Crime stories – both real and fictional – have had us gripped for centuries. Here we line up 15 of history’s most infamous villains, putting their crimes under the magnifying glass and weighing their wrongs from right. Could there be more to their wicked ways than we first believed?
Doctor Who is a long-running, award-winning British science fiction television programme produced by the BBC. The programme depicts the adventures of a mysterious time-traveller known as "the Doctor" who travels in his space and time-ship, the TARDIS, which appears from the exterior to be a blue police phone box. With his companions, he explores time and space, solving problems and righting wrongs.
"1. Mission to the Unknown" 24 min "2. The Myth Makers" 74 min "3. The Traitors" 74 min "4. The Feast of Steven" 74 min "5. Escape Switch" 72 min
This book gives both aspiring and seasoned songwriters a powerful new approach to writing songs, focusing on common obstacles in the songwriting process and techniques to help songwriters overcome them. Each chapter goes to the root of a specific songwriting problem and provides exercises to help readers over the hurdles and put their new skills to work. Topics include writing approach, purpose, structure, melodic significance and construction, basic music theory, word meaning, word design and arrangement, chords
The 9th book about Jack Reacher, written by Lee Child. Six shots. Five dead. One heartland city thrown into terror. But within hours the cops have it solved. A slam-dunk case. Except for one thing. The accused man claims: You got the wrong guy. After that, all he’ll say is: Get Reacher for me. Jack Reacher lives off the grid. Lone righter of wrongs, irresistible to women. What could connect the ex-military cop to this obvious psychopath?
Bill of Wrongs: The Executive Branch's Assault on America's Fundamental Rights
Added by: Maria | Karma: 3098.81 | Non-Fiction, Other | 25 June 2008
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Ivins got the idea for Bill of Wrongs while touring America to
honor her promise to speak out, gratis, at least once a month in
defense of free speech. In her travels Ivins met ordinary people going
to extraordinary measures to safeguard our most precious liberties, and
when she first started writing this book, she intended it to be a
joyous celebration of those heroes. But during the Bush years, the
project’s focus changed. Ivins became concerned about threats to our
cherished freedoms–among them the Patriot Act and the weakening of
habeas corpus–and she observed with anger how dissent in the defense of
liberties was being characterized as treason by the Bush administration
and its enablers.