William Hulbert Footner was a Canadian writer of non-fiction and detective fiction. His most successful creation was the beautiful and brilliant Madame Rosika Storey and her plain assistant who explains the evolving solutions to her boss’ cases. His Madame Storey mysteries fit the flapping 1920s like the long lizard gloves that graced her arms and did well supporting his traveling family’s lifestyle. „Easy To Kill” is another mystery for the famous Mme. Storey to solve. Do ...
Zane Gray is best known as a fishing writer for wild adventure catching giants of the world record in oceans around the world. He published a collection of stories about individual places and types of fish. Fish tales are a great collection of stories that cover the most popular types of fish found in salt water. These are turtles, sailboats, marlins, swordfish and tuna. This is a perfect example for the shade of appetite of every fisherman. Zane Gray was one of America’s m...
New Zealand is one of the „hottest” industrial sites in the world. Known for the brilliant, crystal clear rivers, New Zealand, Zain Gray has the image of a great and mythical trout. In „The Saga” of Eldorado, the „Seaman” Gray combines the legendary streams, and also haunts a monster off the coast of New Zealand. This is an adventure story and fishing history right away.
A collection of crime fiction short stories featuring Mme. Rosika Storey and her resourceful assistant Bella Brickley. Mme. Storey unravels complex cases with thorough investigation and an understanding of human nature. These short stories are written through Bella Brickley’s point-of-view. She is Madame Storey, like Sherlock has fantastic powers of deduction and understanding of psychology, and her secretary is like Watson though she does’t have a degree in medicine. Also ...
Powell’s Plateau was the most distant, inaccessible corner of the Grand Canyon, when Zane Gray went there with a hunter to the buffalo, camp, a cowboy from Utah and a scout from Navajo State. With the help of ropes and rifles, five men traveled to Mustangs. They were not disappointed. Different paths penetrated through the brush of forest and rocks from all sides.
Madame Rosika Storey was one of the most celebrated fictional female private investigators during the Golden Age of the mystery (1920-40). This collection of six stories featuring the woman private detective, glamorous Madame Storey – psychologist and detective! From missing persons to ghastly murder (often in the same case) Madame Storey and her faithful secretary Bella take on the criminal underworld of 1930s New York in these thrilling mysteries. But many of Mme. Storey’...
Putting Crime Over by Hulbert Footner. When Madame Roska Storey and her secretary are robbed, a plan is put in place to catch the robbers as well as their leader. She is the best private detective of England, but her stories are international. Her way to resolve the mystery is original and bring you in a new world. So we are introduced to the fascinating Madame Rosika Storey, fearless and intelligent, who plays cat-and-mouse with killers, goes undercover to break up crimina...
Madame Rosika Storey was one of the most celebrated fictional female private investigators during the Golden Age of the mystery (1920-40). The Encyclopedia of Mystery and Detection calls her, „a stunningly beautiful young woman who describes herself as ’a practical psychologist – specializing in the feminine.” This one is the best private detective of England, but her stories are international. Her way to resolve the mystery is original and bring you in a new world. So we a...
First published in 1918, „Johnny Jewel” is a the story of a cowboy-cum-aviator in America’s Old West. Johnny learns of a damaged plane abandoned in the desert on the Mexican side of the border, and comes up with a plan to put it to work. His affairs are being monitored by Mary V, the ranch owner’s spunky daughter, who is slowly taking interest in Johnny. But in the meantime, a gang of rustlers are taking advantage of his passion for flying in order to distract him from his ...
Rowdy Vaughn is a goodhearted but somewhat uncouth range rider whose attempts at wooing the local schoolteacher are hampered by a longstanding blood feud. The problems start when Jessie’s brother turns out to be a good-for-nothing kind of guy who had done some nasty things to Rowdy in the past. The subplot, concerning Rowdy’s employer’s attempts to find pasture for his cattle during a drought, provides one of the highlights of the book: several interesting chapters describi...
B. M. Bower (a woman who actually lived in early 20th century Montana when this story was written) has a good sense of humor and touches on some of the big issues of the West such as water rights and land ownership and development. Her intrepid heroine starts out as a girl actor in the silly Westerns of early Hollywood and then switches to a remote ranch for the real cowgirl experience. Many of Bower’s books were adapted for the big screen, and her characters and landscape ...
Claude „Kid” Bennett is a young man starting to carve a place for himself in the world. His mom wants him to go to college and earn his M. D., but his dad thinks he could turn the boy into a useful man if he’d stay on the Montana ranch, and learn to work hard. Kid gets a thorn under his saddle and sets out with his three horses to a six day rodeo in Chicago. Along the way he meets J.N. Harlan, and his free-spoken daughter Dulcie who is a Chicago businessman with plenty of p...
A classic tale of the Old West by B.M. Bower. This one is one of her earliest (1918). This was an interesting story about a man who quarrels with his young wife and goes out into the world to try to forget her. „Cabin Fever” gets Bud Moore into a peck of trouble now and then. Bud is a bit too trustful of strangers and before he knows it, he has injected himself into a situation that could prove to be disastrous. Bud then heads for the hills and meets up with another strange...
