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book and chronicles
The account of Jeroboam's life, like that of all his successors, ends with the formula " And the rest of the acts of Jeroboam, how he warred, and how he reigned, behold, they are written in the book of the chronicles of the kings of Israel " (, ).
Kristiana Gregory's book The Great Railroad Race ( part of the " Dear America " series ) is written as a diary by Libby West, who chronicles the end of the building of the railroad and the excitement which engulfed the country at the time.
His latest book, The March of Patriots, chronicles the creation of a modern Australia during the 1991 – 2007 era of Prime Ministers, Paul Keating and John Howard.
In his book A Long Way Gone: Memoirs of a Child Soldier, Ishmael Beah chronicles his life during the conflict in Sierra Leone.
* The book, Outcry-Memoirs of Manny Steinberg, chronicles a young Jewish man's life and trials during the Nazi occupation of Radom and beyond.
He also has a special affection for the martyred maiden Saint Winifred who lies at the centre of the first book in the series, A Morbid Taste for Bones, ( though this was not originally the novel chosen to launch the chronicles ), in which Cadfael takes part in an expedition to Wales to excavate the saint's bones and bring them to the Abbey in England, establishing it as a pilgrimage site of healing relics.
He is also said to have compiled the Psalter of Tara, a book containing the chronicles of Irish history, the laws concerning the rents and dues kings were to receive from their subjects, and records of the boundaries of Ireland.
The book The Surgeon of Crowthorne ( published in America as The Professor and the Madman ) by Simon Winchester, was published in 1998 and chronicles both Minor's later life and his contributions to the creation of the Oxford English Dictionary.
The book chronicles the investigative reporting of Woodward and Bernstein from Woodward's initial report on the Watergate break-in through the resignations of H. R. Haldeman and John Ehrlichman, and the revelation of the Nixon tapes by Alexander Butterfield in 1973.
* " Murder in Coweta County " TV Movie ( 1983 ) Based on the same titled book by Margaret Anne Barnes that chronicles actual events around 1948.
Norman M. Coats of Kirkwood, MO ; a 1944 Borden High School Graduate, World War II Veteran, Businessman and Author ; wrote a compelling book called " Growing Up on Daisy Hill ", which chronicles his early years being born and raised in the nearby hills and hollows of Borden during The Great Depression.
Historian Martis D. Ramage, Jr .' s book, " Tupelo, Mississippi, Tornado of 1936 ," chronicles the devastation of the tornado, with many rare photographs, Another tornado struck in 2008, Rated an EF3 on the Enhanced Fujita Scale.
The book chronicles how the village and its people adapted to these environmental changes, survived and prospered, while at the same time making significant contributions to American society beyond what would be expected from a small village.
A hardcover 268-page book with 170 photos and featuring 30 interviews with town elders, There's No Place Like Rome chronicles the history of Rome from its hardscrabble agricultural start to its transformation as a recreational Mecca.
The book chronicles Tera's path to porn stardom and the loneliness, love, and lust she experienced along the way.
to which is appended the book of the chronicles of the Elis ( 1904 )-co-author, with M ' Cready Sykes
Many historical illustrations left in Rashid al Din's " Compendium chronicles " book described falconry of the middle centuries with Mongol images.
His best-selling book, Man's Search for Meaning ( published under a different title in 1959: From Death-Camp to Existentialism, and originally published in 1946 as Trotzdem Ja Zum Leben Sagen: Ein Psychologe erlebt das Konzentrationslager ), chronicles his experiences as a concentration camp inmate which led him to discover the importance of finding meaning in all forms of existence, even the most sordid ones, and thus a reason to continue living.
The book chronicles the impact of Sufism on the development of Western civilisation and traditions from the seventh century onward through the work of such figures as Roger Bacon, John of the Cross, Raymond Lully, Chaucer and others, and has become a classic.
It also features prominently in the book This Is a Soul, which chronicles the work of American physician Rick Hodes in Ethiopia.
* Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee, a 1970 book by Dee Brown, which chronicles events leading up to the Wounded Knee Massacre
The Sultan was making a collection of ancient chronicles of Persia and ordered Ferdowsi to complete the book.
A notable part of Paradise Lost is book IV where he chronicles Satan ’ s trespass into paradise.
A book entitled Echoes from Calvary: Meditations on Franz Joseph Haydn's The Seven Last Words of Christ ( Rowman & Littlefield, 2005 ) chronicles their long-time involvement with this Good Friday masterpiece and offers rare insight from many perspectives.

book and fictitious
* The book Next by Michael Crichton unravels a story in which fictitious biotechnology companies experiment with gene therapy.
