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Showing 1 - 25 of
367 matches in All Departments
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Devil (DVD)
Chris Messina, Logan Marshall-Green, Geoffrey Arend, Bojana Novakovic, Caroline Dhavernas, …
1
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R60
Discovery Miles 600
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Ships in 8 - 13 working days
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Supernatural sci-fi suspense thriller produced and based on a
concept by M. Night Shyamalan, but directed by Drew and John Erick
Dowdle. Set inside a skyscraper office block, the film revolves
around a group of five people trapped inside an elevator - one of
whom, unbeknownst to the others, is the Devil in disguise.
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Myths and Legends of All Nations - Famous Stories from the Greek, German, English, Spanish, Scandinavian, Danish, French, Russian, Bohemian, Italian and other sources (Illustrated) (Large print, Hardcover, Large type / large print edition)
Logan Marshall
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R752
Discovery Miles 7 520
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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When she set sail from Southampton on her maiden voyage to New York
on April 10, 1912, RMS "Titanic," the pride of the White Star
fleet, was the largest ocean liner in the world. Deemed
"practically unsinkable" because of her double-bottomed hull and
watertight compartments, she carried more than 2,000 passengers and
crew, although only sufficient lifeboats for just over half that
number. Four days out of Southampton, on the night of April 14, she
struck an iceberg in the North Atlantic and sank within a matter of
hours; 1,503 lives were lost. Logan Marshall interviewed the
survivors in the immediate aftermath of the disaster and in this
book he records the facts as they were known, together with
numerous maps, diagrams, drawings, and photographs (including a
picture of the actual iceberg that sank the "Titanic"). Well
established as part of the canon of "Titanic" literature, this book
is a must-have for anyone with an interest in the ship and her
sorrowful fate.
An authentic account of one of the most horrible disasters in
Canadian history. Soon after leaving Quebec on her voyage to
Liverpool with over 1,300 souls on board, she was struck by the
Norwegian collier Storstad off Father Point, Quebec, on 29 May
1914, at 2.10 a.m., and sank about fifteen minutes later, carrying
a thousand of her passengers down with her.
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