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The Imaginary Friend book The Hole In The Sum Of My Parts by Matt Harvey [3] Jimmy Jimmereeno Ramona Wengler's imaginary friend in the short story Uncle Wiggily in Connecticut by J. D. Salinger: Los Chimichangos colorful chihuahuas who are imagined by Skippyjon Jones in the book series of the same name by Judith Byron Schachner; named after ...
Setting of twenty two books. Kelewan: Magician: 1982 Raymond E. Feist: High fantasy setting for The Riftwar Saga. Known Space "The Coldest Place" 1964 Larry Niven: Interstellar region inhabited by a future humanity. Created by Niven for him and other writers to use. The Meg/Loch: Meg: A Novel of Deep Terror: 1997 Steve Alten: Lake Wobegon: Lake ...
Tamora Pierce (born 1954), author of the Tortall books, The Song of the Lioness series and the Circle of Magic books; Ricardo Pinto (born in 1961), author of The Stone Dance of the Chameleon series; Tim Powers (born 1952), author of The Anubis Gates; Anne Plichota, author of Oksa Pollock; C. L. Polk (born 1969), author of The Kingston Cycle
The title of the series comes from the name of a fictional street in Shadyside, which was named after the Fear family. Contextual clues in the text suggest Shadyside is either in southern New England or a northern Mid-Atlantic state of the US. Shalako, New Mexico Louis L'Amour: Shalako: Shaston, South Wessex Thomas Hardy: Thomas Hardy's Wessex
[2] [3] It has been used for multiple books in a series following the diarist's life over many years, such as the Adrian Mole series, the Diary of a Wimpy Kid series, and the Dork Diaries series, all of which chronicle the lives of characters who start a diary as children or adolescents and continue their diary as they mature over time.
Scylla – A monster from Greek mythology which has the body of a woman, six snake heads, twelve octopus tentacles, a cat's tail and four dog heads in her waist. Tarasque – A French dragon with the head of a lion, six short legs similar to that of bear legs, the body of an ox, the shell of a turtle, and a scorpion stinger-tipped tail.
John Clute defines weird fiction as a term "used loosely to describe fantasy, supernatural fiction and horror tales embodying transgressive material". [5] China Miéville defines it as "usually, roughly, conceived of as a rather breathless and generically slippery macabre fiction, a dark fantastic ('horror' plus 'fantasy') often featuring nontraditional alien monsters (thus plus 'science ...
Entish, a theoretical imaginary language in J. R. R. Tolkien's The Lord of the Rings, where tree creatures name objects by relating what they know of their entire past, similarly to Borges' divine language in this essay; Leishu – a genre of reference books historically compiled in China and other countries of the Sinosphere