Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Ripred once had a mate and several pups. During one of the rare peaceful periods between rats and humans, they shared a beautiful garden filled with apple trees and other delicious fruit. It was called the Garden of Hesperides. One day while many rats were enjoying the garden, the humans, led by Solovet and her son Hamnet, launched a surprise ...
A literate rat who tries to get to know Miss Pomeroy who shares a lot in common with him. Whisker Cameron Stelzer: Pie Rats: The Forgotten Map: A circus rat, originally named Wentworth Winterbottom, who becomes a Pie Rat and a member of Captain Black Rat's crew aboard the Apple Pie and is renamed Whisker. The Other Mr Bobo Neil Gaiman: Coraline
Some of his is poems were translated into Ukrainian at this time by Victor Koptilov and published in the magazine The Universe (1981) and the anthology The Poetry of Africa (1983). In 1997 he wrote a poetic novel L’île du Tsarévitch (Island of the Tsarevich) exploring his Slavic origins and Eastern Orthodox faith as well as the fate of his ...
Compared to the Mauritius scops owl and the Rodrigues scops owl, it was the most terrestrial species of the genus, with long legs and possibly somewhat reduced flight capability; more probably though it was simply smaller than the Mauritius bird – between that species and the one from Rodrigues in size – but had equally long legs: the only ...
The Rat Poems: Or, Rats Live On No Evil Star, a 1978 book by Peter Meinke; Rats Live on no Evil Star, a 1996 demo album by Anyone (band) Rats Live on No Evil Star, a story in Tales of Pain and Wonder, a 2000 short story collection by Caitlín R. Kiernan; No Evil Star, a 2002 film by Marion Coutts; Ratsliveonnoevilstar, a 2003 EP by Annie Clark
Upgrade to a faster, more secure version of a supported browser. It's free and it only takes a few moments:
One night, Dandin, Saxtus, and Storm were enjoying themselves at the Abbot's Jubilee Feast when Saxtus recited a strange, prophetic poem. The mousemaid let out a sudden cry and fell unconscious. Unbeknownst to the Redwallers, the story in the poem paralleled the events of Storm's life and triggered the return of her memory.
Freddy the Pig is the central figure in a series of 26 children's books written between 1927 and 1958 by American author Walter R. Brooks and illustrated by Kurt Wiese, consisting of 25 novels and one poetry collection. The books focus on the adventures of a group of animals living on a farm in rural upstate New York.