Senin, 03 Februari 2014

The Brass Bottle, by F. Anstey

The Brass Bottle, by F. Anstey

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The Brass Bottle, by F. Anstey

The Brass Bottle, by F. Anstey



The Brass Bottle, by F. Anstey

PDF Ebook The Brass Bottle, by F. Anstey

"This day six weeks—just six weeks ago!" Horace Ventimore said, half aloud, to himself, and pulled out his watch. "Half-past twelve—what was I doing at half-past twelve?" As he sat at the window of his office in Great Cloister Street, Westminster, he made his thoughts travel back to a certain glorious morning in August which now seemed so remote and irrecoverable. At this precise time he was waiting on the balcony of the Hôtel de la Plage—the sole hostelry of St. Luc-en-Port, the tiny Normandy watering-place upon which, by some happy inspiration, he had lighted during a solitary cycling tour—waiting until She should appear.

The Brass Bottle, by F. Anstey

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #6034613 in Books
  • Published on: 2015-10-26
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 9.00" h x .27" w x 6.00" l, .38 pounds
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 118 pages
The Brass Bottle, by F. Anstey


The Brass Bottle, by F. Anstey

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Most helpful customer reviews

0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. Don't keep your laughter bottled up By B. Chandler Chapters:I. Horace Ventimore Receives a CommissionII. A Cheap LotIII. An Unexpected OpeningIV. At LargeV. Carte BlanceVI. Embarras de RichessesVII. "Gratitude-A Lively Sense of Favours to Come"VIII. Bachelor's QuartersIX. "Persicos Odi, Puer, Apparatus"X. No Place Like Home!XI. A Fool's ParadiseXII. The Messenger of HopeXIII. A Choice of EvilsXIV. "Since There's No Help, Come, Let Us Kiss and Part!"XV. Blushing HonoursXVI. A Killing FrostXVII. High WordsXVIII. A Game of BluffThe EpilogueI never had a chance to see the play and would like to some day. In the mean time I have a DVD copy of the movie with Tony Randall, Barbara Eden, and Burl Ives (1964, Harry Keller). I would like the other movie versions also.Because the movie took place in modern day (1964) I did not realize the story took place in England (originally published in 1900). We also see a few adaptions to the movie to change the timing of the media. Yet for the most part when you read the story you will see that the movie follows the book pretty faithfully down to some of the dialog.The story is simple but becomes complex. Mild mannered obscure architect Horace Ventimore in an attempt to impress his potential father-in-law purchases a brass bottle. Upon opening it, you guess it a djinn (Fakrash) pops out and in his gratitude Fakrash helps Ventimore in a way you would not believe; neither did Ventimore.I also purchased the Kindle freebie which worked well except each page number was read out.The Brass Bottle (Amazon.com Exclusive)

0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. Don't keep your laughter bottled up By B. Chandler Chapters:I. Horace Ventimore Receives a CommissionII. A Cheap LotIII. An Unexpected OpeningIV. At LargeV. Carte BlanceVI. Embarras de RichessesVII. "Gratitude-A Lively Sense of Favours to Come"VIII. Bachelor's QuartersIX. "Persicos Odi, Puer, Apparatus"X. No Place Like Home!XI. A Fool's ParadiseXII. The Messenger of HopeXIII. A Choice of EvilsXIV. "Since There's No Help, Come, Let Us Kiss and Part!"XV. Blushing HonoursXVI. A Killing FrostXVII. High WordsXVIII. A Game of BluffThe EpilogueI never had a chance to see the play and would like to some day. In the mean time I have a DVD copy of the movie with Tony Randall, Barbara Eden, and Burl Ives (1964, Harry Keller). I would like the other movie versions also.Because the movie took place in modern day (1964) I did not realize the story took place in England (originally published in 1900). We also see a few adaptions to the movie to change the timing of the media. Yet for the most part when you read the story you will see that the movie follows the book pretty faithfully down to some of the dialog.The story is simple but becomes complex. Mild mannered obscure architect Horace Ventimore in an attempt to impress his potential father-in-law purchases a brass bottle. Upon opening it, you guess it a djinn (Fakrash) pops out and in his gratitude Fakrash helps Ventimore in a way you would not believe; neither did Ventimore.I also purchased the Kindle freebie which worked well except each page number was read out.The Brass Bottle (Amazon.com Exclusive)

0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. Don't keep your laughter bottled up By B. Chandler Chapters:I. Horace Ventimore Receives a CommissionII. A Cheap LotIII. An Unexpected OpeningIV. At LargeV. Carte BlanceVI. Embarras de RichessesVII. "Gratitude-A Lively Sense of Favours to Come"VIII. Bachelor's QuartersIX. "Persicos Odi, Puer, Apparatus"X. No Place Like Home!XI. A Fool's ParadiseXII. The Messenger of HopeXIII. A Choice of EvilsXIV. "Since There's No Help, Come, Let Us Kiss and Part!"XV. Blushing HonoursXVI. A Killing FrostXVII. High WordsXVIII. A Game of BluffThe EpilogueI never had a chance to see the play and would like to some day. In the mean time I have a DVD copy of the movie with Tony Randall, Barbara Eden, and Burl Ives (1964, Harry Keller). I would like the other movie versions also.Because the movie took place in modern day (1964) I did not realize the story took place in England (originally published in 1900). We also see a few adaptions to the movie to change the timing of the media. Yet for the most part when you read the story you will see that the movie follows the book pretty faithfully down to some of the dialog.The story is simple but becomes complex. Mild mannered obscure architect Horace Ventimore in an attempt to impress his potential father-in-law purchases a brass bottle. Upon opening it, you guess it a djinn (Fakrash) pops out and in his gratitude Fakrash helps Ventimore in a way you would not believe; neither did Ventimore.I also purchased the Kindle freebie which worked well except each page number was read out.The Brass Bottle (Amazon.com Exclusive)

See all 4 customer reviews... The Brass Bottle, by F. Anstey


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The Brass Bottle, by F. Anstey
The Brass Bottle, by F. Anstey

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