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Bête Noire is an international comics anthology published by Fantagraphics Books. While planned to be four issues, only the first issue was published. While planned to be four issues, only the first issue was published.
The Honey Island Swamp Monster, also known as the Cajun Sasquatch and in Cajun French: La Bête Noire, [1] is an ape-like humanoid cryptid creature, similar to descriptions of Bigfoot, purported to inhabit the Honey Island Swamp in St. Tammany Parish, Louisiana. [2]
Bête Noire is the seventh solo studio album by the English singer Bryan Ferry, released on 2 November 1987 by Virgin Records in the United Kingdom and by Reprise Records in the United States. It was a commercial and critical success, peaking at No. 9 in the UK [ 2 ] and was certified Gold by the British Phonographic Industry (BPI).
Bête noire ("black beast" in French, meaning something that is an object of aversion or the bane of one’s existence) may refer to: Bête Noire (album) , a 1987 album by Bryan Ferry Bête Noire (comics) , a 2005 comics anthology
Warcraft: The Sunwell Trilogy is a collection of three volumes of OEL manga, written by Richard Knaak, illustrated by Kim Jae-hwan, and published by Tokyopop.The series is based on Blizzard Entertainment's Warcraft universe and follows the adventures of Kalec, a blue dragon who takes the form of a human to investigate a mysterious power, and Anveena, a beautiful young maiden with an enchanting ...
Ari Haswari was a recurring character, having first appeared in the Season 1 episode "Bete Noir" as an unknown terrorist who held Ducky, Kate, and Gerald Jackson hostage. It is later revealed that he is the child of an Arab mother and Jewish father, initially a Mossad agent sent undercover in Hamas, who later went rogue and became a terrorist ...
Black Beast, The Black Beast may refer to: . Mario Roatta, World War II era Italian general; Derrick Lewis (fighter), American MMA fighter Dark Beast, a Marvel Comics character and supervillain
If I come to be regarded as a bête noire the descriptions will be reversed, and I shall become a Swiss Jew for the Germans and a German man of science for the English!" — Albert Einstein (1879–1955), from the article "Einstein on His Theory" ( The Times , London , 28 November 1919 )