Topic: Douglas Preston
The Prosecutor of Perugia is a balding, portly Italian who has a thing for conspiracy theories involving Satanic sects.. . Giuliano Mignini, the...
New York, NY, January 05, 2011 -(PR.com)- Douglas Preston, SVP and Compliance Executive, Bank of America Merrill Lynch to Speak at KC s Social...
Hands down, the most stunning, surprising and horrific poisoning of a character in a novel has to be in Douglas Preston and Lincoln Child's " When poisons?were not well known, or when a particular poison could not be traced to a ...
I know, maybe he meant to say if John Grisham had written "Tyrannosaur Canyon, and Douglas Preston had written "Jurassic Park", and Michael Crichton had written "The Client", no that's no good either. No less than three of the seven recommendations ...
Barbara Locci and her lover Antonio Lo Bianco were the first victims of The Monster of Florence, the horrifying terror that used to stalk lovers in the Italian countryside only to leave them mutilated in blood. When author Douglas Preston decided to ...
Fever Dream by Douglas Preston and Lincoln Child is the fourth book that teams together Special Agent Aloysius Pendergast and Sargent Vincent D'Agosta and in a plot twist in the middle of the book D'Agosta's love Laura Haywood becomes ...
Talking to the Ground Douglas Preston Simon & Schuster, $24. In Talking to the Ground, Douglas Preston leads us on horseback across the sacred land of the Navajos, in some of the remotest parts of New Mexico and Arizona. Preston is accompanied by his fiancee and her 9-year-old daughter; this book is as much about the creation of their new family as about the land and legends of the Navajo creation story.. While Preston roams mountains and deserts, T. C. McLuhan, in her Cathedrals ...
Perhaps next year we really will all be taking e-readers on our hols, weightlessly loaded with as many titles as we like, so we can browse at our leisure. The Battle for Normandy by Antony Beevor (Viking, ?25) is the history book ...
Perhaps next year we really will all be taking e-readers on our hols, weightlessly loaded with as many titles as we like, so we can browse at our leisure. The Battle for Normandy by Antony Beevor (Viking, ?25) is the history book ...
This brutal, comic novel follows a 19th-century "mountain lunatic" and con artist trying to outrun the law, a spooky hex and his own death, which he may or may not have already experienced. Reimagining the lives of real people such as Mick ...