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Books with title The Luck of Troy

  • The Tale of Troy

    Roger Green

    Paperback (Puffin Classics, May 10, 2012)
    None
  • The Tale of Troy

    Roger Lancelyn Green

    Paperback (Penguin Books Ltd, Aug. 16, 1961)
    None
  • The luck of the kid

    Ridgwell CULLUM

    (Readers Library, July 6, 1925)
    None
  • The Tale of Troy

    Benedict Flynn

    Audio CD (NAXOS AUDIOBOOKS, July 31, 1996)
    None
  • The Tale of Troy

    Roger Lancelyn Green

    Paperback (Puffin, Jan. 1, 1979)
    None
  • The Luck of the Kid

    Ridgwell Cullum

    (Putnam, July 6, 1923)
    First edition bound in green cloth with gold lettering. A Very Good copy. Rubs to the covers and a faint crease along the length of the spine. Former owner's bookplate affixed to the front endpaper. Mild toning to the pages. Northwest adventure novel with some mystery elements. Listed in Hubin.
  • The Luck of the Kid

    Ridgwell Cullum

    (Independently published, May 1, 2020)
    Yukon-Alaska set novel of gold prospectors and a search for "the lost white girl." Ridgwell Cullum (pseudonym of Sidney Groves Burghard) (13 August 1867 - 3 November 1943) was a British writer who wrote a large number of adventure novels over more than 30 years, usually set in sparsely populated regions of the United States or Canada.
  • The Luck of the Kid

    Ridgwell Cullum

    (The Readers Library Co Ltd, July 6, 1938)
    None
  • The Luck of the Kid

    R Cullum

    (Readers Library, )
    None
  • The Luck of the Kid

    Ridgwell Cullum

    (Independently published, April 14, 2019)
    This collection of literature attempts to compile many of the classic works that have stood the test of time and offer them at a reduced, affordable price, in an attractive volume so that everyone can enjoy them.
  • The Luck of Troy

    R L Green

    Hardcover (Penguin Books, March 8, 1967)
    None
  • The Luck of the Kid

    Ridgwell Cullum

    (Library Of Alexandria, May 12, 2019)
    The sub-Arctic summer was at its height. The swelter of heat was of almost tropical intensity. No wisp of cloud marred the perfect purity of the steely blue sky, and no breath of wind relieved the intemperate scorch of the blazing sun. The two men on the river bank gave no heed to the oppressive heat. For the moment they seemed concerned with nothing but their ease, and the swarming flies, and the voracious attacks of the mosquitoes from which the smoke of their camp fire did its best to protect them. Down below them, a few yards away, their walrus-hide kyak lay moored to the bank of the river, whose sluggish, oily-moving waters flowed gently northward towards the far-off fields of eternal ice. It was noon, and a rough midday meal had been prepared and disposed of. Now they were smoking away a leisurely hour before resuming their journey. The younger of the two flung away the end of a cigarette with a movement that was almost violent in its impatience. He turned a pair of narrow black eyes upon his companion, and their sparkle of resentment shone fiercely in sharp contrast against the dusky skin of their setting. “It’s no use blinding ourselves, sir,” he said, speaking rapidly in the tongue of the whiteman, with only the faintest suspicion of native halting. “It’s here. But we’ve missed it. And another’s found it.” He was a youthful creature something short of the completion of his second decade. But that which he lacked in years he made up for in the alertness of purpose that looked out of his keen eyes. He was dark-skinned, its hue something between yellow and olive. He had prominent, broad cheek bones like those of all the natives of Canada’s extreme north. Yet his face differed from the general low type of the Eskimo. There was refinement in every detail of it. There was something that suggested a race quite foreign, but curiously akin.