Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
1929 (03–08) (Blue Book Magazine) 1930 (05) (Metropolitan Books) Tarzan at the Earth's Core: Tarzan #13 Pellucidar #04: 1929: 1929 (09–12), 1930 (01–03) (Blue Book Magazine) 1930 (11) (Metropolitan Books) A Fighting Man of Mars: Barsoom #07: 1929: 1930 (04–09) (Blue Book Magazine) 1931 (05) (Metropolitan Books) Jungle Girl aka. The Land ...
Many of his stories have been re-released in the posthumous volumes Best of Beaumont (Bantam, 1982) and The Howling Man (Tom Doherty, 1992), and a set of previously unpublished tales, A Touch of the Creature (Subterranean Press, 1999). In 2004, Gauntlet Press released the first of two volumes collecting Beaumont's Twilight Zone scripts.
McNamee commenced writing another series for children, the first book of which is The Ring of Five, and the second of which is The Unknown Spy, both of which are based on plotting and espionage. He has also written a series under the pseudonym John Creed: [5] The Sirius Crossing (Faber & Faber, 2003) The Day of the Dead (Faber & Faber, 2004)
The first volume of Resurrection Man was critically acclaimed and earned a dedicated fanbase but did not become a commercial success. The series ended in 1999 after 27 issues, with one issue being numbered Resurrection Man #1 Million (taking place in the 853rd century and tying into the DC One Million crossover). While the series answered many ...
Resurrection man or resurrection men may refer to: A term for a body snatcher—a person who secretly exhumes dead bodies to sell them; Resurrection Man, the antagonist of the serial novel The Mysteries of London; Resurrection Man, a 1994 novel by Eoin McNamee. Resurrection Man, a 1998 film adaptation directed by Marc Evans
The townsfolk grow uncomfortable at the thought of facing problems they thought buried with the dead. When one apparent resurrectee is seen approaching town, a man believes him to be his brother whom he himself had shot, so the man bribes Garrity to reverse the ritual and the figure vanishes.
Twilight: Where Darkness Begins is an out of print teen (young adult) horror novel series published between 1982 and 1987. There are 26 stand-alone books in the series written by various authors; the most notable being Bruce Coville , Carl Laymon (aka Richard Laymon ), Imogen Howe, Betsy Haynes, Richie Tankersley Cusick , and Joseph Trainor.
Birthright spans a timeline of nearly 17 millennia, beginning at a very early stage of expansion from Earth and ending with the death of the last humans. In between, it chronicles a slow but (despite some set-backs) steady conquest of the entire galaxy - inhabited by thousands of sentient alien races, which are overpowered and oppressed using whatever tool it takes: economic pressure ...