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Books with title Baron Trump's Marvellous Underground Journey

  • Baron Trump's Marvellous Underground Journey

    Ingersoll Lockwood

    Paperback (Independently published, March 2, 2019)
    The Baron Trump novels are two children's novels written in 1889 and 1893 by the American author and lawyer Ingersoll Lockwood. They remained obscure until 2017, when they received media attention for perceived similarities between their protagonist and U.S. President Donald Trump.This is the Second in the series of the adventures of Baron Trump, Published in 1893.
  • Baron Trump's Marvellous Underground Journey

    Ingersoll Lockwood, S R P

    Paperback (CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, )
    None
  • Baron Trump's Marvellous Underground Journey

    Ingersoll Lockwood

    language (Anon, July 19, 2017)
    Baron Trump's Marvellous Underground Journey (1892).
  • Baron Trump's Marvellous Underground Journey

    Ingersoll Lockwood

    language (Anon, July 19, 2017)
    Baron Trump's Marvellous Underground Journey (1892).
  • Baron Trump's Marvelous Underground Journey

    Ingersoll Lockwood, Gildart Jackson, Dreamscape Media, LLC

    Audiobook (Dreamscape Media, LLC, Sept. 12, 2017)
    Ingersoll Lockwood invented the fictional character Baron Trump in 1890 for a two-part sci-fi/fantasy series about a privileged boy who undertakes a sequence of fantastic voyages. The style of the Baron Trump series - a mix of fantasy and young-listener-oriented science fiction - anticipated and may have influenced L. Frank Baum's Oz series. The second in that series, Baron Trump's Marvellous Underground Journey, describes Baron's trip to the Earth's interior via an opening in the Russian Arctic. During the journey, Baron and his dog Bulger encounter many lost races, including the Transparent Folk and the Rattlebrains. The unusual prescience of Ingersoll's narrative has given rise to a conspiracy theory that US President Donald Trump has had access to a time machine.
  • Baron Trump's Marvellous Underground Journey

    Ingersoll Lockwood, Tony Darnell

    Hardcover (12th Media Services, July 1, 2018)
    The Baron Trump novels are two children's novels written in 1889 and 1893 by the American author and lawyer Ingersoll Lockwood. They remained obscure until 2017, when they received media attention for perceived similarities between their protagonist and U.S. President Donald Trump. Ingersoll published the first novel, Travels and adventures of Little Baron Trump and his wonderful dog Bulger, in 1889, and its sequel, Baron Trump's Marvelous Underground Journey, in 1893. The novels recount the adventures of the German boy Wilhelm Heinrich Sebastian Von Troomp, who goes by "Baron Trump", as he discovers weird underground civilizations, offends the natives, flees from his entanglements with local women, and repeats this pattern until arriving back home at Castle Trump. The novels were part of a trend in American children's literature that responded to the demand for fantastic adventure stories triggered by Lewis Carroll's Alice in Wonderland (1865). In July 2017, the books were rediscovered by Internet forum users, and then the media, who amused themselves by highlighting perceived similarities between the protagonist and U.S. President Donald Trump, whose son is named Barron Trump. Jaime Fuller wrote in Politico that Baron Trump is "precocious, restless, and prone to get in trouble", often mentions his massive brain, and has a personalized insult for most people he meets. Chris Riotta noted in Newsweek that Baron Trump's adventures begin in Russia, and also mentioned another book of Ingersoll's, The Last President, in which the president's home city of New York is riven by protests against a rigged presidential election.
  • Baron Trump's Marvellous Underground Journey

    Ingersoll Lockwood

    Paperback (Independently published, April 21, 2020)
    || Baron Trump's Marvellous Underground Journey || A very famous story of Baron trump is here by Ingersoll Lockwood. The Baron Trump novels are two children's novels written in 1889 and 1893 by the American author and lawyer Ingersoll Lockwood. They remained obscure until 2017, when they received media attention for perceived similarities between their protagonist and U.S. President Donald Trump.This is the Second in the series of the adventures of Baron Trump, Published in 1893.
  • BARON TRUMP'S MARVELOUS UNDERGROUND JOURNEY

    INGERSOLL LOCKWOOD

    eBook (, Aug. 4, 2017)
    Hard to find at this price. Fun to read.
  • Baron Trump's Marvellous Underground Journey

    Ingersoll Lockwood

    Paperback (Independently published, July 22, 2020)
    First published in 1893, Ingersoll Lockwood penned this entertaining novel about a wealthy young boy who is bored with his life, so when his father gives him a mystic 15th century manuscript about an enigmatic “World within a World” near the center of the Earth, he and his trusty dog Bulger set out to find the portal to the world located somewhere in Russia. They encounter many people along the way who each in turn guide him to the portal. What happens beyond that, you’ll have to read for yourself. If you enjoy a nice, cozy fantasy novel on a rainy night, this one is a fun choice.
  • Baron Trump's Marvelous Underground Journey

