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| Popular Astronomy (UK magazine) | Popular Astronomy is the bi-monthly magazine of the UK's Society for Popular Astronomy published in January March May July September and November. Before 2011 it was a quarterly publication. Before 1981 the journal was known as Hermes and earlier still it was called The Junior Astronomer.The magazine aims to present the science in plain English avoiding unnecessary jargon. |
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| Bury Me in a Free Land | Bury Me in a Free Land is a poem by Frances Harper an African American abolitionist and poet.Make me a grave where'er you willIn a lowly plain or a lofty hill;Make it among earth's humblest gravesBut not in a land where men are slaves.I could not rest if around my graveI heard the steps of a trembling slave;His shadow above my silent tombWould make it a place of fearful gloom.I could not rest if I heard the treadOf a coffle gang to the shambles ledAnd the mother's shriek of wild despairRise like a curse on the trembling air.I could not sleep if I saw the lashDrinking her blood at each fearful gashAnd I saw her babes torn from her breastLike trembling doves from their parent nest.I'd shudder and start if I heard the bayOf bloodhounds seizing their human preyAnd I heard the captive plead in vainAs they bound afresh his galling chain.If I saw young girls from their mother's armsBartered and sold for their youthful charmsMy eye would flash with a mournful flameMy death-paled cheek grow red with shame.I would sleep dear friends where bloated mightCan rob no man of his dearest right;My rest shall be calm in any graveWhere none can call his brother a slave.I ask no monument proud and highTo arrest the gaze of the passers-by;All that my yearning spirit cravesIs bury me not in a land of slaves. |
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| Dark Universe (novel) | Dark Universe is a post-apocalyptic science fiction novel by Daniel F. Galouye first published in 1961. It is currently in publication by Victor Gollancz Ltd as a collector's edition.The book was nominated for a Hugo award in 1962. |
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| European Biophysics Journal | The European Biophysics Journal is published by Springer Science+Business Media on behalf of the European Biophysical Societies Association. The journal publishes papers in the field of biophysics defining this as the study of biological phenomena using physical methods and concepts. It publishes original papers reviews and letters. |
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| Jinsei | Jinsei (人生 lit. (Human) Life) subtitled La Bonne Vie is a Japanese light novel series written by Ougyo Kawagishi and illustrated by Meruchi Nanase. As of February 2014 seven volumes have been published by Shogakukan under their Gagaga Bunko imprint. Both an anime adaptation and manga adaptation have been announced. |
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| Escape from Memory | Escape from Memory is a young adult novel by Margaret Peterson Haddix. It was published in 2003 by Simon & Schuster. |
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| Einstein's Gift | Einstein's Gift is a play written by Canadian playwright Vern Thiessen in 2003. Through the recollections of Albert Einstein the play focuses on the life and career of German chemist Dr. Fritz Haber who helped improve living conditions with his work on nitrogen fixation. His work was later used by the German army to produce chlorine gas used in Second Battle of Ypres in the First World War. As Dr. |
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| New Zealand Local Government | New Zealand Local Government is a monthly trade magazine published by Mediaweb an Auckland-based company. It was published by TPL Media from 1964 to 2011 when Mediaweb purchased TPL Media. |
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| Abramowitz and Stegun | Abramowitz and Stegun is the informal name of a mathematical reference work edited by Milton Abramowitz and Irene Stegun of the United States National Bureau of Standards (now the National Institute of Standards and Technology). |
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| Socialism (book) | Socialism: An Economic and Sociological Analysis is a book by Austrian School economist and libertarian thinker Ludwig von Mises first published in German by Gustav Fischer Verlag in Jena in 1922 under the title Die Gemeinwirtschaft: Untersuchungen über den Sozialismus. It was translated into English from the second reworked German edition (Jena: Gustav Fischer Verlag 1932) by J. Kahane and published by Jonathan Cape in London in 1936. |
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| Eight Months on Ghazzah Street | Eight Months on Ghazzah Street (1988) is the third novel by English author Hilary Mantel who won the Man Booker Prize in 2009. It concerns the Englishwoman Frances Shore who moves to Jeddah Saudi Arabia to live with her husband an engineer. |
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| Señor Vivo and the Coca Lord | Señor Vivo and the Coca Lord is a novel by Louis de Bernières first published in 1991. It is the second of his Latin American trilogy following on from The War of Don Emmanuel's Nether Parts and preceding The Troublesome Offspring of Cardinal Guzman. |
