Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
A Stranger Came Ashore is a 1975 young adult novel written by Scottish author Mollie Hunter. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] Set in the Shetland Islands in the north of Scotland , the plot revolves around a boy called Robbie Henderson, his family and a mysterious stranger named Finn Learson.
Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Seas (French: Vingt Mille Lieues sous les mers) is a science fiction adventure novel by the French writer Jules Verne. It is often considered a classic within both its genres and world literature .
Under the Seas (1907) The Tunnel (1915) 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea (1916) The Mysterious Island (1929) Der Tunnel (1933) Le Tunnel (1933) The Tunnel (1935) 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea (1954) It Came from Beneath the Sea (1955) Invention for Destruction (1958) The Atomic Submarine (1959) On the Beach (1959) Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea ...
They Came from the Sea is a 1955 Australian novel by E. V. Timms. It was the eighth in his Great South Land Saga of novels. The Argues said "although not in the first rank of recent Australian novels, is an exciting book, full of incident." [1] The novel was serialised for Australian radio in 1965, adapted by Colin Roderick and read by Max ...
The civilisation, known as the Nartec, tell their own tale as to how they came to be under the sea, but although Marco jokingly suggests that the group have discovered Atlantis, the name never appears. After the Animorphs make their escape, the Nartec do not appear or are even mentioned in later novels, leaving their fate undetermined.
The Sea Came in at Midnight (1999) is the sixth novel by Steve Erickson. [1] [2] It has been translated into French, German, Italian, Russian and Japanese. It was named one of the year's best novels by the New York Times Book Review and short-listed for a British Fantasy Society Award. [3] It was followed by a sequel, Our Ecstatic Days, in 2005.
Black riders came from the sea. Three little birds in a row; In the Desert; Yes, I have a thousand tongues; Once there came a man; God fashioned the ship of the world carefully; Mystic shadow, bending near me, I looked here; I stood upon a high place, Should the wide world roll away, In a lonely place, "And the sins of the fathers shall be"
In 1475, Sudak came under the control of the Ottoman Empire. In 1771, Sudak got occupied by armed forces of the Russian Empire. The fortress lost its importance and strategic value under Imperial Russian reign, and therefore the Genoese buildings and parts of the fortress were dismantled, and the bricks were used for new construction. [1]