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VIROZONE MUST BE SAVED...With Virozone in permanent AIRLOCK, there are no zone restrictions and no rules, which means no one and nowhere is safe. Lawlie Pearce is back and tougher than ever. But if she is to save Virozone she will need the help of some new friends. Lawlie and the ex-prince of Virozone, Chance Radcliff, must journey from the dangerous Void to battle with the Desperate Village.Along the way they face the hideous Burners, as they seek to find the creators of Virozone: 'Viro Control'.Lawlie and her feisty new friends must free Virozone from the grasp of Tash and Skull or be captured in AIRLOCK for the rest of their lives."Cole created a strong female role model when she created Lawlie. Headstrong, fearless, independent, and determined. The perfect combination needed in this action-packed story!" Melissa Wray, author of The Ruby Locket
Inventing Tomorrow provides a definitive account of H. G. Wells's work and ideas. Sarah Cole illuminates his distinctive style as well as his interventions into social and political thought, arguing that he embodies twentieth-century literature at its most expansive and engaged.
At the Violet Hour offers a richly historicized, trenchant look at the interlocking of literature with violence in British and Irish modernist texts.
Sarah Cole examines the rich literary and cultural history of masculine intimacy in the twentieth century. Cole approaches this complex and neglected topic from many perspectives - as a reflection of the exceptional social power wielded by the institutions that housed and structured male bonds; as a matter of closeted and thwarted homoerotics; as part of the story of the First World War. Cole shows that the terrain of masculine fellowship provides an important context for understanding key literary features of the modernist period. She foregrounds such crucial themes as the over-determined relations between imperial wanderers in Conrad's tales, the broken friendships that permeate Forster's fictions, Lawrence's desperate urge to make culture out of blood brotherhood and the intense bereavement of the war poet. Cole argues that these dramas of compelling and often tortured male friendship have helped to define a particular spirit and voice within the literary canon.
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