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| Raiders of the Nile | Raiders of the Nile is a novel by American author Steven Saylor first published by Minotaur Books in 2014. It is the fourteenth book in his Roma Sub Rosa series of mystery stories set in the final decades of the Roman Republic but the second chronologically. The main character is the Roman sleuth Gordianus the Finder. |
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| Mistborn: The Hero of Ages | Mistborn: The Hero of Ages is the third novel of Brandon Sanderson's Mistborn trilogy released on October 14 2008. It was preceded by Mistborn: The Final Empire and Mistborn: The Well of Ascension. |
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| Laurel's Kitchen | Laurel's Kitchen is a vegetarian cookbook first published in 1976 that contributed to the increasing awareness of vegetarian eating in the US. Its authors were Laurel Robertson Carol Flinders and Bronwen Godfrey and its subtitle was a handbook for vegetarian cookery & nutrition. A second edition The New Laurel's Kitchen was published in 1986. It had the same subtitle and the same first two authors and Brian Ruppenthal was the new third author. The book has sold over a million copies. |
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| Dhaka Courier | The Dhaka Courier (commonly known as the Courier) is a Bangladeshi English-language news magazine. Founded in 1984 it is the longest running English current affairs magazine in the country. Its content is largely focused on politics international affairs economics travel literature society and the arts. |
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| Ad Valvas | Ad Valvas is the college newspaper of the Vrije Universiteit in Amsterdam Netherlands. In print since 1952 it is published every Thursday during the academic year 36 times a year. In 1979 the paper acquired editorial independence and no longer had to answer to the University's Board of Directors. |
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| Bondage Fairies | Bondage Fairies (ボンデージフェアリーズ Bondage Fairies) is an erotic manga about highly sexual human-shaped female forest fairies with wings. It was originally a series in publisher Kubo Shoten's Young Lemon magazine in 1990 where it was titled Insect Hunter. The manga is drawn by Teruo Kakuta (pen name Kondom). The series was later published in the United States with translated English text. |
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| A Turn in the South | A Turn in the South is a travelogue of the American South written by Nobel Prize-winning writer V. S. Naipaul. The book was published in 1989 and is based upon the author's travels in the southern states of the United States.Naipaul has written fiction and non-fiction about life in the Caribbean India Africa and South America. In this book the subject is the U.S.A. including South Carolina Florida Mississippi et cetera. |
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| The Strong Breed | The Strong Breed is one of the best known plays by Wole Soyinka. It is a tragedy that ends with an individual sacrifice for the sake of the communal benefit. The play is centered on the tradition of egungun a Yoruba festival tradition in which a scapegoat of the village carries out the evil of the community and is exiled from the civilization. Eman the play's protagonist takes on the role of carrier knowing it will result in beating and exile. |
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| A veinte años Luz | A veinte años Luz (Twenty years later Luz) is the first novel by Argentinian author Elsa Osorio first published in 1998. The English-language version of her novel My Name is Light was first published in 2003 by Bloomsbury USA. |
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| Greenock Telegraph | The Greenock Telegraph is a local daily newspaper serving Inverclyde (the council area containing the towns of Gourock Greenock and Port Glasgow) Scotland.Founded in 1857 it was the first halfpenny daily newspaper in Britain. It was for a time Greenock Telegraph and Clyde Shipping Gazette owing to the massive amount of maritime traffic moving in and out of Greenock's harbours. |
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| Lalla-Rookh | Lalla Rookh is an Oriental romance by Thomas Moore published in 1817. The title is taken from the name of the heroine of the frame tale the daughter of the 17th-century Mughal emperor Aurangzeb. The work consists of four narrative poems with a connecting tale in prose. |
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| Sharpe's Havoc | Sharpe's Havoc: Richard Sharpe and the Battle of Oporto is a historical novel by Bernard Cornwell set during the Napoleonic Wars. It is the twentieth full-length novel in the series (in order of publication) and takes place between the events of Sharpe's Rifles and Sharpe's Eagle.The book is set largely in Portugal during General Arthur Wellesley's Oporto Campaign in 1809. |
