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Rulebooks. Timothy Brown (October 1991). Dark Sun Boxed Set (1st boxset). TSR, Inc. ISBN 1-56076-104-0. Timothy Brown (June 1992).Dark Sun: Dragon Kings. TSR, Inc. ISBN 1-56076-235-7.
However, rather than returning to their somewhat colourful Fantasy Earth, they instead published two books set in totally different fantasy milieus, Daughters of Darkness (1990) and Eldarad (1990). These books were widely derided by RuneQuest fans, in large part due to their lack of applicability to any RuneQuest game (except those of the ...
Daughters of Darkness leans flamboyantly toward the artistic end of the spectrum, with Delphine Seyrig sporting Marienbad-like costumes and the Belgian director conjuring up images of luxurious decadence replete with feathers, mirrors, and long, winding hotel corridors. At the film's core, however, is a deeply unpleasant evocation of a war of ...
In “Daughters,” a group of men gathers in a sunny, brightly hued prison meeting room. Each man wears an orange jumpsuit and has signed on for a 10-week course about fatherhood with life coach ...
Dark Sun is an original Dungeons & Dragons (D&D) campaign setting set in the fictional, post-apocalyptic desert world of Athas. [1] [2] Dark Sun featured an innovative metaplot, influential art work, dark themes, and a genre-bending take on traditional fantasy role-playing. [3]
Limited edition module included for free with other purchases from the TSR Mail Order Hobby Shop in order to secure the trademark for its "Dragon Master" line of products. [13] Designed for first level characters. 3142: King of the Giantdowns: Variable: Ed Stark: 1997: For the Birthright campaign setting. Includes adventures for low to high ...
As a result of this movement, feminist film theory was applied to a majority of films made by women in that era. Keller openly rejected the structural rules and regulations based on feminist film theory. In a review of E. Ann Kaplan's 1983 book Women and Film Keller stated that theory "obfuscates women's film making in the name of feminism."
A young woman named Willamina "Willie" Connolly is the daughter of a prosperous New York couple, editor Matt Connolly and his wife Willamina, an Irish concert pianist. Willie is a child prodigy with an extremely high IQ. Her parents believe her to be a happy, contented child, but this is a carefully contrived mask.