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Ursula K. Le Guin's Web Site

Ursula K. Le Guin's Web Site

Mosse Labyrinth | Kate's home page diary Pocket Full of Words RhiannonLassiter.com Forbidden Zone Video Clips "A Dimension of Sound. A Dimension of Sight..." I started Planet of the Apes: The Forbidden Zone because I wanted to learn more about Planet of the Apes myself. I looked around the web for a good Apes site, but only found a couple of episode guides for the TV series. When I first started gathering information about POTA, I was surprised to learn that Rod Serling co-wrote the screenplay for Planet. That idea stuck in the back of my head ever since. "Three Men Lost Amongst the Stars..." The first step was figuring out how to do the narration. I went to my original edition of The Twilight Zone Companion, by Marc Scott Zicree (Silman-James Press; 2nd edition is available from Amazon.com), which contains synopses of every episode and transcripts of the opening and closing narration. Identifying the closing narration was tougher. Unfortunately, I only had one episode of The Twilight Zone on tape -- "An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge," which was the final episode produced. "Your Next Stop..."

Literary Resources on the Net Literary Resources on the Net These pages are maintained by Jack Lynch of Rutgers — Newark. Comments and corrections are welcome. Search for a (single) word: Or choose one of the following categories: General Sources These sources are too important to be buried in my miscellaneous pages, and too miscellaneous to be put anywhere else. The Voice of the Shuttle Alan Liu's superb collection of electronic resources for the humanities. Calls for Papers A current list from the cfp@english.upenn.edu mailing list. About These Pages This set of pages is a collection of links to sites on the Internet dealing especially with English and American literature, excluding most single electronic texts, and is limited to collections of information useful to academics — I've excluded most poetry journals, for instance. This page is maintained by Jack Lynch.

The Internet Book Database of Fiction :: Home Aidan Chambers - official web site Tales of Future Past It wasn't that long ago that we had a future. I mean, we have one now; the world isn't going to crash into the Sun or anything like that. What I mean is that we had a future that we could clearly imagine. The future wasn't tomorrow, next week, next year, or next century. It was a place with a form, a structure, a style. True, we didn't know exactly what the future would be like, but we knew that it had to be one of a few alternatives; some good, some very bad. A few years ago, people talked about building a bridge to the 21st century. Boy, were we off base. Still, there was a romantic innocence about the 20th century's view of the future.

Virago Press Hatrack River - The Official Web Site of Orson Scott Card Geraldine McCaughrean

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