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Two warded lock keys and a homemade skeleton key. A skeleton key (also known as a passkey [1]) is a type of master key in which the serrated edge has been removed in such a way that it can open numerous locks, [2] most commonly the warded lock. The term derives from the fact that the key has been reduced to its essential parts. [2]
The Skeleton Key was released in the U.S. on August 12, 2005, after having received an earlier release date of July 29, 2005 in the United Kingdom. [8] It grossed $92 million worldwide. [1] In the U.S., it took in $16.1 million in its first weekend, reaching number 2 at the box office; the total US gross was $47.9 million. [1]
Skeleton Key is the third book in the Alex Rider series written by British author Anthony Horowitz. The book was released in the United Kingdom on July 8, 2002, and in the United States on April 28, 2003.
This story contains spoilers for Episode 3 of HBO’s “The Last of Us” and corresponding moments from the 2013 videogame. The third episode of “The Last of Us” takes viewers back to the ...
Skeleton Key, a comic book by Andi Watson; Skeleton Key, a novel by Anthony Horowitz published in 2002; The Skeleton Key, a detective novel by Bernard Capes, published posthumously in 1920; Skeleton Key: A Dictionary for Deadheads, a book by David Shenk and Steve Silberman
Skeleton Key is the title of a comic book by British author Andi Watson. It was published beginning in 1995 by Slave Labor Graphics and was Watson's first monthly comic. Skeleton Key ran for 30 issues and a number of supplemental stories and was generally well received.
In The Skeleton Key the swaps are complicated enough to require a guide book. 1920s Mama Cecile and Papa Justify swaps souls with Martin and Grace, the children of the plantation owner, who die when "Cecile" and "Justify" are lynched for hoodoo.
"Three Skeleton Key" is a short story by the French author Georges-Gustave Toudouze. The January 1937 edition of Esquire marked its first appearance in English. This suspenseful tale and "Leiningen Versus the Ants" were discovered by the magazine's editor Arnold Gingrich. [1] Georges-G. Toudouze (1877–1972) was born in Paris, France. His ...