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| Arkham's Masters of Horror | Arkham's Masters of Horror is an anthology of fantasy and horror stories edited by Peter Ruber. It was released by Arkham House in an edition of approximately 4000 copies in 2000. The book includes an introductory essay by Ruber before each story and about its author. Ruber has drawn criticism from the horror/fantasy community for the hostility with which he introduces some authors within the volume - for instance his accusation that H.P. |
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| Curtains for Three | Curtains for Three is a collection of Nero Wolfe mystery novellas by Rex Stout published by the Viking Press in 1951 and itself collected in the omnibus volume Full House (Viking 1955). The book comprises three stories that first appeared in The American Magazine: The Gun with Wings (December 1949) Bullet for One (July 1948) Disguise for Murder (September 1950 as The Twisted Scarf) |
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| The Passion of Michel Foucault | The Passion of Michel Foucault is a biography of the French philosopher Michel Foucault authored by the American philosopher James Miller. It was first published in the United States by Simon & Schuster in 1993.Within the book Miller made the claim that Foucault's experiences in the gay sadomasochism community during the time he taught at Berkeley directly influenced his political and philosophical works. |
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| Equal Danger | Equal Danger (Italian title: Il contesto) is a 1971 detective novel by Leonardo Sciascia where a police inspector investigating a string of murders finds himself involved in existential political intrigues. Set in an indeterminate country this novel is informed by the corrupt politics and Mafia of Sciascia's experiences in 1970s Sicily. |
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| The Vagina Monologues | The Vagina Monologues is an episodic play written by Eve Ensler which ran at the Off Broadway Westside Theatre after a limited run at HERE Arts Center in 1996. Ensler originally starred in the production which was produced by David Stone Nina Essman Dan Markley The Araca Group Willa Shalit and the West Side Theater. When she left the play it was recast with three celebrity monologists. |
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| Ingrid Caven (novel) | Ingrid Caven is a 2000 novel by the French writer Jean-Jacques Schuhl. It received the Prix Goncourt. |
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| Geophysical Journal International | Geophysical Journal International is a monthly peer-reviewed scientific journal published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Royal Astronomical Society and the Deutsche Geophysikalische Gesellschaft (German Geophysical Society). The journal published original research papers research notes letters and book reviews. It was established in 1922. The editor-in-chief is Jeannot Trampert (Utrecht University). |
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| Wisdom's Daughter | Wisdom's Daughter is the final book in the Ayesha series written by Sir H. Rider Haggard published in 1923 by Doubleday Page and Company. |
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| The Princess Diaries Volume VIII: Princess on the Brink | The Princess Diaries Volume VIII: Princess on the Brink released in the United Kingdom as The Princess Diaries: After Eight is a young adult book in the critically acclaimed Princess Diaries series. Written by Meg Cabot it was released in 2007 by Harper Collins Publishers and is the eighth novel in the series. |
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| Pacific Standard | Not to be confused with Reese Witherspoon's film production company Pacific Standard.Pacific Standard formerly Miller-McCune is an American magazine. |
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| On Giants' Shoulders | On Giants' Shoulders was written in 1998 by Melvyn Bragg. The book was assembled after a series of interviews Bragg had with current scientists about the worlds greatest scientists such as Archimedes Isaac Newton and Einstein. Bragg who brands himself as a non-scientist conducted these interviews on BBC Radio 4 for other non-scientists. |
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| View from a Height | View from a Height is a collection of seventeen scientific essays by Isaac Asimov. It was the second of a series of books collecting essays from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction written between 1959 and 1962. It was first published by Doubleday & Company in 1963.The collection includes the essay By Jove! the source of the Asimov misquote describing the Solar System (besides the Sun) as Jupiter plus debris. The actual quote is 4 planets plus debris. |
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| Letters to Felice | Letters to Felice is a book collecting some of Franz Kafka's letters to Felice Bauer from 1912 to 1917. Schocken Books acquired these letters from Felice Bauer in 1955 in addition to roughly half of Kafka's letters to Grete Bloch Bauer's friend. Additional letters to Bloch were acquired at a later date. |
