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Jan 31, 1934 — Mar 19, 2012· 78 yrs

UNITED STATES AUTHOR · FICTION · SCIENCE FICTION

Gene DeWeese

Also known as: Thomas Eugene DeWeese, Gene DeWeese

24
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Thomas Eugene DeWeese was an American writer of science fiction, best known for his Star Trek novels. He also wrote Gothic, mystery, and young adult fiction, totalling more than 40 books in his career. - Wikipedia

Rochester, United States
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If she'd had a foot fetish Anna would have been an extremely happy woman.

— from Firestorm

Most acclaimed

#1

Firestorm

5.0 (1)

Bragg Saga #2 From the sensuous voice of novelist Brenda Joyce comes Firestorm, the extraordinary second book in the Bragg family saga that has captured the hearts of readers everywhere. Here is the beginning of the Bragg empire-opulent and glamorous-vast, dangerous, and as untamed as the sweeping plains of Texas...Storm Bragg could outshoot and outride any man, but her family decided it was time she traded in her buckskins for a ballgown and made her debut in San Francisco society.Quickly pursued by every eligible gentleman in town, the young hellcat from Texas had eyes for only one, and he was no gentleman.Brett D'Archand was a self-made success -- arrogant, impossibly attractive, blatantly sensual -- and looking for a wife who would give him respectability.Storm was completely bewitched by him, but she made him lose his head as well as his heart. And, threatened by scandal and ruin, they are forced to wed -- a tempestuous union of free spirits, shackled only by the irrepressible bonds of love. Bragg Saga Innocent Fire (Bragg Saga, #1) Firestorm (Bragg Saga, #2) Violet Fire (Bragg Saga, #3) Dark Fires (Bragg Saga, #4) The Fires of Paradise (Bragg Saga, #5) Scandalous Love (Bragg Saga, #6) Secrets (Delanza Family, #1; The Bragg Saga, #7) Related: After Innocence (Delanza, #2)

#2

Matter and energy

1912

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#3

Lost in Space

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"Randall Amster explores homelessness as both a social and spatial problem. Homeless people are on the front lines of a struggle to preserve places that are theoretically open to anyone regardless of status. Urban spaces in particular manifest a complex ecology comprised of people, culture, architecture, technology, and the natural environment, expressed through gentrification, redevelopment, and privatization. In this ecology, homeless people are criminalized for performing basic activities such as sitting or sleeping. These trends are evident across the U.S. and internationally, linking local issues with wider forces of globalization."--BOOK JACKET.

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