Learn To Speed Read Book Cover hero  

Learn To Speed Read

 

A six-week course to increase your reading speed and comprehension.

Read the entire book for FREE! Print it out, share it with your friends, email it to family, etc. It sports a Creative Commons License so that you can share it digitally with anyone, without fear of persecution. Enjoy!

Read It:

Krismadden.com
GoogleBooks
Scribd

Download It:

Krismadden.com
GoogleBooks
Scribd

Buy It:

KrisMadden.com
Amazon.com
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

The Truth About An Author Book Cover hero  

The Truth About An Author

 

Originally published anonymously in the columns of The 'Academy', and reprinted years afterward, under the author's name, Bennett gives an unabashed account of his early struggles and successes on his way to becoming an English literary giant. His autobiography sheds light on what it meant to be an English writer around the turn the century.

Read the entire book for FREE! Print it out, share it with your friends, email it to family, etc. It sports a Creative Commons License so that you can share it digitally with anyone, without fear of persecution. Enjoy!

Read It:
Scribd

Download It:
Scribd

Buy It:

KrisMadden.com
Amazon.com
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Heart Of Darkness

The complete text reformatted for both "practice reading" and "performance reading"

Description

"Heart of Darkness tells of an Englishman who went out to the deadly West Coast of Africa to become the captain of a river steamboat. His experience is weird and interesting.

Rascality, mismanagement, cruelty and pestilence make of the river settlements one of those hells which only a healthy-minded man like the writer can profitably depict, and none can make real but one possessed of a striking imagination.

Mystery is there in abundance, and something wholly regional of horror, which the reader who knows not the nightmare of the tropics must inadequately realize. The story is a very fine piece of impressionist's work, and throughout that impressionism, like the fever in the jungle-river mist, lurks something sinister and swift, which compels attention; yet which, when all is said, seems a thing of mood rather than a thing of truth."

- The Reader: an illustrated monthly magazine


COMING SOON!