The first book produced by Taxil after his conversion was a four-volume history of Freemasonry, which contained fictitious eyewitness verifications of their participation in Satanism.
Deletions to Wilde's typescript made prior to publication in Lippincott's include: the removal of several passages alluding to homosexuality and homosexual desire ; the deletion of all references to the title of the fictitious book Le Secret de Raoul, and to its fictitious author, Catulle Sarrazin ; and three references to Gray's female lovers Sibyl Vane and Hetty Merton as his " mistresses ".
Wells ' The Shape of Things to Come ( 1933 ), written in the form of a history book published in the year 2106 and — in the manner of a real history book — containing numerous footnotes and references to the works of ( mostly fictitious ) prominent historians of the 20th and 21st centuries.
Lindsay had done little to dispel the myth that the story is based on truth, in many interviews either refusing to confirm it was entirely fiction, or hinting that parts of the book were fictitious, and others were not.
Gerolf Steiner's mock-scientific book about the fictitious animal order Rhinogradentia ( 1961 ), inspired by Morgenstern's nonsense poem Das Nasobēm, is testament to his enduring popularity.
* Software author Adam N. Rosenburg in his blog " The failure of the Digital computer ", has described the current state of programming as nearing the " Software event horizon ", ( alluding to the fictitious " shoe event horizon " described by Douglas Adams in his Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy book ).
* J. R. Hartley – author of another fictitious book, written after it became famous.
In the second book the place of Delia is taken by " Nemesis ", which is also a fictitious name.
Wells ' The Shape of Things to Come ( 1933 ), which was written in the form of a history book published in the year 2106 and-in the manner of a real history book-containing numerous footnotes and references to the works of ( mostly fictitious ) prominent historians of the 20th and 21st centuries.
In Worth's book, The Trivia Encyclopedia, the fictitious entry about Columbo's first name was actually a " copyright trap " – a deliberately false statement intended to reveal subsequent copyright infringement.
Her publisher Riverhead Books canceled the publication of Seltzer's book, Love and Consequences, when it was revealed that Seltzer's story of her alleged experiences growing up as a half-white, half-Native American foster child and Bloods gang member in South Central Los Angeles were fictitious.
Palombia is a fictitious South American country described in the Belgian Spirou et Fantasio and Marsupilami comic book stories as the birthplace and native habitat of Marsupilami.
The names of the secondary officers are also fictitious and do not reflect the actual officers of the Titanic, though Walter Lord's best-selling book A Night to Remember had been released nine years earlier.
* Bagtime ( Popular Library, 1977 ) ( collection of columns written with Paul Galloway, from the perspective of fictitious supermarket bagboy Mike Holiday, under which name the book was published ; also turned into a stage play and TV movie ) ISBN 0-445-04057-2
Therefore designed the prosecution facts, Bahro was compiled from " greed " information ( and misinformation fictitious ) for the West German intelligence service and this by the publication of the book " transferred ".
Gouda uses the May 15 Incident as the basis of a fictitious book, The Individual Eleven by equally fictitious author Patrick Sylvestre.
The book L ' Or de Rennes by Gérard de Sède ( with the collaboration of Pierre Plantard ) contained elements relating to the fictitious secret society the Priory of Sion, reproducing " parchments " that alluded to the survival of the Merovingian line of Frankish kings from Dagobert II, and Pierre Plantard claimed to be descended from that monarch.
When David Pringle chose it for inclusion in his book Modern Fantasy: The Hundred Best Novels, he described the novel as " a playful metafiction about the real and the fictitious, about the writer and his or her creation …" and concluded that the novel is "… a gripping and intelligent tale of the supernatural by an author who is adept at avoiding most of the clichés of the horror genre.
Although Edgerly claimed in the 1900 edition of The Book of General Membership of the Ralston Health Club that the letters for the word RALSTON came from Regime, Activity, Light, Strength, Temperation, Oxygen and Nature, earlier editions of the same book are credited to Everett Ralston, a pseudonym of Edgerly, with the implication that Ralstonism is named after this fictitious person.
According to a review by Martin Bronfenbrenner in The Journal of Political Economy, about half of the book was devoted to dialectical philosophy, " with a strong epistemological stress ", with the other half devoted to discussions of economic and general history, anthropology and sociology, and actual economics, including a surprisingly large helping of business administration – Bronfenbrenner noted that LaRouche seemed to have " more private-business experience than the great majority of academic economists ", including a familiarity with the way speculative overcapitalization, operating at the borders of white-collar crime, creates " fictitious capitals " that later do not match their actual earning power.

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