Books tagged: stratford

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Found: 11 results

Xlr    by Loz Campbell
Price: $4.99 USD. 37500 words. Published on June 20, 2010. .

Leroy Peters, a headstrong 15 year old boy, living in the East of London finds that his school is mysteriously changing into a strangely cerebral but ominous place. He has no idea why, but when his father, Donald, a detective in the local police force, tells the family of a new drug sweeping the East End, it all adds up. Leroy faces chasing, kidnap and betrayal in an attempt to stop it.
The Trap Door: The Lost Script of "Cardenio"    by Andrew Delaplaine
Price: $2.99 USD. 80440 words. Published on April 27, 2011. .

A 15-year-old boy goes back in time to 1594 to Shakespeare's time to unravel the mystery of a famous lost play -- and learn something about himself as well.
Ju-Ju Bowman's Sex Festival    by Lisa R Waite
Price: $1.99 USD. 23750 words. Published on June 8, 2011. .

A Novella. Ju-Ju Bowan isn't sure she believes in true love. But when she runs a B&B for the summer, plans the first Stratford Sex Festival and has an affair with a much younger man, Ju-Ju finally learns what the swans have known all along.
As You Don't Like It (Shakespeare didn't write Shakespeare)    by Jeff Rowe
Price: $7.99 USD. 39140 words. Published on November 14, 2011. .

This book reveals a four-hundred-year old code, hidden within the works of Shakespeare, that illuminates the fact that William Shakespeare is a penname.
Death of a Dean    by Hazel Holt
Price: $5.95 USD. 55430 words. Published by Coffeetown Press  on January 13, 2012. .

Mrs. Malory’s friend David Beaumont is in trouble: he is broke and his acting career is on the skids. To keep his cottage, he must convince his nasty brother Francis to sell their jointly owned family home, currently occupied by their old nanny. Nana dies from a suspicious fall; then Francis is poisoned. Is David the killer? Mrs. Malory sets out to clear his name. The 7th Mrs. Malory mystery.
The War of the Lucrative Words    by Frankie Lassut
Price: $0.99 USD. 19410 words. Published on April 14, 2012. .

The people of Alcester were complaining about money, tourism, and development. Along comes a creative writer who’s a bit tuned in, tapped in and turned on. They are offered, after a very short time, a gift horse ... they find it so unwelcome they don’t even bother to inspect the teeth. That howling dog just loves sitting on that thistle.
London 2012 Olympics - Building the Stratford Venues    by Geoffrey Ponder
Price: $3.99 USD. 6800 words. Published on May 3, 2012. .

General interest material about the design and development of the main sporting venues for the 2012 Olympics in Stratford, London. Giving an outline about how the site was prepared, how the individual venues were designed, and the actual development work to make the venues ready for competition in July 2012. Of particular interest to athletes and spectators who will actually visit the venues.
The Pirates of Maryland Point    by Dot Gumbi
Price: $2.37 USD. 82250 words. Published on July 10, 2012. .

The greatest prize at the London 2012 Olympics isn't gold...it's the Holy Grail. A fast-paced, who-dunnit, Cockney comedy caper packed with pirates and pie and mash.
The Bloody Man    by Bruce Barber
Price: $0.99 USD. 45770 words. Published on February 1, 2013. .

In the first of the Jean-Claude Keyes trilogy, by Bruce Barber and the late Virgil Burnett (as "Bevan Amberhill"), Keyes travels from Toronto to Stratford, Canada and the Stratford Shakespeare Festival. The fire of emotion beneath the glamour of the world of the stage emerges when Keyes discovers the body of a young actor, murdered outside the theatre.
Downstage Dead    by Bruce Barber
Price: $3.99 USD. 50720 words. Published on February 14, 2013. .

Biographer Jean-Claude Keyes becomes involved with an enticing woman named Kaylyn Dionne, who is directing a Stratford Festival production of Count Dracula. On a most unusual “first date,” Keyes and Kaylyn discover the bodies of her sister and another member of the acting troupe, murdered horrifically. But the show must go on, even in the ensuing atmosphere of fear, distrust, and confusion.