top bar Arthur's Animated Logo


2500 Classic Novels

Free EText Stories

Search This Site


Home Page

Louisa May Alcott
Thomas B. Aldrich
Horatio Alger, Jr.
Jane Austen

R. M. Ballantyne

Honore de Balzac
Bronte Sisters
John Buchan
Frances H. Burnett

E. Rice Burroughs

Sir Richard Burton
Wilkie Collins
Joseph Conrad
Marie Corelli

James F. Cooper

Stephen Crane
F. Marian Crawford
Richard Harding Davis
Daniel Defoe

Charles Dickens
F. Dostoevsky

A. C. Doyle
Alexandre Dumas
George Eliot
Edna Ferber

F. Scott Fitzgerald

E. M. Forster
Mary E.W. Freeman
John Galsworthy
Elizabeth Gaskell

George Gissing

Maxim Gorky
Zane Grey
H. Rider Haggard
Thomas Hardy

Bret Harte

Nathaniel Hawthorne
Anthony Hope
Washington Irving
Henry James

Jerome K. Jerome
Rudyard Kipling

Old Sci-fi
Best Stories
Bahá'í Writings

Children's Stories

Wild West Stories
Northern Sagas
Various Books

Etext Sources

Horror Tales
Tales of Oz
Tom Swift Series



HWG Logo

 
top logo

Zane Grey's Novels

Best Stories| The Bible| Bahá'í | Children's Stories| Wild West
Northern Sagas | The Koran | Various Books | Etext Sources |
History| The Shadow| Horror Tales| Gothic Tales| Short Stories
Religions | Detectives | Fairy Tales | Islam | Mystery | Oz |
Women Authors | Boy's Own | American Tales| Frontier Days
hr

Free Novels!    No Registration!    
These books are standard HTML
and should load well into any browser.

See also S. E. White & Bret Harte &
Wild Western Stories
Desert Gold A Romance Of The Border
This hour, when the day had closed and the lonely desert night set in with its dead silence, was one in which Cameron's mind was thronged with memories of a time long past--of a home back in Peoria, of a woman he had wronged and lost, and loved too late. He was a prospector for gold, a hunter of solitude, a lover of the drear, rock-ribbed infinitude, because he wanted to be alone to remember.

The Heritage Of The Desert
A broad bar of dense black shut out the April sky, except in the extreme west, where a strip of pale blue formed background for several clouds of striking color and shape. They alone, in all that expanse, were dyed in the desert's sunset crimson. The largest projected from behind the dark cloud-bank in the shape of a huge fist, and the others, small and round, floated below. To Cole it seemed a giant hand, clutching, with inexorable strength, a bleeding heart. His terror spread to his companions as they stared.

The Lone Star Ranger
So it was in him, then--an inherited fighting instinct, a driving intensity to kill. He was the last of the Duanes, that old fighting stock of Texas. But not the memory of his dead father, nor the pleading of his soft-voiced mother, nor the warning of this uncle who stood before him now, had brought to Buck Duane so much realization of the dark passionate strain in his blood. It was the recurrence, a hundred-fold increased in power, of a strange emotion that for the last three years had arisen in him.

The Light of Western Stars
When Madeline Hammond stepped from the train at El Cajon, New Mexico, it was nearly midnight, and her first impression was of a huge dark space of cool, windy emptiness, strange and silent, stretching away under great blinking white stars.

The Last Of The Plainsmen
One afternoon, far out on the sun-baked waste of sage, we made camp near a clump of withered pinyon trees. The cold desert wind came down upon us with the sudden darkness. Even the Mormons, who were finding the trail for us across the drifting sands, forgot to sing and pray at sundown. We huddled round the campfire, a tired and silent little group. When out of the lonely, melancholy night some wandering Navajos stole like shadows to our fire, we hailed their advent with delight. They were good-natured Indians, willing to barter a blanket or bracelet; and one of them, a tall, gaunt fellow, with the bearing of a chief, could speak a little English.

Riders Of The Purple Sage
Jane Withersteen gazed down the wide purple slope with dreamy and troubled eyes. A rider had just left her and it was his message that held her thoughtful and almost sad, awaiting the churchmen who were coming to resent and attack her right to befriend a Gentile.

The Redheaded Outfield
Red Gilbat was nutty--and his batting average was .371. Any student of baseball could weigh these two facts against each other and understand something of Delaney's trouble. It was not possible to camp on Red Gilbat's trail. The man was a jack-o'-lantern, a will-o'-the-wisp, a weird, long- legged, long-armed, red-haired illusive phantom. When the gong rang at the ball grounds there were ten chances to one that Red would not be present. He had been discovered with small boys peeping through knotholes at the vacant left field he was supposed to inhabit during play.

