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Saturday, October 28, 2006

Nora Roberts

Nora Roberts - Ever After
Nora Roberts - In The Garden 02 - Black Rose
Nora Roberts - Irish Hearts 2 - Irish Hearts
Nora Roberts - Jackie's Story 3 - lawless
Nora Roberts - The Villa
Nora Roberts - Winter Rose
Nora Roberts The Quinns' Christmas
Public Secrets - Nora Roberts
Roberts, Nora - Divine Evil
Roberts, Nora - Lawless
Roberts, Nora - Night Tales 2 - Night Shield.lit
Roberts, Nora - O'Hurleys 01 - The Last Honest Woman.lit
Roberts, Nora - Once more with feeling
Roberts, Nora - Public Secrets
Roberts, Nora - Quinn 03 - Inner Harbor.lit
Roberts, Nora - Quinn Brothers 2 - Rising Tides.lit
Roberts, Nora - Quinn Brothers 3 - Inner Harbor.lit
Roberts, Nora - Stars Of Mithra 1 - Hidden Star (1997).lit
Roberts, Nora - Table for Two.lit
Roberts, Nora (JD Robb) - Dallas 21 - Divided in Death

file size : 5.8 MB

http://rapidshare.com/files/3316626/Nora_Roberts_20_books.zip
Posted by Bookworm at 8:10 PM | 9 comments
Friday, October 27, 2006

Alistair MacLean

Alistair MacLean

Alistair MacLean is a superb author if you haven't read his books, you should.
He usually writes military or spy thrillers, and his books always end with a
twist. Even when you've gotten to know his style and you think you know what the twist will be, you don't. - by Try it

Athabasca
Bear Island
Black Shrike
In Books:


-H.M.S. Ulysses
-The Last Frontier
-The Black Shrike
-The Satan Bug
-Ice Station Zebra
-Where Eagles Dare
-Force Ten From Naverone
-Puppet on a Chain
-The Way to Dusty Death
-The Golden Gate
-Floodgate
-Partisans
-San Andreas


Fear Is The Key
Floodgate
Force Ten From Naverone
Golden Gate
Golden Rendezvous
Guns Of Navarone
HMS Ulysses
Ice Station Zebra
Last Frontier
Night Without End
Partisans
Puppet On A Chain
River Of Death
San Andreas
Santorini
Satan Bug
Seawitch
South By Java Head
Time Of The Assassins
Way To Dusty Death
When Eight Bells Toll
Where Eagles Dare
DOWNLOAD LINKS
Maclean Seawitch
Maclean Night Without End

8.40 MB

http://rapidshare.com/files/45497723/Alistair_Maclean.7z
Posted by Bookworm at 10:08 PM | 0 comments

Robert Ludlum

Robert Ludlum
American thriller writer whose violent, fast-paced books have sold some 290 million copies worldwide. Ludlum started his literary career relatively late, after working in the theatre, both as actor and producer. Ludlum's special skill is to capture the imagination of his readers from the first pages, and keep them absorbed in the story. Although critics considered his style melodramatic and the plots unbelievable, the author often used material from current events in international politics. Characteristic for Ludlum's stories is a paranoid view of the world, in which global corporations and shadowy military and governmental organizations undermine the international status quo. Heroes are thrown into a web of intrigues, where they do not know who is their real friend and who is the enemy. Finally, against all odds, they defeat seemingly superior adversaries.
The Bourne Identity (1980) started a series of novels, in which an American counter-assassin and his nearly superhuman opponent, Carlos, confront in different parts of the world. The character of Carlos was partly based on the Venezuelan-born terrorist Ilich Ramirez Sanchez, who in real life was captured in 1994 in Sudan. Carlos the Jackal has been linked to the massacre of Israeli athletes at the Munich Olympics in 1872 and other acts of terrorism. He is serving a life sentence in a French prison. In The Bourne Identity the protagonist is found half-dead and without memory of who he is. It gradually turns out that he is David Webb, a young Far East scholar. Webb has got a new identity from CIA as Jason Bourne to kill Carlos, another assassin, but is betrayed by the officials. The Bourne Supremacy brought on the stage Bourne's sadistic doppelganger, who has started to execute people in Hong Kong. In the third novel, The Bourne Ultimatum, the showdown between Carlos and Bourne was set in Russia. "The Bourne Supremacy may be Mr. Ludlum's most overwrought, speciously motivated, spuriously complicated story to date. It's difficult to tell whether he's writing worse or it's just getting easier to spot his tricks. And yet - shameful to admit - one keeps reading. Is it the violence of the action? The adolescence of the fantasy? The maddening convolutions of the plot? Whatever, the effect is like dessert after certain rich meals. It's too much. One shouldn't. One doesn't really feel like it. ''Oh, my God,'' one gasps, contemplating the enormity of it. And promptly devours the entire concoction." (Christopher Lehmann-Haupt in The New York Times, March 6, 1986) The fourth novel in the series, The Bourne Legacy (2004), was written by Eric Van Lustbader (b. 1946), who has blended in his earlier works ninja mysticism, eroticism, exotic locations, and government corruption.

In Ludlum's novels multinational right-wing intrigues were often born from economic reasons. He also drew parallels between the Nazis and modern day fanatics striving for power. "When the chaos becomes intolerable, it would be their excuse to march in military units and assume the controls, initially with martial law,'' speculates one of Ludlum's characters in The Aquitaine Progression (1984). In The Matarese Circle (1979) CIA and KGB join their forces, like United States and the Soviet Union during World War II, to fight against a circle of terrorists plotting against superpowers. The Matarese dynasty returned again in The Matarese Countdown (1997), in which its members have infiltrated the CIA and try to establish a new world economic order.

Ludlum also published books under the pseudonyms Jonathan Ryder (Trevayne and The Cry of the Halidon) and Micheal Shepherd (The Road to Gandolpho) - the latter was written in humorist style. - Ludlum died of a heart attack on March 12, 2001, in Naples, Florida.

Extract from: http://www.kirjasto.sci.fi/ludlum.htm


The Bourne Supremacy
Matlock Paper
The Cassandra Compact
The Matarese Countdown
The Road To Omaha
Aquataine Progression

2.79 MB

http://rapidshare.com/files/113217662/Ludlum.7z
Posted by Bookworm at 10:05 PM | 0 comments

David Morrell

David Morrell

David Morrell is the award-winning author of First Blood, the novel in which Rambo was created. He was born in 1943 in Kitchener, Ontario, Canada. In 1960, at the age of seventeen, he became a fan of the classic television series, Route 66, about two young men in a Corvette traveling the United States in search of America and themselves. The scripts by Stirling Silliphant so impressed Morrell that he decided to become a writer.

In 1966, the work of another writer (Hemingway scholar Philip Young) prompted Morrell to move to the United States, where he studied with Young at Penn State and received his M.A. and Ph.D. in American literature. There, he also met the distinguished fiction writer William Tenn (real name Philip Klass), who taught Morrell the basics of fiction writing. The result was First Blood, a novel about a returned Vietnam veteran suffering from post-trauma stress disorder who comes into conflict with a small-town police chief and fights his own version of the Vietnam War.

That "father" of all modern action novels was published in 1972 while Morrell was a professor in the English department at the University of Iowa. He taught there from 1970 to 1986, simultaneously writing other novels, many of them national bestsellers, such as The Brotherhood of the Rose (the basis for a highly rated NBC miniseries starring Robert Mitchum). Eventually wearying of two professions, he gave up his tenure in order to write full time.

Shortly afterward, his fifteen-year-old son Matthew was diagnosed with a rare form of bone cancer and died in 1987, a loss that haunts not only Morrell's life but his work, as in his memoir about Matthew, Fireflies, and his novel Desperate Measures, whose main character has lost a son.

"The mild-mannered professor with the bloody-minded visions," as one reviewer called him, Morrell is the author of twenty-eight books, including such novels of international intrigue as The Fifth Profession, Assumed Identity, and Extreme Denial (set in Santa Fe, New Mexico, where he now lives with his wife, Donna). His most recent publication is the dark-suspense thriller Creepers.

Morrell is the co-president of the International Thriller Writers organization (www.internationalthrillerwriters.com). Noted for his research, he is a graduate of the National Outdoor Leadership School for wilderness survival as well as the G. Gordon Liddy Academy of Corporate Security. He is also an honorary lifetime member of the Special Operations Association and the Association of Former Intelligence Officers. He has been trained in firearms, hostage negotiation, assuming identities, executive protection, and anti-terrorist driving, among numerous other action skills that he describes in his novels. With eighteen million copies in print, his work has been translated into twenty-six languages.

More Info:
http://www.davidmorrell.net/books/index.cfm


Assumed Identity
Fraternity of the Stone
Brotherhood of the Rose
Covenant of The Flame
Desperate Measures
NightScape
Rambo 1 - First Blood
The League of night and Fog
The Protector

3.11 MB

http://rapidshare.com/files/23791095/Morrell_David.7z
Posted by Bookworm at 10:04 PM | 0 comments

James Patterson

James Patterson

James B. Patterson (born March 22, 1947) is an award-winning American author. Formerly the chairman of advertising company J. W. Thompson in the early 1990s, Patterson came up with the slogan "Toys R Us Kid". Shortly after his success with Along Came A Spider, he retired from the firm and devoted his time to writing. The novels— featuring his character, Alex Cross, a black forensic psychologist formerly of the Washington, D.C. Police Department and Federal Bureau of Investigation, now working as a private psychologist and government consultant— are the most popular books among Patterson readers.

