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E. M. (Edith Maude) Hull
Edith Maude Hull was a British writer best known for her romance novel "The Sheik" (1919), which became a bestseller and later inspired a popular film adaptation starring Rudolph Valentino. Her work, often set in exotic desert locales, helped popularize the "desert romance" genre, blending themes of adventure, passion, and cultural conflict. Despite her fame, Hull wrote under the pseudonym E.M. Hull and maintained a relatively private life, rarely seeking the spotlight. She went on to write several more novels, though none achieved the same iconic status as "The Sheik."
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CHAPTER I "Are you coming in to watch the dancing, Lady Conway?" "I most decidedly am not. I thoroughly disapprove of the expedition of which this dance is the inauguration. I consider that even by contemplating such a tour alone into the desert with no chaperon or attendant of her own sex, with only native camel drivers and servants, Diana Mayo is behaving with a recklessness and...
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CHAPTER I The American yacht lying off the harbour at Yokohama was brilliantly lit from stem to stern. Between it and the shore the reflection of the full moon glittered on the water up to the steps of the big black landing-stage. The glamour of the eastern night and the moonlight combined to lend enchantment to a scene that by day is blatant and tawdry, and the countless coloured lamps twinkling along...
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