Paul b kidd biography of rory
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Contents:
The Milperra massaker (Bandidos, Comancheros) -- Martha the Monster (Annie, Olive, Arthur, George Morris) -- The Woolworths Bombers (Larry Burton Danielson & Gregory Norman McHardie) -- The world's deadliest pie salesman (John Wayne Glover - Gwendolyn Mitchell, Winifred Ashton, Effie Carnie, Olive Cleveland, Muriel Falconer, Joan Sinclair) -- The hanging of Barlow and Chambers (Brian Geoffrey Chambers, Kevin John Barlow) -- Every parent's nightmare (Helen Patricia Moore - Suzanne MacIntosh, Nicholas Vaughan, Rachel Hay, Peter Moore) -- The missing Beaumont children (Jane, Arnna, Grant) -- Released to kill... igen (Eric Thomas Turner; Barry Gordon Hadlow; Reginald Kenneth Arthurell; Rodney Francis Cameron; Robert Theo Sievers) -- The beast of Belanglo (Ivan Robert Marko Milat - Caroline Clark, Joanne Walters, Deborah Everist, James Gibson, Simone Schmidl, Anja Habschied, Gabor Neugebauer) -- The Wanda Beach murders (Christine Sharrock, Marianne Schmidt) -- The Whisky
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The Rory Gilmore Reading List
What is the Rory Gilmore Reading List? After mindlessly watching one too many episodes of Gilmore Girls, I had to admit that I found myself wanting to read. Rory Gilmore reads so much that I actually felt like turning of the tv and explore my bookcases instead.
Because one reading challenge just isn’t enough, I thought it would be fun to find out exactly what books Rory is seen with or referencing throughout the series. Some book nerd like me must have compiled them somewhere. I was right, someone had indeed collected all the Rory Gilmore books, and I found them here on Buzzfeed!
So now, it’s just about getting started!
Obviously, due to studying dramaturgy, I’ve read most of the Shakespeare plays before, along with a handful of other novels. For this challenge however, I will start from scratch and review every single one as I read them!
I’ll be linking to my reviews in the list below, when I’ve read them and it’
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THE RORY GILMORE READING CHALLENGE
I have taken on the challenge to become better-read.
My post-college ambitions included waking up prior to six in the morning, hustling to and from the metro station and K Street, and arriving home post seven in the evening. Somewhere in the vortex that is city ambition and adulting, my love of reading became a forgotten and unnoticed lost indulgence.
Earlier this year I began a resolution with myself to read the classics that I hadn't studied in all of my schooling, an aspiration that directed me to an understanding of the immensities of content that I had sadly missed in all of great literature. I then willingly and dutifully led myself down the rabbit hole of a forlorn and obsessive quarter-life crisis; this steered me to a boundless search of reading content and a variant of book challenges, to which I then found one entirely too long and seemingly unattainable, which of course, by then, fit the bill instantly. Being an avid f