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Jan 1, 1908 — —· 118 yrs

FICTION · HISTORY

George Shipway

Also known as: George SHIPWAY

7
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Shoka was well on his way back to the porch when the apparition came out of the forest, a huge lump moving on two thin legs, that proved only a basket and a skinny boy in a hat.

— from The Paladin, 1979

Most acclaimed

#2

Free lance

0.0 (0)
#1

The Yellow Room

1945

5.0 (1)

George Shipway’s two novels, [The Imperial Governor](/works/OL5476132W) and [The Knight](/works/OL5476124W), introduced a first-rate historical novelist to readers in the United States. He was praised not only for his meticulous research, but also for his “lean hard” style (Gerald Meyer, is the Des Moines Register) and “fascinating insight into the timeless military mind” (Martin Blumenson, in the Washington, DC. Star). Now, Mr. Shipway turns again to that same “timeless military mind” in a modern—and frequently funny—suspense tale. THE YELLOW ROOM is the story of a handful of retired, pukka sahib British military men who pass their hours sipping sherry and grumbling in the Yellow Room of their club while, in the streets outside, riots, revolution, and conspiracy threaten to topple the country they love so well. What they do to ensure that there will, indeed, always be an England, and what is done to them is a highly satisfying novel, an entertainment where honor summons crime to her needs, and murder joins hands with patriotism, and all are celebrated in most unusual, shocking, and often amusing, ways.

#3

The Paladin

1979

0.0 (0)

In 1940 Winston Churchill recruited a 15-yr. old boy to become a secret agent who would report to him personally. Throughout World War II this boy, who quickly became a man, was ordered on many highly dangerous missions conducted in utmost secrecy. His code name was Christopher Robin and he was Churchill's paladin-- his secret warrior.

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