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| Lingvisticae Investigationes | Lingvisticae Investigationes: International Journal of Linguistics and Language Resources is a peer-reviewed academic journal of linguistics published by Benjamins. The journal publishes articles book reviews and summaries of PhD theses. Lingvisticae Investigationes publishes 350 pages a year. There is usually a special issue each year. The founder and former editor-in-chief was Maurice Gross (1977–2001). |
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| The International Journal of Robotics Research | The International Journal of Robotics Research is a peer-reviewed scientific journal that covers research in the field of robotics on topics from sensors and sensory interpretations to kinematics in motion planning. The journal's editor-in-chief is John M. Hollerbach (University of Utah). It was established in 1982 and is currently published by Sage Publications. |
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| Searching for Whitopia | Searching for Whitopia: An Improbable Journey to the Heart of White America is a 2009 non-fiction book by Rich Benjamin. |
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| Commentarii de Bello Gallico | Commentarii de Bello Gallico (English: Notebooks about the Gallic War) is Julius Caesar's firsthand account of the Gallic Wars written as a third-person narrative. In it Caesar describes the battles and intrigues that took place in the nine years he spent fighting local armies in Gaul that opposed Roman domination. |
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| Okojo-san | Okojo-san (オコジョさん) is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by Ayumi Uno and serialized in LaLa. The chapters were collected into eight tankōbon volumes by Hakusensha and released from 1996 to 2005. The series is about an ermine living as a pet in a small apartment complex.Okojo-san was adapted into a 51-episode anime series titled Shiawase Sou no Okojo-san (しあわせソウのオコジョさん) by the Japanese animation studio Radix and aired on TV Tokyo from October 2 2001 to September 24 2002. |
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| Flash for Freedom! | Flash for Freedom! is a 1971 novel by George MacDonald Fraser. It is the third of the Flashman novels. |
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| Blood Rites (novel) | Blood Rites is the 6th book in The Dresden Files Jim Butcher's continuing series about wizard detective Harry Blackstone Copperfield Dresden. |
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| Freddy vs. Jason vs. Ash: The Nightmare Warriors | Freddy vs. Jason vs. Ash: The Nightmare Warriors is a six-issue limited series comic book written by Jeff Katz and James Kuhoric with art by Jason Craig. The series was published by Dynamite Entertainment and DC Comics with imprint by Wildstorm beginning in August 2009 and concluding in December 2009. The Nightmare Warriors is a sequel to Freddy vs. Jason vs. Ash which was published in 2007 and was itself a sequel to the 2003 film Freddy vs. Jason. |
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| How It Happened | How it happened is a 1506-word short story by the author Sir Arthur Ignatius Conan Doyle first published during the First World War at the end of what may be considered to be the Edwardian era in 1918 but Conan Doyle began writing in the Victorian era. This story is considered to be about wilful masculine pride and could also be recognised as a warning about the perils of driving at night and in an unfamiliar vehicle. |
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| Johnny Gone Down | Johnny Gone Down is second novel written by Indian Author Karan Bajaj about an Ivy League Scholar who had a bright future at NASA ahead of him but things seem to take a dramatic turn from an innocent vacation. The protagonist then partakes a series of adventures.[] |
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| Al Madina (newspaper) | Al Madina is an Arabic language newspaper published in Jeddah Saudi Arabia. The paper is one of the oldest newspapers published in the country. |
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| The Gunslinger and the Dark Man | The Gunslinger and the Dark Man is a short story by Stephen King originally published in The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction in November 1981. In 1982 The Gunslinger and the Dark Man was collected with several other stories King published in The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction as The Dark Tower: The Gunslinger. The Gunslinger and the Dark Man formed the fifth and final chapter of the book and was slightly revised for the inclusion. |
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| The Parkersburg News and Sentinel | The Parkersburg News and Sentinel is the primary newspaper in Parkersburg West Virginia United States. It was formed by the merger of the previously separate morning News and afternoon Sentinel on April 25 2009. |
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| Empire (Card novel) | Empire (2006) is a speculative fiction novel by Orson Scott Card. It tells the story of a possible second American Civil War this time between the Right Wing and Left Wing in the near future. It is the first of the two books in The Empire duet followed by Hidden Empire with the video game Shadow Complex bridging the two. |
