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Josee, the Tiger and the Fish (Japanese: ジョゼと虎と魚たち, Hepburn: Joze to Tora to Sakanatachi) is a 1984 Japanese short story by author Seiko Tanabe. It was first published in the June 1984 issue of Monthly Kadokawa .
Thousand Words is an independent feature film finance and production company founded by Jonah Smith and Palmer West in 2000. The name is a take on the saying "a picture is worth a thousand words". The name is a take on the saying "a picture is worth a thousand words".
Tiger, Tiger is a biography of professional golfer Tiger Woods, authored by James Patterson and Peter de Jonge. It was published on July 15, 2024, by Little, Brown and Company. The book provides a comprehensive account of Woods' life, covering his early years, rise to fame, significant achievements, personal struggles, and eventual comeback.
1000 Words may refer to: "1000 Words" (Final Fantasy X-2), a song for the video game Final Fantasy X-2; 1000-Word Philosophy, an online philosophy anthology;
Tiger Woods is a 2018 biography of professional golfer Tiger Woods written by Jeff Benedict and Armen Keteyian. [1] [2] It is the second book co-authored by Benedict and Keteyian, who published The System: The Glory and Scandal of Big-Time College Football in 2013. [3] The book was adapted as Tiger, a two-part HBO miniseries in 2021.
"Tiger! Tiger!": logo and illustration by Will H. Drake, St. Nicholas Magazine, Vol. XXI, 1894. "Tiger!Tiger!" is a short story by Rudyard Kipling.A direct sequel to "Mowgli's Brothers", it was published in magazines in 1893–94 before appearing as the third story in The Jungle Book (1894), following "Kaa's Hunting".
"Tiger! Tiger!", a 2003 short story by Elizabeth Bear in Shadows Over Baker Street; Tiger, Tiger! Princeton in Caricature by William F. Brown (writer) Tiger, Tiger: A Memoir, 2011 autobiography by Margaux Fragoso; Tiger, Tiger, a 2024 non-fiction book by James Patterson and Peter de Jonge
Tiger Tale is a children's picture book illustrated by Marion Isham and written by Steve Isham. First published in 2002, the book retells the Aboriginal story of how the Tasmanian tiger got its stripes. Tiger Tale is illustrated using torn paper collage that gives the book a folkloric style.