In 2006, James Patterson sold more than 12 million books in North America alone. In total, Patterson's books have sold an estimated 130 million copies worldwide. He has won awards including the Edgar, the BCA Mystery Guild's Thriller of the Year, and the International Thriller of the Year award. James Patterson was named "the man who can't miss" in Time Magazine. He is the first author to have #1 new titles simultaneously on the New York Times adult and children's best sellers lists, and to have two books on NovelTracker'stop-ten list at the same time. In 2005 alone, James Patterson had five consecutive #1 New York Times bestselling original hardcover books – a record held by no other author to date. He broke that record again in 2006. He even made an appearance on the Fox TV show The Simpsons as himself.

Patterson is also well known for sharing the spotlight with different co-authors such as Maxine Paetro and Andrew Gross and has often said that collaborating with others brings new and interesting ideas to his stories.

He also founded the James Patterson PageTurner Awards, now in its third year. Patterson has personally given away over $600,000 to reward “people, companies, schools, and other institutions who find original and effective ways to spread the excitement of books and reading."

Patterson’s bestselling Women's Murder Club series is now a TV show starring former Law & Order star Angie Harmon, slated to premiere in the fall of 2007 on ABC television. Other movie deals are currently in the works with various Hollywood studios.

Patterson received his bachelor's degree from Manhattan College.


Alex Cross 01 - Along Came a Spider

"Along Came a Spider is a first-rate thriller-fasten your seatbelts and keep the lights on!"
-Sidney Sheldon

"Along Came a Spider is the rarity—a psychological thriller that truly breaks new ground as James Patterson brilliantly explores dark crevices of the aberrant mind. Detective Alex Cross is real and fascinating! When can I meet Cross again? Soon. I hope. Spider is a sure winner; Cross is the fictional detective of the nineties!"
-Ann Rule

"All at once comes Along Came a Spider, with terror and suspense that graps the reader and won't let go. Just try running away from this one."
-Ed McBain
Alex Cross 02 - Kiss The Girls

"Patterson hit the ball out of the park with his last go-round, the bestselling Along Came a Spider. Kiss the Girls is even better."
-Dallas Morning News

"Tough to put down...ticks like a time bomb, always full of threat and tension."
-Los Angeles Times

"A ripsnorting, terrific read."
-Larry King, USA Today

"As good as a thriller can get...with Kiss the Girls, Patterson joins the elite company of Thomas Harris and John Sanford."
-San Francisco Examiner

Alex Cross 03 - Jack And Jill

Fortunately Patterson has brought back homicide detective Alex Cross....He's the kind of multilayered character that makes any plot twist seem believable. From the book's opening murder to its haunting cliff-hanger ending, Patterson has created a dark and scary thrill ride that keeps your heart pounding and your eyes glued to the pages."
-People

"Captivating....As always, Patterson provides a fast-paced thriller full of surprising but realistic plot twists....Cross is one of the best and most likable characters in the modern thriller genre."
-San Francisco Examiner

"Cross, a brilliant homicide cop, is one of the great creations of thriller fiction."
-Dallas Morning News

"Flawless....Patterson, among the best novelists of crime stories ever, has reached his pinnacle with this one."
-Larry King, USA Today

"The pages turn rapidly, and Patterson juggles twist after twist with genuine glee."
-San Francisco Chronicle

After Along Came A Spider and Kiss The Girls, you thought James Patterson couldn't get better. You were wrong. "He's unbeatable....In Jack & Jill [he] again proves himself master of the hair-raising thriller with a climactic, double-twist ending, the trick that made his Along Came a Spider and Kiss the Girls memorable nail-biters."
-Buffalo News

"Quick and scary."
-New York Daily News

"Chilling....this book is hard to put down."
-Associated Press

"A gripping game of death....Through crisp crosscutting, Patterson grabs readers right from the beginning and sweeps them along toward riveting dual climaxes....It's fine, full-blooded entertainment from start to finish, with a last-page surprise."
-Publishers Weekly

Alex Cross 04 - Cat & Mouse

I've just started James Patterson's Cat & Mouse and I can't stop turning pages."
-Larry King, USA Today

"Fast-paced...the prototype thriller for today."
-San Diego Union-Tribune

"A ride on a roller-coaster whose brakes have gone out."
-Chicago Tribune

"Cat & Mouse is a pulsating game....The action is fast and furious....The pages turn in a blur....You might just finish this in one sitting. It's that kind of book."
-Rocky Mountain News

"A quick-paced adventure...with a protagonist worthy of admiration. Alex Cross is a hero. Patterson moves readers along with short chapters, snappy dialogue, and creepy chills....Read it at your own risk."
-Pittsburgh Post Gazette

"Fantastic reading entertainment...does not disappoint....The reader is deluged with horror....If you have been a James Patterson fan in the past then you are just waiting for Cat & Mouse. If you have never read any Patterson books then you should go back to Along Came a Spider and read all of the intervening stories. If you don't have time for that you can still enjoy Cat & Mouse as a stand-alone story."
-Daily Sun

Black Friday (Paperback (mass market))
Alex Cross 05 - Pop Goes the Weasel
Alex Cross 06 - Roses Are Red
Alex Cross 07 - Violets Are Blue
Alex Cross 08 - Four Blind Mice
Alex Cross 09 - The Big Bad Wolf
Alex Cross 10 - London Bridges
Club 01 - First to Die 3
Club 02 - Second Chance
Club 03 - 3rd Degree
Cradle and All
Hide and Seek
Mastermind
Season of the Machete
The Jester
The Lake House
When the Wind Blows

4.79 MB

http://rapidshare.com/files/45495058/Patterson.7z
Posted by Bookworm at 10:01 PM | 0 comments

Dale Brown

Dale Brown

Edge-of-Your-Seat Action from the Master of High-Flying Adventure. Dale Brown is the author of fourteen New York Times bestsellers, and now he soars to new heights with this outstanding, realistic thriller of warfare and global politics that rivals any headline we can imagine. On America's newest combat base, U.S. Air Force aerial warfare expert Major General Patrick McLanahan and his crew of daring engineers are devising the air combat unit of the future. Known as Air Battle Force, it can launch concentrated, stealthy, precision-guided firepower to any spot on the globe within hours. And soon McLanahan and his warriors will have their first target. Chased out of Afghanistan, Taliban fighters are planning to invade the neighboring oil-rich Republic of Turkmenistan, an isolated and incredibly wealthy Central Asian state. As unsteady alliances form and forces collide, the impending battle for control of the world's largest oil deposits threatens to tear apart the tenuous peace created by America's victories in Afghanistan. Now it's up to McLanahan and a handful of American commandos half a world away, aided by an untested and unproven force of robotic warplanes, to win a war in which everyone -- even "friendly" forces at home -- wants them to fail.


Battle Born
Day Of The Cheetah
Dreamland -Strike Zone
Fatal Terrain
Flight Of The Old Dog
Leadership Material
Shadows Of Steel
Silver Tower
Sky Masters
Storming Heaven
Tin Man
Warrior Class
Wings Of Fire

5.94 MB

http://rapidshare.com/files/23789772/Brown_Dale.7z
Posted by Bookworm at 9:59 PM | 0 comments

Tom Clancy

Tom Clancy

The Hunt for Red October, Patriot Games, Clear and Present Danger, and The Sum of All Fears have been turned into commercially successful films with actors such as Alec Baldwin, Harrison Ford and Ben Affleck as Clancy's most famous character Jack Ryan. As with many movie adaptations of popular novels, there is controversy amongst fans concerning the (non-)canonicity of the movies, most of which take fairly extensive liberties with the original plot. Recently, there have been talks about a movie based on the bestselling novel, Rainbow Six.

In recent years, his novels have become more political, showcasing his conservative philosophy. In the novels Executive Orders and The Bear and the Dragon, Jack Ryan is President of the United States. Some of Ryan's policies include a more aggressive War on Drugs (with an emphasis on arresting high-profile drug users to curtail demand,) and replacing the progressive income tax with a flat tax. Some fans have objected to this focus on domestic politics rather than military subjects. Of course, Clancy's political opinions were very much in evidence in previous novels; those opinions typically addressed foreign/defense policies.

Nevertheless, Clancy's books have continued to sell briskly, perhaps due to momentum from his previous popularity. Alternatively his books' popularity could be due to his ideas resonating positively with his fans. He returned, somewhat, to his earlier approach with The Bear and the Dragon, which starts off as a political novel, and metamorphoses into a war procedural two-thirds of the way through.

With the release of The Teeth of the Tiger, Clancy introduced Jack Ryan's son and two nephews as main characters. Presumably, he has retired Jack Ryan as a central character. Many fans have expressed disappointment in Clancy's recent fiction works and sales of his books have reflected the growing trend of readers turning away from Clancy.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tom_Clancy

Jack Ryan 05 - Cardinal Of The Kremlin
Jack Ryan 06 - Clear & Present Danger
Jack Ryan 07 - The Sum Of All Fears
Jack Ryan 08 - Debt of Honor
Jack Ryan 09 - Executive Orders
Net Force 05 - Point of Impact
Net Force 06 - Cybernation
Op Center 1 - Op Center
Op Center 2 - Mirror Image
Op Center 4 - Acts Of War
Op Center 5 - Balance Of Power
Op-Center 6- Divide and Conquer
Patriot Games
Red Rabbit
Red storm rising
SSN
Teeth of the Tiger
The Bear And The Dragon

10.07 MB
Posted by Bookworm at 9:57 PM | 0 comments

Clive Cussler

Clive Cussler

The first two Pitt novels, The Mediterranean Caper and Iceberg, were relatively conventional maritime thrillers. The third, Raise the Titanic!, made Cussler's reputation and established the pattern that subsequent Pitt novels would follow: A blend of high adventure and high technology, generally involving megalomaniacal villains, lost ships, and sunken treasure.

