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This article about a thriller novel of the 1970s is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. See guidelines for writing about novels. Further suggestions might be found on the article's talk page.
Original production, 1926: from left: Sheila and Keld, Olive, Naomi and Edmund. The Rat Trap (1918) is a four-act drama by Noël Coward, written when he was 18, but not staged until he was 26, by which time he was well known as a rising playwright, after the success of The Vortex.
Rat Trap or Rattrap may also refer to: "Rat Trap", a 1978 song by the Boomtown Rats; The Rat Trap, a 1918 play by Noël Coward; Rat Trap (audio drama), a Doctor Who audio drama; Rat Trap, a 1963 French film; Elippathayam (The Rat Trap), a 1981 Indian film; Rat Trap, a 1976 novel by Craig Thomas
The Man in the Picture: A Ghost Story, 2007 Profile Books; The Beacon, 2008 Chatto and Windus; The Small Hand: A Ghost Story, 2010. Profile Books; A Kind Man, 2011; Dolly: A Ghost Story, 2012. Profile Books Ltd. Black Sheep, 2013. Chatto and Windus (144p) [2] From the Heart, 2017 Chatto and Windus
The actual story delves into Unni's struggles and his eventual entrapment in outdated attitudes, paralleling the disintegration of the feudal system. The film poignantly explores the consequences of Unni's obliviousness, portraying his decline as he becomes a victim of the very trap he symbolically embodies, drowned in the pond like the rats he ...
The third story titled The Initiate, [8] [9] the fourth story The Son [10] [11] and the fifth and final story The Traitor were released on July 8, 2014. [ 12 ] [ 13 ] Simultaneously with the release of last three short stories, a collected edition of the five short stories titled Four: A Divergent Collection was released on July 8, 2014, which ...
Rattrap (voiced by Scott McNeil) is the hacker, saboteur, and demolitions expert whose beast mode is a rat. He is cunning and resourceful, but sarcastic and querulous. Rattrap at first seems to come as a coward, often proclaiming “We’re all gonna die!” whenever he is put in danger.
Sybil Wettasinghe was born on 31 October 1927, the second of five siblings. She spent the first six years of her childhood in the village of Gintota in suburban Galle, where she started the primary education from Ginthota Buddhist School (currently as Ginthota Madya Maha Vidyalaya).