Who ever said the Internet was just porno and right wing nuts?? ;>
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To: KantianBurke
Nice... do you know www.abebooks.com ? Great place for finding old/used/out-of-print books
To: KantianBurke
Who ever said the Internet was just porno and right wing nuts?? ;>There are right wing nuts too?
I thought it was just porn.
BTW--what does "literary" mean?
I agree, Bartleby's is a true treasure trove.
3 posted on
11/23/2001 1:50:51 PM PST by
Yankee
To: KantianBurke
Great find! Bookmarked for future use; thanks for sharing.
4 posted on
11/23/2001 1:50:52 PM PST by
uvular
To: KantianBurke
Project Gutenberg also has thousands of Titles (in the public domain) in "text" format.
5 posted on
11/23/2001 1:52:22 PM PST by
TomGuy
To: KantianBurke
That site rocks!! The whole Harvard Classics online- kewl.
7 posted on
11/23/2001 1:55:36 PM PST by
mafree
To: KantianBurke
Thanks. Bookmarked!
To: KantianBurke
Who ever said the Internet was just porno and right wing nuts??They've got the Decameron online....
To: KantianBurke
Good post. Actually the DU most times just refers to Freepers as wingnuts.
12 posted on
11/23/2001 1:58:24 PM PST by
vladog
To: KantianBurke
BTTT
To: KantianBurke
Who ever said the Internet was just porno and right wing nuts?? What, no porno? And you call it literature?
To: KantianBurke
Very Nice...thanks.
20 posted on
11/23/2001 2:09:34 PM PST by
SoDak
To: KantianBurke
23 posted on
11/23/2001 2:13:06 PM PST by
Fred25
To: KantianBurke
24 posted on
11/23/2001 2:13:28 PM PST by
JCG
To: KantianBurke
26 posted on
11/23/2001 2:16:36 PM PST by
Fred25
To: KantianBurke
28 posted on
11/23/2001 2:17:57 PM PST by
Fred25
To: sistergoldenhair
ping
29 posted on
11/23/2001 2:24:07 PM PST by
facedown
To: KantianBurke
Thanks for the good find.
To: KantianBurke
To: KantianBurke
Its there! What about an English grammar handbook? Its there or it's there? (Bookmarked anyway.)
To: KantianBurke; Fred25
It is a great site. It not only has the "Five Foot Shelf" of Harvard Classics, but over two dozen reference books, Oxford Anthologies of Poetry, collections of quotations, the inaugural addresses of the presidents, the books Theodore Roosevelt wrote, and much else besides.
If you like Project Avalon's collection of historical documents, make sure you check out The Liberty Library of Constitutional Classics, The Founders' Constitution, The Making of America, OKU Historical Documents, LOC Searchable Historical Documents, and A Century of Lawmaking. Not light reading, but useful if you ever get in an argument about government or history. American history fans may also find some surprises at The Atlantic Magazine's archives, if they look around a little.
39 posted on
11/23/2001 3:05:37 PM PST by
x
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