Cussler's novels, like those of Michael Crichton are examples of techno-thrillers that do not use military plots and settings. Where Crichton strives for scrupulous realism, however, Cussler prefers fantastic spectacles and outlandish plot devices. The Pitt novels, in particular, have the anything-goes quality of the James Bond or Indiana Jones movies, while also sometimes borrowing from Alistair MacLean's novels. Pitt himself is a two-dimensional, larger-than-life hero reminiscent of Doc Savage and other characters from pulp magazines.

More Info:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cussler%2C_Clive

Dirk Pitt 01 - Pacific Vortex
Dirk Pitt 02 - The Mediterranean Caper
Dirk Pitt 03 - Iceberg
Dirk Pitt 04 - Raise The Titanic
Dirk Pitt 06 - Night Probe
Dirk Pitt 07 - Deep Six
Dirk Pitt 08 - Cyclops
Dirk Pitt 09 - Treasure
Dirk Pitt 10 - Dragon
Dirk Pitt 11 - Sahara
Dirk Pitt 12 - Inca Gold
Dirk Pitt 13 - Shock Wave
Dirk Pitt 14 - Flood Tide
Dirk Pitt 16 - Atlantis Found
Dirk Pitt 17 - Trojan Odyssey
Dirk Pitt 18 - Valhalla Rising
Dirk Pitt 19 - Black Wind
Dirk Pitt Reveale
KA01 - Serpent
KA02 - Blue Gold
KA03 - Fire Ice
KA04 - White Death
Oregon Chronicles01 - Golden Buddha
The Sea Hunters 1
The Sea Hunters 2



DOWNLOAD LINKS:

Cussler Clive part A 18 books

Cussler Clive part B 8 books

Posted by Bookworm at 9:55 PM | 3 comments

Frank Herbert

Frank Herbert
Frank Patrick Herbert (October 8, 1920 – February 11, 1986) was a critically and commercially successful American science fiction author. He is best known for the novel Dune, and the five other novels in the series that followed it. The Dune saga dealt with themes such as human survival and evolution, ecology, and the intersection of religion, politics, and power, and is considered to be one of the greatest science fiction tales ever written, as well as an undeniable classic of literature in general.

Dune is the best-selling science fiction novel, and the Dune saga is the best-selling science fiction series, ever. In addition, Dune has received widespread critical acclaim, winning the Nebula Award in 1965 and sharing the Hugo Award in 1966. According to contemporary Robert A. Heinlein, Herbert's opus was "Powerful, convincing, and most ingenious."

More Info:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frank_Herbert

01 - Dune
02 - Dune Messiah
03 - Children Of Dune
04 - God Emperor Of Dune
05 - Heretics of Dune
06 - Chapterhouse Dune
07 - House Atreides
08 - House Harkonne
Direct Descent
Dune - House Corrino
Dune - The Butlerian Jihad
Dune - The Machine Crusade
Dune - The Road To Dune
DV 1 - Destination Void
DV 2 - Jesus Incident
DV 3 The Lazarus Effect
DV 4 The Ascension Factor
Seed Stock
The Dosadi Experiment
The Eyes of Heisenberg
The Godmakers
The White Plague
Dune Series 1-6

DOWNLOAD LINKS:

Herbert Frank part A - 16 books

Herbert Frank part B - 8 books
Posted by Bookworm at 9:53 PM | 0 comments

E. E. Smith

E. E. Smith
Dr. Smith was born in Idaho and held a large number of menial jobs before attending the University of Idaho, where he is installed in the Alumni Hall of Fame.
His novels are generally considered to be the original space operas and offer almost non-stop action. However they are, to a fair extent, still "true" science fiction, in that they use the extrapolation of known science and, often, the extrapolation of existing and historic social and political patterns of the early to mid-twentieth century. Smith himself expressed a preference for inventing fictional technologies that were not strictly impossible (so far as the science of the day was aware) but highly unlikely: "the more unlikely the better" was his phrase.

01 Triplanetary
02 - First Lensman
Skylark Three
03 - Galactic Patrol
04 - Gray Lensmen
05 - Second Stage Lensman
06 - Children of the Lens
07 - Masters Of The Vortex
d'Alembert 05 - Appointment at Bloodstar
d'alembert 10 - Revolt Of The Galaxy
NL - New Lensman
SubSpace 1 - Subspace Explorers
The Galaxy Primes

3.93 MB
Posted by Bookworm at 9:51 PM | 0 comments

Wilbur Smith

Wilbur Smith

His novels are primarily set in Africa. He wrote his first novel ('When the Lion Feeds') whilst working for Salisbury Inland Revenue. The success that it achieved encouraged him to become a full time writer.

Wilbur Smith now lives in London. He claims to have an abiding concern for the peoples and wildlife of his native continent.

In 2002, Wilbur Smith was granted the Inaugural Sport Shooting Ambassador Award by the World Forum on the Future of Sport Shooting Activities.

Books by Smith often fall into one of three series, which reflect either the families that the book features, or the timeframe it is set in

Courtneys
Ancient Egyptian
Ballantyne
Wilbur Smith has also written many standalone novels

B1 - Falcon Flies
B2 - Men Of Men
B3 The Angels Weep
B4 - The Leopard Hunts In Darkness
C01 - When The Lion Feeds
C02 - The Sound of Thunder
C03 - A Sparrow Falls
C04 - Elephant Song
C05 - Monsoon
C05 - The Burning Shore
C06 - Power Of The Sword
C07 - Rage
C08 - A Time To Die
C10 - Golden Fox
C11 - Birds Of Prey
C12 - Blue Horizon
Cry Wolf
E01 - River God
E02 - Seventh Scroll
E03 - Warlock
Eagle in the Sky
Gold Mine
Hungry as the Sea
Shout At The Devil
The Dark Of The Sun
The Sunbird

12.93 MB
Posted by Bookworm at 9:47 PM | 1 comments

Jack Higgins

Jack Higgins

Jack Higgins is the principal pseudonym of UK novelist Harry Patterson (b. 1929). Patterson is the author of more than sixty novels. Most have been thrillers of various types and, since his breakthrough novel The Eagle Has Landed in 1975, nearly all have been best-sellers.

Patterson's early novels, written under his own name as well as under the pseudonyms James Graham, Martin Fallon, and Hugh Marlowe, are brisk, competent, but essentially forgettable thrillers that typically feature hardened, cynical heroes, ruthless villains, and dangerous locales. Patterson published thirty-five such novels--sometimes three or four a year--between 1959 and 1974, learning his craft (as many thriller writers have, in the world of paperback originals). East of Desolation (1968), A Game for Heroes (1970) and The Savage Day (1972) stand out among his early work for their vividly drawn settings (Greenland, the Channel Islands, and Belfast, respectively) and offbeat plots.

Patterson began using the pseudonym "Jack Higgins" in the late 1960s, but it was the publication of The Eagle Has Landed in 1975 that made "Higgins'" reputation. Eagle represented a step forward in the length and depth of Patterson's work. Its plot (concerned with a German commando unit sent into England to kidnap Winston Churchill) was fresh and innovative (although the plot is clearly reminiscent of Cavalcanti's wartime film "Went The Day Well?"), and the characters had significantly more depth than in his earlier work. One in particular stood out: Irish gunman, poet, and philosopher Liam Devlin. Higgins followed Eagle (which sold tens of millions of copies worldwide) with a series of equally ambitious thrillers, including several (Touch the Devil, Confessional, The Eagle Has Flown) featuring return appearances by Devlin.

The third phase of Patterson's career began with the publication of Eye of the Storm in 1992. A fictionalized retelling of an unsuccessful mortar attack on Prime Minister John Major by a ruthless young Irish gunman-philosopher named Sean Dillon hired by an Iraqi millionaire. Recruited by British intelligence at the beginning of the next novel, Thunder Point (1993), Dillon became Patterson's first real continuing character - a Liam Devlin for the 1990s and beyond.

Jack Higgins is the principal pseudonym of British novelist Harry Patterson (born July 27, 1929). Patterson is the author of more than sixty novels. Most have been thrillers of various types and, since his breakthrough novel The Eagle Has Landed in 1975, nearly all have been best-sellers.
Sheba.lit
Night of the Fox.lit
Confessional.lit
Dark Side of the Street.lit
Dillinger.lit
Drink With The Devil.lit
Eagle Has Flown.lit
Eagle Has Landed.lit
East Of Desolation.lit
Hour Before Midnight.lit
Iron Tiger.lit
Last Place God Made.lit
Savage Day.lit
Season In Hell.pdf
The President's Daughter.lit
Violent Enemy.pdf
Wrath Of The Lion 1964.lit
Dark Side Of The Island.lit

4.31 MB
Posted by Bookworm at 9:45 PM | 1 comments

Frederick Forsyth

Frederick Forsyth

Day Of The Jackal
was Frederick Forsyth's first novel. An assassin known as The Jackal is hired to kill Charles De Gaulle. We know he's going to fail, but the story is a great success despite this knowledge.

The Negotiator
is the story of a ploy to force the President of the USA to resign, or to
otherwise prevent him from signing a treaty that would be unfortunate for the bad guys.

The Dogs Of War
tells about a plan to use a team of mercenaries to take over an African country run by a dictator. The ultimate goal: to exploit the country's natural resources.

