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Mob Rules (Luna)

by Cameron Haley

If street magic was easy, everyone would be doing it.

Moby-Dick: Ahab, Captain Of The Whaling Ship For Revenge The White Whale (Macmillan Collector's Library #62)

by Herman Melville

Designed to appeal to the booklover, the Macmillan Collector's Library is a series of beautiful gift editions of much loved classic titles. Macmillan Collector's Library are books to love and treasure.This beautiful Macmillan Collector's Library edition of Moby-Dick features an afterword by Nigel Cliff.On board the whaling ship Pequod a crew of wise men and fools, renegades and seeming phantoms is hurled through treacherous seas by crazed Captain Ahab, a man hell-bent on hunting down the mythic White Whale. Herman Melville transforms the little world of the whale ship into a crucible where mankind's fears, faith and frailties are pitted against a relentless fate. Teeming with ideas and imagery, and with its extraordinary intensity sustained by mischievous irony and moments of exquisite beauty, Moby-Dick is both a great American epic and a profoundly imaginative literary creation.

The Mocking Program (Angel Cardenas #2)

by Alan Dean Foster

Inspector Angel Cardenas has seen plenty of corpses like the one in the Quetzal inburb - just another Juan Doe robbed of his cash, cards, internal organs, and then dumped in a gutter. However Cardenas soon learns this murder is anything but ordinary... First, the infallible DNA-ID database insists the cadaver is that of two people - local executive George Anderson and a mysterious Texas businessman. Then Anderson's wife and daughter, Surtsey Mockerkin and Katla, turn up missing, their posh suburban home has been retrofitted into a huge time bomb... and at least three mob syndicates from as many continents are competing to capture or kill twelve-year-old-Katla. Who is the dead man, and why is his daughter being hunted? Relying on his training as a nearly telepathic intuit, Inspector Cardenas embarks on a search that leads him from sex parlours and stimstick clubs of the Strip - where kids are deadly and even the music kills - to an undersea control room where computer crimes are committed by criminal by criminal computers. Finding Katla Anderson is the key to unravelling the deadly mystery, but what Angel Cardenas doesn't know is that the closer he gets to the girl, the closer the assassins are getting to them...

Mockingbird: From the author of The Queen’s Gambit – now a major Netflix drama (S.F. MASTERWORKS #Vol. 70)

by Walter Tevis

The future is a grim place in which the declining human population wanders drugged and lulled by electronic bliss. It's a world without art, reading and children, a world that people would rather burn themselves alive than endure.Even Spofforth, the most perfect machine ever created, cannot bear it and seeks only that which he cannot have - to cease to be. But there is hope for the future in the passion and joy that a man and woman discover in love and in books, hope even for Spofforth.A haunting novel, reverberating with anguish but also celebrating love and the magic of a dream.

Mockymen

by Ian Watson

When a young British couple, who make jigsaw puzzles, are hired by an ageing Norwegian to take nude photos of themselves in a sculpture park in Oslo, they are drawn into a web of occult Nazi horror. Even more horrifying will be the fate of the whole world some years later if alien visitors achieve their secret aims. However, the aftermath of events in that Oslo park will provide Anna Sharman with a key to unlock those aims.Anna is a rebel within Britain's intelligence service at a time when most of the world appeases the aliens because of the gifts they bring - and if she must lose her own body in order to discover the truth, she will do so.

Modern Fantasy: 100 Best Novels(ebk)

by David Pringle

Pringle presents his selections in chronological order and includes a synopsis of the story, a discussion of the author's overall contribution to fantasy literature, critical commentary on the title's significance, and a brief publishing history. An introductory essay tackles the difficulty of defining fantasy, while a "Brief Bibliography" directs readers to other discussions of the genre. By no means a definitive subject guide, this entertaining volume should serve as a solid introduction to the elusive field of imaginative literature.

