Overkill

  • Overkill
    By Robert Buettner

    A hardshell platoon to take down one nutball may be overkill. But there's no such thing as overkill where my ship's concerned.” “Uh. It's not the shooter they've engaged. The animal's loose.” “What? Has it killed anybody?

  • Overkill: The Untold Story of Motörhead
    By Joel McIver

    The LP begins with the song's snaky, insistent bass line, while live 'Overkill' is transformed into a much heavier, extended beast, with Lemmy restarting the song two or three times as an encore. 'Damage Case' is another signature song, ...

  • Overkill: The Story of Modern Weapons
    By John Cox

    Overkill: The Story of Modern Weapons

  • Overkill: Thriller
    By Brad Thor

    Overkill: Thriller

  • Overkill: When Modern Medicine Goes Too Far
    By DR PAUL. OFFIT

    In this game-changing book, infectious-disease expert and Rotavirus vaccine inventor Dr Offit highlights fifteen common medical interventions still recommended and practised bymedical professionals, despite clear evidence that they are ...

  • Overkill: The Rise and Fall of Thriller Cinema
    By Jr., Bill Mesce

    The work examines the evolution of the thriller from the heyday of the Hollywood mogul era in the 1930s when it was primarily bottom-of-the-bill fodder, through its maturity in the...

  • Overkill: A Lou Thorne Thriller
    By Kory M. Shrum

    The phone rings in the middle of the night and Konstantine knows the news will be bad even before he answers it.

  • Overkill: An Alex Hawke Novel
    By Ted Bell

    The latest action-packed thriller from New York Times bestselling author Ted Bell pits counterspy Alex Hawke against Russian president Vladimir Putin in a daring, exhilarating mission to rescue Hawke’s kidnapped son—and prevent a Soviet ...

  • Overkill: Sex and Violence in Contemporary Russian Popular Culture
    By Eliot Borenstein

    Borenstein argues that the popular cultural products consumed in the post-perestroika era were more than just diversions; they allowed Russians to indulge their despair over economic woes and everyday threats.