You may have to Search all our reviewed books and magazines, click the sign up button below to create a free account.
None
Richard Linville (ca. 1652-1684), Quaker son of Thomas Linvill and Elizabeth Wickersham, emigrated with his wife Mary, from England to Chester, Pennsylvania in 1684 (he died almost immediately after arrival). His widow married Thomas Baldwin of New Jersey in 1684. Descendants and relatives lived in Pennsylvania, New Jersey, North Carolina, Ohio, Indiana, Michigan, Illinois, Kansas and elsewhere. Includes genealogical data about Linville and Wickersham ancestry in England to 1600 A.D.
How many other performers from the last 60 or so years can you think of that are instantly recognisable from just their Christian name? Bing, Elvis and Ringo come to mind and so does Cliff… Richard that is! Born Harry Webb in India in 1940, Sir Cliff as he became in 1995, has achieved just about everything that it is possible to achieve as an entertainer and is still doing it and loving it, after all these years. From his early career of the late fifties with the Shadows, through to the sixties with his movies, then the ups and downs of the seventies, eighties and nineties. The new millennium provided another challenge for which Cliff was more than happy to meet, much to the delight of his adoring fans. This book celebrates the life and music of this amazing pop icon illustrated with fabulous archive black & white and colour photography. Cliff, we salute you!
When the Goddess Returns to Eden introduces two interdimensional and universal entities who are enemies and in pursuit of each other through space-time. The setting of their at present encounter is a fictional small town and county in south central Kentucky. There the antagonist, Turner Ashton, infiltrates a local drug cartel who is plotting the death of the protagonist, Rhea Michaels, an educator. She is encouraged by an elderly friend to make contact with the county attorney, Max Hastings, who is also a main character threatened by the cartel. The plot weaves the fictionalized main characters and supporting cast in a web of crime, torture, mayhem, and murder. The connecting element of the initial book and subsequent releases is a professor, Bradford Wainwright, who has received the manuscript from an unknown source with the directive to be read by him alone with the promise a future manuscript will identify him as the author. Once Wainwright finishes reading the initial manuscript and he is speaking to his agent, the second book arrives.
Thomas Young was born in about 1747 in Baltimore County, Maryland. He married Naomi Hyatt, daughter of Seth Hyatt and Priscilla, in about 1768. They had four children. Thomas died in 1829 in North Carolina. Ancestors, descendants and relatives lived mainly in North Carolina.
College Street is a piece of fictional history. The book recalls for the reader an historical period in a way that explains as well as describes. The text covers most of the middle third of the Twentieth Century, including the outbreak of World War II and the confusion of the peace that followed. The author may be one of the principles, or maybe not. He may be a part of each character in an environment providing no hint of genetic identity. The book switches on a light to give the reader a closer look at the drama of displaced mankind in a battle for survival.