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Labours of love, review of "The Door" by The Guardian, 29 October 2005; The housekeeper with the keys to Hungary's secret sufferings [dead link ], review of "The Door" by The Independent, 18 January 2006; The 10 Best Books of 2015 (The Door is the first book listed), The New York Times, 3 December 2015
"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 ...
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 ...
The Door is a two-part celebrity series broadcast on the ITV Network in the United Kingdom, hosted by Amanda Holden (Wild at Heart) and Chris Tarrant (Who Wants to Be a Millionaire? Keith Duffy and Dean Gaffney made it to the final with Duffy winning the show with Gaffney as the runner-up.
The Door is a book of poetry by Canadian author Margaret Atwood, published in 2007. [1] [2]The poems of The Door demonstrate self-awareness on the part of the author. They confront themes of advancing age and encroaching death (Atwood was 68 in 2007), as well as authorial fame and the drive to produce writing. [3]
The Magic Door sequence based on the collected edition [6] Sequence Title Initial published numbering Date of first publication 1: Acrospirical Meanderings In a Tongue of the Time: none: 1973 2: The Magic Door: Book I: 1975 3: Citrinas: Book II: 1977 4: The Diary of Palug's Cat: Book III: 1980 5: The Book of Brychan: Book IV: 1982 6: Cylinder ...
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 ...
When a pair of renowned psychologists are brutally murdered from unexpected causes, Laura McCaffrey is called to assist in the case. Meeting with Dan Haldane, a police lieutenant, she is told that one of the victims was her divorced spouse, Dylan, who kidnapped their only daughter six years ago.