The Spirit Of The Border
A Romance Of The Early Settlers In The Ohio Valley -- 1906
rom the high bank where they stood the land sloped and narrowed gradually until it ended in a sharp point which marked the last bit of land between the Allegheny and Monongahela rivers. Here these swift streams merged and formed the broad Ohio. The new-born river, even here at its beginning proud and swelling as if already certain of its far-away grandeur, swept majestically round a wide curve and apparently lost itself in the forest foliage.

The Call Of The Canyon
The bleak road wound away to the southwest, and from this direction came the gusty wind. It did not blow regularly so that Carley could be on her guard. It lulled now and then, permitting her to look about, and then suddenly again whipping dust into her face.

The Young Forester
I dreamed of forest lands with snow-capped peaks rising in the background; I dreamed of elk standing on the open ridges, of white-tailed deer trooping out of the hollows, of antelope browsing on the sage at the edge of the forests. Here was the broad track of a grizzly in the snow; there on a sunny crag lay a tawny mountain-lion asleep.

Betty Zane
The interior of a pioneer's rude dwelling did not reveal, as a rule, more than bare walls, a bed or two, a table and a few chairs--in fact, no more than the necessities of life. But Colonel Zane's house proved an exception to this. Most interesting was the large room.

The Mysterious Rider
Purple haze began to thicken in the timbered notches. Gray foothills, round and billowy, rolled down from the higher country. They were smooth, sweeping, with long velvety slopes and isolated patches of aspens that blazed in autumn gold. Splotches of red vine colored the soft gray of sage.

The Man Of The Forest
AT sunset hour the forest was still, lonely, sweet with tang of fir and spruce, blazing in gold and red and green; and the man who glided on under the great trees seemed to blend with the colors and, disappearing, to have become a part of the wild woodland.

Wildfire  
She longed for something to happen. It might be terrible, so long as it was wonderful. This day, when Lucy had stolen away on a forbidden horse, she was eighteen years old.

To The Last Man  
His animals were tired, especially the pack mule that had carried a heavy load; and with slow heave of relief they knelt and rolled in the dust. Jean experienced something of relief himself as he threw off his chaps.

The Rainbow Trail  
All day Shefford had plodded onward with the clear horizon-line a thing unattainable; and for days before that he had ridden the wild bare flats and climbed the rocky desert benches. The great colored reaches and steps had led endlessly onward and upward through dim and deceiving distance.

The Border Legion  
Joan staggered back, frightened, outraged. She was so dazed she did not recognize the man, if indeed she knew him. But a laugh betrayed him. It was Jim.

The U. P. Trail  
In the early sixties a trail led from the broad Missouri, swirling yellow and turgid between its green-groved borders, for miles and miles out upon the grassy Nebraska plains, turning westward over the undulating prairie, with its swales and billows and long, winding lines of cottonwoods, to a slow, vast heave of rising ground

Go here for book ratings!!
Riders of the Purple Sage - Mormons, Gentiles, outlaws, and cowboys interact in a thrilling story of adventure on the Utah-Arizona border of the 1870s. The pressing question is: What does one do when inherited religious faith is found wanting? The all-time best selling western.

See also S. E. White & Bret Harte &
Wild Western Stories


Flags image

Pages Updated On: 1-April- MMIII
Copyright © MMI -- MMIII   ArthursClassicNovels.com

 
top bar Arthur's Animated Logo


Online Education

Toronto Streets

Home Page

D.H.Lawrence
Jack London
George MacDonald
Captain F. Marryat
Herman Melville

L. M. Montgomery

William Morris
H. H. Munro (Saki)
Kathleen Norris
Phillips Oppenheim

Baroness Orczy

Stories of O Henry
Gilbert Parker
Elia W. Peattie
Edgar Allan Poe

Charles Reade

Mary Roberts Rinehart
Rafael Sabatini
Sir Walter Scott
George. B. Shaw

William G. Simms
Bronte Sisters

R.L.Stevenson
Booth Tarkington
William M. Thackeray
Leo Tolstoy

Anthony Trollope

Ivan Turgenev
Mark Twain
Henry van Dyke
Jules Verne

H.G.Wells

Edith Wharton
Stewart E. White
Kate Douglas Wiggin
Oscar Wilde

P. G. Wodehouse
Charlotte M. Yonge

For History Lovers
Gothic Tales
Stories by Women
Short Stories

Detective Stories
Religious Material

Fairy Tales
Mystery Stories
Boy's Own
Frontier Days

American Tales
The Bible
The Koran
Writings of Islam

Sponsored by the ETEXT Archives



The Shadow Knows

Baen Free Library
Baen Free Library