The Beano Annual 2006


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Beano Book Annual 2001 2002.


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The Beano Annual 2005


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Beano Annual 2007


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The Beano Annual 2020


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Beanotown is the place to go for mischief and mayhem because it's the place where kids rule! The parents and the teachers of Bash Street School might think differently, but the kids from the longest-running weekly comic in the world know the truth ... as they'll prove in 112 pages of brand new, awesomely funny stories! Whether it's going on the run with an elephant in Dennis & Gnasher, or leaping through dimensions in Rubi's Screwtop Science, they'll prove there's no such thing as a normal day in Beanotown!




Dandy Annual 2006


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Dennis the Menace


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No further information has been provided for this title.




Private Eye Annual 2006


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The 'Private Eye Annual 2006' contains spoofs, parodies, gags, send-ups, cartoons and photo-captions from this well-known fortnightly satirical magazine.




"Code of Massachusetts regulations, 2006"


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Archival snapshot of entire looseleaf Code of Massachusetts Regulations held by the Social Law Library of Massachusetts as of January 2020.




Love and Monsters


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Scholar and Who fan Miles Booy has written the first historical account of the public interpretation of Doctor Who. Love and Monsters begins in 1979 with the publication of 'Doctor Who Weekly', the magazine that would start a chain of events that would see creative fans taking control of the merchandise and even of the programme's massively successful twenty-first century reboot. From the twilight of Tom Baker's years to the newest Doctor, Matt Smith, Miles Booy explores the shifting meaning of Doctor Who across the years - from the Third Doctor's suggestion that we should read the Bible, via costumed fans on television, up to the 2010 general election in Britain. This is also the story of how the ambitious producer John Nathan-Turner, assigned to the programme in 1979, produced a visually-excessive programme for a tele-literate fanbase, and how this style changed the ways in which Doctor Who could be read. The Doctor's world has never been bigger, inside or out!