You may have to Search all our reviewed books and magazines, click the sign up button below to create a free account.
The general details and course of events given in this story about King Alfred are, in the main, as written by Asser, the King’s chaplain. One or two further incidents of the Athelney period are from the later chroniclers--notably the sign given by St. Cuthberht--as are also the names of the herdsman and the nobles in hiding in the fen. But all the characters can be found here – King Alfred, Queen Ealhswith, their daughters, Asser, Odda, Osmund, Cuthbert, Guthrum, Hubba, St. Neot, Athelstan Godred, Ethelred, Thiodolf, Thora and the other significant players of the age. The story is told by Ranald Vemundsson, son of the late Vemund, king of Southmereland, Norway, slain by Jarl Rognvald on...
"King Alfred's Viking" by Charles W. Whistler. Published by Good Press. Good Press publishes a wide range of titles that encompasses every genre. From well-known classics & literary fiction and non-fiction to forgotten−or yet undiscovered gems−of world literature, we issue the books that need to be read. Each Good Press edition has been meticulously edited and formatted to boost readability for all e-readers and devices. Our goal is to produce eBooks that are user-friendly and accessible to everyone in a high-quality digital format.
No society at any time, under any conditions, has provided enduring freedom, security, justice, or self-determination for all of its citizens. The problems that confront the human species today are so large, so complex, and so urgent that an effective solution requires a framework that considers mankind as a whole. The alternative, according to Gerhard Hirschfeld, is global disaster. These observations provide both the motivation and the focus for The People, a book that proposes a radical departure from traditional perceptions of people in society. Hirschfeld argues that the basic relationship between people, leaders, and the middle class has always been fixed in human society, and that the...
"The Viking's Skull" by John R. Carling is a mystery novel with supernatural elements. The book tells the story of Idris Breakspear, a man searching for a clue to the fate of his father, who was accused of a murder he didn't commit, sprung from prison by his friend Noel Rochefort, and vanished at sea fifteen years previous.
None
After living on the streets of New York City for over a decade, Logan Ellis admits her perceptions might be a little skewed. But twisted or not, there¿s a satisfying irony in watching a well dressed vampire stand in the middle of a ghetto alley, windblown trash scraping small circles near his feet. What she finds even more intriguing, is waiting for him to decide whether or not he¿s going to kill her. Kerestyan Nelek hasn¿t quite made up his mind. As the Lord of New York, he can¿t allow a homeless drug addict, whose memories are packed with knowledge of vampiric existence, to run free in his city. It¿s not the first time he¿s been in this situation with a human, it¿s just the first time in thousands of years he¿s come face to face with one who doesn¿t seem to care. And that¿s what makes the decision so damn difficult.What horrors would you have to witness before you went numb? How many years would it take for you to feel that way? What would it take to make you care again?Logan¿s answers are simple: the worst humanity has to offer, almost thirty¿and something she never expected.
The author presents the first full scale intellectual portrait of Ward.