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In January 1904, three men were elected to a small and secretive
London-based criminological society referred to by its members as
"Our Society." Members of this society would meet at each other's
homes to discuss real-life crimes and ideas for stories. The three
men were close friends and each, in his own way, became a
successful crime writer. The first was Max Pemberton, a popular
late Victorian and Edwardian novelist, who had several bestsellers,
such as 'The Iron Pirate' to his name; the second was Bertram
Fletcher Robinson, a man of many talents, who sadly died young, and
before the full extent of these talents could be realised; and the
third, Arthur Conan Doyle. These three friends formed a creative
partnership that remains practically unique within the annals of
popular fiction. Robinson's collaboration with Doyle over 'The
Hound of the Baskervilles', belongs to literary folk lore, but
Robinson's dealings with Pemberton were likewise fruitful. During
January 1907, Robinson contracted typhoid and became terminally
ill. Shortly before he died, Robinson drafted some notes for an
adventure story and asked Pemberton to write it for him. The result
was 'Wheels of Anarchy'. It appears that Robinson and Pemberton had
discussed this tale with Doyle, but in any event, the final
narrative technique and literary devices, strongly resemble those
used by Dr. John H. Watson to chronicle the adventures of Sherlock
Holmes. Robinson, however, the Cambridge 'Varsity sportsman, and
Edwardian gentleman, lives on through both Bruce Driscoll, the
narrator and hero of 'Wheels of Anarchy', and Edward E. Malone, the
narrator and hero of Doyle's novel, 'The Lost World'. 'Wheels of
Anarchy' is not only a rip-roaring adventure story, that makes
James Bond look like a stay at home, but also a testament to the
friendship between Pemberton, Robinson and Doyle. It should engage
Sherlock Holmes fans and aficionados of the adventure and mystery
genres alike.
If you are looking for a simple and easy way to prepare a play or
pantomime then this is the book for you. With readymade stories
that can be easily updated to suit your performance this is more
than a 'how to' book - it gets you most of the way there. Whether
you are looking to put on a simple play inside the classroom to
create an engaging and empowering lesson for children, or whether
you want to prepare one to perform in front of others, Hugh Cooke's
simple and wittylayout makes it easy. These pantomimes/plays have
developed a long tradition in schools and theatres over the years -
the names of the characters may have been changed, and there have
been plot twists and dialogue added, but the participants are all
looking for the same thing - to get to the fun bit of practising
and performing quickly instead of spending hours learning by trial
and error. Just When You Thought It Was Safe To Go Back Into The
Theatre will allow you all the excitement and joy of the pantomime
without the pain and frustration .
Rugby Football was the first volume in the successful nine-part
series on Sports and Pastimes that was written for the Isthmian
Library between 1896 and 1901. It was also one of the first rugby
books to be written after members of the Rugby Football Union
became bitterly divided over a proposal to pay match expenses to
players. During 1896, the R.F.U. split and two new rugby codes were
born; the strictly amateur code of Rugby Union and the more
professionally inclined code of Rugby League. Bertram Fletcher
Robinson was a supporter of amateurism in sport and he felt that
the time was ripe to chart the birth of Rugby Union as a distinct
branch of Rugby Football. During the 1890s, The Times newspaper
described Fletcher Robinson as a household name within rugby
circles . Robinson played as a Forward alongside many international
players for both the Cambridge University Rugby Football Club 1st
XV and the Combined Oxford & Cambridge University Rugby
Football Club XV. According to his obituary in the Daily Express
newspaper, he would have been capped for England but for an
accident. Hence he was well qualified to write an anecdotal account
of the origin of Rugby Union. Rugby Football details the laws,
training techniques and tactics that were specific to Rugby Union
during its nascent period. It also reviews the development of Rugby
Union in British educational institutions and as a global
international sport. Rugby Football includes contributions from
several other historical rugby figures: Frank Mitchell (Cambridge
University & England), Richard Henry Burdon Cattell (Oxford
University, Blackheath, Moseley, Barbarians, Midland Counties &
England), Charles James Nicol Fleming (Oxford University &
Scotland), Gregor MacGregor (Cambridge University, Barbarians &
Scotland) and Henry Barrington Tristram (Oxford University &
England).
A fast-moving fantasy novel, a no-holds-barred novel written on an
adult level, about the war on terror. In the city state of Oolong
Morblock, where a certain proportion of the people have a natural
ability to cause themselves to explode, in effect making them
potential suicide bombers, Ibrahim Chess tries to find the middle
road: to steer a course of moderation and sanity in a world which
is going mad, and where the civil peace is threatened by the
increasingly intolerant fanaticism of the conflict between the
minority group to which Ibrahim belongs, the astrals, and the city
state's dominant group, the norms. Note: this book contains some
disturbing scenes. If you do not find something in this book to
disturb you then you are a seriously disturbed person. Are you a
person of exquisite good taste? Then, sorry, but you are
disqualified as a reader. This book pretty much takes the attitude
that boundaries (especially boundaries of taste) are there to be
breached. You have been warned!
Short stories of varying lengths. Over 600 pages. SF, fantasy,
horror, aberration and weirdness. Time travel, virtual reality,
cloning. Murder in various modes of brutality. Sex, rape,
necrophilia. SANTA CLAUS SEX CRIMINAL: a look at the pedophile.
Torture. Vomit. The transcosmic environment of the moid. Life after
death. Complications involving a demon. A story including a serial
killer. Murdered by a ghost. High quality literary fiction to
mainline to your mind.
This is a wide-ranging collection of modern free verse poems by the
author of the fantasy series "Chronicles of an Age of Darkness."
The 141 poems touch on topics as diverse and various as school
life, city life, nature, war, death, cancer, pregnancy,
breastfeeding and atomic war. Highlights of the collection include
a praise poem for Saddam Hussein called "Saddam is Guilty," and
"Lumberjacked Cities," about the slaughter of the civilian
populations of Dresden, Tokyo, Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
Togura Poulaan, a questing hero whether he liked it or not, is
precipitated into a series of adventures in a world which includes
dragons, sea serpents, war, wild tribes and the wizard Hostaja
Sken-Pitilkin, lord of the island of Drum. A fast-paced fantasy
novel published in the USA as two volumes, THE QUESTING HERO and
THE HERO'S RETURN.
A murder mystery with fantasy elements set in the land of Nizon,
where people eat with scissors rather than with chopsticks. Fantasy
in a modern environment complete with computers and cellphones.
Business manager Ken Udamana, a husband and a father of two,
believes that someone is planning to murder him and takes a shot at
find out who. This novel contains some violence and touches on the
subject of an adulterous relationship.
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