¡Acompáñanos a viajar por el mundo de los libros!
Añadir este libro a la estantería
Grey
Escribe un nuevo comentario Default profile 50px
Grey
Suscríbete para leer el libro completo o lee las primeras páginas gratis.
All characters reduced
Don's Vendetta - cover

Don's Vendetta

Isobel Wycherley

Editorial: Next Chapter

  • 0
  • 0
  • 0

Sinopsis

DC Tim Shelley is on a mission to find Len Moscow and avenge his daughter's death. Meanwhile, her twin sister, Sonny, is trailing the man who made the murder possible: her ex-mafia colleague Mario Fontana.
 
After a meeting in Amsterdam, Shelley joins forces with Bertolt in order to find the killer.  Anastacia Smirnoff also has her part to play, as each of them makes their way toward the inevitable confrontation.
 
Old debts will be paid, and sacrifices made, as the Warrington saga ends where it began: in Milan. But who will have the last laugh, and who will win the war?
Disponible desde: 07/06/2022.
Longitud de impresión: 104 páginas.

Otros libros que te pueden interesar

  • Legacy - cover

    Legacy

    James H. Schmitz

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Ancient living machines that after millennia of stillness suddenly begin to move under their own power, for reasons that remain a mystery to men. Holati Tate discovered them-then disappeared. Trigger Argee was his closest associate-she means to find him. She's brilliant, beautiful, and skilled in every known martial art. She's worth plenty-dead or alive-to more than one faction in this obscure battle. And she's beginning to have a chilling notion that the long-vanished Masters of the Old Galaxy were wise when they exiled the plasmoids to the most distant and isolated world they knew....  (Summary from book jacket) Originally published in 1962 as "A Tale of Two Clocks".  (addition by km)
    Ver libro
  • Oil of Dog - cover

    Oil of Dog

    Ambrose Bierce

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    "Oil of Dog" by Ambrose Bierce is a darkly satirical short story that explores themes of greed, morality, and the consequences of unchecked ambition. The narrative follows Boffer Bings, a boy whose parents run a morally questionable business: his father manufactures dog oil for medicinal purposes, while his mother operates an illegal disposal service for unwanted infants.
    Ver libro
  • Mr Punch's Model Music-hall Songs & Dramas - cover

    Mr Punch's Model Music-hall...

    F. Anstey

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    F. Anstey was the nom de plume of Thomas Anstey Guthrie, a Londoner who was trained for the bar but found success as a writer of humorous pieces for Punch and humorous novels. Mr. Punch's Model Music Hall is a collection of humorous pieces written for Punch, divided into songs and dramas. In his usual fashion, Mr. Anstey captured the tone of his times and then exaggerated whatever was already absurd to entertain and give pointed commentary at the same time. - Summary by Don W. Jenkins
    Ver libro
  • A Comic History Of Rome - A Wry Journey From the Wolf-Sucking Start to the Farcical Dictator Face-Off of History's Favorite Oligarchic Republic - cover

    A Comic History Of Rome - A Wry...

    Gilbert Abbott À Beckett

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Forget dusty textbooks and noble senators. The real history of Rome is a chaotic, blood-soaked circus of power-crazed maniacs, backstabbing politicians, and enough megalomaniacs in togas to outfit a farce. 
    Behind the marble pillars and glittering triumphs lay a world of two-faced demagogues and ruthless ambition. Gilbert Abbott A Beckett’s legendary Comic History of Rome drags the Eternal City’s glorious past into the gloriously witty gutter where it belongs. 
    This is history as the finest form of satire. Witness the original sibling rivalry between Romulus and Remus, which ended—like so much in Rome—in betrayal. From the daring escape of Cloelia from the Etruscan camp to the grim reality of the gladiatorial arena, no sacred cow is left unskewered. A Beckett’s narrative, both “compendious and correct,” guides you through the chaos with dry, avuncular wit, suggesting we take the reign of Romulus with “an entire cellar of salt.” 
    Now, listen as the venerable figures of antiquity are revived in all their farcical glory: eavesdrop on the Senate’s petty squabbles, follow Hannibal’s troublesome Alpine holiday, and endure the terrible poetry and even worse governance of Emperor Nero. The original illustrations are vividly brought to life through the narrator's sharp performance, preserving the unique charm of this classic. 
    So, don your metaphorical laurel wreath and ready your laughter. This audiobook invites you to experience the hilarious rise and fall of an empire—a story far richer, and funnier, than any textbook would ever dare admit.
    Ver libro
  • Parenting Hell - cover

    Parenting Hell

    Rob Beckett, Josh Widdicombe

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    What's it really like to be a parent? And how come no one ever warned Rob or Josh of the sheer mind-bending, world-altering, sleep-depriving, sick-covering, tear-inducing, snot-wiping, bore-inspiring, 4am-relationship-straining brutality of it all? And if they did, why can't they remember it (or anything else for that matter)? And just when they thought it couldn't get any harder, why didn't anyone warn them about the slices of unmatched euphoric joy and pride that occasionally come piercing through, drenching you in unbridled happiness in much the same way a badly burped baby drenches you in milk-sick? Join Josh and Rob as they share the challenges and madness of their parenting journeys with lashings of empathy and extra helpings of laughs. Filled with all the things they never tell you at antenatal classes, Parenting Hell is a beguiling mixture of humur, rumination, and conversation for prospective parents, new parents, old parents and never-to-be parents alike.
    Ver libro
  • Extract from Captain Stormfield's Visit to Heaven (version 3) - cover

    Extract from Captain...

    Mark Twain

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    This was the last story published by Twain, a few months before he died. The story follows Captain Elias Stormfield on his extremely long cosmic journey to heaven. It deals with the obsession of souls with the "celebrities" of heaven, like Adam and Moses, who according to Twain become as distant to most people in heaven as living celebrities are on Earth. Twain uses this story to show his view that the common conception of heaven is ludicrous and points out the incongruities of such beliefs.A lot of the description of Heaven is given by the character Sandy McWilliams, a cranberry farmer who is very experienced in the ways of heaven. The heaven described by him is similar to the conventional Christian heaven, but includes a larger version of all the locations on Earth, as well as of everywhere in the universe. Once in heaven, the person spends eternity living as he thinks best, usually according to his true (sometimes undiscovered) talent. According to one of the characters, a cobbler who "has the soul of a poet in him won't have to make shoes here", implying that he would instead turn to poetry and achieve perfection in it.As Stormfield proceeds through heaven, he learns that his pre-conceptions of "heaven" are all wrong and a good part of the fun of the tale comes from Twain's revealing the "true facts" about what heaven is and how it works. (Introduction by Wikipedia and John Greenman)
    Ver libro