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| Borderlands (novel) | Borderlands is a 1991 children's historical novel by author Peter Carter Originally published in the UK in 1990 as Leaving Cheyenne it is a study of the American West in 1871 as seen through the eyes of a 14-year-old boy. |
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| Records of the Grand Historian | The Records of the Grand Historian (Taishi gong shu 太史公書 now usually known as the Shiji 史記 – Historical Records) is a comprehensive history of ancient China that covers a 2500-year period from the age of the legendary Yellow Emperor to the reign of Emperor Wu of Han in the 2nd century BC. |
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| 100 People Who Are Screwing Up America | 100 People Who Are Screwing Up America (and Al Franken is #37) is a non-fiction book by Bernard Goldberg that was published in 2005. The book's central idea is to name and blame a long list of specific individuals for making the United States a far more selfish vulgar and cynical place. |
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| The Elements of Java Style | The Elements of Java Style is a book of rules of programming style in the Java computer language. The book was published by Cambridge University Press in January 2000. The book provides conventions for formatting naming documentation programming and packaging.This book is part of a series of books that include The Elements of C# Style and The Elements of C++ Style. |
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| Northern News | The Northern News is a newspaper in Kirkland Lake Ontario Canada. It is owned and published by Sun Media.First published in 1922 as the Northern Daily News it was downsized to fit the population in the readership on June 1 2004. It had been a daily newspaper but now only publishes three times a week.On August 28 2012 the online version of Northern News was revamped to include more current events at the local regional and national level. |
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| Dark Forces (book) | Dark Forces: New Stories of Suspense and Supernatural Horror is an anthology of 23 original horror stories first published by The Viking Press in 1980 and as a paperback by Bantam Books in 1981. It was edited by New York City literary agent Kirby McCauley. Dark Forces won the World Fantasy award for best anthology/collection in 1981 and is celebrated in an essay by Christopher Golden in Horror: Another 100 Best Books edited by Stephen Jones and Kim Newman. |
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| Book of Matches | Book Of Matches is a poetry book written by Simon Armitage first published in 1993 by Faber and Faber. Several poems featured in the book are studied as part of the GCSE English Literature examination in the UK.The book is written in three sections the first (Book of Matches) containing 30 short sonnets. Each is meant to be read within 20 seconds the amount of time it would take for a match to be lit and burn out. |
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| Airframe (novel) | Airframe is a novel by American writer Michael Crichton first published in hardcover in 1996 by Knopf and as a paperback in 1997 by Ballantine Books. The plot follows Casey Singleton a quality assurance vice-president at the fictional aerospace manufacturer Norton Aircraft as she investigates an in-flight accident aboard a Norton-manufactured airliner that leaves three passengers dead and fifty-six injured.Airframe remains one of Crichton's few novels to be unadapted to film. |
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| 1876 (novel) | Gore Vidal's 1876 is the third historical novel in his Narratives of Empire series. It was published in 1976 and details the events of a year described by Vidal himself as probably the low point in our republic's history. |
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| Crusade (Destroyermen novel) | Crusade is the second book of the Destroyermen series. MatthewReddy and the crew of USS Walker (DD-163) are reunited with the destroyer USS Mahan (DD-102) and set out to fight the Grik. Reddy and Walker's marine detachment continue training the Lemurians to defend themselves and take the war to the Grik. The Grik have now taken over the ship that was chasing them the Japanese battlecruiser Amagi. |
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| The Country of the Blind | The Country of the Blind is a short story written by H. G. Wells. It was first published in the April 1904 issue of The Strand Magazine and included in a 1911 collection of Wells's short stories The Country of the Blind and Other Stories. It is one of Wells's best known short stories and features prominently in literature dealing with blindness.Wells later revised the story with the expanded version first published by an English private printer Golden Cockerel Press in 1939. |
