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Les Diaboliques (The She-Devils) is a collection of short stories written by Barbey d'Aurevilly and published in France in 1874. Each story features a woman who commits an act of violence, or revenge, or some other crime. It is considered d'Aurevilly's masterpiece. [1]
As the LibriVox forum says: "We like to think LibriVox might be interpreted as 'child of the voice', and 'free voice'. Finally, the other link we like is 'library' so you could imagine it to mean Library of Voice." [9] There has been no decision or consensus by LibriVox founders or the community of volunteers for a single pronunciation of LibriVox.
In the 1920s, Anton Petrovich, a Russian expatriate residing in Berlin, returns from a business trip to a distressing discovery: his wife has been unfaithful with a friend named Berg. Overwhelmed by anger, Anton confronts Berg, demanding he leave. He leaves a note for his unfaithful wife, instructing her to depart as well.
Revenge: Eleven Dark Tales (寡黙な死骸みだらな弔い, Kamoku na shigai, Midara na tomurai) is a collection of interconnected short stories by Yōko Ogawa. It was published in Japan in 1998, [1] and in the United States by Picador in 2013. Stephen Snyder translated the book into English.
Fiction about revenge, committing a harmful action against a person or group in response to a grievance, be it real or perceived. Wikimedia Commons has media related to Revenge in fiction . Pages in this category should be moved to subcategories where applicable.
One inventive woman decided that she could do a lot better than coal for her naughty, cheating boyfriend. Rather than confront him about his philandering, she printed out his conversations.
The Stories of Vladimir Nabokov (in some British editions, The Collected Stories) is a posthumous collection of every known short story that Vladimir Nabokov ever wrote, with the exception of "The Enchanter". In the current printing of this work, sixteen stories not previously published in English are translated by the author's son, Dmitri Nabokov
The Story of My Wife: The Reminiscences of Captain Storr is a Hungarian novel by Milán Füst. First published in Hungary in 1946, it was eventually translated into English by Ivan Sanders in 1988. [1] The book is written as if it is a memoir and tells the story of captain Jacob Storr, a Dutch man who suspects his wife of infidelity.