When Andrew spots a friendly forest monster outside his window, he knows it's time to play. Get ready to follow along with Andrew as he starts the strangest round of hide-and-seek you've ever seen Can he track down the tricky creature? Find out in this wild, word-free graphic novel.
This book is a volume in the Penn Press Anniversary Collection. To mark its 125th anniversary in 2015, the University of Pennsylvania Press rereleased more than 1,100 titles from Penn Press's distinguished backlist from 1899-1999 that had fallen out of print. Spanning an entire century, the Anniversary Collection offers peer-reviewed scholarship in a wide range of subject areas.
This is the history of Andrew David Urshan from his childhood in Iran to his coming to the USA and his religious pilgrimage from high church to the Pentecostal movement. You will travel with him on trains and ships. You will see him return to Iran to be present at the Assyrian massacre, as Islam tries to commit genocide on the Armenian and Assyrian especially Christians. You will see his deliverance and his return to America as he travels through Russia and pioneers the Pentecostal movement in Russia. While in the north close to St. Petersburg he will begin to preach the message of Oneness and baptism in Jesus name. He founds the Apostolic movement in Russia which will dominate until several years later the Assembly of God will begin to bring churches together. This book is contained for the most part in Magog: The Blessed People. I have kept it in publishing in case someone wanted just the story of A. D. Urshan.
Andrew Scott: Moriarty on Sherlock and His Journey as an Actor, traces the life of a shy Dublin boy with a slight lisp who grew up to become a spellbindingly charismatic actor, fearless in his performances.As the quirky master criminal, Jim Moriarty, in the BBC's modern-day take on the iconic Sherlock Holmes, Ireland's Andrew Scott transformed a brief scene at the climax of the television show into the star-making role of his career. Fans, critics and colleagues lauded his portrayal, and Scott found himself with what he called, "the career I've always dreamed of."Andrew Scott worked steadily as an actor, but sometimes stubborn choices may have delayed and even derailed his momentum as he stayed true to his own feelings, even refusing the conventional wisdom that an actor shouldn't be openly gay if he wanted to get roles, by coming out publicly after Sherlock.The innovative, Andrew Scott: Moriarty on Sherlock and His Journey as an Actor, features never-before-seen information on Scott's pre- and post-Sherlock career, numerous photos, interviews with early co-stars, directors and playwrights and a timeline of original articles tracing Scott from the beginning of Sherlock and on, observing the actor of infinite versatility as he is coming to grips with fame, fandom, and international recognition.