Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
This event occurred around the time that The Book of the Law (Liber Legis) was about to be published in The Equinox, Vol. I, No. VII. [2] The writing of Book 4 was accomplished with the assistance of Soror Virakam [3] at a villa in Posillipo near Naples, Italy. The book was subsequently published in the winter of 1912–1913 in The Equinox, Vol.
Haldor Lillenas was born on 19 November 1885 on Stord Island, near Bergen, Norway, the son of Ole Paulsen Lillenas (born May 1854 in Norway; died 24 July 1926 in Hennepin County, Minnesota), [7] a farmer and storekeeper, and his wife Anna Marie Lillenas (born March 1851 in Norway; died c. 1906 in Minnesota), [8] and brother of Paul Olson (born 27 March 1879 in Norway; died 18 May 1934 in ...
The book became a best seller. [8] By 1935 it was estimated to have sold 55,000 copies in Australia and 25,000 in England. [9] Thwaites wrote a sequel, The Melody Lingers (1935). By 1968 it had been reprinted 54 times and was estimated to have sold over a million copies. [6]
Original file (1,275 × 1,650 pixels, file size: 2.54 MB, MIME type: application/pdf, 8 pages) This is a file from the Wikimedia Commons . Information from its description page there is shown below.
The Arkansas Democrat-Gazette says that, "Sin and Syntax is, at almost 300 pages, much more than 'the little book' of Strunk and White. Hale includes the usual suspects," to make her points, but adds “examples from prose stylist Roger Angell on the catcher in baseball, "Talk of the Town" pieces from The New Yorker , George Orwell from ...
Surprisingly for the two of them, the first jumper is a transfer, and a 'Stiff;' Abnegation. When he asks for her name, she hesitates and he feels she is familiar to him in some way. She eventually answers "Tris", and Four then proclaims, "First jumper–Tris!".
John Melady is a Canadian non-fiction author from Seaforth, Ontario Canada. A former high school vice-principal in Trenton, Ontario, he writes primarily about 19th and 20th century Canadian history with a usual focus on acts exhibiting courage.
Thomas Patrick Melady (March 4, 1927 – January 6, 2014) was an American diplomat and author. From 2002 until his death he served as the Senior Diplomat in residence at The Institute of World Politics in Washington, D.C.