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Beast Quest is a best-selling British series of children's fantasy–adventure novels produced by Working Partners Ltd and written by several authors all using the house name Adam Blade. [1] As of October 2024, the main series had achieved a total of 154 books published, and over 20 million copies of the books have been sold altogether since ...
Grashkor the Beast Guard: 2012: ISBN 978-1-408-31517-0: Michael Ford Steve Sims 10: Ferrok the Iron Soldier: 2012: ISBN 978-1-408-31847-8: Michael Ford Steve Sims 11: Viktor the Deadly Archer: 2013: ISBN 978-1-408-32408-0: Michael Ford Steve Sims 12: Anoret the First Beast: 2013: ISBN 978-1-408-32410-3: Michael Ford Steve Sims 13: Okawa the ...
Gwen wields four throwing axes and a rapier that has the shape of a wolf head on the hilt. She is another Chosen Rider, of a wolf-Beast called Gulkien. She tags along with Tanner after Derthsin's armies destroy Colweir, but only because Gulkien, her beast, trusts Firepos, Tanner's beast. Grandmother Esme is Tanner's very wise grandmother.
Allan Frewin Jones (born 30 April 1954) is an English writer credited with more than 90 books for children and young adults. [1] He has published under the alternate names: Fiona Kelly, A F Jones, Frewin Jones, Damien Graves, Adam Blade, Nick Shadow, and Allan Jones.
Cherith Baldry at Fantastic Fiction; Cherith Baldry at the Internet Speculative Fiction Database; Cherith Baldry at Library of Congress, with 7 library catalogue records; Adam Blade [permanent dead link ], Jenny Dale [permanent dead link ], Jack Dillon [permanent dead link ], Erin Hunter (shared pseudonyms) at LC Authorities with 36, 46, 0, and 79 records
Flip book containing Winnie to the Rescue! by Laura Owen and Korky Paul (Oxford University Press) and Yuck's Rotten Joke by Matt and Dave (Simon & Schuster Children's Books) Flip book containing Mr Gum and the Hound of Lamonic Bibber by Andy Stanton (Egmont Children's Books) and Beast Quest: Sephir the Storm Monster by Adam Blade (Orchard Books)
Apocalyptic fiction is a subgenre of science fiction that is concerned with the end of civilization due to a potentially existential catastrophe such as nuclear warfare, pandemic, extraterrestrial attack, impact event, cybernetic revolt, technological singularity, dysgenics, supernatural phenomena, divine judgment, climate change, resource depletion or some other general disaster.
The story ends on a low note for all groups involved: Dagoska is lost to the Gurkish; an intrigue sees both heirs to the throne killed and an innocent man is blamed for political reasons; the quest for the Seed is an abject failure; and Bethod remains at large in the North; Ferro and Logen's burgeoning relationship ends abruptly as both are ...