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Books published by publisher Mandarin

  • The Weaker Vessel

    Antonia Fraser

    Paperback (Mandarin, Oct. 15, 1989)
    None
  • Candy Is Dandy

    Ogden Nash, Anthony Burgess

    Paperback (Mandarin, May 7, 1992)
    None
  • The Silence of the Lambs

    Thomas Harris

    Paperback (Mandarin, April 4, 1991)
    When an unknown killer begins stalking and brutally attacking women across the USA, the FBI trainee assigned to the case must use unconventional methods of investigation, including enlisting the services of a homicidal genius, in order to halt the slaughter. Published with a film tie-in cover.
  • The Woman in Black

    Unknown

    Mass Market Paperback (Mandarin, Jan. 1, 1783)
    None
  • Time Is the Simplest Thing

    Clifford D. Simak

    Paperback (Mandarin, Nov. 15, 1986)
    None
  • Alive!

    Piers Paul Read

    Paperback (Mandarin, Nov. 5, 1992)
    None
  • Illusions

    Richard Bach

    Paperback (Mandarin, Oct. 1, 1992)
    None
  • Lust for Life

    Irving Stone

    Paperback (Mandarin, March 15, 1980)
    None
  • The Godfather

    Mario Puzo

    Paperback (Mandarin, Jan. 1, 1997)
    None
  • Moonwalk

    MICHAEL JACKSON

    Paperback (MANDARIN, March 15, 1989)
    A rerelease of the popular autobiography of the King of Pop features a new introduction and afterword, in a book where the author discusses his fame, his first love, his plastic surgery and his exceptional career and the often bizarre rumors that surrounded it and augments these reflections with rare personal photos.
  • HERITAGE OF STARS

    CLIFFORD D. SIMAK

    Paperback (MANDARIN, March 15, 1986)
    A man hunts for lost knowledge in a future society that’s reverted to a primitive tribal state in this novel by the author of Way Station. More than a thousand years have passed since humankind intentionally destroyed its treacherous technology, choosing to revert back to a primitive tribal state. In this society the rusting brain cases of long-inert robots are considered trophies, and the scant knowledge that has survived is doled out to an inquisitive few in monastery-like “universities.” It is at one such center of learning that young Tom Cushing first reads of the legendary “Place of Going to the Stars,” rumored to exist on a high butte somewhere in the western part of the land. Driven by enthusiasm and an insatiable need to track the myth to its source, Tom sets out on an amazing trek across what was once called “America,” teaming up with a witch, the world’s last remaining robot, and other odd companions. But all the astonishing discoveries and dangers they encounter along the way will pale before the revelations that await them at journey’s end. Clifford D. Simak, award-winning science fiction Grand Master, offers a breathtaking vision of the future that is both dystopian and hopeful in equal measure. In A Heritage of Stars, he boldly displays the heart, intelligence, and awesome imaginative powers that have established him as one of the all-time greatest authors of speculative fiction.
  • Your Blues Ain't Like Mine

    Bebe Moore Campbell

    Paperback (Mandarin, Nov. 4, 1996)
    None