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  2. Fah Lo Suee - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fah_lo_Suee

    Fah Lo Suee (Chinese: 花露水; pinyin: Huā Lùshuǐ) is a character who was introduced in the series of novels Dr. Fu Manchu by the English author Sax Rohmer (1883-1959). She is the daughter of Dr. Fu Manchu and an unnamed Russian woman, sometimes shown as an ally, sometimes shown as a rival.

  3. Young Fu of the Upper Yangtze - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Young_Fu_of_the_Upper_Yangtze

    Young Fu of the Upper Yangtze is a book by Elizabeth Foreman Lewis that won the Newbery Medal for excellence in American children's literature in 1933. [1] The story revolves around Fu Yuin-fah, the son of a widow from the countryside of western China, who wishes to become a coppersmith in the big city on the Yangtze River, Chungking (now spelled Chongqing).

  4. May Ziadeh - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/May_Ziadeh

    May Elias Ziadeh (/ z i ˈ ɑː d ə / zee-AH-də; Arabic: مي إلياس زيادة, ALA-LC: Mayy Ilyās Ziyādah; [a] 11 February 1886 [1] [2] – 17 October 1941) was a Palestinian-Lebanese Maronite poet, essayist, and translator, [3] [4] who wrote many different works both in Arabic and in French.

  5. Sacred Books of the East - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sacred_Books_of_the_East

    The Sacred Books of the East is a monumental 50-volume set of English translations of Asian religious texts, edited by Max Müller and published by the Oxford University Press between 1879 and 1910. It incorporates the essential sacred texts of Hinduism , Buddhism , Taoism , Confucianism , Zoroastrianism , Jainism , and Islam .

  6. The Mystery of Dr. Fu-Manchu - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Mystery_of_Dr._Fu-Manchu

    By the end of the book, Fu Manchu's slave girl Karamaneh, a beautiful Arab woman, apparently now in love with Dr Petrie, and her brother Aziz are freed from Fu Manchu's captivity, and Inspector Weymouth, driven mad by an injection of serum from Fu Manchu, is restored to sanity by Fu Manchu, who appears to have escaped from a fire which destroys ...

  7. Faxian - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Faxian

    Faxian (337–c. 422 CE), formerly romanized as Fa-hien and Fa-hsien, was a Chinese Buddhist monk and translator who traveled on foot from Jin China to medieval India to acquire Buddhist scriptures.

  8. Fee-fi-fo-fum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fee-fi-fo-fum

    19th-century author Charles Mackay proposed in The Gaelic Etymology of the Languages of Western Europe (1877) that the seemingly meaningless string of syllables "Fa fe fi fo fum" is actually a coherent phrase of ancient Gaelic, and that the complete quatrain covertly expresses the Celts' cultural detestation of the invading Angles and Saxons:

  9. The Royal Diaries - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Royal_Diaries

    The Royal Diaries is a series of 20 books published by Scholastic Press from 1999 to 2005. In each of the books, a fictional diary of a real female figure of royalty as a child throughout world history was written by the author. The Royal Diaries was a spin-off of Scholastic's popular Dear America series.