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Note: This is for articles on Novel sequences - which are a set or series of novels which have their own title and free-standing storyline, and can thus be read independently or out of sequence or in sequence. This includes series described by the same author/authorial partnership that can read sequentially. Authorial intention may be enough to ...
The dancer in the title sequence was Karen Standley. These episodes have frequently been repeated on British television, most recently on Sky Arts. All episodes have been released on DVD in a box set for each series, except the 1984–85 series, which was released together with the first episode of the eighth series. [2] [3]
This term is also apropos for series where some reading order is preferable, but which may not consist solely of novels, such as the 1632 series, wherein about half is short fiction, half novels, and sometimes the years in the book have nothing to do with published order in our time line. A sequence is a series of books that are otherwise ...
Category:Series of books for (non-novel) series that need not be read sequentially as each work is stand-alone enough without prior reading in the series. Category:Novel sequences for series that are otherwise related—which are a set or series of novels which have their own title and free-standing storyline, and can thus be read independently ...
It presents fully edited modern-spelling editions of the plays and poems, with lengthy introductions and full commentaries. There have been three distinct series of The Arden Shakespeare over the past century, with the third series commencing in 1995 and concluding in January 2020. [1] The fourth series is scheduled to commence publication in ...
The Winternight trilogy has received positive reviews. Critics from Publishers Weekly praised The Bear and the Nightingale, stating "Arden’s debut is an earthy, beautifully written love letter to Russian folklore, with an irresistible heroine who wants only to be free of the bonds placed on her gender and claim her own fate in 14th-century Russia."
The series title sequence used a rostrum camera to create a montage of three images, the first showing a silhouetted British soldier standing over the grave of a comrade, the camera first focuses on the cross, where the almost imperceptible words IN MEMORY are glanced, the second shows a uniformed, skeletal corpse by the entrance to a dugout ...
The Two Mrs. Grenvilles is a 1987 television miniseries based on Dominick Dunne's 1985 novel of the same name and dramatizing the sensational killing of William Woodward, Jr. by his wife, Ann Woodward in 1955.