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Chris Clark

Kirjat ja teokset yhdessä paikassa: 25 kirjaa, julkaisuja vuosilta 1999-2026, suosituimpien joukossa How to Write Adventure Modules That Don't Suck. Vertaile teosten hintoja ja tarkista saatavuus suomalaisista kirjakaupoista.

25 kirjaa

Kirjojen julkaisuhaarukka 1999-2026.

How to Write Adventure Modules That Don't Suck

How to Write Adventure Modules That Don't Suck

Jobe Bittman; Mike Breault; Ann K. Brown; Timothy Brown; Stephen Chenault; Casey Christopherson; Chris Clark; Michael Curtis; Chris Doyle; Joseph Goodman; Allen Hammack; Jon Hook

Goodman Games
2024
sidottu
Goodman Games has established a reputation for publishing some of the best adventure modules in the industry. Now we present our advice on how you can write great adventures! This compilation of articles is authored by two dozen of the industry’s best-known adventure writers. Each article gives a different perspective on how to write adventure modules that don’t suck, written by authors with decades of experience and prominent published credits. By the time you’re done reading this book, you’ll be on the path to designing great adventure modules on your own. Bonus: This PDF includes a digital copy of the original How To Write Adventures Modules That Don’t Suck (2007). Whether you’re an experienced writer or an aspiring novice, you’ll find something of value in this book!
Exposing Jack

Exposing Jack

Chris Clark; Andrew Gardner

PEN SWORD BOOKS LTD
2026
sidottu
The Hammersmith Nude Murders is the name of a series of six murders in West London, England, in 1964 and 1965. The victims, all sex workers, were found undressed in or near the River Thames. Two earlier murders, committed in West London in 1959 and 1963, have also been linked by some investigators to the same perpetrator. There have been at least eight other publications covering these crimes, with speculation about who was responsible, but none conclusively identifying any individual. Despite intense media interest and one of the biggest manhunts in Scotland Yard's history, the case is unsolved. Forensic evidence gathered at the time is believed to have been destroyed or lost. In this book the authors have identified a viable new suspect who had the Method, Motive and Opportunity to have committed these murders. He was a minder in the illegal drinking dens, both The Tennis Club and The Jazz Club, a taxi driver from Notting Hill who in 1964 moved to a flat at 3 Amelia House off Queen Caroline Street just half a mile from where Hannah Tailford was found in The Thames, he rubbed shoulders with the last 5 victims, whose Fiancé was a hairdresser to at least five of the victims and who enjoyed forced deep fellation; a fetish that the lead officer, Chief Superintendent John Du Rose identified as the cause of asphyxiation to each of the victims.
The Profitable Farm

The Profitable Farm

Chris Clark; Brian Scanlon; Johnnie Balfour

5M Books Ltd
2025
nidottu
Maximum sustainable output offers increased economic and environmental resilience at both the individual farm and wider industry levels. The Profitable Farm is a pragmatic guide for farmers and other interested parties to maximum sustainable output (MSO) concepts, practices and applications. The Profitable Farm is suitable for farmers seeking greater resilience and increased profitability, academics who need to re-visit the ‘Standard Theory of The Firm’ as it applies to farming, and policy-makers charged with responsibility to secure food-supplies and provide support programmes for the sector. The Profitable Farm provides both the technical background and the practical implications of MSO practices. In particular, it addresses the inescapable realities of energy issues on profitability and environmental damage. Case studies are used throughout to emphasise key points and the appendices will satisfy those wishing to delve further into the technical concepts behind MSO. Unlike most publications on farming, which tend to focus on farming practices, sectoral economics (at a national planning level) or environmental impact issues, The Profitable Farm is essentially about farming as businesses with significant responsibilities to the natural environment and uncompromised animal welfare.
The Murder of Judith Roberts

