Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Frost and Fire" is a short story by Ray Bradbury and the fourteenth in his collection R is for Rocket. It was first published in Planet Stories (Fall, 1946) as "The Creatures That Time Forgot". The story is about short-lived humans on a planet similar to Mercury .
The Stories of Ray Bradbury is an anthology containing 100 short stories by American writer Ray Bradbury, first published by Knopf in 1980. The hundred stories, written from 1943 to 1980, were selected by the author himself.
Frost and Fire may refer to: "Frost and Fire" (short story), a short story by Ray Bradbury; Frost and Fire, an album by the heavy metal band Cirith Ungol; Frost and Fire, the 1965 album by The Watersons; Frost & Fire, a collection of short stories and essays by Roger Zelazny "Frost & Fire", the thirtieth episode of the fifth season of Adventure ...
Frost & Fire is a 288-page collection of short stories and essays by Roger Zelazny. It was printed in 1989 by William Morrow. Contents "An Exorcism, of Sorts" ...
"R Is for Rocket" (first published as "King of the Gray Spaces") "The End of the Beginning" "The Fog Horn" "The Rocket" "The Rocket Man" "The Golden Apples of the Sun" "A Sound of Thunder"
Note: This Frost diagram for nitrogen is also incomplete as it lacks azide (N − 3, or hydrazoic acid, HN 3), presented here above in the former Frost diagram for nitrogen. The pH dependence is given by the factor −0.059 m / n per pH unit, where m relates to the number of protons in the equation, and n the number of electrons exchanged.
"Frost & Fire" is the thirtieth episode of the fifth season of the American animated television series Adventure Time. It was written and storyboarded by Luke Pearson and Somvilay Xayaphone, from a story by Kent Osborne, series creator Pendleton Ward, Jack Pendarvis, and showrunner Adam Muto. It originally aired on Cartoon Network on August 5 ...
"The Long Rain" is a science fiction short story by American writer Ray Bradbury. This story was originally published in 1950 under a different title in the magazine Planet Stories, and then in the collection The Illustrated Man.