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| Justine (Sade) | Justine (or The Misfortunes of Virtue or several other titles: see below) is a classic 1791 novel by Donatien Alphonse François de Sade better known as the Marquis de Sade. There is no standard edition of this text in hardcover having passed into the public domain. The text itself is often incorporated into collections of Sade's work.Justine is set just before the French Revolution in France and tells the story of a young woman who goes under the name of Therese. |
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| Professor Shonku (short story collection) | Professor Shonku is a short story collection by Satyajit Ray featuring the eponymous character Professor Shonku. It was first published in India by NewScript Publications Calcutta in 1965. Of the nine short stories that are part of the collection eight had formerly been published in various editions of the periodical magazine Sandesh and one (namely Professor Shonku o Bhoot) in Ashcharya.The collection contains seven stories to which two other were added in later editions. |
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| Jennifer Hecate Macbeth William McKinley and Me Elizabeth | Jennifer Hecate Macbeth William McKinley and Me Elizabeth is a children's novel by E. L. Konigsburg. It was published by Atheneum Books in 1967 and next year in the UK by Macmillan under the title Jennifer Hecate Macbeth and Me.Jennifer Hecate was the author's first book published the same year as her second book From the Mixed-Up Files of Mrs. Basil E. Frankweiler. |
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| On Pointe | On Pointe is a children's novel written by Lorie Ann Grover published in 2004.It was nominated for the 2006 Dorothy Canfield Fisher Children's Book Award. |
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| Wonka Vision | Wonka Vision was an American music magazine. It was founded in 1998 by Justin Luczejko and ceased publication in 2010. |
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| Život a dílo skladatele Foltýna | Život a dílo skladatele Foltýna (Life and Work of the Composer Foltýn) is an unfinished Czech novel written by Karel Čapek. It was first published posthumously in 1939. It is a fictional biography of a composer Bedřich Foltýn (pseudonym Beda Folten) who perceives himself as a genius and is hopelessly obsessed with an idea to become a great artist and to write a big opera about Biblical Judith. |
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| Journal of British Cinema and Television | The Journal of British Cinema and Television is a triannual academic journal published by Edinburgh University Press in May August and December of each year. It was established in 2004. Themed issues alternate with regular issues and every issue contains papers book reviews interviews and conferences. |
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| Canadian Journal of Physics | The Canadian Journal of Physics is a peer-reviewed scientific journal of physics. It was established in 1929. The journal is published monthly by the NRC Research Press and edited by Michael Steinitz (St. Francis Xavier University). It is also affiliated with the Canadian Association of Physicists. |
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| Journey to Jupiter | Journey to Jupiter is a juvenile science fiction novel the eighth in Hugh Walters' Chris Godfrey of U.N.E.X.A. series. It was published in the UK by Faber in 1965 and in the US by Criterion Books in 1966. |
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| The Green Bible | The Green Bible is an English version of the New Revised Standard Version Bible with a focus on environmental issues and teachings. It was originally published by Harper Bibles on October 7 2008. It is a study Bible featuring essays by N.T. Wright Barbara Brown Taylor Brian McLaren Matthew Sleeth Pope John Paul II and Wendell Berry. |
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| Apocalypso (novel) | Apocalypso is a novel by the British author Robert Rankin. |
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| Scientometrics (journal) | Scientometrics is a peer-reviewed academic journal in the field of scientometrics. The journal publishes original studies short communications preliminary reports review papers letters to the editor and book reviews on scientometrics. It is published by Akadémiai Kiadó and Springer Science+Business Media and was established in 1978. According to the Journal Citation Reports the journal has a 2011 impact factor of 1.966. |
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| Gothic Sports | Gothic Sports is a German manga-styled book created by Anike Hage. It focuses on a young girl named Anya who is adjusting to her new school. When she tries to join various sports teams she's rejected. After she forms her own soccer team thus creating the first Gothic Lolita soccer team. It has been licensed by Tokyopop for English distribution with the first volume being released 1 July 2007. Volume 2 was released on October first and volume 3 was released on January 8 2008. |
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| Spits (newspaper) | Sp!ts pronounced Spits is a tabloid format newspaper freely distributed in trains trams and buses in the Netherlands. Its competitor is Metro. |
