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    <title>Fictionwise: Excellence in eBooks: Best-Selling Titles From Telltale Weekly</title>
    <link>http://www.Fictionwise.com</link>
    <description>Fictionwise.com: Best-Selling Titles From Telltale Weekly</description>
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<title>1) A Dog's Tale by Mark Twain</title>
<link>http://www.Fictionwise.com/ebooks/ebook27951.htm</link>
<description>"My father was a St. Bernard, my mother was a collie, but I am a Presbyterian. This is what my mother told me, I do not know these nice distinctions myself..." A funny, sweet short story by the incomparable Mark Twain. Read by Alex Wilson.</description>
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<title>2) The Curious Case of Benjamin Button [Unabridged] by F. Scott Fitzgerald</title>
<link>http://www.Fictionwise.com/ebooks/ebook78778.htm</link>
<description>Benjamin Button is born as a fully grown man and for the next seventy years grows toward infancy. One of Fitzgerald's most famous stories. Read by Alex Wilson. First published in Collier's Weeky.</description>
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<title>3) The Time Machine by H. G. Wells</title>
<link>http://www.Fictionwise.com/ebooks/ebook28648.htm</link>
<description>Unabridged reading of the first science fiction time travel novel. An amateur scientist discovers that just as he may travel around in the three physical dimensions, he may also travel through the fourth--time. These are his adventures and discoveries through time. Read by James Spencer of Active Voicing.</description>
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<title>4) Civil Disobedience by Henry David Thoreau</title>
<link>http://www.Fictionwise.com/ebooks/ebook27953.htm</link>
<description>Originally entitled "Resistance to Civil Government," the classic libertarian essay on self-reliance, advocating the active refusal to disobey unjust laws. Read by Alex Wilson.</description>
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<title>5) When the World Was Young by Jack London</title>
<link>http://www.Fictionwise.com/ebooks/ebook54281.htm</link>
<description>"And then the thing happened--the thing unthinkable and unexpected." London's speculative story about the frightening, dual nature of man. Read by William Coon.</description>
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<title>6) The Pit and the Pendulum by Edgar Allan Poe</title>
<link>http://www.Fictionwise.com/ebooks/ebook29499.htm</link>
<description>Poe's classic horror tale about one soul's torment as he awaits execution in a Spanish Inquisition torture chamber. Read by Alex Wilson.</description>
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<title>7) On the Decay of the Art of Lying by Mark Twain</title>
<link>http://www.Fictionwise.com/ebooks/ebook28927.htm</link>
<description>A humorous essay, read by Alex Wilson</description>
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<title>8) Other Voices, Other Worlds by Bruce Boston</title>
<link>http://www.Fictionwise.com/ebooks/ebook28760.htm</link>
<description>An 18-poem audio chapbook by the Grand Master of science fiction poetry. Read by the author and set to music by Jack Poley. Includes readings of "For Spacers Snarled in the Hair of Comets" (1985 Rhysling Award Winner), "The FTL Addict Fixes" (1984 Rhysling Award Nominee), and "The Evolution of the Death Murals" (1986 Rhysling Award Nominee), as well as "The Alchemist Is Born in a Sudden Changing of Seasons," "The Alchemist in Transit," "The Alchemist Discovers a Universal Solvent," "A Thousand Faces," "The Alchemist Among Us," "And Soon a Wolf For Every Door," "Mean Time 2000," "Beyond Procreation," "The Beserker Enters a Plea," "The Eyes of the Pilot," "The Star Drifter Grounded," "From the Double Ruins of Helix," "Against the Ebon Rush of Night," "The Knowledge at Londrai," and "Luminaries." These poems previously appeared in Poems in this collection first appeared in Asimov's SF, Amazing Stories, Aboriginal SF, Berkely Poets Cooperative, Lost Roads, The Magazine of Speculative Poetry, StarLine, Velocities, and Weird Tales.</description>
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<title>9) The Ransom of Red Chief by O. Henry</title>
<link>http://www.Fictionwise.com/ebooks/ebook27952.htm</link>
<description>"It looked like a good thing: but wait till I tell you. We were down South, in Alabama--Bill Driscoll and myself-when this kidnapping idea struck us. It was, as Bill afterward expressed it, during a moment of temporary mental apparition; but we didn't find that out till later." The classic humorous tale about a kidnapping gone awry by the beloved O Henry. Read by Alex Wilson.</description>
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<title>10) Lecture to Art Students by Oscar Wilde</title>
<link>http://www.Fictionwise.com/ebooks/ebook28173.htm</link>
<description>With a professional's insight, an opinionated mind, and not a small amount of trademark dry wit, Oscar Wilde offers his advice on "what makes an artist and what does the artist make; what are the relations of the artist to his surroundings, what is the education the artist should get, and what is the quality of a good work of art." Read by Damian Hess.</description>
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