Autoren-Bilder

Raymond Lamont-Brown

Autor von Kamikaze: Japan's Suicide Samurai

48 Werke 488 Mitglieder 4 Rezensionen

Über den Autor

Raymond Lamont-Brown has been a freelance writer since 1965. He has produced some fifty titles. He retired from his posts as lecturer in the Departments of Continuing Education at the Universities of Dundee and St Andrews in 1999

Werke von Raymond Lamont-Brown

Kamikaze: Japan's Suicide Samurai (1997) 107 Exemplare
John Brown (2000) 24 Exemplare
Scottish Folklore (1996) 18 Exemplare
Phantoms of the theater (1977) 10 Exemplare
A book of superstitions (1970) 8 Exemplare
Book of Epitaphs (1982) 7 Exemplare
Humphry Davy (2004) 6 Exemplare
Discovering Fife (1988) 5 Exemplare
Phantom Soldiers (1975) 5 Exemplare
A new book of epitaphs (1973) 5 Exemplare
Book of British Eccentrics (1984) 5 Exemplare
Irish Grave Humour (1987) 5 Exemplare
Fife in History and Legend (2002) 4 Exemplare
A Book of Witchcraft (1971) 3 Exemplare
Villages of Fife (2002) 3 Exemplare
East Anglian Epitaphs (1980) 2 Exemplare
A casebook of military mystery (1974) 2 Exemplare
A book of proverbs (1970) 2 Exemplare
Royal Murder Mysteries (1990) 2 Exemplare

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Great collection of folk tales indicated where & what.
 
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sweetzombieducky | Nov 28, 2015 |
This was a good book about two of the most prominent of Edward VII's mistresses. The book is basically 90% Alice and 10% Agnes, due, in part, to the fact that very little is known about Agnes Keyser. Part of the book talks about Alice Keppel's two daughters, Violet and Sonia, and I felt that the inclusion of these two ladies didn't need to be part of the story. There were also a few factual errors, for instance: stating that Prince Felix Yusupov, killer of Rasputin, was the brother-in-law of Grand Duke Dimitri Pavlovich. In fact, he was his cousin-in-law.

All in all this was an interesting book and a must read for any interested in Edward VII's extra-curricular activities.
… (mehr)
½
 
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briandrewz | 1 weitere Rezension | May 26, 2012 |
This book, about Queen Victoria's beloved John Brown, didn't produce anything I didn't already know about the Queen and her Highland servant. The narrative at times got a little boring, though, the book does give a good portrait of Brown to someone unfamiliar with the story.
 
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briandrewz | Apr 5, 2012 |
Very poorly written -- the author seemed more fascinated where obscure people lived then giving us any insight or even any real fun stories. Tried way too hard to make Agnes Keyser an interesting person--she must have been a book. And Keppel must have been more interesting than presented.
 
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NellieMc | 1 weitere Rezension | Apr 26, 2009 |

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Statistikseite

Werke
48
Mitglieder
488
Beliebtheit
#50,613
Bewertung
3.1
Rezensionen
4
ISBNs
89
Sprachen
2

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