![]() Children’s fictionġ964 (US) 1967 (UK) – Charlie and the Chocolate Factoryġ972 – Charlie and the Great Glass Elevatorġ991 – The Vicar of Nibbleswicke (Posthumously)Ģ005 – Roald Dahl’s Incredible Chocolate Box (published posthumously for World Book Day, and including a missing chapter from Charlie and the Chocolate factory). ![]() Here we present a chronological bibliography of works published during and after the author’s life: children’s fiction, children’s poetry, adult fiction and non-fiction. Roald Dahl was as prolific a writer as he was creative, releasing fiction and poetry for children and short stories and non-fiction for adults. ![]()
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![]() Pack Animals was, though, quite good, though I still find it ironic that a sparkly unicorn featured. I have, however, seen a couple of very good genderswap fanfics, and it's been suggested that I have a go at one that deals with the social aspects of it as well as personal disconnect - of the two best ones I'm thinking of, one doesn't have very much about how general people react to different genders, and the other (non-Torchwood) is set on an uninhabited planet. ![]() Gwen Cooper woke up this morning expecting the unexpected. But now she has a new weapon in her quest for Mr Right. ![]() ![]() Emma is 30, single and frankly desperate. She woke up this morning with nothing to look forward to but another evening of unsuccessful speed-dating. Read Torchwood: Almost Perfect by James Goss available from Rakuten Kobo. Genderswap is something that can only be done well in a certain frame, and a light-hearted tie-in novel to a tv series isn't it. Read so far: Another Life, Border Princes, Slow Decay, Trace Memory, Pack Animals, Skypoint, Almost Perfect, The House That Jack Built. Emma is 30, single and frankly desperate. Personally, it tips over to love for me because it deliberately doesn't take itself too seriously - it had to be that silly about it because I don't think the format and genre of the books could accurately deal with the situation as it stood, and if they'd tried, they would have failed miserably. ![]() Almost Perfect is the book everyone either loves or hates. ![]() ![]() After 13 cancellations from different editors, he finally released his book in July 2006 under Droemer Knaur Verlag. He got his idea for Therapy in 2000, waiting for a friend in a waiting room from a orthopedist. Since 2006, Fitzek started to write psycho-thriller novels, which all became a best-seller. He wrote his first book titled Professor Udolphs Buch der Namen with Jürgen Udolph, which came out in 2005. ![]() He attended law school until the first state examination, earned his degree in copyright and worked then as editor-in-chief and program director for different radio stations in Germany. After High school in Charlottenburger Wald-Gymnasium, Fitzek started studying veterinary, but stopped after 3 months. Sebastian Fitzek was born in West Berlin, West Germany and grew up with his father, headmaster of the Lilienthal-Gymnasium in Berlin-Lichterfelde, and his mother, a teacher. Fitzek is currently one of the most successful writers of Germany. Die Therapie), was a bestseller in Germany in 2006, toppling The Da Vinci Code from the first position. ![]() ![]() Sebastian David Fitzek (born 13 October 1971 in West-Berlin) is a German writer and journalist. ![]() |