The Murder of Judith Roberts

Chris Clark; Tanita Matthews

PEN SWORD BOOKS LTD
2024
sidottu
In the Summer of 1972, 14-year-old Judith Roberts took off for a bike ride within the vicinity of her Staffordshire home. Her body was discovered after a three-day manhunt, concealed from view in a thick privet having been brutally attacked. The community of Tamworth was rocked by the news of her death and an outcry for justice ensued. Within weeks of her murder, an impressionable and troubled soldier, based in the nearby barracks, 17-year-old Andrew Evans, walked into a police station and confessed to the killing. Relentlessly interviewed for hours on end without representation or an appropriate adult present, Andrew was swiftly charged with Judith's murder. Despite attempting to recount his statement and a legal defence at trial that defied the prosecution's arguments that Andrew Evans was guilty, a judge sentenced him to life behind bars. He was eventually acquitted in 1997 in what was, at the time, Britain's longest miscarriage of justice. While Andrew Evans fought for his freedom, another man drove up and down England undetected: Peter William Sutcliffe. Eventually proven capable of inflicting unimaginable horror at any given opportunity, an independent inquiry dubbed him likely responsible for more murders than the 13 he was convicted of and the seven others he attempted between 1975 and 1980. In _The Murder of Judith Roberts_, Chris Clark and Tanita Matthews examine evidence that concludes that Sutcliffe, whose violent criminal history dates back as far as 1969, was the real culprit responsible for Judith's murder. With never before-published dialogue from Andrew Evans' police interviews showing the grave miscarriage of justice, the case file of the five-decade cold case is examined under a new light.
Inside the Mind of Gary Ridgway

Inside the Mind of Gary Ridgway

Chris Clark

Ad Lib Publishers Ltd
2024
nidottu
Gary Ridgway – dubbed the Green River Killer by the media before his identity was known, after five victims found in the Green River – terrorized the Seattle region of the United States during the 1980s and early 1990s, abducting and killing young women. He was arrested in 2001 and eventually pleaded guilty to forty-nine murders, which makes him the second most prolific serial killer in United States history (based on confirmed murders), though he claims to have killed eighty-five (there is at least one live investigation which implicates Ridgway). He is currently in Washington State Penitentiary in Walla Walla, serving forty-nine consecutive life sentences. Clark shows how Gary Ridgway became known as the Green River Killer within King county in Washington state. He goes on to reveal Ridgway’s connection to many more missing people and bodies found in Pierce and other Washington counties, as well as over the border in Portland, Oregon, and as far away as Colorado, as he became an interstate killer. All of Ridgway’s confirmed victims were killed within King county, Washington, where a plea bargain saved him from execution within that county. Since then and within the past few years, GEDMATCH DNA has identified some of the Jane Doe cases connected with Ridgway. These show clearly that Ridgway killed over a far wider area, including in Snohomish county to the north and Pierce and Lewis counties to the south, as well as over the border in Portland, in Multomah county in Oregon and even further to the south-east in Windy Ridge and Denver, Colorado, 1,300 miles from SeaTac. Clark has compiled an extensive list of other missing persons and human remains found, mainly within King and Pierce counties, which fit Ridgway’s active timeline and victimology, which he feels should be reinvestigated.
The Truth About Lasseter

The Truth About Lasseter

Chris Clark

Echo Books
2024
pokkari
This book ends debate about the possible existence of a fabulous gold reef that "Harry" Lasseter claimed in 1930 he had found in Central Australia as a young man, famously prompting a well-funded expedition to go in futile search of it at the outset of the Great Depression.While other writers have previously disproved aspects of the life story that Lasseter claimed for himself, none has adopted the chronological biography approach which shows so sharply the pattern of behaviour that leaves no room for doubt: Lasseter was a compulsive delusionary liar, constantly demanding the attention of figures in authority for his own personal benefit.Far from the honest working man battling to get the 'square deal' that he claimed was his due, Lasseter revealed himself time and again as a persuasive poseur full of big ideas that were usually impractical, unoriginal or founded on empty promises. While argument might continue to focus on what motivated the figures who joined in promoting his reef story, there remains not a shred of doubt that there never was any gold.
Inside the Mind of the Yorkshire Ripper

