#thomas tessier
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Illustration
Paris 2024
Olympic Games
Thomas Tessier
#thomas tessier#Illustration#Paris 2024#Olympic Games#art#original art#artist painter#art style#ilustration painter#art colors#art work#ooctoopussy#xpuigc#xpuigc bloc
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Jeux paralympiques
Paris🗼 2024
Illustration 🖍🖌 ©️ Thomas Tessier
👋 Bel après-midi
#art#illustration#thomas tessier#art contemporain#jo paris 2024#artwork#jeux paralympiques#affiche#tour eiffel#sport#paris#bel après-midi#fidjie fidjie
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Chris Moore, ''Finishing Touches'' by Thomas Tessier, 1987
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Contes et légendes : La lune et le bananier- Contes d'Afrique, Thomas Tessier
Au commencement, Dieu avait créé et mis sur Terre un seul homme et une seule femme.Un jour, il les interrogea :« Que préférez-vous, la mort de la Lune ou la mort du bananier ?— Seigneur, dirent-ils, nous ne comprenons pas.— Voulez-vous être comme la Lune, qui reste invisible tous les mois pendant quelques jours, mais qui réapparaît ensuite, ou préférez-vous être comme un bananier, qui meurt après…
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And because Tumblr doesn't allow more than 10 embedded links:
https://www.nytimes.com/2021/05/13/us/usc-president-speech-plagiarism.html
==
The idea that Claudine Gay was treated differently than other university presidents because of her skin color is not entirely untrue. Just not the way activists are trying to pretend.
If Claudine lived in "an anti-black world," she would have been ousted before Liz Magill. For that matter, she never would have been gently elevated the university presidency in spite of a weak - and as it turns out, fraudulent - academic history.
Have you noticed that the tactics and behaviors of activists mirror those of coercive controlling abusers?
Either Harvard's board hired someone for their top-most position without actually checking their academic credentials, or worse, did check, but hid it and proceeded anyway. Both roads lead to diversity hire.
#Lee Jussim#Claudine Gay#Claudine Gay scandal#Harvard#Harvard University#academic fraud#academic corruption#plagiarism#ivy league#higher education#corruption of education#diversity hire#diversity equity and inclusion#diversity#equity#inclusion#religion is a mental illness
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Thank you @ignite-my-fire for tagging me! 🖤
Answer these Q’s
Last Song: Code Mistake - CORPSE & BMTH
Last Movie: The Nun 2
Currently Reading/Last Read: The Sacrifice by Shantel Tessier (iykyk daddy Tyson 🤤 - highly recommend but please read the TWs first!)
Currently Watching: Love Island USA
Current Obsession: Jake Thomas Kiszka sir, every fucking day of my life haha. I’ll never recover.
No pressure tags: @alwaysonthemend @sinsofstardust @wildbluesorbit @becinabubblegvf @wetkleenex-gvf @runwayblues @theweightofjake @writingcold @josiee-gvf (sorry if you already did this!)
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The Murder of Maria Ridulph: Solved or Unsolved?
December 30, 2022
Maria Ridulph was born on March 12, 1950, to Michael and Frances Ivy Ridulph in Sycamore, Illinois. She was the youngest of four. Maria’s mother described her daughter as high-strung and explained that if she got in any kind of trouble she would become hysterical. Maria was also known to be a “screamer” and afraid of the dark.
On December 3, 1957, 7 year old Maria begged her parents to go outside after it began to snow. After supper, Maria and her best friend, 8 year old Kathy Sigman who lived on her street, went outside near Maria’s house and played a game called “duck the cars.”
According to Kathy, the two young girls were approached by a man said to be in his early 20′s, tall with a slender chin, light hair, a gap in his teeth and wearing a colourful sweater. The man told the girls his name was Johnny and that he was 24 but not married. He asked Maria and Kathy if they liked dolls and piggyback rides. “Johnny” gave Maria a piggyback ride and after Maria had returned to her house to get a doll to show Johnny.
When Maria returned with the doll, Kathy claimed to have gone back to her house to grab her mittens. When Kathy returned, Maria and Johnny were gone.
Kathy decided to go to the Ridulph house to tell Maria’s parents she couldn’t find her. Maria’s parents thought she was hiding and sent her brother to go look for her, but to no avail. The Ridulph’s then called the police and a search began.
Within two days, the FBI were on the case, believing that it Maria might have been abducted across state lines. After conducting several interviews from witnesses who saw the girls throughout the evening, it was suggested that “Johnny” had approached Maria and Kathy after 6:30 pm, and Maria had been abducted between 6:45-7 pm.
