Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Scorpion (Carmilla Black, born Thasanee Rappaccini) is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. She first appears in Amazing Fantasy (vol. 2) #7 and was created by Fred Van Lente and Leonard Kirk .
Scorpion is a spy thriller novel by American author Andrew Kaplan, [1] [2] published by Macmillan in hardcover in 1985 and as a Warner Books paperback in 1986. It hit best-seller lists in Canada, the UK, Australia, Germany and Greece.
Jamal is trying to get his brother, Randy, out of a bad habit. Randy is a 17-year-old who is the leader of the Scorpions, a local gang of drug dealers in New York City. Jamal's family includes himself, Randy, his mother, his 3-year-old sister whose name is Lassy, and his father, Jason Hicks.
Scarlett Estevez as Violet Rodriguez / Ultra Violet, [1] a 13-year-old girl who gets chosen by a magical Luchador mask that transforms her into a superhero with super-speed; J.R. Villarreal as Cruz De la Vega / Black Scorpion, [1] Violet's maternal uncle and superhero mentor who owns a wrestling gym and fights crime in secret where he possesses super-strength and the ability to teleport ...
After a solar flare knocks out power and communications in Southern California, Scorpion, Ralph, Cabe's girlfriend Allie, Sly's intern Patty, and Sly's science club team up to save two teenagers trapped on a plane with no way of landing. Cabe, Allie, Toby, and Happy reactivate the lighthouse both couples went to for a romantic weekend away to ...
Book Author(s) Country Notes Ref. 1964 Manfred Steiner Martian Time-Slip: Philip K. Dick USA [148] 1996 Seth Garin The Regulators: Stephen King (under the pen name Richard Bachman) USA [149] 1996 Simon Lynch Simple Simon: Ryne Douglas Pearson USA: Adapted into the film Mercury Rising (1998). [150] [151] 2000 Marty Zellerbach The Hades Factor
At one point the plan had been for "The Scorpion God" and "Envoy Extraordinary" to be rounded out with two new short stories and later Monteith suggested using two much shorter stories of Golding's that had been previously published: "Miss Pulkinhorn" (Encounter, vol 15, August 1960, pp. 27–32) and "The Anglo Saxon" (Queen, 22 December 1959 ...
Of the book, Farmer stated that she had never intended to create a sequel to The House of the Scorpion, as writing the novel had depressed her. [2] As a result, she began work on the Trolls Trilogy, but soon found that she wanted to revisit the world of the previous novel in order to resolve problems that remained at the end of Scorpion. [2]