    Ingersoll Lockwood, Charles Howard Johnson

    Paperback (Stonewell Press, April 25, 2018)
    Are Donald and Barron Trump time travelers?This amazing book, first published in 1893, tells of the adventures of an extremely wealthy boy called Baron Trump.• He is guided by a man called “Don,” who is known as “the master of all masters.” • His adventures take him to Russia. • The family motto is “The pathway to glory is strewn with pitfalls and dangers.” Along the way, young Baron learns vital moral lessons that would benefit us all: be honest, avoid vanity, don’t be a “hot head,” and don’t hold grudges. Baron Trump's Marvelous Underground Journey is the Gulliver's Travels for our time!This edition includes the whimsical and delightful illustrations drawn for the original book. The book has been redesigned and retypeset for a 21st-century audience.
  • Baron Trump's Marvellous Underground Journey

    Ingersoll Lockwood

    Paperback (Independently published, Aug. 4, 2020)
    As doubting Thomases seem to take particular pleasure in popping up on all occasions, Jack-in-the-Box-like, it may be well to head them off in this particular instance by proving that Baron Trump was a real baron, and not a mere baron of the mind. The family was originally French Huguenot—De la Trompe—which, upon the revocation of the Edict of Nantes in 1685, took refuge in Holland, where its head assumed the name of Van der Troomp, just as many other of the French Protestants rendered their names into Dutch. Some years later, upon the invitation of the Elector of Brandenburg, Niklas Van der Troomp became a subject of that prince, and purchased a large estate in the province of Pomerania, again changing his name, this time to Von Troomp.The “Little Baron,” so called from his diminutive stature, was born some time in the latter part of the seventeenth century. He was the last of his race in the direct line, although cousins of his are to-day well-known Pomeranian gentry. He began his travels at an incredibly early age, and filled his castle with such strange objects picked up here and there in the far away corners of the world, that the simple-minded peasantry came to look upon him as half bigwig and half magician—hence the growth of the many myths and fanciful stories concerning this indefatigable globe-trotter. The date of his death cannot be fixed with any certainty; but this much may be said: Among the portraits of Pomeranian notables hanging in the Rathhaus at Stettin, there is one picturing a man of low stature, and with a head much too large for his body. He is dressed in some outlandish costume, and holds in his left hand a grotesque image in ivory, most elaborately carved. The broad face is full of intelligence, and the large gray eyes are lighted up with a good-natured but quizzical look that invariably attracts attention. The man’s right hand rests upon the back of a dog sitting on a table and looking straight out with an air of dignity that shows that he knew he was sitting for his portrait.If a visitor asks the guide who this man is, he always gets for answer:—“Oh, that’s the Little Baron!”But little Baron who, that’s the question?Why may it not be the famous Wilhelm Heinrich Sebastian von Troomp, commonly called “Little Baron Trump,” and his wonderful dog Bulger?- Taken from "Baron Trump's Marvellous Underground Journey" written by Ingersoll Lockwood
  • Baron Trump's Marvellous Underground Journey

    Ingersoll Lockwood

    Paperback (CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, Aug. 20, 2018)
    Baron Trump’s Marvellous Underground Journey by Ingersoll Lockwood. The Baron Trump novels are two children's novels written in 1889 and 1893 by the American author and lawyer Ingersoll Lockwood. Lockwood published the first novel, Travels and adventures of Little Baron Trump and his wonderful dog Bulger, in 1889, and its sequel, Baron Trump's Marvelous Underground Journey, in 1893. In July 2017, the books were rediscovered by Internet forum users, and then the media, who pointed out similarities between the protagonist and U.S. President Donald Trump, whose son is named Barron Trump. Jaime Fuller wrote in Politico that Baron Trump is "precocious, restless, and prone to get in trouble", often mentions his massive brain, and has a personalized insult for most people he meets. Chris Riotta noted in Newsweek that Baron Trump's adventures begin in Russia. Riotta also mentioned another book of Ingersoll's, 1900; or, The Last President, in which New York City is riven by protests following the shock victory of a populist candidate in the 1896 presidential election who brings on the downfall of the American republic. The novels recount the adventures of the German boy Wilhelm Heinrich Sebastian Von Troomp, who goes by "Baron Trump", as he discovers weird underground civilizations, offends the natives, flees from his entanglements with local women, and repeats this pattern until arriving back home at Castle Trump. The novels were part of a trend in American children's literature that responded to the demand for fantastic adventure stories triggered by Lewis Carroll's Alice in Wonderland (1865). They were however indifferently received and did not enter the canon of children's literature. An 1891 reviewer wrote about one of Lockwood's novels: "The author labors through three hundred pages of fantastic and grotesque narrative, now and then striking a spark of wit; but the sparks emit little light and no warmth, and one has to fumble for the story."