Mór Jókai

Mór Jókai Móricz Jókay of Ásva (18 February 1825 – 5 May 1904), known as Mór Jókai, was a Hungarian novelist, dramatist and revolutionary. Outside of Hungary, he was also known as Maurice Jókai or Maurus Jokai or Mauritius Jókai. He was a leader of the outbreak of the Hungarian Revolution of 1848 in Pest. His romantic novels became widely popular among the elite of Victorian England, where he was often compared to Charles Dickens by the press. One of his most famous admirers was Queen Victoria herself. Provided by Wikipedia
1
by Jókai, Mór 1825-1904
Published 1849
Book
2
by Jókai, Mór, 1825-1904.
Published 1850
Book
3
by Jókai, Mór, 1825-1904.
Published 1856
Book
4
by Jókai, Mór, 1825-1904.
Published 1856
Book
6
by Jókai, Mór, 1825-1904
Published 1871
Book
7
by Jókai, Mór 1825-1904
Published 1872
Fulltext
eBook
8
by Jókai, Mór 1825-1904
Published 1873
Book
9
by Jókai, Mór 1825-1904
Published 1873
Book
10
by Jókai, Mór, 1825-1904
Published 1873
Book
11
by Jókai, Mór 1825-1904
Published 1874
Book
12
by Jókai, Mór 1825-1904
Published 1874
Book
13
by Jókai, Mór 1825-1904
Published 1874
Fulltext
eBook
14
by Jókai, Mór, 1825-1904
Published 1874
Book
15
by Jókai, Mór, 1825-1904.
Published 1875
Book
16
by Jókai, Mór 1825-1904
Published 1875
Book
17
by Jókai, Mór 1825-1904
Published 1875
Book
18
Published 1875
Other Authors: '; ...Jókai, Mór 1825-1904...
Book
20
by Jókai, Mór 1825-1904
Published 1877
Book