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Action books is an independent press housed at the English Department at University of Notre Dame. The editors are Johannes Göransson and Joyelle McSweeney . [ 1 ] The press publishes form-breaking and hybrid work with a focus on texts in translation.
Behance, stylized as BÄ“hance, is a social media platform owned by Adobe whose main focus is to showcase and discover creative work. [2] [3] Behance was founded by Matias Corea and Scott Belsky in November 2005. [4] It was acquired by Adobe in December 2012. [5] As of October 2020, Behance had over 24 million members. [6]
Original file (764 × 1,343 pixels, file size: 7.58 MB, MIME type: application/pdf, 385 pages) This is a file from the Wikimedia Commons . Information from its description page there is shown below.
GURPS Action 1: Heroes (PDF) GURPS Action 2: Exploits (PDF) GURPS Action 3: Furious Fists (PDF) GURPS Action 4: Specialists (PDF) GURPS Action 5: Dictionary of Danger (PDF) GURPS Action 6: Tricked-Out Rides (PDF) GURPS Action 7: Mercenaries (PDF) GURPS Action 8: Twists (PDF) GURPS Action 9: The City (PDF)
The Executioner is a monthly action-adventure paperback book series created by American author Don Pendleton.Every other month the series was complemented by the release of a "Super Bolan", titles that were twice the length of a standard Executioner novel.
Action fiction is a genre in literature that focuses on stories involving high-stakes, high-energy, and fast-paced events. This genre includes a wide range of subgenres, such as spy novels , adventure stories, tales of terror, intrigue (" cloak and dagger "), and mysteries .
In this series from 2012 Butcher Billy interlaces cinematography with storyboard, replacing live action scenes from contemporary super-hero blockbuster movies with cuts from the 1960s and 1970s comic books they were born from. The concept aims to explore how thin is the line that separates modern from classic, and pixels from ink.
Len Deighton's Action Cook Book is a 1965 collection of cookery strips (known as a cookstrip, an invention of Len Deighton's from his days as a student at the Royal College of Art) originally published in the Observer newspaper, with additional information and notes.