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Books with title The Continuing Revolution

  • The Continuing Revolution

    James I. Clark

    Library Binding (Heinemann/Raintree, July 1, 1989)
    Describes the successful Communist takeover of Russia, the establishment of the Soviet Union, and the contributions of subsequent regimes, with particular attention given to foreign relations after World War II
    T
  • The Revolution

    Almondie Shampine

    language (NewAge Publishing, Nov. 5, 2016)
    As I floated, chattering in cold, the freezing waters spraying my face and mouth, the salt burning my throat; as the night tide whipped me back and forth, and I could see nothing but inky blackness for miles and miles all around me, and no sense of direction as to where the closest shore was, I wondered.To fight the bad guys, I’d had to become like them, with that precarious line so blurred that I could no longer tell the difference between the good and the bad guys, anymore, or even which one I now was. I’d caused a revolution. The perfect justice to fit their crimes.But what would my justice be? At the mercy and mercy alone of high-tide to do with me as it pleased, I tiredly closed my eyes. “I’m coming, Nana. I’m coming,” I said weakly.Catina Salsbury returns for the fifth book in the action-packed dystopian series, The Modules.
  • Cuba: The Continuing Revolution.

    Williams, Byron,

    Library Binding
    None
  • Cuba: the Continuing Revolution

    Byron Williams

    Hardcover (Parents Magazine Press, March 15, 1969)
    Cuba and Castro - restoring Cuba to the Cubans
  • The Revolution

    Almondie Shampine

    Paperback (CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, Nov. 5, 2016)
    As I floated, chattering in cold, the freezing waters spraying my face and mouth, the salt burning my throat; as the night tide whipped me back and forth, and I could see nothing but inky blackness for miles and miles all around me, and no sense of direction as to where the closest shore was, I wondered. To fight the bad guys, I’d had to become like them, with that precarious line so blurred that I could no longer tell the difference between the good and the bad guys, anymore, or even which one I now was. I’d caused a revolution. The perfect justice to fit their crimes. But what would my justice be? At the mercy and mercy alone of high-tide to do with me as it pleased, I tiredly closed my eyes. “I’m coming, Nana. I’m coming,” I said weakly. Catina Salsbury returns for the fifth book in the action-packed dystopian series, The Modules.