Because Kathy was the only witness to have actually seen Johnny she was placed in protective custody, as officials feared Johnny would come back and try to harm her. Authorities had Kathy look over photos of convicted felons who resembled how she described Johnny.
In late December 1957, Kathy was taken to Madison, Wisconsin, to see a lineup of suspects. She positively identified a 35 year old man named Thomas Joseph Rivard. However, Rivard had an alibi and was in jail at the time of the kidnapping of Maria. Years later when interviewed Kathy says she does not remember ever picking Rivard out of the lineup.
On April 26, 1958, near Woodbine, Illinois, two tourists looking for mushrooms in a wooden area came across the skeletal remains of a small child, who was wearing only a shirt, undershirt and socks. The condition of the body indicated it had been there for many months. Based on dental records, a lock of hair, and the clothes she had been wearing, the skeletal remains were positively identified as Maria Ridulph.
Maria’s coat, pants, shoes and underwear were not found. There were no photos taken of the actual crime scene as coroner James Furlong did not want any photo’s of Maria’s body being leaked to the media. Because the body was found and did not cross state lines by being in Illinois, the FBI withdrew from the case.
An initial autopsy did not determine cause of death, but an autopsy conducted 50 years later concluded that Maria was most likely stabbed several times in the throat.
An initial suspect was John Tessier, born John Cherry on November 27, 1939. John’s father had been killed in World War II. During the war, John’s mother met a man named Ralph Tessier, and later married him in November 1944. The pair then moved to Sycamore, Illinois and had 6 more children together.
The Tessier family home was located around the corner from the Ridulph’s, less than two blocks away. At the time of Maria’s abduction, John was 18 years old and living at home, making plans to join the US Air Force.
On December 4, 1957, police visited John’s house as part of their neighbourhood search, but John’s mother had told them he had been home on the night of December 3. John became a suspect to FBI after Maria’s body was found, though it is unclear whether he was a suspect due to a tip from a local resident, or by his own parents who wanted to clear their son and realized the description of “Johnny” matched him.
John and his parents told FBI that he was in Rockford, Illinois, on December 3, to enlist in the Air Force, a different story than what his mother previously said. On December 4, he claimed to have sight seen in Chicago before making his way back home. There was record of a phone call John placed to his parents asking for a ride home. Due to this alibi, and passing a lie detector test, John was taken off the suspect list.
Kathy Sigman was never shown a photo of John or asked to identify him.
John Tessier served in the US military for 13 years and became captain. He became a police officer after in the town of Lacey, near Olympia. In 1982, in Tacoma, Washington, John took in a 15 year old runaway named Michelle Weinman and her friend. It was reported that John fondled Michelle and performed oral sex on her.
John was charged with statutory rape, and pleaded guilty to communication with a minor for immoral purposes. He was sentenced to one year of formal probation and terminated from the Milton Police Department on March 10, 1982.
On April 27, 1994, John changed his name legally to Jack Daniel McCullough, saying he wanted to honour his mother. In 2011, John was in his early 70′s, living in a retirement community in northwest Seattle, working as a security guard.
In 1997, Maria’s case, then 40 years old was closed and named William Henry Redmond, a former truck driver and carnival worker from Nebraska the man who likely killed her. Redmond had died in 1992. Redmond had been charged in 1988 with the murder of an 8 year old Pennsylvania girl in 1951, but the case was eventually dismissed.
He was also a suspect in the 1951 disappearance of 10 year old Beverly Potts in Ohio (covered earlier on this blog.)
Maria’s case was reopened in 2008, from new information coming from John’s half sister, Janet Tessier. Janet said on their mother’s deathbed in 1994, she confessed that John did it. Janet and another sister, Eileen, had both suspected that John was involved, and Janet said she made attempts over the years to get officials to look into her mother’s statement.
John’s other sisters also had suspected him, and his sister Jeanne told officials John had molested her and other young girls as a child.
Police took Kathy Sigman (now Chapman) photos of John Tessier and she identified him as the man named “Johnny.” An unused military train ticket from Rockford to Chicago also confirmed that John had driven his own car to Rockford and not taken the train like he had claimed. He would’ve had enough time to drive back to Sycamore on the afternoon of December 3, 1957, and kidnap Maria.
In 2011, John was brought in for questioning and began becoming aggressive when Maria’s kidnapping and his whereabouts that night were brought up. He was arrested and extradited to Illinois.
The trial began in September 2012, and determined that John was attracted to Maria and decided to kidnap her, but instead ended up killing her. There was no DNA evidence found despite Maria’s body being exhumed.
However, several witnesses identified John as “Johnny” including Kathy, who was the star witness. On September 14, 2012, John Tessier, known as Jack Daniel McCullough was convicted of kidnapping and murdering Maria Ridulph. He was sentenced to life with the possibility of parole after 20 years. He was 73 years old.
