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No Name is an 1862 novel by Wilkie Collins. Illegitimacy is a major theme of the novel. It was originally serialised in Charles Dickens's magazine All the Year Round before book publication. It is the second of his four "great novels", released after The Woman in White (1860) and before Armadale (1866) and The Moonstone (1868).
The Cuckoo's Calling is a crime fiction [1] novel written by British author J. K. Rowling, published under the pseudonym Robert Galbraith. [2] It is the first novel in the Cormoran Strike series of detective novels and was first published on 4 April 2013.
GLSEN's No Name-Calling Week launches as an annual week of educational activities aimed at ending name-calling of all kinds. [10] Vermont becomes the first state to pass an LGBT-inclusive anti-bullying law that includes protections on the basis of sexual orientation and gender identity/expression.
The author stated that this was due to him refusing to give the publishers his name as well as the book not fitting into any specific genre. [1] In an interview with L'Express the author mentioned that he had begun working on a fourth book in the series entitled The Book of Death , but temporarily shelved it due to the writing process becoming ...
Welcome to Twixmas, aka Dead Week, or Feral Week: that stretch between Christmas and New Year’s Eve when we get the urge to take off and tune out, and our outstanding projects, deadlines and ...
No\Name (stylized in all caps) is a Japanese manga series written by Rafal Jaki, the creator of Cyberpunk: Edgerunners, and illustrated by Machine Gamu, known for ...
I Heard the Owl Call My Name is a best-selling 1967 novel by Margaret Craven. The book tells the story of a young Anglican priest named Mark Brian who, unbeknown to him, has not long to live. He learns about the meaning of life when he is to be sent to a First Nations community in British Columbia .
The Dreamseller - The Calling. A stranger tries to save a despairing man from suicide. Nobody knows where the enigmatic stranger comes from, his name or history. He rants that modern societies have turned themselves into a global hospice. With a fascinating rhetoric he begins to engage followers in order to sell dreams.