The Modern Library: The 200 Best Novels in English Since 1950 (Brief Guide To... Ser.)

by Colm Toibin Carmen Callil

For Colm Toíbín and Carmen Callil there is no difference between literary and commercial writing - there is only the good novel: engrossing, inspirational, compelling. In their selection of the best 200 novels written since 1950, the editors make a case for the best and the best-loved works and argue why each should be considered a modern classic. Enlightening, often unexpected and always engaging this tour through the world of fiction is full of surprises, forgotten masterpieces and a valuable guide to what to read next. The complete list of authors included in the book is as follows:Agatha Christie; Henry Green; Frank Hardy; Georgette Heyer; Sam Hanna Bell; Daphne du Maurier; Patrick Hamilton; Carson McCullers; Anthony Powell; J. D. Salinger; Ralph Ellison; Ernest Hemingway; Bernard Malamud; R. K. Narayan; Flannery O'Connor; John Steinbeck; Evelyn Waugh; Mulk Raj Anand; James Baldwin; Saul Bellow; Raymond Chandler; L. P. Hartley; Rosamund Lehmann; Amos Tutuola; Kingsley Amis; William Golding; Elizabeth Jenkins; Sylvia Townsend Warner; Samuel Beckett; William Gaddis; Patricia Highsmith; Vladimir Nabokov; Janet Frame; Jack Kerouac; Elizabeth Taylor; Rebecca West; Chinua Achebe; Isak Dineson; John O'Hara; Alan Sillitoe; William Burroughs; Ivy Compton-Burnett; Grace Paley; Harper Lee; Olivia Manning; John Updike; P. G. Wodehouse; Joseph Heller; V. S. Naipaul; Muriel Spark; Patrick White; Maureen Duffy; William Faulkner; Doris Lessing; Edna O'Brien; Katherine Anne Porter; Elizabeth Bowen; John Le Carré; Mary McCarthy; Sylvia Plath; Wilson Harris; Hubert Selby Jr.; Frank Sargeson; Wole Soyinka; Margaret Laurence; Jean Rhys; Paul Scott; John Fowles; Christina Stead; William Styron; Ngugi Wa Thiong'o; William H. Gass; Iris Murdoch; B. S. Johnson; Mary Lavin; Mario Puzo; Robertson Davies; Patrick O'Brian; Frederick Forsyth; Mordecai Richler; Francis Stewart; Eudora Welty; J. G. Farrell; Thomas Pynchon; E. L. Doctorow; Ruth Prawer Jhabvala; David Lodge; Alistair MacLeod; Anne Rice; David Storey; Beryl Bainbridge; John Cheever; Joan Didion; Margaret Drabble; Jessica Anderson; Maurice Gee; Graham Greene; Roy A. K. Heath; Ian McEwan; Thomas Flanagan; Mavis Gallant; Nadine Gordimer; Elizabeth Hardwick; Norman Mailer; V. S. Naipaul; Anthony Burgess; Shirley Hazzard; Russell Hoban; Bernard MacLaverty; Marilynne Robinson; John Kennedy Toole; Fay Weldon; William Maxwell; Alasdair Gray; Thomas Harris; Salman Rushdie; Robert Stone; Bruce Chatwin; Thomas Keneally; Alice Walker; Edmund White; Martin Amis; J. G. Ballard; Julian Barnes; Anita Desai; Balraj Khanna; Jayne Anne Phillips; Helen Garner; Anita Brookner; Cormac McCarthy; Larry McMurtry; Brian Moore; Jeanette Winterson; Richard Ford; Kazuo Ishiguro; Peter Taylor; Ruth Rendell, writing as Barbara Vine; Kaye Gibbons; Carl Hiaasen; Stephen King; Toni Morrison; Michael Ondaatje; Francis Wyndham; Peter Carey; Raymond Carver; Pete Dexter; Elizabeth Jolley; Frank Moorhouse; Bapsi Sidhwa; Anne Tyler; Tom Wolfe; John Banville; Oscar Hijuelos; Amy Tan; A. S. Byatt; J. M. Coetzee; Michael Cunningham; Roddy Doyle; Elmore Leonard; John McGahern; David Malouf; Alice Munro; Pat Barker; Angela Carter; Amit Chaudhuri; Bret Easton Ellis; Timothy Mo; Norman Rush; Iain Sinclair; Jane Smiley; William Trevor; Tim Winton; Eugene McCabe; Patrick McCabe; Donna Tartt; Jeffrey Eugenides; Gita Mehta; E. Annie Proulx; Will Self; Irvine Welsh; Sebastian Faulks; Vikram Seth; Jonathan Coe; Louis de Bernières; Alan Hollinghurst; P. D. James; James Kelman; T. Coraghessan Boyle; Penelope Fitzgerald; Rohinton Mistry; Margaret Atwood; Patrick McGrath; Graham Swift; Tobias Wolff; Jim Crace; Don DeLillo; Philip Roth; Charles Frazier; V. S. Pritchett.