On April 15, 2016, a new trial was ordered due to an attorney named Richard Schmack, who extensively reviewed evidence of the case and determined that John could not have committed the murder of Maria Ridulph. According to Schmack, evidence of John’s whereabouts were kept out of the trial. Phone records that John made to his mother from a payphone in Rockford, rather than Sycamore which was alleged in his trial proved he could not have been in Sycamore during Maria’s abduction.
John was still charged with the crime, but released on bond the day pending the new trial. A week later, Judge Brady dismissed the charges, but without prejudice, meaning John could still be tried again. Jack Daniel McCullough was declared innocent on April 12, 2017 by the DeKalb County Circuit Court.
There is a bronze memorial plaque on a pedestal outside the Sycamore Municipal Building in Maria’s honour. The Ridulph family also established a “Maria Ridulph Memorial Fund” later used as a scholarship, and summer camp fund for local children in need.
So who do you believe murdered Maria Ridulph? Is the case solved or still unsolved to you?
#unsolved#UNSOLVED MYSTERIES#unsolved murder#unsolved case#unsolved disappearance#abduction#true crime#Crime#murder#homicide#investigation#fbi#chicago#Illinois#solved#case#cold case
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Villa Diodati, Summer of 1816
In the summer of "the year without summer" (inclement weather in Europe caused by the eruption of Mount Tambora in Indonesia, this being the most powerful volcanic eruption in human history so far) the poet Lord Byron rented a villa by Lake Geneva. He sought to flee a scandal he made of himself in the high society of his homeland. Despite this, he was not without friends. Percy Shelley and his future wife, Mary Godwin, rented the nearby Maison Chapuis, and add to this exile-or-vacationers' party Lord Byron's personal doctor John William Polidori and Mary Shelley's stepsister Clara Mary Jane Clairmont, they passed the time at Lord Byron's invitation in the Villa Diodati. About three days of rain kept them confined indoors, reading ghost stories for their amusement. This was the collection Fantasmagoriana, translated and compiled by Jean-Baptiste Beno��t Eyriès.
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Cochran, Peter. The Gothic Byron. Cambridge Scholars, Newcastle: 2009. Frankenstein⁸⁰ Mary Godwin began Frankenstein in June 1816, and (now Mary Shelley) finished it on November 22nd 1817; it was published anonymously on January 1st 1818. ⁸¹ Byron began Manfred (we think, for he didn't date the rough Manfred manuscripts)⁸² at about the same time; he began fair-copying it on March 18th 1817, and revised its third act early in May. It was published on June 16th 1817.
Both works were in part conceived in an atmosphere drenched, as Mary Shelley describes it, in the Gothic:
…it proved a wet, ungenial summer, and incessant rain often confined us for days to the house. Some volumes of ghost stories, translated from the German into French, fell into our hands. There was the History of the Inconstant Lover, who, when he thought to clasp the bride to whom he had pledged his vows, found himself in the arms of the pale ghost of her whom he had deserted. There was the tale of the sinful founder of his race, whose miserable doom it was to bestow the kiss of death on all the younger sons of his fated house, just when they reached the age of promise. His gigantic, shadowy form, clothed like the ghost in Hamlet, in complete armour, but with the beaver up, was seen at midnight, by the moon's fitful beams, to advance slowly along the gloomy avenue. The shape was lost beneath the shadow of the castle walls; but soon a gate swung back, a step was herd, the door of the chamber opened, and he advanced to the couch of the blooming youths, cradled in healthy sleep. Eternal sorrow sat upon his face as he bent down and kissed the forehead of the boys, who from that hour withered like flowers snapt upon the stalk. I have not seen these stories since then; but their incidents are as fresh in my mind as if I had read them yesterday. 'We will each write a ghost story,' said Lord Byron; and his proposition was acceded to. (p.261)
Thomas Moore would have us believe that Byron (referring not to Manfred, but to what became the fragment Augustus Darvell), proposed joint publication:
During a week of rain at this time, having amused themselves with reading German ghost-stories, they agreed, at last, to write something in imitation of them. "You and I," said Lord Byron to Mrs. Shelley, "will publish ours together." He then began his tale of the Vampire… ⁸³
80: The text of Frankenstein used here is from Three Gothic Novels, ed. Peter Fairclough (Penguin 1973). 81: Dates from Robinson, Charles E. Byron and Frankenstein, at Tessier, Therese (ed.), Lord Byron A Multidisciplinary Open Forum (Paris 1999), p.105. Robinson suggests several parallels between Frankenstein and Manfred, but I believe the idea can be taken further. 82: He asks Hobhouse to bring Taylor's Pausanias, an important subtext for Manfred, on May 1st and June 23rd 1816 (BLJ V 74 and 80). 83: Moore's Life (1830), II 31. ] While I wrote before about the formation of early gothic novels into a genre (with tropes recognizable enough to be parodied: architecture, melodrama, themes of being haunted by the past,) I believe the stories that emerged from those rainy days at that villa did codify what Anglophile readers more readily recognize as gothic today: They did the monster mash. (The monster mash!) Frankenstein by Mary Shelley introduced the enduring image of an ambitious, obsessed scientist whose arrogance sets in motion the tragedy that his innovation is his downfall; and also of Frankenstein's monster: uncanny in appearance, innocent of even the fact that fire burns, but outcast without guidance and left to the mercy of a cruel world. John William Polidori was also at the ghost-story reading party at the villa and wrote something to answer Byron's proposition too: The Vampyre, which introduced a monster that could live among humans, and by some supernatural force compel and manipulate others by use of voice or words or presence alone. Sources: Cochran, Peter. The Gothic Byron. Cambridge Scholars, Newcastle: 2009. Pickett, Robert George and Gary S. Paxton, et al (Bobby Boris Pickett and the Crypt-Kickers). "Monsters' Mash Party". Garpax Records: 25 August 1962.