Inside the Mind of the Yorkshire Ripper

Chris Clark; Tim Hicks

Gemini Books Group Ltd
2023
nidottu
The police believed Sutcliffe was operating only in the Greater Manchester Police, South Yorkshire Police and West Yorkshire Metropolitan Police force areas, using his car. In fact, Sutcliffe was operating nationally and internationally, using his employer's lorry to commit attacks. Authors Chris Clark and Tim Hicks have meticulously researched Sutcliffe's crimes and reveal many of his previously unknown victims for the first time. The police failed to deliver justice for the victims' families, and the media has failed to hold the police to account for this failure - both in the original investigation and in subsequent cold-case investigations. The authors hope that by bringing more of the facts of the case into the public domain and by telling the victims' stories, they can help to bring closure for friends and relatives of victims of the Yorkshire Ripper.
The New Millennium Serial Killer

The New Millennium Serial Killer

Bethan Trueman; Chris Clark

PEN SWORD BOOKS LTD
2022
sidottu
In March 2011, a major police investigation was opened in the search for missing Swindon local, Sian O'Callaghan. When taxi driver Christopher Halliwell was arrested, Detective Superintendent Stephen Fulcher didn't expect what happened next. After the body of another missing girl, Becky Godden-Edwards, was uncovered, the police had two murders on their hands and one suspect, but how many more unsolved murders could Christopher Halliwell be responsible for? The hidden cache of around 60 pieces of women's clothing and accessories that he led police to suggests that the number could be much higher than the two murders he has been convicted of. In The New Millennium Serial Killer, former police intelligence officer Chris Clark and true crime podcast host Bethan Trueman use their in-depth research to present a comprehensive study into convicted killer Christopher Halliwell. Discussing the crimes for which he was convicted but presenting them alongside the unsolved cases of missing and murdered women who fit with his victim type, and who went missing in the areas where he was familiar, from the 1980s to the time of his arrest in 2011. With many jobs over the years which allowed Halliwell to travel to different areas of the UK, along with a passion for fishing and narrow boating, including Yorkshire, East Lancashire, and the Midlands. With a foreword by former Detective Superintendent Stephen Fulcher, The New Millennium Serial Killer presents a fascinating account of this cruel killer and tells the heartbreaking stories of over twenty women whose cases remain unsolved today, seeking to find justice for their loved ones who are still waiting for answers. Do they remain with Christopher Halliwell and the collection of women's items?
Gone Fishing: The Unsolved Crimes of Angus Sinclair

Gone Fishing: The Unsolved Crimes of Angus Sinclair

Chris Clark; Adam Lloyd

Mango Books
2021
sidottu
Angus Robertson Sinclair, one of the worst killers the UK has ever seen, was convicted of four murders. His first took place in his home city of Glasgow in 1961, when he raped and murdered his seven-year-old neighbour Catherine Reehill when he was just sixteen. But after spending a mere six years in prison, he was released in his early twenties to kill again. Teenagers Helen Scott and Christine Eadie were last seen at the World's End pub on Edinburgh's Royal Mile in October 1977. The next morning both were found murdered; not together, but a few miles apart on the East Lothian coast. They had both been raped before they were killed. The largest investigation in Scottish police history didn't find their killer. Several years later, in 1982, Sinclair was jailed for life after he was charged with and admitted eleven charges of rape and indecent assault. However, twenty years after this, as Sinclair was beginning to be hopeful about being released on parole, a cold case review showed that Sinclair's DNA had been found on the body of 17-year-old Mary Gallagher, a 1978 Glasgow murder that had been previously unsolved. These discoveries lead detectives to examine the link between Sinclair and several other unsolved cases. Scientific advances put Sinclair and his brother-in law Gordon Hamilton who died in 1996 firmly in the frame for the World's End pub murders of Helen Scott and Christine Eadie. In 2007 Sinclair stood trial for these murders, but a lack of evidence saw the case collapse. But following the change in Scotland's double jeopardy law, Sinclair again faced trial for the World's End murders in 2014, and this time was found guilty. The judge said the words 'evil' and 'monster' were not enough to describe Sinclair, as he sentenced him to a minimum of 37 years in prison for the murders of the two teenagers. This is the longest sentence issued to anyone in a Scottish court, and ensured that Sinclair would die in jail. But there were more victims. Many more. Sinclair was convicted of four murders, but we believe he murdered at least twelve people, maybe fourteen. And in this book, we tell their stories.
How to Lose Weight - The Satiety Diet