The Modern Superhero in Film and Television: Popular Genre and American Culture (Routledge Advances in Comics Studies)

by Jeffrey A. Brown

Hollywood’s live-action superhero films currently dominate the worldwide box-office, with the characters enjoying more notoriety through their feature film and television depictions than they have ever before. This book argues that this immense popularity reveals deep cultural concerns about politics, gender, ethnicity, patriotism and consumerism after the events of 9/11. Superheroes have long been agents of hegemony, fighting for abstract ideals of justice while overall perpetuating the American status quo. Yet at the same time, the book explores how the genre has also been utilized to question and critique these dominant cultural assumptions.

The Modern Superhero in Film and Television: Popular Genre and American Culture (Routledge Advances in Comics Studies)

by Jeffrey A. Brown

Hollywood’s live-action superhero films currently dominate the worldwide box-office, with the characters enjoying more notoriety through their feature film and television depictions than they have ever before. This book argues that this immense popularity reveals deep cultural concerns about politics, gender, ethnicity, patriotism and consumerism after the events of 9/11. Superheroes have long been agents of hegemony, fighting for abstract ideals of justice while overall perpetuating the American status quo. Yet at the same time, the book explores how the genre has also been utilized to question and critique these dominant cultural assumptions.

A Modern Utopia

by H. G. Wells

While traveling in the Swiss Alps, a pair of Englishmen who are in the midst of a discussion about the possible types of Utopias find themselves suddenly transported into a parallel world — a planet seemingly identical to Earth, yet radically different, as they will learn. This Utopia exists as a single allied state, with a common language and perfect equality, under the rule of a voluntary order of nobility known as the Samurai. The travelers are mightily impressed by this harmonious society, but what will the Utopians think of their guests?Better known for his formative works in science fiction, H. G. Wells also took a lively interest in politics and society. In this 1905 novel, the visionary author blends philosophical discussion with an imaginative narrative that offers a persuasive and ever-valid argument for his socialist ideals. This new edition of A Modern Utopia is enhanced with a series of atmospheric engravings from the original publication.

The Modern World (Gollancz S. F. Ser.)

by Steph Swainston

In the third of the Castle novels, Steph Swainston takes the reader ever deeper into a world of beauty and terror. . .The endless war for survival against the merciless Insects has reached yet another stalemate for the Circle, the immortals who serve the Emperor of the Fourlands. The building of a massive dam has driven the Insects back, but it's only a matter of time before they find another way to advance.Jant, the Emperor's winged Messenger, is called away from battle to find the daughter of fellow immortal, Lightning. Cyan has gone missing in the city of Hacilith, and Lightning wants him to bring her back. But Jant knows better than anyone just how much trouble a teenager can get into in Hacilith's underworld . . .So begins a hectic quest. A quest that will take Jant back to his past, back to the bizarre world of the Shift and, eventually, back to the Fourlands. Just as it faces a terrifying new threat.

Modernism and Time Machines (Edinburgh Critical Studies in Modernist Culture)

by Charles Tung

Modernism and Time Machines places the fascination with time in canonical works of twentieth-century literature and art side-by-side with the rise of time-travel narratives and alternate histories in popular culture. Both modernism and this cardinal trope of science fiction produce a range of effects and insights that go beyond the exhilarations of simply sliding back and forth in history. Together the modernist time-obsession and the fantasy of moving in time help us to rethink the shapes of time, the consistency of timespace and the nature of history.

The Mohole Mystery

by Hugh Walters

After their expedition to Saturn, Chris Godfrey and his friends were given the longest spell of leave they had ever had. Every day they expected to hear about their next assignment from Sir George Benson, Director of the United Nations Exploration Agency, but when they tried to get in touch with him they found it was impossible. Clearly something strange was going on.When Sir George finally reappeared he had a startling proposition for them. A new kind of expedition was to be launched, not into space but into the depths of the earth. The astronauts were about to become 'subterranuts'. Or rather one of them was, for only one man could enter the capsule which was to carry him down the Mohole, the borehole which had been drilled twenty-one miles into the earth, to end in a huge underground cavern...