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| Richmond Free Press | The Richmond Free Press is an independent newspaper in Richmond Virginia. Published on a weekly basis it is mainly targeted at the city's African-American community. Its main competitor is the Richmond Times-Dispatch owned by Berkshire Hathaway. Raymond H. Boone is the paper's founder editor and publisher. |
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| Summer of the Monkeys | Summer of the Monkeys is a 1976 children's novel written by Wilson Rawls. The book was published by Doubleday (later released by Yearling Books) and was the winner of the William Allen White Book Award and the California Young Reader Medal. |
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| Red Cotton Night-Cap Country | Red Cotton Night-Cap Country or Turf and Towers (1873) is a poem in blank verse by Robert Browning. It tells a story of sexual intrigue religious obsession and violent death in contemporary Paris and Normandy closely based on the true story of the death supposedly by suicide of the jewellery heir Antoine Mellerio. |
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| The Jukebox Queen of Malta | The Jukebox Queen of Malta is the second novel by American author Nicholas Rinaldi first published in 1999 by Bantam Press. |
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| The Banker | The Banker is an English-language monthly international financial affairs publication owned by The Financial Times Ltd. and edited in London. The magazine was first published in January 1926 through founding Editor Brendan Bracken of the Financial News who went on to become the chairman of the Financial Times from 1945-1958.Since its founding the magazine has claimed a dedication to the international perspective through features interviews multi-media applications and events. |
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| Donald Duck Adventures | Donald Duck Adventures was a comic book series featuring the adventures of Donald Duck and his nephews Huey Dewey and Louie. |
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| Science (journal) | Science also widely referred to as Science Magazine is the academic journal of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) and is one of the world's top scientific journals.The peer-reviewed journal first published in 1880 is circulated weekly and has a print subscriber base of around 130000. |
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| Hillsboro Free Press | The Hillsboro Free Press is a local weekly newspaper from Hillsboro Kansas. The paper publishes every Wednesday. It is one of two newspapers in the city the other being the Hillsboro Star-Journal. |
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| Annals of the Faculty of Law in Belgrade | The Annals of the Faculty of Law in Belgrade (Serbian: Анали Правног факултета у Београду) is a peer-reviewed law review published by the University of Belgrade Faculty of Law. The editor-in-chief is Sima Avramović. The journal solicits articles contributions case and legislation comments debates and book reviews on all aspects of law and social sciences. The journal is accessible on electronic databases such as HeinOnline. |
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| The Silly Book | The Silly Book is a children's book by Stoo Hample first published in 1961 and reissued in 2004. It includes silly songs silly names to call people and things silly recipes silly poems silly things to say and silly nothings. Hample's first book it was originally edited by Ursula Nordstrom. |
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| Underworld (comic strip) | Underworld is an adult-themed comic strip written and drawn by the artist Kaz since 1992. It runs in many American alternative weeklies such as the New York Press and the SF Bay Guardian. It features regular characters such as Smoking Cat Sam Snuff Creep Rat Nuzzle Petit Mort and others interacting within an archetypal inner-city environment. |
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| The Magician: The Secrets of the Immortal Nicholas Flamel | The Magician: The Secrets of the Immortal Nicholas Flamel (often shortened to The Magician) is the second novel in the six book fantasy fiction series The Secrets of the Immortal Nicholas Flamel and is the sequel to The Alchemyst. It was released on 5 June 2008 in the United Kingdom and 24 June 2008 in the United States. It was nominated for an Irish Book of the Year Award The Dublin Airport Authority Irish Children's Book of the Year – Senior Category. |
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| Ursule Mirouët | Ursule Mirouët an often overlooked novel belongs to Honoré de Balzac’s great series of 94 novels and short stories La Comédie humaine. First published in 1841 it forms part of his Scènes de la vie de province.The action of the novel takes place in Nemours though with flashbacks to Paris. It is set in the years 1829-1837. |
