Author:Henry Milner Rideout
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Works
[edit]Novels
[edit]- The Siamese Cat (1907)
- Admiral's Light (1907)* (external scan)
- Dragon's Blood (1909)* (external scan)
- The Twisted Foot (1910) (external scan)
- White Tiger (1915)
- The Far Cry (1916) (external scan)
- Tin Cowrie Dass (1918) (external scan)
- The Key of the Fields; and Boldero (1918) (external scan)
- The Key of the Fields (1918)
- Boldero (1918)
- Fern Seed (1920) (external scan)
- The Foot-Path Way (1920)
- The Winter Bell (1922)
- Barbry (1923)
Short stories and collections
[edit]- Beached Keels (1906) (novellas, first published individually in The Atlantic Monthly) (transcription project)
- "Bull's Eye" (1909)
- "Fair Play" (1910)
- "The Hand of Glory" (1915)
- "The Rainbow" (1915)
- "Parimban's Daughter" (1916)
- "The Camellia Tree" (1916)
- "Hury Seke" (1917)
- "After Dark" (1918)
- "Goliah" (1918)
- "Surprising Grace" (1918)
- "The Golden Wreath"(1919)
- "Saxby Gale" (1918)
- "Fortune's Darling" (1919)
- "Runa's Holiday" (1919)
- "The Toad" (1920)
Works from magazines
[edit]- "Getting into line" (1905, Leslies)
- "The Padre's Volcano" (1906, Everybody's)
- "The Ruin of Harry Benbow" (1906, Atlantic Monthly)
- "'Hantu'" (1906, The Atlantic Monthly), (Included in The Spinner's Book of Fiction, 1907)
- "The Man-Eater" ((1924 July, McCall's Magazine) (ss)
- "Old Things" (1925 April 25, The Saturday Evening Post) (ss)
- "The Seeds of Time" (1925 Jan 10, The Saturday Evening Post) (ss)
- Longer works
- Fern Seed (1921 April 16–30, The Saturday Evening Post) (3-part serial)
- The Winter Bell (Saturday Evening Post serial) (1922 Jan 28–Feb 11, The Saturday Evening Post) (3-part serial)
- Dulcarnon (Saturday Evening Post serial) (1925 May 2–23, The Saturday Evening Post) (4-part serial)
Non-fiction
[edit]- Letters of Thomas Gray: selected with a biographical notice (1899) (external scan)
- William Jones: Indian, Cowboy, American Scholar, and Anthropologist in the Field (1911) (external scan)
- The Princess; a Medley (by Alfred Tennyson) (1899; as co-editor) (external scan)
- Selections from Byron, Wordsworth, Shelley, Keats, and Browning (1909; as co-editor (external scan)
- Freshman English and Theme-correcting in Harvard college (external scan)
Some or all works by this author are in the public domain in the United States because they were published before January 1, 1929.
This author died in 1927, so works by this author are in the public domain in countries and areas where the copyright term is the author's life plus 96 years or less. These works may be in the public domain in countries and areas with longer native copyright terms that apply the rule of the shorter term to foreign works.
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