American author Bertha Muzzy Sinclair (1871–1940) was known by her pen name B. M. Bower. She wrote novels and screenplays, mainly about the American Wild West. This is one of her novels. Casey Ryan loves speed but his passion led to his unemployment. He, known as the most reckless stage driver ever to carry the mail, was bitten by the speed bug and deserted his stage coach for a Ford; but not even a Ford could stand Casey’s handling and he eventually found himself bereft of...
„Chip of the Flying U”, published in 1906, was B.M. Bower’s first and best-known novel. The story is about a cattle ranch, run by a group of happy and hilarious young men, and owned by a crusty older man. Chip is a colorful young man who works as a cow puncher in Montana. He is the typical woman-shy cowboy, but he is also a gifted artist. Well, one day, his boss announces that his (the boss’s) sister is done with her doctor training and coming out to the ranch. And guess wh...
Pioneering Western writer Bertha Muzzy Bower was herself the wife of a Montana rancher for a time, so she brings a wealth of personal experience and psychological insight to this gripping narrative that follows protagonist Valeria as she enters into marriage and struggles with the often-harsh reality of rural life. Val is cast into circumstances that test her temper, strength, and sanity. One of her few contacts with the outside world is a friend of her husband’s whom she d...
B. M. Bower’s novel „Rim o’ the World” introduces readers to a rough-and-tumble group of range riders who scrape out a living in the foreboding and unwelcoming region known as Black Rim Country. Packed with suspense, action, and romance, this is a must-read for Western fans of all ages. B. M. (Bertha Muzzy) Bower was the first woman to make a career of writing popular westerns. And what a career it was –more than sixty novels published from 1904 to 1940, the year of her dea...
The plot of „"Hay-Wire"” is centering around a family ranch and settled town. Lynn Hayward is bitter and frustrated over the way his family’s ranch has fallen into disrepair through his vicious-tempered invalid father’s stinginess and willful neglect. Lynn reaches the pitch of resentment when he discovers that an apparently penniless old prospector, who’s been taking gifts and favors from the Haywards for years, is actually concealing a fortune in his cabin. Bower’s portray...
B.M Bower had a gift for writing Westerns, weaving tales of adventure, intrigue, mystery, and romance – often with surprise endings. They are historical reminiscences of pioneers among the sage and bush, clearing the way for a new America. She wrote about working cowboys usually on western ranches, with the occasional visit of an eastern types. Her books were known for their factual attention to detail such as cattle branding. Cole is the son of wealth, but through no fault...
Eastern society girl Beatrice Lansell, on a visit to her brother’s Montana ranch, is being pressured by her social-climbing mother to accept her English nobleman suitor, Sir Redmond Hayes. She fills her days with coquetry, leisure and meaningless flirtations, but she has never found true love. The staunchly independent Beatrice finds herself equally annoyed and attracted by mysterious cowboy Keith Cameron. Will this improbable romance last? There’s plenty of conflict as cor...
Good Indian is a foster son of a western ranch owner. Considered as the eldest son, Good Indian plays a pivot role when the family ranch is attacked by scheming, gold prospectors. He is taken by the beauty of one fragile girl who cannot understand the western customs. His partner and supporter, Georgie Howard, quells her love for him, when they both go through the legal battle of the family ranch. Bower gives the reader an excellent portrayal of a man loved by more than one...
Around 1900 Bower started to write about the wild west – and she was one of a few women writers that ’wrote like a man’ and fooled most of her readers at the time. Not afraid to write about the violent times she is one of the best western writers ever, that this book is one of her finest of her character creations. Medicine was a hero among the cowhands of the Flying U after he saved the stranger on horseback who had been struck by lightning. However, their mysterious guest...
This was B. M. Bower’s 15th novel, and like her „The Phantom Herd” a year later, it draws on her knowledge of the movie business. Sixteen-year-old Jean Douglas, the title character, is a no-nonsense daughter of a Montana rancher, Aleck Douglas, who in the opening chapters is wrongly found guilty of murder and sent to prison. With the help of a ranch hand, Lite Avery, she spends the rest of the novel finding the real killer. B. M. Bower, was an American author who wrote nove...
B.M. Bower was an American writer of Western novels and short stories who wrote over 55 novels. Several of her stories were subsequently adapted and made into movies. This story of the cow country concerns the efforts of the Sawtooth Cattle Company, who number their cattle by the tens of thousands, to eliminate the smaller outfits around. Al Woodruff, the evil eye of the Sawtooth, is efficient in his particular line of work, which is the reason why Brit Hunter of the Quirt ...
