Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Something Upstairs: A Tale of Ghosts was originally published by Orchard Books on September 1, 1988 in hardcover format. [2] The title was simplified to Something Upstairs starting with the 1990 paperback edition. Orchard Books was acquired by Scholastic, who printed their paperback edition in 2010. A list of notable formats is as follows:
Main page; Contents; Current events; Random article; About Wikipedia; Contact us; Donate; Pages for logged out editors learn more
The Man Upstairs is a collection of nineteen short stories by P. G. Wodehouse, first published in the United Kingdom on 23 January 1914 by Methuen & Co., London. [1] Most of the stories had previously appeared in magazines, generally Strand Magazine in the UK and Cosmopolitan or Collier's Weekly in the United States.
The Man Upstairs (short story collection), a 1914 short story collection by P. G. Wodehouse "The Man Upstairs", a 1943 short story by Ray Bradbury from The October Country; The Man Upstairs, a 1953 novel by Patrick Hamilton "The babysitter and the man upstairs", a 1960s urban legend; The Man Upstairs, a 1995 short story by Carolyn Banks
The Woman Upstairs is a novel by Claire Messud that was published in 2013 by Alfred A. Knopf. [1] Set in Cambridge, Massachusetts , the novel is told from the point of view of Nora Elridge, an elementary school teacher reflecting back on her life in 2004 when she became enchanted with the Shahids, a family of intellectuals she met while ...
The first book, titled simply Thomas & Sarah, was published in 1978 by Sphere Books and covers the first seven episodes of the programme. The second book, titled Thomas & Sarah: Two for a Spin, was also published by Sphere Books and released in 1979. Both books were written by Mollie Hardwick, who also wrote many Upstairs, Downstairs books.
Nana Upstairs dies when he's a child, and Nana Downstairs dies when he's an adult; at both ages, Tommy learns to keep his beloved Nanas in his memory. The original edition of this autobiographical story was published in 1973; a second edition, published in 1998, has new illustrations and layout.
A 2009 The New York Times article noted about the book: "Compared with Anne Frank’s Diary of a Young Girl, it is sparer and sterner: Frank, unaware of her tragic fate, radiated lively, optimistic, girlish intensity, while Reiss wrote 'The Upstairs Room' after much of her hope and appetite for life had been extinguished. One expects the ...