Deceiver
Frederick Forsyth delivers thrilling tales of Cold War espionage in The Deceiver. The book is a collection of novellas that revolve around the career of one of British intelligence's most effective operatives. Unfortunately for that operative, he is being sent by the new administration into quiet retirement on the eve of the end of the Cold War. Using a committee review of that operative's career to link the individual episodes, Forsyth provides another entertaining character in thrilling spy tales.

Fist Of God
is set in the build-up to the first Gulf War, where a British SAS operative is sent to Kuwait and then Baghdad to discover the truth about Saddam Hussein's secret weapon, code-named "The Fist of God".

Fourth Protocol
tells the story of a Russian renegade secret service chief who sends an agent to Britain to assemble and detonate a nuclear bomb near an American base. The expectation is that this will swing the upcoming election in favor of the leftists.

Icon
is set in 1999, at which time Russian politics is in a crisis. A populist Russian politician looks like he will win the upcoming presidential election, but the British secret service has obtained proof that this man will be worse than Hitler was in Germany. The British and the Americans launch a covert operation to derail this man's election campaign.

The Odessa File
is a story about the hunt to bring a WW II war criminal to justice.

The Devils Alternative
is a cold war spy thriller. We are presented with a Russian leader and an
American President trying to avoid WW III in the face of a crisis

4.69 MB

http://rapidshare.com/files/113217661/Frederick_Forsyth.7z
Posted by Bookworm at 9:42 PM | 0 comments

Michael Crichton

Michael Crichton

Michael Crichton is the author of The Andromeda Strain, Congo, Jurassic Park, Rising Sun, The Terminal Man, The Lost World, Airframe and Timeline. He is the winner of an Edgar Award (1980; The Great Train Robbery) as well as an Emmy, a Peabody, and a Writer's Guild of America Award for the television series ER.

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The Andromeda Strain (pdf)

"This book recounts the five-day history of a major American scientific crisis. As in most crises, the events surrounding the Andromeda Strain were a compound of foresight and foolishness, innocence and ignorance. Nearly everyone involved had moments of great brilliance, and moments of unaccountable stupidity...."

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The Terminal Man (doc)

A relentless homicidal maniac is loose in the world.
Forty tiny electrodes are implanted in Harry Benson's brain. Through a terrifying miscalculation, this man is overwhelmed by the urge to kill for three minutes a day. Watch out for the human time bomb.

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The Great Train Robbery (doc)

In Victorian London, where lavish wealth and appalling poverty exist side by side, one man navigates both worlds with ease, the rich, handsome and ingenious Edward Pierce. Who would suspect that a gentleman of breeding could mastermind the theft of the century?

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Eaters of the Dead (doc)

In A.D. 922 Ibn Fadlan, the representative of the ruler of Bagdad, City of Peace, crosses the Caspian sea and journeys up the valley of the Volga on a mission to the King of Saqaliba. Before he arrives, he meets with Buliwyf, a powerful Viking chieftain who is summoned by his besieged relatives to the North. Buliwyf must return to Scandanavia and save his countrymen and families from the monsters of the mist....

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Congo (html)

The legendary ruins of the Lost City of Zinj have seen an eight-person field exhibition die. After startling discoveries, a new expedition is sent back into the Congo--its mission, to descend into the secret world where the only way back out may be through the grisliest
death....

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Sphere (txt)

This suspense thriller opens as a 300 year old spaceship is discovered on the South Pacific Ocean floor.

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Disclosure (html)

A brutal struggle in the cutthroat computer industry...A shattering psychological game of cat and mouse...A shocking accusation that threatens to derail a brilliant career...The are the electrifying elements of the new novel by the author of Rising Sun and Jurassic Park. It is Michael Crichton at his galvanizing best...

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Airframe (doc)

Cruising 35,000 feet above the earth, a twin-engine commercial jet encounters an accident that leaves 3 dead, 56 wounded, and the cabin in shambles. What happened? With a multi-billion-dollar company-saving deal on the line, Casey Singleton is sent by her hard-driving boss to uncover the mysterious circumstances that led to the disaster before more people die. But someone doesn't want her to find the truth.

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Timeline (pdf)

This story features historians in 1999 employed by a tech billionaire-genius. He plans a theme park featuring artifacts from a lost world revived via cutting-edge science. The project's chief historian sends a distress call to 1999 from 1357, but the risks are huge

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Prey (txt)

High-tech whistle-blower Jack Forman used to specialize in programming computers to solve problems by mimicking the behavior of efficient wild animals--swarming bees or hunting hyena packs, for example. Now he's unemployed and is finally starting to enjoy his new role as stay-at-home dad. All would be domestic bliss if it were not for Jack's suspicions that his wife, who's been behaving strangely and working long hours at the top-secret research labs of Xymos Technology, is having an affair. When he's called in to help with her hush-hush project, it seems like the perfect opportunity to see what his wife's been doing, but Jack quickly finds there's a lot more going on in the lab than an illicit affair. Within hours of his arrival at the remote testing center, Jack discovers his wife's firm has created self-replicating nanotechnology--a literal swarm of microscopic machines. Originally meant to serve as a military eye in the sky, the swarm has now escaped into the environment and is seemingly intent on killing the scientists trapped in the facility. The reader realizes early, however, that Jack, his wife, and fellow scientists have more to fear from the hidden dangers within the lab than from the predators without.

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State of Fear (html)

Once again Michael Crichton gives us his trademark combination of page-turning suspense, cutting-edge technology, and extraordinary research. State of Fear is a superb blend of edge-of-your-seat suspense and thought provoking commentary on how information is manipulated in the modern world. From the streets of Paris, to the glaciers of Antarctica to the exotic and dangerous Solomon Islands, State of Fear takes the reader on a rollercoaster thrill ride, all the while keeping the brain in high gear.

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3.02 MB

http://rapidshare.com/files/7733648/Michael_Crichton.zip
Posted by Bookworm at 8:23 PM | 0 comments

Ken Follett

Ken Follett
Code to Zero

He wakes up in the men's room at Union Station. He can not remember who he is or how he got there. One shocking look in the mirror tells him he is a bum however he can not believe it. Now he must find out who he is. Watch answer leads him in a different direction and we are intrigued to find more about what let to this situation.

Jackdaws

"Jackdaws" is a thrilling historical novel set inWorld War II. Author Ken Follett tells the story through Major Felicity "Flick" Clairet of the Special Operations Executive. Her story is based on the real life of Pearl Witherington. The novel begins in Sainte Cecile, France where the Germans have taken over a château to use as their main telephone exchange. The resistance force fails miserably in their attack due to poor intelligence. Back in London, Flick puts together an all women cleaning team which succeeds in blowing up the château. This in turn allows D-Day to be a success. Unfortunately, out the original six women on the team, only two returned from the mission.
Through "Jackdaws," Follett is able to convey the unseen importance of women in the war effort. Flick and her team are a prime example of this. Through her snap decisions and ingenuity, Flick is able to outwit German Major Dieter Franck. Other members of her team are also cited for their bravery, including Jelly, an explosives expert. Despite her age of forty seven, she volunteers to be a member of the team conquering her fear of parachuting. In real life Pearl Witherington is given the civil MBE award after she is rejected for the Military Cross, given only to men. Saying she had done nothing civil, Witherington returned the award. It is women like Flick who have allowed other women to advance to where they are today.

The Pillars of the Earth

This amazing epic tale spans 12th Century England and illustrates the dynamic opposing forces of Church and State. For the duration of the novel, the royal force behind the King of England and the earls and knights that support him are contrasted with the Church's agenda. This illustrates how each force, in its own right, operated in the Middle Ages.

Tom Builder is a mason desperately trying to work enough to provide food for his family. He is building a home for the son of nobility but finds himself out of work when the son's fiancé refuses the marriage. Not only is he out of work, but is now at odds with this scorned nobleman. His family is left to wander the countryside looking for work. In the process, Tom's wife, Agnes, gives birth to their third child while laying on the cold ground of the forest. After she dies in childbirth, Tom doesn't think he can provide for the baby and elects to leave the child in the forest to die.

Phillip is a the prior of a small monastery tucked deep in the woods. His brother, Francis, shows up one day with a baby that he found in the woods. After a short time, Phillip goes to Kingsbridge, the main priory that oversees his small monastery. He winds up elected as Prior of Kingsbridge and in the process becomes the enemy of the area Bishop, sub-prior that thought he would become prior, and a local nobleman - the same scored lover that is angry with Tom Builder. Thus the lives of all of the characters are inexplicably intertwined and continue to affect each other throughout the duration of the century.

Arching over the entire story line is the desire to build the perfect cathedral that spans the generations; first on the part of Tom the builder, later on the part of his stepson Jack, and finally a contribution by Jack's daughter Sally. Follett has done a masterful job in explaining and illustrating the craftsmanship that goes into masonry, carpentry, and building the exquisite works of art that are cathedrals and churches built in the Middle Ages.

This novel weaves a story of the lives of numerous characters, one stronger and more intriguing than the next. It is a tale of love, heartbreak, violence, death, and political maneuvering. It is a story that will appeal to men and women, young and old. Ken Follett has written a breathtaking masterpiece that is impossible to be summarized accurately, but is so engrossing that as you read you will hope it will continue forever.

Paper Money

For all Ken Follet fans this is a must. In the foward of the first American release of his first novel, Follet admits that he tried too much in too little space and made things way too complicated. However, Paper Money allows us to se an established novelist when he was taking his first steps and see what lessons he learned.

If you like Follet, you will like this book. The same story teller is there. He just has learned to do it better and take his time. Avery short book with alot of story. Read it.

