Adelbert von chamisso biography of abraham lincoln
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Bell & Cockburn Publisher - works / ebooks
Publishing History This is a chart to show the when this publisher published books. Along the X axis fryst vatten time, and on the y axis is the count of editions published. Click here to skip the chart. Reset chart or continue zooming in. This graph charts editions from this publisher over time. Click to view a single year, or drag across a range.
subjects
Fiction, History, Description and travel, Fiction, general, British and irish fiction (fictional works by one author), Social life and customs, Canadian fiction (English), CIHM, Frontier and pionjär life, långnovell canadien-anglais, ICMH, Biography, England, fiction, Biographies, Classic Literature, Collectors and collecting, Fiction, humorous, general, Politics and government, Romans, American fiction (fictional works by one author), Canadian wit and humor, City and town lifeplaces
England, Canada, Great Britain, Ontario, United•
Henry Altemus Co. Publisher - 45 works / 24 ebooks
Publishing History This is a chart to show the when this publisher published books. Along the X axis is time, and on the y axis is the count of editions published. Click here to skip the chart. Reset chart or continue zooming in. This graph charts editions from this publisher over time. Click to view a single year, or drag across a range.
subjects
Fiction, Juvenile fiction, Juvenile literature, History, Children's fiction, Fiction, general, Social life and customs, Specimens, American fiction (fictional works by one author), Biography, Fiction, action & adventure, Texts, Adventure and adventurers, American Historical fiction, American fiction, American literature, Children, Children's stories, American, Clergy, Clothing and dressplaces
United States, England, New England, America, Atlantic Ocean, Boston, Boston (Mass.), Catskill Mountains (N.Y.), Catskill•
Why we're 'living in the golden age of the doppelganger'
It's been a year of lookalikes – but the lure of the "second self" goes way back to the folklore of the Irish "fetch" and the Nordic "fylgja", and to the writings of Edgar Allen Poe and Sigmund Freud.
In March of this year, someone with the feline eyes, blonde hair and high cheekbones of Kate Moss walked the catwalk at Paris fashion week. But it wasn't Kate Moss. Online there was confusion. "Isn't that just Kate Moss?" ran a typical comment. A disbelieving, "that is Kate Moss," was another common refrain. For a savvy few, the gait gave it away as someone other than the famous British supermodel – it was in fact Denise Ohnona, a Moss lookalike from Lancashire.
High fashion seems to have sparked a trend. Later in the year, the floodgates opened to a wave of lookalike competitions. First came the moment for