Jimbo

  • Jimbo: A Fantasy
    By Algernon Blackwood

    A darkly psychological work of juvenile fiction, Jimbo: A Fantasy is the story of a boy confronting the anxieties of childhood and awakening to the adult horrors of death and separation.

  • Jimbo
    By Algernon Blackwood

    So it came about that three months later, when May was melting into June, Miss Ethel Lake arrived upon the scene as a result of the Colonel's blundering good intentions.

  • Jimbo: A Fantasy
    By Algernon Blackwood

    This work has been selected by scholars as being culturally important and is part of the knowledge base of civilization as we know it. This work is in the public domain in the United States of America, and possibly other nations.

  • Jimbo: A Fantasy
    By Algernon Blackwood

    This volume contains the first volume of Charles James Lever s phenomenally popular 1840 novel, "Charles O Malley: The Irish Dragoon." This fantastic novel would make for a great addition...

  • Jimbo: A Fantasy
    By Algernon Blackwood

    "Jimbo is a delicious book, and one that should be read by all who long at times to escape from this working-day world into the region of haunting and half-remembered things."

  • Jimbo: A Fantasy (Classic Reprint)
    By Algernon Blackwood

    About the Publisher Forgotten Books publishes hundreds of thousands of rare and classic books. Find more at www.forgottenbooks.com This book is a reproduction of an important historical work.

  • Jimbo: Adventures in Paradise
    By Gary Panter

    A futuristic punk ventures through a madcap, dystopian fantasia in this astounding work of comics literature by a celebrated artist and illustrator.

  • Jimbo: A Fantasy (Esprios Classics)
    By Algernon Blackwood

    The June sunshine lay hot and still over the paved court, and he looked up into the blue sky overhead. ... there seemed to be some writing on them, and he was in the act of going nearer to inspect, when a window opened and he heard some ...

  • Jimbo: A Novel of Resurgence and Redemption
    By Joe Cawley

    The fractured Huey fell out of the sky like a greased brick.