Storm Island

2.32 MB

http://rapidshare.com/files/45490328/Follett_Ken.7z
Posted by Bookworm at 8:21 PM | 0 comments

David Eddings

David Eddings

Fantasy

Prequels:

Belgarath the Sorcerer
Througout his 7000 year long life, Belgarath has beheld Events and things no other man has seen. This is Belgarath's own story about the world, from his own birth to the birth of Garion. An enthralling story about the Belgariad/Malloreon world

Polgara the Sorceress
Polgara is not as old as Belgarath but in this book we see her own story. A
story that is quite different from Belgarath's. This book reveals the answers to some of the questions about Polgara that one might have. For example, what happened during the years when she lived in Vo Wacune?

Belgariad:

Pawn of Prophecy
The story begins in aunt Pol's kitchen at Faldor's farm where Garion is being raised. The main theme of the books is about how it is to grow up and to break up with one's old life. From his safe life at the farm, Garion is being thrown into a new life controlled by a thousand of years old prophecy - the prophecy of his and the world's destiny...

Queen of Sorcery
Garion starts to realize his own role in the world. He's playing a much more significant role than he could ever imagine - the fate of the world lies in hishands...

Magician’s Gambit
Ce'Nedra has problems believing that the prophecy speaks of the truth.
Is Uncle Wolf really the legendary sorcerer Belgarath and who is Garion?
A simple country boy on a dangerous journey? Garion and Ce'Nedra start to realize that their purpose for the world is far more complex than they first believed.

Castle of Wizardry
The orb is recaptured but more remains. Ce'Nedra's task is even greater than she can imagine. A great war is approaching and in the center is Garion and Ce'Nedra. A princess and a country boy?

Enchanter’s End Game
The moment of the prophecy is quickly approaching and Garion has to reach Cthol Mishrak in time to fight the evil one eyed god - Torak. Ce'Nedra has become the leader of an army, that has to prevail at all costs.

The Mallorean:

Guardian of the West
Garion has now fulfilled his task (or so he thinks) and has slain Torak.
Garion and Ce'Nedra are now king and queen of Riva and the world seems to be in order again. But they don't get much time for relief. Something new and unknown is afoot and Garion and Ce'Nedra's son is kidnapped. A new adventure lies in front of them...

King of the Murgos
The kidnapper has been traced down to Nyissa and Garion and Ce'Nedra are chasing her all the way to lands of the Murgos. The Dark Prophecy didn't vanish when Garion slew Torak, instead it took control of a Grolim - Zandramas. Who plans to use the child in rite to ensure the Triumph of the Dark Prophecy. In the despair Garion and Ce'Nedra finds new allinces and the hope still remains...

Demon Lord of Karanda
Garion's enemy, Zakath of Mallorea, holds them captives. As the chances of finding Zandramas are getting smaller Garions sees that Zakath is far more civilized man than he thought. But Zakath refuses to let them go and the only key to where the final Event will occur is Cyradis, a seeress from Kell...

Sorceress of Darshiva
Zandramas is still one step ahead and she has more than Garion and his furious wife to worry about. In order to succeed her task she has to be at the Place Which is No More before the king of Riva. Although she has great forces at her disposal Garion and his wife still threaten her in their endless pursuit.

The Seeress of Kell
The final event is getting closer and Garion still has no clue where the Place Which is No More is located. The only person who can tell that is Cyradis, the seeress from Kell. In order to find out where the place of the event is, Zandramas uses her black magic to force that knowledge from one person of Garion's party. Although the long odds are on Zandramas' side, Garion will never give up his son. No matter what happens...

2.87 MB

DOWNLOAD LINK
David Eddings - 8 Rivan Codex Series
Elerium

The Diamond Throne
Knight Sparhawk has returned from a country far, far away. He has been away for 10 years now, ordered to leave due to the corruption of the Elenian state. Now he has returned to see that justice is done. But the descendant of the throne, queen Ehlana has been poisoned and the only thing that will heal her is Bhelliom, a magic gem. But there are more things afoot than the attempted murder on the queen's life...

The Ruby Knight
The crystal block that Sephrenia, Vanion and 11 other Pandion have created to sustain Ehlana's life is getting weaker and weaker and Sparhawk has to hurry. The attack on Ehlana is not the only problem out there, somethings much more significant is happening.

Saphire Rose
As they get closer and closer to the solution they realize that their enemies
are far more dangerous and their allies far greater than they could ever imagine. Bhelliom seems to be more than a stone, far more powerful than Sparhawk could ever imagine. And who is Sparhawk really, an ordinary knight?

1.36 MB

http://rapidshare.com/files/113217659/Elenium.7z

Tamuli Series:

Domes of Fire
Peace has returned to the world, or so it seems. Ehlana and Sparhawk have settled down in Cimmura. But soon problems arises in the Tamuli empire and emissaries are sent in order to call for Anakha (.a.k.a. Sparhawk) who is said to be the only one who can deal with it...

The Shining Ones
Within the enemy lines there are Trolls, vampires, werewolves, zombies, ghouls, Ogres and now even the horrifying mythical Shining Ones are being sighted. In order to fight them Sparhawk must recover the Bhelliom that Aphrael hid in the sea. Bhelliom is the only force strong enough to fight them.

The Hidden City
Sparhawk must free the Troll Gods locked within the Bhelliom to fight his enemies. But Cyrgon has used the forbidden spells and has conjured up Klæl, an ancient evil force as old as Bhelliom. The world's destiny lies in the hands of Anakha, warrior of the Bhelliom...

1.18 MB

http://rapidshare.com/files/113218075/Tamuli.7z

Dreamer Series:

The Elder Gods
David and Leigh Eddings introduce readers to their newly minted Land of Dhrall with The Elder Gods, the first book in the four-book Dreamers Saga. Dhrall is under the gentle rule of four gods representing the four compass points. These gods are reaching the end of their terms of power when the god of the North brings four children who are destined to take over for them into his siblings' lairs. The children are dreamers and able to see the possible outcome of battles in a coming war with the evil creature that controls the wasteland at the center of Drahll's map. Thus, the gods and their young charges undertake quests to hire mercenary armies and thwart the initial invasion into their lands.

The Treasured One
The Vlagh has turned its attention from the lands of the goddess Zelana
(The Elder Gods) to her brother, Veltan, ruler of the peaceful farming land
around the Falls of Vash. These gentle villagers are Vlaghís obstacles as it
breeds a hideous army to annihilate the world. Determined to protect his people and his lands, Omago, Veltanís human friend, works with the heroes from Zelanaís domain to raise a defense. But the gods and the humans have overlooked one person: Jalkan, an outlander, who is unleashing soldiers to corral innocent villagers and convert them to his ìreligionî of the Amar--ìthe one true god.î He covets the gold that Zelena and Veltan promised their mercenaries. And what are a few innocent deaths if they result in more gold for Jalkan and the rest of
his empire?

0.61 MB

http://rapidshare.com/files/113417086/Dreamers.rar

Other Books:

High Hunt
The group around dan's brother had been held together by a mutual taste for liquor and endless arguments. Now, high in the mountains on a quest to see who could bag the biggest deer, old jealousies and hatreds were being dusted off and revived. Everyone knew an explosion was coming. No one knew who would survive. And none of them were willing to turn back. Reissue.

Regina's Song
Regina and Renata are truly identical twins. They are so strikingly alike, even their mother can't tell them apart. Since their DNA is identical and their infantfootprint records were lost by the hospital, no one can be sure which is which. This doesn't bother the twins. In fact, they're inseparable--until one of the young women is murdered. The other has no memory of the event, no idea who she is. In her near-total amnesia, she can remember only family friend Mark, who has always been a surrogate big brother to the twins. And Mark finds himself fearing that the effects of the trauma don't end with amnesia, for now a series of vicious murders terrorizes Seattle, accompanied by the howl of wolves....

The Redemption of Althalus
As the first stand-alone one-volume epic fantasy by the popular Eddings team (whose series include The Belgariad; The Malloreon and The Elenium), this hefty saga about Good trouncing Evil plumps an engaging young reprobate hero into the arms of aDliterallyDdivine feline heroine. A professional thief and occasional murderer, Althalus accepts a commission to steal a supernatural tome known as the Book. When he arrives at the mysterious House at the End of the World, a lissome black cat with emerald eyes turns out to be the fertility goddess Dweia. Together they enlist a Mission Improbable team to out-sorcel the assorted villains marshaled by the sorcerer Ghend, who is bent on converting this
medieval-like world from the worship of Dweia's good god-brother, Deiwos, to awful servitude under their wicked sibling Daeva. Plenty of derring-do spices up the first two-thirds of this jolly romp, and some zingy flashes of wit home in neatly on stuffy human institutions like overorganized religion and landed aristocracies. Unfortunately, the Eddingses can't resist a lengthy time-traveling reprise, which drags the story down into so-so conventionality.

1.38 MB

http://rapidshare.com/files/113218071/Other.7z
Posted by Bookworm at 8:20 PM | 1 comments

Greg Illes

Greg Illes

Greg Iles was born in Germany, where his father ran the US Embassy Medical Clinic during the height of the Cold War. He spent his youth in Natchez, Mississippi, and graduated from the University of Mississippi in 1983. His first novel, SPANDAU PHOENIX, a thriller about Nazi war criminal Rudolf Hess, was published in 1992 and became a New York Times bestseller.