The Molecule Men and the Monster of Loch Ness (Fred Hoyle's World of Science Fiction)

by Fred Hoyle Geoffrey Hoyle

Dr John West, Cambridge don and private investigator, was present at the trial of an odd duck, R. A. Adcock, who was being most uncooperative in answering questions about a bank robbery. At length, Adcock had made a dash for it from the courtroom - through a glass window, and what should have been a three storey drop to the street. But suddenly, Adcock wasn't there, and at once a swarm of bees came into the courtroom.Thus begins The Molecule Men, which takes many fascinating and terrifying turns to its chilling conclusion.In the second story, the Monster of Loch Ness, Tom Cochrane, an independent scientist, determines to find out why the waters of Loch Ness are inexplicably warming up. What was it that caused the waters of the loch to pour up into the air like the worst rainstorm any of the observers had ever seen? What was at the bottom of the loch?These two short novels by a celebrated father and son team will hold the interest of the science fiction fan from page one on.

Molly and the Night Monster

by Christopher Wormell

When Molly wakes up in the middle of the night, she hears the sound of a step on the stairs. It could be a crocodile creeping up to catch her . . . Or a giant giraffe outside on the landing . . . Or an enormous elephant turning the doorknob and opening the door . . . Or even a night monster come to gobble her up . . . But when Molly surprises the tiptoeing beast, she gets an even bigger surprise of her own!This edition is a beautiful reissue of a children's modern classic.

Molly The Goldfish Fairy: The Pet Keeper Fairies Book 6 (Rainbow Magic #34)

by Daisy Meadows

Get ready for an exciting fairy adventure with the no. 1 bestselling series for girls aged 5 and up. Fairyland is in uproar! Jack Frost has stolen the Pet Fairies magical pets. Without them, the Pet Fairies can't ensure that pets in the human world find the right owners. And now the pets have escaped from Jack Frost's ice castle and are roaming the human world! Rachel and Kirsty have to help get the pets back...before it's too late. 'These stories are magic; they turn children into readers!' ReadingZone.com Read all seven fairy adventures in the Pet Fairies set! Katie the Kitten Fairy; Bella the Bunny Fairy; Georgia the Guinea Pig Fairy; Lauren the Puppy Fairy; Harriet the Hamster Fairy; Molly the Goldfish Fairy; Penny the Pony Fairy. If you like Rainbow Magic, check out Daisy Meadows' other series: Magic Animal Friends and Unicorn Magic!

Molly Moon and the Monster Music (Molly Moon #6)

by Georgia Byng

Eleven-year-old Molly Moon is known and loved for her incredible powers - hypnotism, time travelling, mind reading . . . But now something seems to have power over her. Not only has it made her a brilliant musician, it's given her thousands of new fans, all of whom are mesmerized by her. Literally. Only Petula, her pet pug, senses an off-note. Molly-the-Maker-of-Magical-Music is one thing, but Molly-the-Big-Old-Meanie is another - and every day Petula sees her kind owner become more and more horrible. What is going on? And can one determined dog sort it out . . . before Molly becomes truly monstrous?

Molly Moon and the Morphing Mystery (Molly Moon #5)

by Georgia Byng

Molly Moon is unstoppable! She's a master hypnotist, a time-traveller and a mind-reader, and in this sizzling story she harnesses a new power - morphing. Soon she and her twin brother Micky are swapping bodies with ladybirds, rats, even the Queen of England herself! But the fun can't last forever . . . and unless they can get their hands on the 'The Advanced Arts' hypnotism book, they will never get back to their own bodies. Sabotaged by a gaggle of wicked women who want to destroy them, Molly and Micky must find a way to return to themselves in spite of all the dangerous surprises thrown in their way.

