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  1. The Man with the Red Tattoo. Martyn Pig. Midnight for Charlie Bone. Midnight Runner. Misspent Youth. Molly Moon's Incredible Book of Hypnotism. Mondays Are Red. The Moon Riders. The Mulberry Empire.

  2. The Lost World. The Lost World is a book written by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle in the year 1912. In it, Professor Challenger and his companions travel to find a large plateau in South America where dinosaurs still live. After a long journey they find the plateau, and witness not only dinosaurs, but two tribes - an ancient Native American people and ...

  3. The Commitments. Followed by. The Van. The Snapper (1990) is a novel by Irish writer Roddy Doyle and the second novel in The Barrytown Trilogy. [1] The plot revolves around unmarried Sharon Rabbitte's pregnancy, and the unexpected effects this has on her conservative, working-class Dublin family. When twenty-year-old Sharon informs her father ...

  4. The Van is a 1991 novel by Roddy Doyle and the third novel in The Barrytown Trilogy. It was shortlisted for the Booker Prize (1991). Premise. The basis of the story is that Jimmy Rabbitte Sr. has been laid off from his job and has no money. His friend, Brendan "Bimbo" Reeves, also is laid off and receives a redundancy cheque.

  5. The Gemma Doyle Trilogy [1] is a trilogy of fantasy novels by American writer Libba Bray. They are told from the perspective of Gemma Doyle, a girl in the late nineteenth century. The Gemma Doyle Trilogy consists of three books: A Great and Terrible Beauty (published December 9, 2003), Rebel Angels (published 2006), and The Sweet Far Thing ...

  6. After the Flood ( Swedish: Efter floden) is a 1982 novel by the Swedish novelist P. C. Jersild. It was well received as it played into the contemporary fear of nuclear holocaust. P.C. Jersild was an active anti-nuclear campaigner as part of the Nobel Prize –winning NGO, International Physicians for the Prevention of Nuclear War .

  7. Floodtide. Floodtide is a 1950 historical novel by the American writer Frank Yerby. [1] It was ranked seventh on the Publishers Weekly list of bestselling novels that year. [2] Like many of his works of the era it is set in the South during the nineteenth century.

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