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Mockingjay is a 2010 dystopian young adult fiction novel by American author Suzanne Collins. It is chronologically the last installment of The Hunger Games series , following 2008's The Hunger Games and 2009's Catching Fire .
Following is the complete list of 124 novels written by the original author Ibn-e-Safi in Jasoosi Dunya (جاسوسی دنیا) series. [1] (Original number, original title , original title , translated tile in parentheses, year first published.) Diler Mujjrim (دلير مجرم) (The Courageous Criminal) Bilal Naseem - 1952
The novel revolves around the titular protagonist who is always mocked due to his personality and name. [1] Whereas the story bears similarities with Bollywood movie Mera Naam Joker , where protagonist suffers the same fate of losing his love and grief over his poverty and profession.
Maulvi Nazir Ahmad Dehlvi, also known as Deputy Nazir Ahmad, was an Urdu novel writer, social and religious reformer, and orator. Even today, he is best known for his novels, he wrote over 30 books on subjects such as law, logic, ethics and linguistics. [1] His famous novels are Mirat-ul-Uroos, Tobat-un-Nasuh, and Ibn-ul-waqt.
Mockingjay is a 2010 novel by Suzanne Collins. Mockingjay may also refer to: The Hunger Games: Mockingjay – Part 1 (2014), the first half of a two-part film adaptation of the novel; The Hunger Games: Mockingjay – Part 2 (2015), the second half of a two-part film adaptation of the novel; Katniss Everdeen or the Mockingjay, the protagonist of ...
Authorities have arrested the grandfather of a 1-year-old boy who was unaccounted for after a Dec. 8 crash that killed two of his family members and critically injured his mother.
Devta (Urdu: دیوتا deotā, "deity") is a serialized fantasy thriller novel written in the Urdu language by Mohiuddin Nawab. [1] It was published monthly for 33 years in the Pakistani magazine Suspense Digest from February 1977 to January 2010. Devta is the fictional autobiography of Farhad Ali Taimoor, a man who gained telepathic powers. [2]
Umro Ayyar or Amar Ayyar is a fictional character, an ayyār, [a] in Tilism-e-Hoshruba, an Urdu recension of the Islamic epic Hamzanama (originally in Persian). He was first written about during the time of Mughal Emperor Akbar and many stories and novels have been written about him since.