How to Lose Weight - The Satiety Diet

Chris Clark; James L Gibb

Quillpen Pty Ltd T/A Leaves of Gold Press
2020
pokkari
Satiety is the key to weight loss. This book presents data about a vast range of factors beyond diet, all of which are powerful tools for weight control. The Satiety Diet uses scientific research into the ways not only your food, but also your thoughts, habits, environment and almost every aspect of your lifestyle affect your body-weight.
How to Lose Weight - The Satiety Diet

How to Lose Weight - The Satiety Diet

Chris Clark; James L Gibb

Quillpen Pty Ltd T/A Leaves of Gold Press
2019
sidottu
"Satiety is the key to weight loss." Losing weight can be hard. If it were easy, we'd all be slim and there would be no "obesity crisis". At first glance, it seems straightforward; if you simply ate less and exercised more, you would lose weight. Right? If only it were that simple Around the world, scientists are working at the limits of human knowledge to find solutions for the problem of overweight. Four years in the making, the Satiety Diet is based on cutting-edge research into the countless ways not only your food, but also your thoughts, habits, senses, environment and almost every aspect of your life can profoundly affect your body-weight.This book presents data about a vast range of lifestyle factors including and beyond diet, all of which are powerful tools for weight control. The Satiety Diet is the science-based way to lose weight and keep it off forever.
LifeFinder: Path to crafting your legacy

LifeFinder: Path to crafting your legacy

Chris Clark

Independently Published
2019
nidottu
Have you ever felt as though you have no direction in your life? Are you just going through the motions? The fact is many people have felt this way throughout human history. Many people do not know precisely how to harness their potential. Some may even feel they don't have potential or maybe they are waiting on something. They may also feel as though they work tirelessly, but never seem to get anywhere.LifeFinder is a commendable book in its own area. The author has analyzed in-depth strategies to make life much more enjoyable. The book highlights internal motivation as a central theme to finding the right direction of success. Similarly, the book sketches a guiding chart for the readers to follow for success like vision, determination, discipline, introspection, and human will. The author deals with these like how hopelessness is learned and the consequences.One of the main objectives of this book is to find ways to determine your stuff, live a life of service, and leave your legacy. The author also directs attention to highlight the importance of mental health, traumatic stress, and emotional awareness. The book, therefore, acts as a guide to people facing such challenges in their life.This book is meant to be a guide to responsible human will for all families and households given how common "lack of motivation" is everywhere.
The Face of Evil

The Face of Evil

Chris Clark; Robert Giles

John Blake Publishing Ltd
2017
nidottu
In 1994, Robert Black was convicted of the kidnapping, sexual assault and murder of three young girls, and sentenced to life imprisonment with a minimum tariff of thirty-five years; in 2011 he was convicted of a fourth such killing. He died in HMP Maghaberry, Northern Ireland, in January 2016, aged sixty-eight, unmourned, and entirely unrepentant of his repellent crimes.These bald facts, horrific as they are, do not begin to scratch the surface of the truth about Robert Black, a Scottish-born serial killer who undoubtedly committed further murders for which he was never tried, both in this country and on the Continent. In this ground-breaking account, Robert Giles, who has spent years tracing the killer's movements and sifting through all the evidence, including transcripts of the trials, convincingly argues that Black was an habitual serial killer over many years, and quite certainly responsible for more than the four child murders for which he was convicted.Co-written with Chris Clark, a former police intelligence officer whose tireless work into the Yorkshire Ripper produced convincing new evidence of other murders that went unnoticed or unrecorded, The Face of Evil shows once and for all that Robert Black was a serial killer whose crimes went far beyond what is generally believed. In doing so, it paints a portrait of human cruelty at its worst.