UNLIMITED Audiobooks and eBooks

Over 40,000 books & works on all major devices

Get ALL YOU CAN for FREE for 30 days!

The Room with the Little Door

Roland Burnham Molineux

How does All You Can Books work?

All You Can Books gives you UNLIMITED access to over 40,000 Audiobooks, eBooks, and Foreign Language courses. Download as many audiobooks, ebooks, language audio courses, and language e-workbooks as you want during the FREE trial and it's all yours to keep even if you cancel during the FREE trial. The service works on any major device including computers, smartphones, music players, e-readers, and tablets. You can try the service for FREE for 30 days then it's just $19.99 per month after that. So for the price everyone else charges for just 1 book, we offer you UNLIMITED audio books, e-books and language courses to download and enjoy as you please. No restrictions.

Book Excerpt: 
. . .They say I wrote it. Undoubtedly it will appear in evidence against me in case of a new trial—hearsay evidence is “great stuff”:

DAWN. When morning comes, and Joe pounds on the bar, Calling me back from happy dreamland far; Although “they say” that two were killed by me, How I regret I cannot make it three!

42The following admirable pastoral was written by a gentleman with a longing for the delights of rural life—or life of any other kind:

MY ONION. I love to see my onion grow And send its shoots up in the air. It is a homely plant, I know, But yet its stalks are green and fair. They say the rose would smell as If called by any other name, And so to make my joy complete; A rose and onion are the same. For you may call it what you like, By any name that&. . . Read More

Community Reviews

Fun read about a man's experiences on death row during the turn of the 20th century New York. Familiarity with what brought the author to death row would help, but fine as a standalone. I actually had some familiarity with the case as I had read a blog about it before reading this, and as I write th

An odd and interesting little book that combines the author's personal philosophy, black humor, and descriptions of the death house conditions. Both the main text and the afterward by a journalist assume the reader's familiarity with Molineux's murder trials, so there are a lot of questions that are