The Last of the Mohicans

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Courier Corporation, May 23, 2012 - Fiction - 336 pages

A massacre at a colonial garrison, the kidnapping of two pioneer sisters by Iroquois tribesmen, the treachery of a renegade brave, and the ambush of innocent settlers create an unforgettable, spine-tingling picture of American frontier life in this classic 18th-century adventure — the most popular of James Fenimore Cooper's Leatherstocking Tales.
First published in 1826, the story — set in the forests of upper New York State during the French and Indian War — movingly portrays the relationship between Hawkeye, a gallant, courageous woodsman, and his loyal Mohican friends, Chingachgook and Uncas. Embroiled in one of the war's bloody battles, they attempt to lead the abducted Munro sisters to safety but find themselves instead in the midst of a final, tragic confrontation between rival war parties.
Imaginative and innovative, The Last of the Mohicans quickly became the most widely read work of the day, solidifying the popularity of America's first successful novelist in the United States and Europe. Required reading in many American literature classics, the novel presents a stirring picture of a vanishing people and the end to a way of life in the eastern forests.

 

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Contents

CHAPTER 1
1
CHAPTER 2
10
CHAPTER 3
18
CHAPTER 4
26
CHAPTER 5
34
CHAPTER 6
42
CHAPTER 8
62
CHAPTER 9
71
CHAPTER 19
176
CHAPTER 20
187
CHAPTER 21
197
CHAPTER 22
206
CHAPTER 23
216
CHAPTER 24
227
CHAPTER 25
237
CHAPTER 26
248

CHAPTER 10
79
CHAPTER 11
89
CHAPTER 12
100
CHAPTER 13
112
CHAPTER 14
122
CHAPTER 15
134
CHAPTER 16
144
CHAPTER 17
154
CHAPTER 18
166
CHAPTER 27
257
CHAPTER 28
266
CHAPTER 29
275
CHAPTER 30
286
CHAPTER 31
296
CHAPTER 32
304
CHAPTER 33
317
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