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| Scanners Live in Vain | Scanners Live in Vain is a science fiction short story by Cordwainer Smith (pen name of Paul Linebarger) set in his Instrumentality of Mankind future history. It was originally published in the magazine Fantasy Book in 1950. It was judged by the Science Fiction Writers of America to be one of the finest short stories prior to 1965 and was included in the anthology The Science Fiction Hall of Fame Volume One 1929–1964. |
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| Machine of Death | Machine of Death is a 2010 collection of science fiction short stories edited by Ryan North Matthew Bennardo and David Malki.All of the stories center around a device which when provided with a blood sample can identify the way a person will die. The machine relays this information by printing a short word or phrase which serves as the title of each story on a small card. |
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| Collected Poems – 2003 edition (Philip Larkin) | This volume edited by Anthony Thwaite contains all of Philip Larkin's poetry published during his lifetime. It consists of the contents of The North Ship The Less Deceived The Whitsun Weddings and High Windows in their original ordering plus two appendices containing all the other poems Larkin published e.g. Aubade. |
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| Journal of Biological Chemistry | The Journal of Biological Chemistry is a weekly peer-reviewed scientific journal that was established in 1905. Since 1925 it is published by the American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology. It covers research in areas of biochemistry and molecular biology. The editors-in-chief are Martha Fedor and Herbert Tabor. All its articles are available free after one year of publication. In press articles are available free on its website immediately after acceptance. |
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| NME | New Musical Express popularly known by the acronym NME created by Theodore Ingham is a British weekly music journalism publication published since March 1952. It started as a music newspaper and gradually moved toward a magazine format during the 1980s and 90s changing from newsprint in 1998. It was the first British paper to include a singles chart in 14 November 1952 edition. In the 1970s it became the best-selling British music newspaper. |
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| The Londoner | The Londoner was a newsletter in the style of a newspaper published by the Mayor of London and delivered free to most households in Greater London United Kingdom.In the words of the Mayor of London's office it was a newsletter for Londoners from the Mayor of London. |
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| Formal Aspects of Computing | Formal Aspects of Computing (FAC) is a peer-reviewed scientific journal published by Springer Science+Business Media covering the area of formal methods and associated topics in computer science. The editors-in-chief are Jim Woodcock and Cliff Jones. The journal is associated with BCS-FACS the British Computer Society Formal Aspects of Computing Science Specialist Group. According to the Journal Citation Reports the journal has a 2010 impact factor of 1.170. |
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| Hayom Yom | Hayom Yom (Hebrew: היום יום Today is day ...) is a calendar for the Hebrew year of 5703 (1942-3) compiled by Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson at the behest of his father-in-law Rabbi Yosef Yitzchok Schneersohn in the winter of 1942.For each day the calendar prescribed sections of Chumash Tehillim and Tanya for study that day; this practice is known in Chabad-Lubavitch as Chitas (חתת). |
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| Swords Against the Shadowland | Swords Against the Shadowland is a fantasy novel by Robin Wayne Bailey featuring Fritz Leiber's sword and sorcery heroes Fafhrd and the Gray Mouser. Chronologically it falls between the first and second volumes of the complete seven volume edition of Leiber's collected stories devoted to the characters. The story is a direct sequel to Ill Met in Lankhmar the last story in Swords and Deviltry and covers some of the same events as The Circle Curse the first story in Swords Against Death. |
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| Aruvu Rezuru: Kikaijikake no Yōseitachi | Aruvu Rezuru: Kikaijikake no Yōseitachi (アルヴ・レズル -機械仕掛けの妖精たち- lit. Arve Rezzle: Mechanized Fairies) is a science fiction light novel series by Yū Yamaguchi that began serialization in 2011. It is released through the electronic magazine BOX-AiR an imprint run by Kodansha Box. In December 2011 it was selected out of 11 winners of the New Author Awards to become the first BOX-AiR series to be animated. |
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| Tintin (magazine) | Tintin magazine (French: Le Journal de Tintin) (Dutch: Kuifje) was a weekly Franco-Belgian comics magazine of the second half of the 20th century. Subtitled The Journal for the Youth from 7 to 77 it was one of the major publications of the Franco-Belgian comics scene and published such notable series such as Blake and Mortimer Alix and the principal title The Adventures of Tintin. |
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