laughedelic rated Madame de Sade: 3 stars

Madame de Sade by Yukio Mishima
Madame de Sade is a 1965 play written by Yukio Mishima. It was first published in English, translated by Donald …
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Madame de Sade is a 1965 play written by Yukio Mishima. It was first published in English, translated by Donald …

Aldous Huxley: Point counter point. (1971, Chatto & Windus)
Point Counter Point is a novel by Aldous Huxley, first published in 1928. It is Huxley's longest novel, and was …

The Doors of Perception is an autobiographical book written by Aldous Huxley. Published in 1954, it elaborates on his psychedelic …

Isaac Asimov's I, Robot launches readers on an adventure into a not-so-distant future where man and machine , struggle to …

Written from 1852 to 1856, this autobiographical novel was Tolstoy's first publication. The early life of Nikolai, the son of …

A man who struggles with insomnia meets a colorful extremist, and they create a secret organization together.
Chuck Palahniuk …

Hermann Hesse wrote Siddhartha after he traveled to India in the 1910s. It tells the story of a young boy …

H. G. Wells, H. G. Wells (Duplicate): Wells:The Time Machine (Paperback, Everyman)
The Time Traveller, a dreamer obsessed with traveling through time, builds himself a time machine and, much to his surprise, …

Albert Camus: [1948 Modern Library Edition] The Plague by Albert Camus; Translated from the French by Stuart Gilbert (1948, ML)
The Plague (French: La Peste) is a novel by Albert Camus, published in 1947, that tells the story of a …

Nineteen Eighty-Four: A Novel, often referred to as 1984, is a dystopian social science fiction novel by the English novelist …

When an army of invading Martians lands in England, panic and terror seize the population. As the aliens traverse the …