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The Footprints of God


"My name is David Tennant, M.D. I'm professor of ethics at the University of Virginia Medical School, and if you're watching this tape, I'm dead." Tennant works for Project Trinity, a secret government organization attempting to build a quantum-level supercomputer. Using advanced magnetic resonance imaging techniques, Tennant and five other top scientists have supplied Trinity, the experimental computer, with molecular copies of themselves as models for a neurological operating system. As Trinity comes to life, the men who control the experiment begin to split into competing factions, each determined to use the computer for his own ends. When Tennant tries to shut the project down because of ethical considerations, he is marked for death by the beautiful but physically and psychologically scarred Geli Bauer, head of security. Iles writes himself onto a high wire that stretches over a dangerous fictional chasm as Tennant begins to have narcoleptic seizures and see life through the eyes of Jesus Christ. That this talented author makes it to the other side without falling is testament to his ingenuity and intelligence. Armageddon looms as nuclear missiles streak toward the United States, and the fate of mankind rests on Tennant's ability to reason with the omnipotent Trinity. Readers interested in the exploration of religious themes without the usual New Age blather or window-dressed dogma will snap up this novel of cutting-edge science.

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24 Hours

Hickey is a con-man and kidnapper who targets his victims with care. By staying with the person who has the money - and by checking the amount is affordable for them - he has never yet had to kill. But when he tries to rip Will Jenning's family apart he gets more than he bargained for.

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Sleep No More

John Waters is a successful petroleum geologist with the perfect family. Then one day his world is turned inside out by a single word spoken from the lips of the stunning Eve Sumner. One solitary word that takes him back a decade to another woman and the most passionate of affairs. Mallory Candler was the quintessential Southern Belle. But her captivating beauty and intelligence hid a dark side that John Waters couldn't handle. Mallory loved John with a deep seething passion that threatened to destroy them both, and despite his infatuation he ended their affair. Sometime later her body was found raped and murdered on a New Orleans pier. When John and Eve meet two days later at a cocktail party her parting gesture is a slight squeeze of his hand and the words "You weren't wrong about what I said; it's me John." His blood runs cold. How does Eve Sumner know so many secrets about his past with Mallory Candler? Was their first meeting cleverly orchestrated or simply fate?

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Black Cross

It is 1944. The world awaits the Allied invasion of Europe. Churchill has learned that Nazi scientists have developed Sarin--a new weapon that could turn the tide for Hitler. Two men--a pacifist American doctor and a fanatical Jewish assassin--must embark on a murderous mission into Germany. Their target--a human hell where Jews fuel Hitler's last hope.

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1.0MB

http://rapidshare.de/files/13158161/Greg_Illes.rar.html
Posted by Bookworm at 8:19 PM | 0 comments

Stephen R. Lawhead

Stephen R. Lawhead

Stephen Ray Lawhead is an American writer known for novels, both fantasy and science fiction.

Beginning in 1981, Stephen Lawhead began to author novels, initially fantasy and
science fiction. Most of these had a slant towards the Christian beliefs he holds. He moved to Oxford, England in 1986 to do research for The Pendragon Cycle, a reinterpretation of the legend of King Arthur in a Celtic setting combined with elements of Atlantis. Following this work he became more interested in Celtic history and culture, especially Celtic Christianity. The Song of Albion Trilogy prompted a return to England, having left in 1987. This was a series of books set between the Celtic Otherworld and present-day Britain. In 1996 he published Byzantium, a work of pure historical fiction. Since then his work has moved more towards the historical, with The Celtic Crusades set at the time of the Crusades and Patrick which follows the historical life of Saint Patrick.

Many of his books are in series following a common theme:

Dragon King trilogy:

* In the Hall of the Dragon King (1982)
* The Warlords of Nin (1983)
* The Sword and the Flame (1984)

Empyrion Saga:

* Empyrion I: The Search for Fierra (1985)
* Empyrion II: The Siege of Dome (1986)

The Pendragon Cycle:

* Taliesin (1987)
* Merlin (1988)
* Arthur (1989)
* Pendragon (1994)
* Grail (1997)

The Song of Albion:

* The Paradise War (1991)
* The Silver Hand (1992)
* The Endless Knot (1993)

The Celtic Crusades:

* The Iron Lance (1998)
* The Black Rood (2000)
* The Mystic Rose (2001)

Hero (With Ross Lawhead):

* City Of Dreams (2003)
* Rogue Nation (2004) unpublished
* World Without End (2005) unpublished

He has also written several stand-alone novels:

* Dream Thief (1983)
* Byzantium (1996)
* Avalon (1999) — related to the Pendragon Cycle
* Patrick (2003)

http://rapidshare.com/files/113217157/Dragon_King_Trilogy.7z 1.08 MB
http://rapidshare.com/files/113218072/Pendragon_Cycle.7z 2.79 MB
http://rapidshare.com/files/113218074/Song_Of_Albion.7z 1.13 MB
http://rapidshare.com/files/113217155/Celtic_Crusades.7z 1.57 MB
Posted by Bookworm at 8:18 PM | 1 comments

Raymond E. Feist


Raymond E. Feist

Raymond E. Feist is an American author, mostly specialising in fantasy fiction.
In his books Feist describes the fictional worlds of Midkemia and Kelewan.

The Riftwar Saga

The Riftwar Saga is the first trilogy written by Raymond E. Feist. The books take place on the worlds of Midkemia and Kelewan.

1. Magician (1982)
This book was later republished (in 1992) with previously omitted text
restored. Also published in two parts:
1. Magician: Apprentice (1982)
2. Magician: Master (1982)

2. Silverthorn (1985)
3. A Darkness at Sethanon (1985)

Krondor's Sons

These works feature many of the characters from the Riftwar trilogy and are set
some years later. They revolve around the sons of Arutha, the prince of Krondor,
and set the stage for The Serpentwar Saga.

1. Prince of the Blood (1989)
2. The King's Buccaneer (1992)

The Empire Trilogy

These books (co-authored by Janny Wurts) are set entirely in Kelewan and are
somewhat contemporaneous with the Riftwar trilogy. One major Riftwar character
('Pug'/'Milamber') appears briefly. The series has a much stronger focus on
intrigue and political maneuvering than the former series.

1. Daughter of the Empire (1987)
2. Servant of the Empire (1990)
3. Mistress of the Empire (1992)

The Serpentwar Saga

These books are set five decades after the Riftwar trilogy

1. Shadow of a Dark Queen (1994)
2. Rise of a Merchant Prince (1995)
3. Rage of a Demon King (1995)
4. Shards of a Broken Crown (1998)

Riftwar Legacy

These books are set a few years after the Riftwar trilogy but before Prince of
the Blood.

1. Krondor: The Betrayal (1998) (novelization of the computer game Betrayal at
Krondor)
2. Krondor: The Assassins (1999)
3. Krondor: Tear of the Gods (1999) (novelization of the computer game Return
to Krondor)
4. Krondor: The Crawler (TBA)
5. Krondor: The Dark Mage (TBA)

Legends of the Riftwar

These books are set during the Riftwar, and occasionally feature "cameo appearances"
by favourite characters belonging to the co-author (except for Murder in LaMut
where the "guest" characters are in the thick of the action).

1. Honoured Enemy (2001) (with William R. Forstchen)
2. Murder in LaMut (2002) (with Joel Rosenberg)
3. Jimmy the Hand (2003) (with S. M. Stirling)

Conclave of Shadows

These books, while set in Midkemia, are geographically separated from the earlier books and connect only peripherally as yet. Additionally, they are set about 30 years past the time of the Serpentwar.

1. Talon of the Silver Hawk (2002)
2. King of Foxes (2003)
3. Exile's Return (2004)

Darkwar Saga

This will be one of the final sagas about Midkemia, covering the 3rd Riftwar.
Future series will be set in Midkemia between this series and the 4th Riftwar
(which will only be one or two books long), depending partly on interest from
publishers.

1. Flight Of The Nighthawks (2005)
2. Into a Dark Realm (September 2006)
3. Wrath of a Mad God (TBA)

In Chronological order:

* The Riftwar Saga
o Legends of the Riftwar
o The Empire Trilogy
* Riftwar Legacy
* Krondor's Sons
* The Serpentwar Saga
* Conclave of Shadows
* Darkwar Saga

DOWNLOAD LINKS
Riftwar 0.80 MB
Conclave of Shadows 0.86 MB
Raymond E. Feist - All 3 Empire books 1.49 MB
Riftwar Legacy 0.95 MB
Serpentwar Saga 1.98 MB
Legends of the Riftwar 0.70 MB
Posted by Bookworm at 8:17 PM | 1 comments

Anne McCaffrey


Anne McCaffrey

Anne Inez McCaffrey is an American science fiction author best known for her Dragonriders of Pern series.

