The Crimes of Galahad
Galahad Newman Bousted has chosen a life of evil. He shuns virtue and embraces vice; his life is one monstrous crime after another. He will stop at nothing to reach the pinnacle of wealth and status, and if he sees a desirable woman he will take what he wants from her without compunction.

And he will get away with it.
1113855304
The Crimes of Galahad
Galahad Newman Bousted has chosen a life of evil. He shuns virtue and embraces vice; his life is one monstrous crime after another. He will stop at nothing to reach the pinnacle of wealth and status, and if he sees a desirable woman he will take what he wants from her without compunction.

And he will get away with it.
7.99 In Stock
The Crimes of Galahad

The Crimes of Galahad

by H. Albertus Boli
The Crimes of Galahad

The Crimes of Galahad

by H. Albertus Boli

eBook

$7.99 

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Overview

Galahad Newman Bousted has chosen a life of evil. He shuns virtue and embraces vice; his life is one monstrous crime after another. He will stop at nothing to reach the pinnacle of wealth and status, and if he sees a desirable woman he will take what he wants from her without compunction.

And he will get away with it.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940015804119
Publisher: Dr. Boli
Publication date: 11/25/2012
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 403
File size: 708 KB

About the Author

HENRICUS ALBERTUS BOLI was born in 1783 in York, Penna., the son of a local physician and typefounder. He showed an early aptitude for literary studies, and at the age of eight astonished his Latin master by successfully declining three nouns previously regarded as indeclinable. About a year later, he published his first volume of verse, an epic poem in twenty-four books describing a journey from York to Hanover, Penna.
Having established his reputation, Dr. Boli continued his literary pursuits. Shortly after graduating from the Central Pennsylvania School for Unusual Boys, he invented the letter M, the income from which was enough to relieve him from the necessity of remunerative labor. He therefore turned his attention to works of charity. Saddened by the plight of Portuguese refugees, he organized and supervised the construction of Portugal, where at last they might have a home of their own. Meanwhile he diverted himself by writing a number of popular novels under the pen name “Anthony Trollope.” At about the same time he founded his celebrated Magazine, whose flattering success continues to the present under his personal supervision.
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