8 ENGLISH BOOKS RELATING TO «COELACANTHIC»
Discover the use of
coelacanthic in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
coelacanthic and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
1
Pieces of Green: The Sociology of Change in Pakistan, 1964-1974
New thinking must now replace the coelacanthic theories so far in vogue among
youth in Pakistan. A genuine factor that keeps the boy on the street and
interested in processions is the total lack of alternative pastimes. He has no
access to ...
Shutting my eyes, I just feel their presence around me, like living fossils, finning
lethargically in the dust, proud of their beautiful ugliness, their coelacanthic
memories stretching back to the original explosion of the universe. Silvery green
...
John Treadwell Nichols, 1986
3
Changing the art of inhabitation
So it is with the radiator; one in a room is a substitute for a fire, something to stand
by - but five thousand in a hospital is coelacanthic - like being a prisoner in the
nineteenth century. Ambient light, ambient air, no fuss about detail, awareness in
...
Alison Margaret Smithson, Peter Smithson, 1994
4
Canadian Slavonic Papers
... Flotow describes the "West-shock" and the "East- nostalgia" existing in East
Berlin since the wall came down. In further debunking of today's sacred gods,
John-Paul Himka attacks Solzhenitsyn for Denikinist, "coelacanthic" views on
Ukraine.
5
The Station: Travels to the Holy Mountain of Greece
Originally published in 1928 by Duckworth Publishers under the title: "The station, Athos: treasures and men."
In his new introduction, written especially for this volume, Fussell writes: "Reading the book is like stumbling into a modern museum of literary kinds presided over by a benign if eccentric curator.
7
The Silver Dream: An InterWorld Novel
New York Times bestselling authors Neil Gaiman and Michael Reaves deliver a thrilling sequel to the science fiction novel InterWorld, full of riveting interdimensional battles and alternate realities.
Neil Gaiman, Michael Reaves, Mallory Reaves, 2013
A reclusive millionaire makes a deal with the devil. Just another horror tale? Don't bet on it. It's from Clive Barker.