Zaskakujące zwroty akcji, spotkania z tajemniczymi istotami i odkrywanie nowych światów. To wszystko składa się na fascynującą rzeczywistość powieści podróżniczych i przygodowych! Od lat sprawiają one radość i dostarczają emocji zarówno młodszym, jak i starszym czytelnikom, wrzucając ich w wir niezwykłych przygód przeżywanych przez bohaterów tak klasycznych powieści przygodowych, jak również współczesnej literatury podróżniczej. Jednym z najbardziej rozpoznawalnych tytułów jest książka „Przygody Tomka Sawyera” autorstwa Marka Twaina, który pozostaje jedną z ulubionych lektur dla dzieci i młodzieży. Dla wielu nazwiskiem, które budzi od razu radość i ciekawość w sercu jest też Juliusz Verne - jego "W 80 dni dookoła świata" czy "20 tysięcy mil podwodnej żeglugi", znalazły swoje miejsce w ścisłym kanonie literatury przygodowej. Nie sposób również mówić o emocjonujących książkach z gatunku powieści przygodowej, nie wspominając o "W pustyni i w puszczy" Henryka Sienkiewicza.
Wejdźcie w świat przygód, śledząc wyjątkowe losy bohaterów odwiedzających egzotyczne krainy z pomocą książek papierowych, ebooków lub audiobooków, które czekają na Was niecierpliwie na Woblink!
Początki powieści przygodowej sięgają XVIII wieku, a do jej klasyków zaliczani są między innymi Karol May, James Oliver Curwood czy James Fenimore Cooper. Jakie są cechy powieści przygodowej? Fabuła tych książek pełna jest dynamicznej akcji - nie ma tu miejsca na długie zatrzymanie i nic-nie-robienie. Bohaterowie najlepszych książek przygodowych z reguły są postaciami pozytywnymi, których charakter czasami wystawiany jest na próbę przez napotykane na drodze przeszkody. Często są oni przedstawiani jako wzory do naśladowania, które poprzez podejmowanie właściwych (choć czasem trudnych) wyborów wychodzą cało z wszystkich niebezpieczeństw. Cechy gatunkowe literatury przygodowej powodują, że z reguły nie ma tu czasu na pogłębione analizy motywacji czy psychologię postaci - liczy się przede wszystkim wartka akcja i dobra rozrywka czytelników. Wiele spośród najlepszych książek przygodowych to powieści dla dzieci i/lub książki dla młodzieży, takie jak ebooki wspomnianego już Juliusza Verne'a, uważanego za swoistego pioniera powieści przygodowej. Jego powieści "Dzieci kapitana Granta" czy "Podróż do wnętrza Ziemi" znajdziecie na Woblink także w wydaniach obcojęzycznych - po angielsku lub francusku.
Książki podróżniczo-przygodowe to wyjątkowe połączenie wojaży w dalekie, często nieznane kierunki i niezwykłych przygód przeżywanych przez głównych bohaterów. Do jednej z najpopularniejszych serii książek przygodowych tego typu w Polsce należą dzieła Alfreda Szklarskiego, który opisywał przygody Tomka Wilmowskiego. Ich akcja rozgrywa się na początku XX wieku i porusza wiele aktualnych ówcześnie tematów. Powieści te są więc nie tylko okazją do poznania nowych krain, ale także zapoznania się z historią. Wyruszcie w drogę z młodym poszukiwaczem przygód oraz z dobrym przyjacielem jego ojca, Janem Smugą, sięgając po dostępne na Woblink książki "Tomek w krainie kangurów", "Tomek u źródeł Amazonki" czy "Tomek na tropach Yeti!". Popularności dzieł Szklarskiego dorównuje seria "Pan Samochodzik" Zbigniewa Nienackiego. Powieści Henryka Sienkiewicza, Jacka Londona (na przykład "Zew krwi"), Anthony'ego Doerra ("Światło, którego nie widać") czy Roberta Harrisa ("Wielka ucieczka") udowadniają, że cechy gatunkowe powieści przygodowo-podróżniczej skutecznie można łączyć także z innymi typami twórczości literackiej.
Jakie więc są polecane książki przygodowe i podróżnicze, od których nie można się oderwać? Do klasyki powieści przygodowej zdecydowanie zaliczyć należy "Przygody Hucka Finna" Marka Twaina, "Wyspę skarbów" Louisa Roberta Stevensona" czy "Przypadki Robinsona Crusoe" Daniela Defoe. "Zaginiony świat" Artura Conana Doyle'a to z kolei powieść fantasy, której fabuła zainspirowała takie dzieła jak "King Kong" czy "Park Jurajski". Wyjątkowe połączenie gatunków prezentuje także Andrzej Pilipiuk w swoim cyklu "Norweski dziennik", przeznaczonym przede wszystkim dla młodzieży. Historia rozgrywa się w Polsce w połowie XX wieku i łączy niezwykłe przygody z elementami kryminału, a nawet fantastyki. Na tą wyjątkową trylogię składają się ebooki "Norweski dziennik. Ucieczka", "Norweski dziennik. Obce ścieżki" oraz "Norweski dziennik. Północne wiatry". Przykłady powieści przygodowej można by mnożyć bez końca - równie wiele znajdziecie ich na Woblink w formatach książek papierowych, audiobooków lub ebooków!