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Death at Victoria Dock by Kerry Greenwood
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Death at Victoria Dock by Kerry GreenwoodDeath at Victoria Dock by Kerry Greenwood

Driving home late one night, Phryne Fisher is surprised when someone shoots out her windscreen. When she alights she finds a pretty young man with an anarchist tattoo dying on the tarmac just outside the dock gates. He bleeds to death in her arms, and all over her silk shirt. Enraged by the loss of the clothing, the damage to her car, and this senseless waste of human life, Phryne promises to find out who is responsible. But she doesn't yet know how deeply into the mire she'll have to go: bank robbery, tattoo parlours, pubs, spiritualist halls, and anarchists.
 
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Tags: tattoo, Phryne, promises, responsible, doesn, Death, tattoo, Greenwood, Victoria
Three Doors to Death by Rex Stout
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Three Doors to Death by Rex StoutThree Doors to Death by Rex Stout

One by one they knocked on Nero Wolfe's door, each with a case more perplexing than the last: a suicide victim who turns up alive, only to be murdered anew; a murder victim's family who provides his killer with an alibi; and a master horticulturalist who finds the woman of his dreams--dead and cooling in his hothouse.

REUPLOAD NEEDED

 
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Tags: victim, dreams, woman, finds, horticulturalist, Stout, Death, Three, Doors
On the Heights of Despair
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On the Heights of DespairOn the Heights of Despair

The dark, existential despair of Romanian philosopher Cioran's short meditations is paradoxically bracing and life-affirming. Written in 1934, when he was 22 and desperately insomniac, this feverishly lyrical, at times slyly humorous confessional outpouring reveals Cioran as an angry young man in morally decaying Europe--a far cry from the elegant, curt stylist of his later books. Here Cioran rails at life's irrationality and absurdities; embraces solitude, melancholy and the awareness of death...
 
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Tags: Cioran, solitude, embraces, melancholy, death, Heights, Despair, Europe, elegant
Death and Memory in Early Medieval Britain
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Death and Memory in Early Medieval BritainDeath and Memory in Early Medieval BritainHow were the dead remembered in early medieval Britain? Originally published in 2006, this innovative study demonstrates how perceptions of the past and the dead, and hence social identities, were constructed through mortuary practices and commemoration between c. 400–1100 AD. Drawing on archaeological evidence from across Britain, including archaeological discoveries, Howard Williams presents a fresh interpretation of the significance of portable artefacts, the body, structures, monuments and landscapes in early medieval mortuary practices.


 
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Tags: Britain, practices, commemoration, mortuary, through, medieval, Death, archaeological
Fantasy in Death
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Fantasy in Death by J.D. RobbFantasy in Death by J.D. Robbby J.D. Robb

They were best friends, driven by one shared vision - to rule the world of virtual reality games. Cill, hard-edged and beautiful, Var and Benny, brains and business acumen, and Bart, the genius behind the idea. Their newest invention, developed to transport the player into a fantastical virtual world, is just about to be launched. Then, suddenly, Bart is found brutally killed, defeated by their own game. Their close-knit group is torn apart. Who could have engineered a virtual death with such devastating consequences?
 
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Tags: virtual, world, Their, killed, defeated, Fantasy, Death