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The Road is a 2006 post-apocalyptic novel by American writer Cormac McCarthy. The book details the grueling journey of a father and his young son over several months across a landscape blasted by an unspecified cataclysm that has destroyed industrial civilization and nearly all life.
William B. Murphy (January 9, 1908 – July 2, 1970) was an American film editor who, in the course of a twenty-year career, served as president of American Cinema Editors (ACE) from 1952 to 1955 and was distinguished in 1966 with ACE's Eddie Award for his work on the science fiction film, Fantastic Voyage, which also earned him an Academy Award nomination for Best Editing.
The Road (London book), a 1907 memoir by Jack London; The Road, or The Ten Commandments, a 1931 novel by Warwick Deeping; The Road (Anand novel), a 1961 novel by Mulk Raj Anand; The Road, a 1965 play by Wole Soyinka; The Road: Stories, Journalism, and Essays, a 1987 book by Vasily Grossman; The Road, a 2010 novel in the Being Human series by ...
The First Third (1971, autobiographical novel), published three years after Cassady's death; As Ever: The Collected Correspondence of Allen Ginsberg & Neal Cassady. Berkeley, CA: Creative Arts Book Company, 1977. ISBN 978-0916870089; Grace Beats Karma: Letters from Prison (collection of poetry and letters). New York, NY: Blast Books, 1993.
The Road is a 2009 American post-apocalyptic survival film directed by John Hillcoat and written by Joe Penhall, based on the 2006 novel of the same name by Cormac McCarthy. The film stars Viggo Mortensen and Kodi Smit-McPhee as a father and his son in a post-apocalyptic wasteland.
On the Road is a 1957 novel by American writer Jack Kerouac, based on the travels of Kerouac and his friends across the United States.It is considered a defining work of the postwar Beat and Counterculture generations, with its protagonists living life against a backdrop of jazz, poetry, and drug use.
But in 1984, he was paroled to California, Thomas said. On Feb. 22, 1986, South Pasadena Police responded to a report of a woman lying in the road on Banks Street, Thomas said.
Willy Murphy [1] (October 2, 1936 [2] –March 2, 1976) [3] was an American underground cartoonist.Murphy's humor focused on hippies and the counterculture. His signature character was Arnold Peck the Human Wreck, "a mid-30s beanpole with wry observations about his own life and the community around him."