The novel was adapted into a film, Ethan Frome, in 1993.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ethan_Frome
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The Daring Twins
The Daring Twins: A Story for Young Folk is a mystery novel for juvenile readers, written by L. Frank Baum, author of the Oz books. It was first published in 1911, and was intended as the opening installment in a series of similar books.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Daring_Twins
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The Clayhanger Family
The Clayhanger Family is a series of novels by Arnold Bennett, published between 1910 and 1918. Though the series is commonly referred to as a "trilogy", it actually consists of four books; the first three novels were released in one single volume as The Clayhanger Family in 1925.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Clayhanger_Family
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The Case of Richard Meynell
The Case of Richard Meynell is a novel by Mary Augusta Ward, first published in 1911.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Case_of_Richard_Meynell
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The Card
The Card is a short comic novel written by Arnold Bennett in 1911 (titled Denry the Audacious in the American edition). It was later made into a 1952 movie starring Alec Guinness and Petula Clark.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Card
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The Book of Khalid
The Book of Khalid (1911) is a novel by Arab-American writer Ameen Rihani. Composed during a sojourn in the mountains of Lebanon, it is considered to be the first novel by an Arab-American writer in English. His contemporary, Khalil Gibran, illustrated the work, and the story is often seen as an influence on Gibran's own well-known book The Prophet.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Book_of_Khalid
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Aunt Jane's Nieces and Uncle John
Aunt Jane's Nieces and Uncle John is a young-adult novel written by L. Frank Baum, famous as the creator of the Land of Oz. It is the sixth volume in the ten-book series Aunt Jane's Nieces, Baum's greatest commercial success after the Oz books themselves. Like the other books in the series, this sixth volume was issued under the pen name "Edith Van Dyne," one of Baum's multiple pseudonyms.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aunt_Jane%27s_Nieces_and_Uncle_John
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Ang mga Anak Dalita
Ang mga Anak Dalita (" Children of the Poor") is a 1911 Tagalog-language novel written by Filipino novelist Patricio Mariano. The 73-page novel was published in Manila by Limbagan at Aklatan Ni I.R. Morales (Printing Press And Library of I.R. Morales) during the American era in Philippine history (1898–1946). Ang mga Anak Dalita is a political novel that deals also with Filipino ideology, the socio-economic situation, the industrial upheaval, and the struggle of the oppressed Filipino working class in Manila during Mariano’s time.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ang_mga_Anak_Dalita
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Alraune
Alraune (German for Mandrake) is a novel by German novelist Hanns Heinz Ewers published in 1911. It is also the name of the female lead character. The book originally featured illustrations by Ilna Ewers-Wunderwald.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alraune
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The Twinkle Tales
The Twinkle Tales is a 1905 series by L. Frank Baum, published under the pen name Laura Bancroft. The six stories were issued in separate booklets by Baum's publisher Reilly & Britton, with illustrations by Maginel Wright Enright. In 1911, the six eight-chapter stories were collected as Twinkle and Chubbins; Their Astonishing Adventures in Nature-Fairyland — which is a misnomer, since Chubbins appears in only two stories and few are set in "Nature-Fairyland". The book was followed by Policeman Bluejay, which was retitled Babes in Birdland for its second edition. Baum later wanted these Bancroft stories published under his own name, and his publisher put out a second edition of Babes in Birdland (third edition overall) with Baum's name on it for the first time in 1917.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Twinkle_Tales
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South Sea Tales (1911)
South Sea Tales (1911) is a collection of short stories written by Jack London. Most stories are set in island communities, like those of Hawaii, or are set aboard a ship.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/South_Sea_Tales_(1911)
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More Ghost Stories
More Ghost Stories is the title of M. R. James's second collection of ghost stories, published in 1911. Some later editions under the title Ghost Stories of an Antiquary contain it and the earlier Ghost Stories of an Antiquary in one volume.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/More_Ghost_Stories
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The Country of the Blind and Other Stories
The Country of the Blind and Other Stories is a collection of thirty-three fantasy and science fiction short stories written by the English author H. G. Wells between 1894 and 1909. It was first published by Thomas Nelson and Sons in 1911. All the stories had first been published in various weekly and monthly periodicals. Twenty-seven of the stories had also been previously published in five earlier story collections by Wells.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Country_of_the_Blind_and_Other_Stories
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The Celestial Omnibus
The Celestial Omnibus and Other Stories is the title of a collection of short stories by E. M. Forster, first published in 1911. It contains stories written over the previous ten years, and together with the collection The Eternal Moment (1928) forms part of Forster's Collected Short Stories (1947).
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Celestial_Omnibus