For centuries, an intriguing sequel to the tale of Merlin has sat unseen within the bindings of an Elizabethan register. Cutting-edge techni

seen from United States
seen from Malaysia
seen from China
seen from China

seen from United Kingdom
seen from Serbia
seen from China
seen from Serbia
seen from China
seen from China
seen from United States
seen from Malaysia

seen from Australia
seen from United Kingdom

seen from Canada
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seen from United States

seen from Colombia
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For centuries, an intriguing sequel to the tale of Merlin has sat unseen within the bindings of an Elizabethan register. Cutting-edge techni
Ancient Tepatic Recipe
Ngay-cun i Tepat i sen-wey
Herein is preserved this, the recipe of Kaset of Ninil, which was eaten and loved by kings and princes. Kaset begat Kannuk, and Kannuk begat Chitek, who begat Kolnôq. And each taught this way to their daughter. And Kolnôq married Sawngik, and they moved from the ridges of Notoq west to the eastern plain of Tepat, and settled in a town of reeds, and made the recipe there. And they were fruitful and multiplied, and the fame of their cooking grew. And among their brood were two sisters, Kethel and Kannul, who were found by the envoys from the city, and taken to be court ladies, where they cooked this dish for the table of Princess Nôqhum. And each married in the East District and lived there with husband and children. And among the children was Qathul, who […] I am the daughter of Qatum, and it is from her that I have learned. It is said that this dish may be accomplished by only the most skillful of women, and in my age have I met none other who hath mastered it. This is the recipe which was spoken to me, from her: Take meat, and salt, and put together …
[rest of manuscript missing]
For centuries, an intriguing sequel to the tale of Merlin has sat unseen within the bindings of an Elizabethan register. Cutting-edge techni
A lost manuscript that was rediscovered & published after Leiber’s death, The Dealings of Daniel Kesserich is billed as being “Lovecraftian,” but it’s not. Pulp 1930′s weird fiction for sure, but that doesn’t automatically make something “Lovecraftian.” As for the story itself, it’s a pseudoscience time travelling who dunnit that’s just okay. Certainly not the best of Leiber’s work, but not terrible either; probably only worth reading if you’re a devoted fan of the author.
I don’t know wtf was going on with Jason Van Hollander’s illustrations in here, but there are a lot of them.
I just found out my lost manuscript is salveagable. retrievable. Oh yes!
"I offer myself to be devoured by Spanish peasants," writes the poet Federico García Lorca in a newly-discovered manuscript of a poem from his portrait of the United States during the Great Depression, Poeta en Nueva York (Poet in New York).
'Extraordinary' Lorca manuscript discovered