Restoree

Doona Trilogy:

Decision at Doona
Crisis on Doona
Treaty at Doona

Get Off the Unicorn

Planet Pirate Series:

Dinosaur Planet
Dinosaur Planet Survivors
The Death of Sleep
Sassinak
Generation Warriors

The Coelura

Black Horses for the King

No One Noticed the Cat

Brain Ships:

The Ship Who Sang
The Ship Who Searched
Partnership
The City Who Fought
The Ship Avenged
The Ship Who Won
The Ship Errant

The Talents

Historical Notes:

To Ride Pegasus
Pegasus in Flight
Pegasus in Space
The Rowan
Damia
Damia's Children
Lyon's Pride
The Tower and the Hive

Crystal Singer Series:

Crystal Singer
Killashandra
Crystal Line

The Peytabee Series:

Powers That Be
Power Lines
Powerplay

Freedom Series:

Freedom’s Landing
Freedom’s Choice
Freedom’s Challenge
Freedom’s Ransom

Books of Pern:

1. Dragons Dawn
2. The Chronicles Of Pern: First Fall

SS Runner of Pern:
3. Dragonseye
4. Moreta: Dragon Lady Of Pern
5. Nerilka's Story

SS Beyond Between:
6. The Master Harper of Pern

Dragonriders of Pern Trilogy:
7. Dragonflight
8. Dragonquest
9. The White Dragon

Harper Hall Trilogy:
10.Dragonsong
11.Dragonsinger
12.Dragondrums
13.Renegades of Pern
14.All the Weyrs of Pern
15.The Dolphins of Pern
16.The Skies of Pern
17.Dragon’s Kin
18 Dragonsblood

DOWNLOAD LINK
56 Books - Anne McCaffrey File Size:- 13 mb
Posted by Bookworm at 8:14 PM | 0 comments

Terry Brooks

Terry Brooks

Terry Brooks mainly writes high fantasy, and has also written several movie
novelizations. His first novel, The Sword of Shannara, was an immediate bestseller, but some critics accused Brooks of having plagiarized the plot from J. R. R. Tolkien's The Lord of the Rings - something that he strenuously denies. The chief similarity is that it is a heroic fantasy featuring various races who form an alliance against a dark lord and set out on a quest to defeat him.


The Sword of Shannara Trilogy

1. First King of Shannara (prelude) (1996)
2. The Sword of Shannara (1977)
3. The Elfstones of Shannara (1982)
4. The Wishsong of Shannara (1985)

The Heritage of Shannara Tetralogy

1. The Scions of Shannara (1990)
2. The Druid of Shannara (1991)
3. The Elf Queen of Shannara (1992)
4. The Talismans of Shannara (1993)

The Voyage of the Jerle Shannara

1. Ilse Witch (2000)
2. Antrax (2001)
3. Morgawr (2002)

High Druid of Shannara

1. Jarka Ruus (2003)
2. Tanequil (2004)
3. Straken (2005)

Magic Kingdom of Landover series

1. Magic Kingdom For Sale -- SOLD! (1986)
2. The Black Unicorn (1987)
3. Wizard at Large (1988)
4. The Tangle Box (1994)
5. Witches' Brew (1995)

The Word & the Void series

Main article: The Word & the Void

1. Running with the Demon (1997)
2. A Knight of the Word (1998)
3. Angel Fire East (1999)

DOWNLOAD LINKS
The Sword of Shannara 2.25 MB
The Heritage of Shannara 2.34 MB
High Druid of Shannara 1.18 MB
Magic Kingdom of Landover 2.32 MB
The Voyage of the Jerle Shannara 1.04 MB
The Word - the Void 1.06 MB
Terry Brooks - Shannara - 17 books 3.20 MB
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Dean Koontz

Dean Koontz

Dean Koontz grew up in desperate poverty under the tyranny of a violent alcoholic
father (Koontz's father served time in prison for trying to murder him). Despite
his traumatic childhood, Koontz put himself through Shippensburg University of
Pennsylvania (then known as Shippensburg State College), and in 1967 went to work as an English teacher at Mechanicsburg High School. In his spare time he wrote his first novel, Star Quest, which was published in 1968. From there he went on to write over a dozen more science fiction novels.

In the 1970s, Koontz began publishing mainstream suspense and horror fiction,
under his own name as well as under several pseudonyms; Koontz has stated he
used pen names after several editors convinced him that authors who switched
genre fell victim to "negative crossover": alienating established fans, while
simultaneously not picking up any new fans. Known pseudonyms include Deanna Dwyer, K. R. Dwyer, Aaron Wolfe, David Axton, Brian Coffey, John Hill, Leigh Nichols, Owen West, and Richard Paige. Currently some of those novels are sold under Koontz's real name.

Koontz's breakthrough novel was Whispers (1980). Several of his books have
reached #1 on the New York Times bestseller list.

Koontz is renowned for his skill at writing suspenseful page-turners. His
strengths also include memorable characters, original ideas, and ability to
blend horror, fantasy and humour. Koontz has been criticized for his tendency to
include too many similes and therefore to drag out descriptions, his frequent use of similar plotting structures, and a tendency to moralize heavily.

Arguably, most of Koontz's work can still be classified as science fiction, as
he tries to create plausible, consistent explanations for the unusual, fantastic
events featured in most of his novels.

A Darkness in my Soul.lit
A Werewolf Among Us.lit
Anti-man.lit
Blood Risk.lit
Chase.lit
Dark Rivers of the Heart.lit
Darkfall.lit
Demon seed.lit
False memory.lit
Fear Nothing.lit
Fear that Man.lit
Flesh in the Furnace.lit
Frankenstein - Prodigal Son.lit
Hideaway.lit
Icebound.lit
Intensity.lit
Life Expectancy.lit
Lightning.lit
Midnight.lit
Mr. Murder.lit
Night chills.lit
Odd Thomas.lit
One Door Away From Heaven.lit
Santa's Twin.lit
Seize The Night.lit
Shadowfires.lit
Shattered.lit
Soft Come The Dragons.lit
Sole Survivor.lit
Strange Highways.lit
Strangers.lit
The Book Of Counted Sorrows.lit
The Door To December.lit
The Haunted Earth.lit
The Mask.lit
Ticktock.lit
Time Thieves.lit
Watchers.lit
Winter Moon.lit


DOWNLOAD LINKS:

Dean Koontz part A - 24 Books

Dean Koontz part B - 15 Books
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Tad Williams

Tad Williams

Robert Paul "Tad" Williams (born March 14, 1957) is the author of several fantasy and science fiction novels, including Tailchaser's Song, the Memory, Sorrow, and Thorn series, the Otherland series, and The War of the Flowers.

Williams is currently writing the Shadowmarch series, the first volume of which was published in November of 2004. The second volume, Shadowplay, was published in March 2007.

In July 2006, Williams started publishing a new six issue comic mini-series called The Next through DC Comics. A second series for DC Comics called The Factory is currently in planning stages. In addition, Tad is writing Aquaman: Sword of Atlantis for DC Comics starting with issue #50, a project which began in March 2007.

Robert Paul "Tad" Williams is the author of several fantasy and science fiction novels, including Tailchaser's Song; the Memory, Sorrow, and Thorn series; the Otherland series and The War of the Flowers.
Williams is currently writing the Shadowmarch series, the first volume of which was published in November, 2004. He plans a return to the world of Memory, Sorrow, and Thorn in A Chronicle of Stone, though this project has been considerably delayed due to other writing commitments.

Tailchaser's Song

Memory, Sorrow, and Thorn:
Book 1 - The Dragonbone Chair (Hardcover 1988, Paperback 1989)
Book 2 - Stone of Farewell (Hardcover 1990, Paperback 1991)
Book 3 - To Green Angel Tower (Hardcover 1993)
Book 3 was split into 2 parts for Paperback publication (1994):
o To Green Angel Tower, Part 1 a. k. a. To Green Angel Tower: Siege in UK edition
o To Green Angel Tower, Part 2 a. k. a. To Green Angel Tower: Storm in UK edition

Otherland:
Book 1 - City of Golden Shadow (Hardcover 1996, Paperback 1998)
Book 2 - River of Blue Fire (Hardcover 1998, Paperback 1999)
Book 3 - Mountain of Black Glass (Hardcover 1999, Paperback 2000)
Book 4 - Sea of Silver Light (Hardcover 2001, Paperback 2002)

Shadowmarch, Volume I

6.90 MB

http://rapidshare.com/files/45497722/Tad_Williams.7z
Posted by Bookworm at 8:10 PM | 1 comments

James Clavell

JAMES CLAVELL

James Clavell is a half-Irish Englishman, born in Canada and educated in Portsmouth. He served as a captain in the Royal Artillery during the war. In 1942 he was captured by the Japanese and sent to Changi. It was on his experience in Changi that his bestselling novel KING RAT was based. The interest in Asia, its people and culture continued with TAI-PAN, a tale of Canton and Hong Kong in the mid-19th century and the founding of an Anglo-Chinese trading company, Struan's. This was followed by the classic SHOGUN, the story of Japan during the period two centuries before when Europe first began to make an impact on the island people of the Rising Sun. NOBLE HOUSE, the fourth novel in the Asian saga, continued the story of Struan's, the Hong Kong trading company, as the winds of change blew through the Far East. GAI-JIN is the third novel in the Asian saga set twenty years after the end of TAI-PAN.

Shogun (1975)
John Blackthorne, whose dream is to be the first Englishman to circumnavigate the globe, to wrest control of the trade between Japan and China from the Portuguese, and to return home a man of wealth and position.
Toranaga, the most powerful feudal lord in Japan, who strives and schemes to seize ultimate power by becoming Shogun - supreme military dictator - and to unite the warring samurai fiefdoms under his own masterful and farsighted leadership.
Lady Mariko, a Catholic convert whose conflicting loyalties to the Church and her country are compounded when she falls in love with Blackthorne, the barbarian intruder.
Shogun is a huge, exotic, blood-stained canvas of sixteen century but still
medieval Japan, rival war-lords and proselytizing Jesuits, geishas, eppuku,
samurai with death-wish and a shipwrecked Elizabethan.

Gai-Jin (1993)
It is 1862 and Japan is a land in chaos as the power of the Shogun wanes and the rival factions plan to restore the Emperor. In Yokohama, the gai-jin, the hated foreigners, seek to profit from the chaos. At the head of the Noble House, and heir to the title Tai-pan, stands Malcolm Struan who is determined to become his own man and marry the woman he loves. At the head of the Shogunate party is the Lord Yoshi, a direct descendant of Shogun Toranaga.