Molly Moon, Micky Minus and the Mind Machine (Molly Moon #4)

by Georgia Byng

Molly Moon is on a mission – to bring her long-lost twin brother, Micky, home. But before she can rescue him she has to FIND him, and he could be anywhere! Luckily Molly’s time-travel talents and world-stopping skills help her in her search . . . until a baby-faced villain with a precocious plan to have the world’s biggest brain gets in her way. Can Molly, Petula the pug and their best friend, Rocky, use Molly’s new secret weapon – MIND READING – to defeat the brainy babe and her monstrous mind machine?

Molly Moon Stops the World (Molly Moon #2)

by Georgia Byng

Molly Moon, the orphan who once took Broadway by storm, has vowed never to use her amazing hypnotic powers again. But when she learns that a megalomaniac master hypnotist called Primo Cell is rumoured to be controlling the minds of famous movie stars, she has to intervene. Arriving in Hollywood, Molly, Rocky and Petula the pug get to work. While Petula is being pampered at a beauty parlour for glamorous pooches, Molly and Rocky plan how to blag their way into Primo's famous Oscar-night party. Here they find that their enemy is far more dangerous and powerful than they suspected. Primo thinks it will be a breeze to control the minds of two kids, but he doesn't know that Molly has discovered an extraordinary new ability. Her hypnotic eyes can actually stop time itself . . .

Molly Moon's Hypnotic Time-Travel Adventure (Molly Moon #3)

by Georgia Byng

Molly Moon has just found herself in the wrong place at the wrong time! A conniving, super-rich maharaja has abducted Molly and Petula the pug and whisked them back to nineteenth-century India. Using the art of Time-Travel Hypnosis he has also kidnapped four younger versions of Molly, as part of a plan to stop Molly ever learning her hypnotic skills. With not only her past but the future of the world at stake, can Molly outwit the cunning maharaja before it's too late?

Molly Moon's Incredible Book of Hypnotism: Film Tie-In Edition (Molly Moon #1)

by Georgia Byng

Orphan Molly Moon was found as a baby in a box marked 'Moon's Marshmallows'. For ten miserable years she's lived under the cruel rule of Miss Adderstone in grim Hardwick House. But her life changes overnight when she finds a mysterious book on hypnotism and discovers an amazing talent - the power to make people do anything she want them to. Escaping from the orphange, Molly flies to New York in search of fame and fortune. But her adventures in hypnotism lead her into the clutches of a dangerous enemy . . .

Molly Twinkletail: Book 2 (Magic Animal Friends Early Reader #2)

by Daisy Meadows

The much-loved series from the creator of Rainbow Magic - abridged for younger readers and illustrated in full colour!Welcome to a magical world where animals talk and play - just like you and me!Best friends Jess and Lily love all animals. But when they follow a mysterious golden cat into Friendship Forest - a place where animals live in tiny cottages and sip dandelion tea at the Toadstool Cafe - their animal friends suddenly become much more magical!On their second adventure, Lily and Jess are invited to the Friendship Forest fair! But Grizelda the witch wants to spoil everyone's fun and her servants, the Boggits, trick little Molly Twinkletail into running away from the party. It's up to the girls to find her - but where in Friendship Forest would a tiny mouse hide?

Molly Twinkletail Runs Away: Book 2 (Magic Animal Friends #2)

by Daisy Meadows

Welcome to a magical world where animals talk and play - just like you and me!Best friends Jess and Lily love all animals. But when they follow a mysterious golden cat into Friendship Forest - a place where animals live in tiny cottages and sip dandelion tea at the Toadstool Cafe - their summer holidays suddenly become much more magical!On their second adventure, Lily and Jess are invited to the Friendship Forest fair! But Grizelda the witch wants to spoil everyone's fun and her servants, the Boggits, trick little Molly Twinkletail into running away from the party. It's up to the girls to find her - but where in Friendship Forest would a tiny mouse hide?

Molly Zero

by Keith Roberts

Raised, tested, trained and indoctrinated in the Blocks, Molly Zero is being groomed for the governing Elite. Rebelling against her fate, she flees. An innocent searching for truth, Molly finds the world outside the Blocks alien and frightening. Her flight plunges her first into the heart of a small community. Next, attracted by their eccentric gaiety, she joins the travelling gypsies, roaming the country in Commercial Air Cushion Vehicles. And then Molly gets caught up in urban terrorism...

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