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Rylen Alumak, the Gustavor Museum archivist, and Havenrose Courtier, the elevator attendant learn about a possible powerful artifact hidden on Floor Eight. After unlocking the coded elevator the doors open to Iklandangar E'e Narte, Ice Range of the North, home to torrential blizzards, avalanches and ferocious camouflaged ice bears.
Young Rylen Alumak, the Director of Archives of the Gustavor Museum and and his sidekick Havenrose Courtier, the elevator attendant crack an ancient code to the building's elevator that opens its doors to a previously inaccessible floor that is home to the Sand Swamps of Akrabul, a place with a history of dangers including the Akrabulian Wonder. Will the children find what they are looking for and bring it safely back to the museum?
Follow Rylen's adventure as the Professor's Nephew, from returning with the Golden Ashes and the power to heal or inflict, to reading about Cysgard the Olfeist, the dragon monster that terrorizes the King of Enik Veem. Follow Rylen and his friend, Havenrose as they venture out into the fog shrouded Lake Dragkosvete to the haunted Dungeon Isle of Cyllias Ey'e in search for the Spout of Tamewater amongst a horde of ghostly prisoners. With a little help from a previous acquaintance, can the children bring back the Spout of Tamewater to the Gustavor Museum where it truly belongs?
A troubled boy Rylen Alumak, expelled from school, is sent away to work as an archivist at his great uncle's rundown museum. Through his explorations and studies within the museum he discovers a secret code to the cranky dust-laden elevator that will open its doors to floors that hold secrets and adventures beyond beliefs.Will Rylen and his new friend Havenrose, the elevator attendant, find what they are looking for deep within the suspenseful and intriguing 13th Floor?
The First Half of the Professor's Nephew Series by M. Addison McEwan, including the first four books of The Rock of Iris, The Crystal Claw, The Golden Ashes and the Spout of Tamewater.
First came video and more recently high definition home entertainment, through to the internet with its streaming videos and not strictly legal peer-to-peer capabilities. With so many sources available, today’s fan of horror and exploitation movies isn’t necessarily educated on paths well-trodden — Universal classics, 1950s monster movies, Hammer — as once they were. They may not even be born and bred on DAWN OF THE DEAD. In fact, anyone with a bit of technical savvy (quickly becoming second nature for the born-clicking generation) may be viewing MYSTICS IN BALI and S.S. EXPERIMENT CAMP long before ever hearing of Bela Lugosi or watching a movie directed by Dario Argento. In this world, H.G. Lewis, so-called “godfather of gore,” carries the same stripes as Alfred Hitchcock, “master of suspense.” SPINEGRINDER is one man’s ambitious, exhaustive and utterly obsessive attempt to make sense of over a century of exploitation and cult cinema, of a sort that most critics won’t care to write about. One opinion; 8,000 reviews (or thereabouts.
An ancient language professor receives a mysterious book that contains messages from thousands of years in the past. Soon the professor finds himself and his nephew, a quantum mechanics experts, kidnapped by the American government. The captors order that a time machine be built. It is the beginning of an experience that turns the two men's world upside down. Much is revealed to them, including that the life they had been living was an illusion being controlled by a shape-shifting reptillian race known as the Draceye. Escaping in a time machine to the Sacred Circle of Stones, the two men journey back in time where they meet the Nineian Council. It is from the Council members that the men learn of a prophecy about a sacred boy who will change all things as they know it. Can they find the boy and defeat the Draceye or will the leader of the Draceye, Bezale, outwit them in thier efforts? So begins a tale of time, deceit, illusion, and great ancient magic. The Draceye saga begins...
An influential family’s weekend party is the stage for murder in this alternative history trilogy opener set in a post-WWII England where the Nazis won. Eight years have passed since the upper-crust “Farthing Set” overthrew Winston Churchill and led Britain into a separate peace with Hitler. Now those families have gathered for a weekend retreat. Among them is estranged scion Lucy Kahn, who can’t understand why she and her husband, David, were so enthusiastically invited. But all becomes clear when the eminent Sir James Thirkie is found murdered—with a yellow Star of David pinned to his chest. Lucy realizes that her Jewish husband is about to be framed for the crime, an outcome that would be altogether too politically convenient, given the machinations underway in Parliament in the coming week. The Farthing Set are determined to pass laws further restricting the right to vote, and a new outcry against Jews and foreigners would suit them fine. But whoever’s behind the murder and the frame-up didn’t count on the principal investigator from Scotland Yard being so prone to look beyond the obvious—or his being a man with his own private reasons for sympathizing with outcasts and underdogs . . . Praise for Farthing “If le Carré scares you, try Jo Walton. Of course her brilliant story of a democracy selling itself out to fascism sixty years ago is just a mystery, just a thriller, just a fantasy—of course we know nothing like that could happen now. Don’t we?” —Ursula K. Le Guin “Walton . . . crosses genres without missing a beat with this stunningly powerful alternative history set in 1949. . . . While the whodunit plot is compelling, it’s the convincing portrait of a country’s incremental slide into fascism that makes this novel a standout. Mainstream readers should be enthralled as well.” —Publishers Weekly (starred review)
From debut author Katharyn Blair comes a heart-stopping fantasy novel, perfect for fans of Cassandra Clare and The Young Elites, about a teenage runaway who enters a dangerous tournament with an impossible prize. Vesper Montgomery can summon your worst fear and turn it into a reality—but she’s learned the hard way that it’s an addicting and dangerous power. One wrong move and you could hurt someone you love. But when she earns a spot in the Tournament of the Unraveling, where competitors battle it out for a chance to rewrite the past, Vesper finally has a shot to reverse the mistakes that have changed her forever. She turns to Sam Hardy, a former MMA fighter who’s also carrying a tragedy he desperately wants to undo. However, helping heal Sam’s heart will mean breaking her own, and the competition forces her to master her powers—powers she has been terrified of since they destroyed her life.
Hiroshima is the story of six people—a clerk, a widowed seamstress, a physician, a Methodist minister, a young surgeon, and a German Catholic priest—who lived through the greatest single manmade disaster in history. In vivid and indelible prose, Pulitzer Prize–winner John Hersey traces the stories of these half-dozen individuals from 8:15 a.m. on August 6, 1945, when Hiroshima was destroyed by the first atomic bomb ever dropped on a city, through the hours and days that followed. Almost four decades after the original publication of this celebrated book, Hersey went back to Hiroshima in search of the people whose stories he had told, and his account of what he discovered is now the eloquent and moving final chapter of Hiroshima.