6 Books, 5.06 MB

http://rapidshare.com/files/113214917/Clavell_James.7z
Posted by Bookworm at 8:05 PM | 1 comments

Eric Van Lustbader

Eric Van Lustbader

Eric Van Lustbader (he dropped his middle name Van, for several years due to a
confusion about his last name) was born and raised in Greenwich Village. He is
the author of more than twenty best-selling novels, including 'The Ninja', in
which he introduced Nicholas Linnear, one of modern fiction's most loved and
enduring heroes, 'Black Heart', 'Angel Eyes', 'The Kaisho', 'Floating City',
'Second Skin', and 'Dark Homecoming'. His novels have been translated into twenty languages; his books are best-sellers worldwide and are so popular whole sections of bookstores from Bangkok to Dublin are devoted to them.

He is also the author of a successful and highly regarded series of fantasy
novels. Most recently, he has been working on a number of short stories and
novellas which appeared in 1999: 'Off The Beaten Path: Stories of Place' for
Farrar, Strauss and Giroux and 'Murder And Obsession' for Delacourt Press for
Avon Books.

He is a graduate of Columbia College, with a degree in Sociology. Before turning
to writing full time, he enjoyed highly successful careers in the New York City
public school system, where he holds licenses in both elementary and early childhood education, and in the music business, where he worked for Elektra Records and CBS Records, among other companies. He was the first writer in the US to write about Elton John, and to predict his success. As a consequence, he and Elton and Bernie Taupin, Elton's lyricist became friends. Writing in 'Cash Box' Magazine, he also predicted the successes of such bands as Santana, Roxy Music, the Jimi Hendrix Experience, David Bowie, and The Who, among others.

In his spare time, Mr. Lustbader serves on the Board of Trustees and the
Executive Committee of the City and Country School in Greenwich Village,
and tends his prized collection of Japanese maples and beech trees
(The New York Times, Martha Stewart's Living). He is a Second-Level Reiki master.
He and his wife Victoria, who is on the Board of the South Fork-Shelter Island
chapter of The Nature Conservancy (after working for them for seven years as
Associate Director of Development and Special Events), have been residents of
the South Fork of Long Island for more than fifteen years.

Sunset Warrior
1. The Sunset Warrior (1977)
2. Shallows of Night (1978)
3. Dai-San (1978)
4. Beneath an Opal Moon (1980)
5. Dragons on the Sea of Night (1997)

Nicholas Linnear
1. The Ninja (1980)
2. The Miko (1984)
3. White Ninja (1990)
4. The Kaisho (1993)
5. Floating City (1994)
6. Second Skin (1995)

China Maroc
1. Jian (1985)
2. Shan (1986)

Novels
Sirens (1981)
Black Heart (1983)
Zero (1987)
French Kiss (1989)
Angel Eyes (1990)
Black Blade (1992)
Dark Homecoming (1997)
Pale Saint (1999)

27 MB
http://rapidshare.com/files/20494397/asdews.zip
Posted by Bookworm at 8:03 PM | 0 comments

Orson Scott Card

Orson Scott Card

Orson Scott Card is the multi-award winning and bestselling author of a number of ground-breaking SFF novels. Ender's Game is his first Young Adult cross-over novel in the UK.

Nobody had ever won the Hugo and Nebula awards for a novel and its sequel, two years in a row, until Orson Scott Card received them for Ender's Game and Speaker for the Dead, in 1986 and 1987. But Orson Scott Card's experience is not limited to one genre or form of storytelling.

His contemporary novels Lost Boys, Treasure Box, and Homebody brought a powerful emphasis on character and moral dilemmas to the old-fashioned ghost story. And his newest contemporary novel, Enchantment (April 1999 from Del Rey), is a romantic fantasy that has Sleeping Beauty being awakened by an American graduate student in Ukraine in 1991. The characters pass back and forth between Sleeping Beauty's world of ninth-century Russia and today's America, with the famous anti-hero of Russian folklore, the witch Baba Yaga, following close behind. Card has broken new ground with each of his major works. "The Homecoming Saga" (the novels The Memory of Earth, The Call of Earth, The Ships of Earth, Earthfall, and Earthborn) was a retelling of ancient scripture as science fiction. Pastwatch: The Redemption of Christopher Columbus is the sine qua non of alternate history novels, in which time travellers return to keep Columbus from discovering America - or at least from returning to Europe after having discovered it. It will be followed by books that reinvision Noah's flood and the Garden of Eden - in historically, culturally, and scientifically plausible ways.

His works have been translated into many languages, including Catalan, Danish, Dutch, Finnish, French, German, Hebrew, Italian, Japanese, Polish, Portuguese, Romanian, Russian, Slovakian, Spanish, and Swedish.

A dozen of Card's plays have been produced in regional theatre, including the musical Barefoot to Zion (written in collaboration with his composer brother, Arlen L. Card), which played to sold-out houses in Utah as part of the Mormon Church's celebration of the sesquicentennial of the entry of the pioneers into Salt Lake Valley. His historical novel, Saints, has been an underground hit for several years, and Card has written hundreds of audio plays and a dozen scripts for animated video plays for the family market. Meanwhile, Ender's Game is being developed for film by Robert Chartoff, co-producer of The Right Stuff, Raging Bull, and the Rocky series, with Card writing the screenplay.


The Tales of Alvin Maker:

Seventh Son
Red Prophet
Prentice Alvin
Alvin Journeyman
Heartfire
The Crystal City
The Grinning Man

The Ender Saga:

Ender's Game
Speaker for the Dead
Xenocide
First Meetings
Ender's Shadow
Shadow of the Hegemon
Shadow Puppets
Shadow of the Giant

The Homecoming Saga:

The Memory of Earth
The Call of Earth
The Ships of Earth
Earthfall
Earthborn


Maps in a Mirror:

Maps in a Mirror Vol 1
The Changed Man
Flux
Cruel Miracles
Monkey Sonatas


Worthing Chronicle:

Capitol
Worthing Chronicle 2 - Hot Sleep


Novels:

Enchantment
Homebody
Pastwatch, The Redemtion of Christopher Columbus
Songmaster
Treasure Box
Wyrms


Other Books:

America
Cruel Miracles
Missed
Treason
Enchantment

13.35 MB

http://rapidshare.com/files/45535090/Card_Orson_Scott.7z
Posted by Bookworm at 8:01 PM | 0 comments

Heinlein Robert

Robert Anson Heinlein (July 7, 1907 – May 8, 1988) was one of the most popular, influential, and controversial authors of "hard" science fiction. He set a high standard for science and engineering plausibility and helped to raise the genre's standards of literary quality. He was the first writer to break into mainstream, general magazines such as The Saturday Evening Post, in the late 1940s, with unvarnished science fiction. He was among the first authors of bestselling, novel-length science fiction in the modern, mass-market era. For many years, Heinlein, Isaac Asimov, and Arthur C. Clarke were known as the "Big Three" of science fiction.

Within the framework of his science fiction stories Heinlein repeatedly integrated recognizable social themes: The importance of individual liberty and self-reliance, the obligation individuals owe to their societies, the influence of organized religion on culture and government, and the tendency of society to repress non-conformist thought. He also examined the relationship between physical and emotional love, speculated about unorthodox family relationships, and the influence of space travel on human cultural practices. His iconoclastic approach to these themes led to wildly divergent perceptions of his works and attempts to place mutually contradictory labels on his work. For example, his 1959 novel Starship Troopers was widely viewed as an advocacy of militarism and even to contain some elements of fascism, although many passages in the book disparage the inflexibility and stupidity of a purely militaristic mindset. By contrast, his 1961 novel Stranger in a Strange Land put him in the unexpected role of pied piper to the sexual revolution and the counterculture.

Heinlein won four Hugo Awards for his novels. In addition, fifty years after publication, three of his works were awarded "Retro Hugos" — awards given retrospectively for years in which no Hugos had been awarded. He also won the first Grand Master Award given by the Science Fiction Writers of America for lifetime achievement.

After his death, his wife Virginia Heinlein issued a compilation of Heinlein's correspondence and notes into a somewhat autobiographical examination of his career, published in 1989 under the title Grumbles from the Grave. In his fiction, Heinlein coined words that have become part of the English language, including "grok", "TANSTAAFL" and "waldo."

All you zombies
The Black Pits of Luna
Blowups Happen
The Cat who Walks Through Walls
Citizen of the Galaxy
Common Sense
Coventry
Delilah and the Space-Rigger
The Door Into Summer
Double Star
Expanded Universe
Farnham's Freehold
Friday
Gentlemen, Be Seated
Glory Road
The Green Hills of Earth
Have Space Suit will Travel
If This Goes On
It's Great to Be Back!
A Comedy of Justice
Let There Be Light
Life-Line
Logic of Empire
The Long Watch
Lost Legacy
Magic Inc
The Man Who Sold the Moon
The Menace from Earth
Methuselah's Children
Misfit
The Moon Is A Harsh Mistress
The Number Of The Beast
Ordeal in Space
Orphans Of The Sky
Past Through Tomorrow
Podkayne Of Mars
The Puppet Masters
Requiem
The Roads Must Roll
Rocket Ship Galileo
Sixth Column
Space Jockey
Starship Troopers
Stranger In A Strange Land
This I Believe
Time For The Stars
To Sail Beyond The Sunset
Tunnel In The Sky
Universe
Waldo
We Also Walk Dogs
The Worlds of Robert A. Heinlein
Year Of The Jackpot

Download Books :

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File Size : 3.5 MB

http://rapidshare.com/files/45539369/Heinlein_Robert.7z

File Size : 16.5 MB

Posted by Bookworm at 8:00 PM | 0 comments
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