The Last Egyptian E F SchmidtThe Last Egyptian (1908) is a novel by L. Frank Baum. Although he is more widely known as the author of the Land of Oz series, Baum also used several pseudonyms to make forays into more conventional fiction for adults. The Last Egyptian, published anonymously, is a story of corruption, betrayal, romance, and adventure. It was adapted into a 1914 silent film by Baum and J. Farrell MacDonald, an influential and prolific figure in early American cinema.
With the ability to conceive of and construct ever more complicated machinery
the book draws upon voyages undertaken by the author on five different working cargo ships
Emily Brontë's Wuthering Heights has been adapted countless times for film and television over the decades
A unique historical study of the personal nature of religion
Demonstrating that this is not just part of the history of Switzerland but of Britain too
historical questions of representation
the right to change religions
Father Sky and Mother Earth
The anthology aims to provide sixth-form and university students of Italian with high-quality and stimulating reading material
At Millennium's End looks back over the body of Kurt Vonnegut's writing
But he is soon caught up in a swirl of events and concerns that alter the course of his life irrevocably
from the Near East and North Africa to the Mediterranean world and the Americas