Encounter at North Road House

Encounter at North Road House PDF Author: Christopher Bike
Publisher: America Star Books
ISBN: 145604642X
Category : Fiction
Languages : en
Pages : 144

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Book Description
A masked psychopath arrives at a house one night looking for another kill, unaware that this house is haunted and vacant. The house hosts a wicked, dark, spiritual presence. The doors of North Road House lock shut and entrap the masked killer. This causes the masked, imperishable psychopath to clash with North Road House. You must do the best you can to maintain your composure with this one. Encounter at North Road House is a book that will take the horror fan on one of the most chilling and bloodcurdling journeys for these times, a terrifying thrill‑ride.

Africa's Great North Road in a Vw Camper

Africa's Great North Road in a Vw Camper PDF Author: Emma Selig Jones
Publisher: iUniverse
ISBN: 9781475926989
Category : Travel
Languages : en
Pages : 572

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Book Description
Emma and I most cordially invite you to accompany us as our special arm-chair guest on an overland journey through the most exciting continent on the Planet Earth. We shall begin our journey in Cape Town, South Africa in the fall of 1964. During the following ten months we will travel and camp along Africas Great North Road. A variety of recently created nations and peoples, a few still struggling to be free, will be visited, among them, South Africa, Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe), Zambia, Tanzania, Kenya, Uganda and the Congo. There are, at present, more than 700 separate tribes living south of the Great Sahara Desert. Obviously all of them cannot be included. However, we will visit and camp-out with the typical African where he lives, whether it be an Afrikaner living in one of the exclusive multi-level homes cut into the rock cliffs overlooking the Bay of Cape Town surrounded by twelve-foot walls capped with broken glass and razor wire or a Wanderobo tribesman dressed in a loincloth and carrying a bow and sheath of poisoned arrows met along a primitive dusty track running through the Bush country of Tanzania. Our self-contained VW camper gave us the freedom to camp along the streets of any city or village or along the track where Native Africans were living much as they have for many hundreds of years. Please be prepared, watching people and so-called wild animals can take many hours and, in some instances, the supply of daylight runs out. Frequently camp was made along the track out in the Bush and was visited by elephants during the night or a pride of lions stopping by to sharpen their claws on our tires. In one instance several elephants stripped branches off a tree under which we were camped not one of them touched the camper!

Reproduction by Design

Reproduction by Design PDF Author: Angus McLaren
Publisher: University of Chicago Press
ISBN: 0226560694
Category : History
Languages : en
Pages : 245

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Book Description
Drawing on novels, plays, science fiction, and films of the 1920s and 1930s, this book examines modern science's place in reproduction in British and American cultural history.

Friends' Intelligencer

Friends' Intelligencer PDF Author:
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category : Society of Friends
Languages : en
Pages : 850

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Book Description


The Great North Road, the Old Mail Road to Scotland: London to York

The Great North Road, the Old Mail Road to Scotland: London to York PDF Author: Charles G. Harper
Publisher: DigiCat
ISBN:
Category : Travel
Languages : en
Pages : 144

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Book Description
Charles G. Harper in this book describes the road that links the two capitals; London and York together. The book is a reproduction of the earlier version when automobiles have just been invented. This book contains numerical descriptions of distances between these two locations, it contains the journey of travelers through this old, historical road.

Accounts and Papers of the House of Commons

Accounts and Papers of the House of Commons PDF Author: Great Britain. Parliament. House of Commons
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category :
Languages : en
Pages : 566

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Book Description


The Great North Road

The Great North Road PDF Author: Charles G. Harper
Publisher: BoD – Books on Demand
ISBN: 3752342897
Category : Fiction
Languages : en
Pages : 186

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Book Description
Reproduction of the original: The Great North Road by Charles G. Harper

Viking encounters

Viking encounters PDF Author: Anne Pedersen
Publisher: Aarhus Universitetsforlag
ISBN: 877184936X
Category : History
Languages : en
Pages : 636

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Book Description
The Viking Congresses bring together scholars of archaeology, philology, history, toponymy, numismatics and a number of other disciplines to discuss the Viking Age from a variety of viewpoints. This volume contains 44 peer-reviewed papers selected from those presented at the 18th Viking Congress held in Denmark in August 2017. The contributors take up the interdisciplinary challenge, and the papers cover a wide range of subjects, rooted in the past, but also connecting to the present.

Proceedings of the Parliament of South Australia

Proceedings of the Parliament of South Australia PDF Author: South Australia. Parliament
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category : South Australia
Languages : en
Pages : 690

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Book Description


The Great North Road: York to Edinburgh

The Great North Road: York to Edinburgh PDF Author: Charles George Harper
Publisher: C. Tinling & Co., Ltd
ISBN:
Category :
Languages : en
Pages : 153

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Book Description
Example in this ebook Chapter I At last we are safely arrived at York, perhaps no cause for comment in these days, but a circumstance which “once upon a time” might almost have warranted a special service of prayer and praise in the Minster. One comes to York as the capital of a country, rather than of a county, for it is a city that seems in more than one sense Metropolitan. Indeed, you cannot travel close upon two hundred miles, even in England and in these days of swift communication, without feeling the need of some dominating city, to act partly as a seat of civil and ecclesiastical government, and partly as a distributing centre; and if something of this need is even yet apparent, how much more keenly it must have been felt in those “good old days” which were really so bad! A half-way house, so to speak, between those other capitals of London and Edinburgh, York had all the appearance of a capital in days of old, and has lost but little of it, in these, even though in point of wealth and population it lags behind those rich and dirty neighbours, Leeds and Bradford. For one thing, it has a history to which they cannot lay claim, and keeps a firm hold upon titles and dignities conferred ages ago. We may ransack the pages of historians in vain in attempting to find the beginnings of York. Before history began it existed, and just because it seems a shocking thing to the well-ordered historical mind that the first founding of a city should go back beyond history or tradition, Geoffrey of Monmouth and other equally unveracious chroniclers have obligingly given precise—and quite untrustworthy—accounts of how it arose, at the bidding of kings who never had an existence outside their fertile brains. When the Romans came, under Agricola, in A.D. 70, York was here. We do not know by what name the Brigantes, the warlike tribe who inhabited the northern districts of Britain, called it, but they possessed forts at this strategic point, the confluence of the rivers Ouse and Foss, where York still stands, and evidently had the military virtues fully developed, because it has seemed good to all who have come after them, from the Romans and the Normans to ourselves, to build and retain castles on the same sites. The Brigantes were a great people, despite the fact that they had no literature, no science, and no clothes with which to cover their nakedness, and were they in existence now, might be useful in teaching our War Office and commanding officers something of strategy and fortification. They have left memorials of their existence in the names of many places beginning with “Brig,” and they are the sponsors of all the brigands that ever existed, for their name was a Brito-Welsh word meaning “hill-men” or “highlanders,” and, as in the old days, to be a highlander was to be a thief and cut-throat, the chain of derivative facts that connects them with the bandits of two thousand years is complete. To be continue in this ebook