Richard p henrick biography of michael jackson
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Fiction, 1950- (Adult)
Representations of Antarctica
The following is a comprehensive list of novels (designed for an adult audience) published after 1949, written in English or translated into English, containing substantial Antarctic material. It includes fictional re-creations of real events.
[ A to E | F to L | M to Q | R to Z ]
Abbey, Lloyd. The Last Whales. New York: Grove Weidenfeld,1989.
Abramov, Aleksandr, and Sergei Abramov. Horsemen From Nowhere. Moscow: Mir, 1969.
Alexander, Caroline. Mrs Chippy's Last Expedition: The Remarkable Journals of Shackleton's Polar-Bound Cat. London: Bloomsbury, 1997.
[Also published in New York: Harper Collins, 1997.]
Andrews, Sarah. In Cold Pursuit. New York: St Martin's Minotaur, 2007.
[Andrews travelled to Antarctica on a National Science Foundation grant and produced this murder mystery set at McMurdo base.]
Archer, Alex [Jo
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Inquest into the Death of Henrick OOSTERBAAN
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Inquest into the Death of Hendrick OOSTERBAAN
Delivered on :15 February 2019
Delivered at : Perth
Finding of : Coroner King
Recommendations : N/A
Orders/Rules : N/A
Suppression Order : N/A
Summary : The deceased at the time of his death was 64 years old when he was last known to be alive on 9 January 2017.
In late December 2016, the deceased went to Victoria to visit friends, a couple who had an 11 year old autistic son. On 4 January 2017, the police searched the deceased’s home in relation to a reported historical child sex offence. The deceased’s son who was present during the search, later called the deceased and informed him of the search.
The next day, the deceased went to the Melbourne airport where he hired a fordon and over the next two days drove the car back to Western Australia. In Kalgoorlie, he mailed a parcel containing his anställda effects to his brev office låda. On 16 January 20
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Ann Maria Jackson
Ann Maria Jackson (1810–January 28, 1880) was an enslaved woman with nine children who ran away from her enslaver in November 1858 after two of her eldest children had been sold. Her husband became mentally ill and died in a poor house. After finding out that four more of her children were about to be sold, she gathered the seven children who were with her and traveled along the Underground Railroad for Canada. She went through the way of Wilmington, then to Philadelphia, later to St.Catherines, and then to Toronto. This was rare as she had brought her seven children with her through the Underground Railroad. It was difficult for women to run away secretly.[1] The Jacksons established new lives for themselves in Toronto. Her two eldest children later reunited with the family, and the youngest, Albert Jackson, became the first African American to work as a letter carrier in Toronto.
Marriage and children
[edit]Ann Maria Jackson, born about 1810