Author:Henry Milner Rideout

Novels

 * The Siamese Cat (1907)


 * Admiral's Light (1907)*
 * Dragon's Blood (1909)*
 * The Twisted Foot (1910)
 * White Tiger (1915)
 * The Far Cry (1916)
 * Tin Cowrie Dass (1918)
 * The Key of the Fields; and Boldero (1918)
 * The Key of the Fields (1918)
 * Boldero (1918)
 * Fern Seed (1920)
 * The Foot-Path Way (1920)
 * The Winter Bell (1922)
 * Barbry (1923)

Short stories and collections

 * Beached Keels (1906) (novellas, first published individually  in The Atlantic Monthly)
 * Blue Peter
 * Wild Justice (1903)
 * Captain Christy


 * "Bull's Eye" (1909)
 * "Fair Play" (1910)
 * "The Hand of Glory" (1915)
 * "The Rainbow" (1915)
 * "Parimban's Daughter" (1916)
 * "The Camellia Tree" (1916)
 * "Hury Seke" (1917)
 * "After Dark" (1918)
 * "Goliah" (1918)
 * "Surprising Grace" (1918)
 * "The Golden Wreath"(1919)
 * "Saxby Gale" (1918)
 * "Fortune's Darling" (1919)
 * "Runa's Holiday" (1919)
 * "The Toad" (1920)

Works from magazines

 * "Getting into line" (1905, Leslies)
 * "The Padre's Volcano" (1906, Everybody's)
 * "The Ruin of Harry Benbow" (1906, Atlantic Monthly)
 * "'Hantu'" (1906, The Atlantic Monthly), (Included in The Spinner's Book of Fiction, 1907)
 * "The Man-Eater" ((1924 July, McCall's Magazine) (ss)
 * "Old Things" (1925 April 25, The Saturday Evening Post) (ss)
 * "The Seeds of Time" (1925 Jan 10, The Saturday Evening Post) (ss)
 * Longer works
 * Fern Seed (1921 April 16–30, The Saturday Evening Post) (3-part serial)
 * The Winter Bell (Saturday Evening Post serial) (1922 Jan 28–Feb 11, The Saturday Evening Post) (3-part serial)
 * Dulcarnon (Saturday Evening Post serial) (1925 May 2–23, The Saturday Evening Post) (4-part serial)

Non-fiction

 * Letters of Thomas Gray: selected with a biographical notice (1899)
 * William Jones: Indian, Cowboy, American Scholar, and Anthropologist in the Field (1911)

With Charles Townsend Copeland

 * The Princess; a Medley (by Alfred Tennyson) (1899; as co-editor)
 * Selections from Byron, Wordsworth, Shelley, Keats, and Browning (1909; as co-editor
 * Freshman English and Theme-correcting in Harvard college