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The book has received high praise, including the following: Claire Messud, for The New York Times Book Review, Feb. 6, 2015: "I've been haunted by this novel. Szabo's lines and images come to my mind unexpectedly, and with them powerful emotions. It has altered the way I understand my own life. [1] "
The Door (poetry collection), a 2007 book of poetry by Margaret Atwood; The Door, a 1930 novel by Mary Roberts Rinehart; The Door, the name used by the Christian satire magazine The Wittenburg Door during the 80s, 90s, and early 2000s; The Door (interstellar teleporter), an interstellar transportation device used in the science fiction works of ...
Samuel Eldred Greenlee, Jr. (July 13, 1930 – May 19, 2014) [1] was an American writer of fiction and poetry. He is best known for his novel The Spook Who Sat by the Door, first published in March 1969 in London by the recently founded small imprint Allison & Busby (with Ghanaian-born Margaret Busby as its editor), having been rejected by dozens of mainstream publishers, [2] and received much ...
The early novels Falcons of Narabedla and The Door Through Space are listed by some sources [1] [2] [3] as part of the Darkover series (as noted below), but although they presage some themes and images with the main sequence, these do not take place on Darkover, and are in other ways inconsistent with the series.
The first book of the trilogy was also reviewed by the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette in August of the same year. [3] The following year, the trilogy received praise from the Tuscaloosa News , citing it as one of several recent releases contributing to an "explosive interest in religious books" and an acceptance of Christian fiction in mainstream ...
The novel ends with Wolfe and Archie receiving an unidentified but important visitor, implied to be J. Edgar Hoover ("the big fish", someone Archie has never seen before, but of whom he has seen plenty of pictures). Speculating that this visitor has come in person to collect the FBI credentials, Wolfe refuses to let him into the house, leaving ...
The Door in the Wall may refer to: "The Door in the Wall" (short story) by H. G. Wells; The Door in the Wall and Other Stories, a 1911 short story collection by H. G. Wells; The Door in the Wall (1949) by Marguerite de Angeli "The Door in the Wall", a 1965 collection of short stories by Oliver La Farge
"The Door" was written by the series' creators David Benioff and D. B. Weiss. After the episode aired, in the "Inside the Episode" featurette released by HBO for "The Door", Benioff and Weiss revealed that the closing scene involving Hodor's name origin and subsequent death was an idea that was presented to them directly from George R. R ...