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Make Something Up: Stories You Can't Unread is a collection of short stories published on May 26, 2015, and written by Chuck Palahniuk. [1] [2] [3]Make Something Up ranked No. 8 on the ALA's list of the Top Ten Challenged Books of 2016, due to profanity, sexual explicitness, and being "disgusting and all around offensive."
Fight Stories was a pulp magazine devoted to stories of boxing. Published by Fiction House, it ran 47 issues cover-dated June 1928 [1] to May 1932, followed by a four-year hiatus. It then ran an additional 59 issues, dated Spring 1936 - Spring 1952. It is best remembered for publishing a large number of stories by Robert E. Howard. [2]
"The Tale of How Ivan Ivanovich Quarreled with Ivan Nikiforovich" (Russian: «Повесть о том, как поссорился Иван Иванович с Иваном Никифоровичем», romanized: Povest' o tom, kak possorilsja Ivan Ivanovič s Ivanom Nikiforovičem, 1835), also known in English as The Squabble, is the final tale in the Mirgorod collection by Nikolai Gogol.
It was originally published in the July 1930 issue of Fight Stories. [1] Howard earned $80 for the sale of this story [2] which is now in the public domain. [3] It is also known as "Sucker Fight" after being published under that name in the Winter 1939–1940 issue of Fight Stories, under the pen name Mark Adams.
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Fight Club 2 #10: March 30, 2016 Chuck Palahniuk Cameron Stewart Dave Stewart David Mack Steve Morris (variant) Tyler Crook (variant) [17] In a metafictional ending, Palahniuk himself is running the story of Fight Club 2 by a group of fellow comic book writers and friends. They do not approve of Palahniuk's original ending, in which Tyler's ...
Allison's short stories address themes such as: strength, cycles of poverty, identity, aggression, mother/daughter relationships, survival. Survival: Allison's short story "Mama" showcases the correlation between abuse and poverty and what one must to do keep alive. Jack, the step-father, abuses the narrator and her mother.
The allusion to Helen of Troy enriches the story, making Tarzan and Taug's fight over Teeka take on symbolic proportions. Stan Galloway writes: "when Burroughs chooses to name Helen as an objective correlative for Teeka, he expects both literal and emotional connections to occur." [5] Tarzan's final claim of the story—"Tarzan is a man. He ...