Books and Stories
- This list may not be complete.
- Sinful Peck, Novel; Publisher: Harper & Brothers, New York - London 1903
- Spun-Yarn: Sea Stories, Anthology; Publisher: Harper & Brothers, New York - London 1898
- The Slumber of a Soul: A Tale of a Mate and a Cook
- The Survival of the Fittest
- A Creature of Circumstance
- The Derelict "Neptune"
- Honor Among Thieves
- Over the Border, Anthology; Publisher: McClure's Magazine and Metropolitan Magazine (Unknown publishing date)
- The Last Battleship
- Absolute Zero
- Over the Border
- The Fire Worshiper
- The Baby
- The Grinding of the Mills
- The Equation
- The Twins
- The Brothers
- Kimset
- The Mate of His Soul
- The Voices
- The Sleep Walker
- Shipmates, Anthology; Publisher: D. Appleton and Company, New York 1901
- The Nuisance
- The Fool Killer
- The Devil and His Due
- Polarity: A Tale of Two Brunettes
- A Tale of a Pigtail
- The Man at the Wheel
- The Day of the Dog
- At the End of the Man-rope
- A Fall From Grace
- The Dutch Port Watch
- On the Forecastle Deck
- Land Ho!, Anthology; Publisher: New York, London, Harper & Brothers 1896-1905 containint:
- The Dollar
- The Ship-Owner
- The Wave
- The Cook and the Captain
- The Line of Least Resistance
- The Lobster
- On Board The “Athol”
- The Magnetized Man
- The Mistake
- The Submarine Destroyer
- The Dancer
- On the Rio Grande
- Where Angels Fear to Tread and Other Stories of the Sea, anthology published 1899, The Century Co., containing:
- Where angels fear to tread
- The brain of the battle-ship
- The wigwag message
- The trade-wind
- Salvage
- Between the Millstones
- The Battle of the Monsters
- From the royal-yard down
- Needs must when the devil drives
- When Greek meets Greek
- Primordial
- Masters of Men, published 1901, Curtis Publishing Co.
- Book I - The Age of Stone
- Book II - The Age of Iron
- Book III - Barbarism
- Book IV - Civilization
- Futility, or the Wreck of the Titan (In 1912 Futility was renamed Wreck of the Titan.) containing:
- The wreck of the Titan
- The Pirates
- Beyond the Spectrum
- In the Valley of the Shadow
- Down to the Sea, published 1905, Harper and Brothers, containing:
- The Closing of the Circuit
- A Cow, Two Men, and a Parson
- The Rivals
- A Chemical Comedy
- A Hero Of The Cloth
- The Subconscious Finnegan
- The Torpedo
- The Submarine
- Fifty Fathoms Down
- The Enemies
- The Vitality of Dennis
- The Helix
- The Shark
- The Mutiny
- The Grain Ship, anthology published 1914, McKinley, Stone and Mackenzie, NY, containing:
- The Grain Ship
- From the Darkness and the Depths
- Noah's Ark
- The Finishing Touch
- The Rock
- The Argonauts
- The Married Man
- The Triple Alliance
- Shovels and Bricks
- Extracts from Noah's Logs
- Three Laws and the Golden Rule containing:
- The Three Laws and the Golden Rule
- The Americans
- Dignity
- The Honeymoon Ship
- The Third Mate
- Through the Deadlight
- The Hairy Devil
- The Slumber of a Soul
- Honor Among Thieves
- The Survival of the Fittest
- A Creature of Circumstance
Read more about this topic: Morgan Robertson
Famous quotes containing the words books and, books and/or stories:
“Unusual precocity in children, is usually the result of an unhealthy state of the brain; and, in such cases, medical men would now direct, that the wonderful child should be deprived of all books and study, and turned to play or work in the fresh air.”
—Catherine E. Beecher (18001878)
“My residence was more favorable, not only to thought, but to serious reading, than a university; and though I was beyond the range of the ordinary circulating library, I had more than ever come within the influence of those books which circulate round the world, whose sentences were first written on bark, and are now merely copied from time to time on to linen paper.”
—Henry David Thoreau (18171862)
“Every one of my friends had a bad day somewhere in her history she wished she could forget but couldnt. A very bad mother day changes you forever. Those were the hardest stories to tell. . . . I could still see the red imprint of his little bum when I changed his diaper that night. I stared at my hand, as if they were alien parts of myself . . . as if they had betrayed me. From that day on, I never hit him again.”
—Mary Kay Blakely (20th century)