Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The book follows Harry Morgan, a fishing boat captain out of Key West, Florida. To Have and Have Not was Hemingway's second novel set in the United States, after The Torrents of Spring . Written sporadically between 1935 and 1937, and revised as he traveled back and forth from Spain during the Spanish Civil War , the novel portrays Key West and ...
Armstrong was twice married. With his first wife, he was the father of one son and two daughters: [6] Thaddeus Gloster Armstrong (1887–1963), who married artist Claire Kathleen Hanway, the younger sister of his stepmother, in 1921. [15] [16] Genevieve Armstrong, who married Watson. [17] Constance Armstrong, who died unmarried. [18]
Harry briefly expresses a wish to stay and work on his rocket but is easily persuaded to go with the rest of the colonists and come back when the weather is cooler. [ 2 ] Five years later, the United States , having won the war and rebuilt New York , sends a small military dispatch to recover the colonists sent to Mars, only to find their ...
It will appear in book form in 1931 as the fifth of 75 novels (and 28 short stories) in which Simenon features the pipe-smoking Paris detective. September 11 – Agatha Christie marries archaeologist Max Mallowan in Edinburgh.
Although the book and play were successful, the British Board of Film Censors (BBFC) would not allow a film to be made during the 1930s: it was a "very sordid story in very sordid surroundings", and in Gow's words "regarded as 'dangerous'". [2] In 1936, the BBFC rejected a proposed film version of Love on the Dole. [6]
The U.S.A. trilogy is a series of three novels by American writer John Dos Passos, comprising the novels The 42nd Parallel (), Nineteen Nineteen and The Big Money ().The books were first published together in a volume titled U.S.A. by Modern Library in 1937.
White Night is the 9th book in The Dresden Files, Jim Butcher's continuing series about wizard detective Harry Blackstone Copperfield Dresden. The cover art by illustrator Christian McGrath depicts Harry walking down a snowy street with his glowing staff.
Harry Armstrong may refer to: Harry George Armstrong (1899–1983), U.S. Air Force surgeon who first described the Armstrong Limit Harry Armstrong (politician) (1915–2011), Ohio Senator