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Shelley, Mary. Frankenstein; or, the Modern Prometheus. (Originally published in 1816.) Polidori, John William. The Vampyre. (Originally published in 1818.)
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thomas tessier the fates paperbacks from hell
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Day 19: Favorite spicy book
This ended up being very late, since I worked night shift yesterday. It is kind of hard to pick a favourite here, because a lot of these books tend to be very similar to each other. For years my favorite go to used to be Kitty Thomas, but since she wrote Blue Sky I have kind of fallen off her wagon. Recently I have really enjoyed reading The L.O.R.D series by Shantel Tessier. At least if you…
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Janvier MMXXIV
Films
Bridget Jones Baby (Bridget Jones's Baby) (2016) de Sharon Maguire avec Renée Zellweger, Patrick Dempsey, Shirley Henderson, Gemma Jones et Jim Broadbent
Arnaque à Hollywood (The Comeback Trail) (2020) de George Gallo avec Robert De Niro, Tommy Lee Jones, Morgan Freeman, Zach Braff, Eddie Griffin, Emile Hirsch et Kate Katzman
Copie conforme (1947) de Jean Dréville avec Louis Jouvet, Suzy Delair, Annette Poivre, Madeleine Suffel, Jane Marken, Danièle Franconville, Jean-Jacques Delbo et Léo Lapara
L'Inconnu du Nord-Express (Strangers on a Train) (1951) d'Alfred Hitchcock avec Farley Granger, Ruth Roman, Robert Walker, Leo G. Carroll, Patricia Hitchcock, Marion Lorne, Jonathan Hale et Laura Elliott
Une affaire d'honneur (2023) de et avec Vincent Perez et aussi Roschdy Zem, Doria Tillier, Damien Bonnard, Guillaume Gallienne, Nicolas Gaspar, Pepe Lorente
Hôtel fantôme (Das letzte Problem) (2019) de et avec Karl Markovics et aussi Stefan Pohl, Maria Fliri, Julia Koch, Max Moor, Sunnyi Melles Laura Bilgeri
Aviator (The Aviator) (2004) de Martin Scorsese avec Leonardo DiCaprio, Cate Blanchett, Kate Beckinsale, Adam Scott, Kelli Garner, Alec Baldwin, Ian Holm, Jude Law et Danny Huston
Palais royal ! (2005) de et avec Valérie Lemerciere et aussi Lambert Wilson, Catherine Deneuve, Michel Aumont, Mathilde Seigner, Denis Podalydès, Michel Vuillermoz, Gisèle Casadesus, Gilbert Melki, Maurane
Du plomb pour l'inspecteur (Pushover) (1954) de Richard Quine avec Fred MacMurray, Philip Carey, Kim Novak, Dorothy Malonne, E.G. Marshall, Allen Nourse, James Anderson et Joe Bailey
Les Douze Salopards (The Dirty Dozen) (1967) de Robert Aldrich avec Lee Marvin, Ernest Borgnine, Charles Bronson, Jim Brown, John Cassavetes, Richard Jaeckel, George Kennedy, Trini Lopez et Telly Savalas
Le silence des ânes (Das Schweigen der Esel) (2022) de et avec Karl Markovics et aussi Julia Koch, Caroline Frank, Gerhard Liebmann, Valentin Sottopietra, Klaus Windisch, Tobias Fend, Julian Sark, Stefan Pohl
Elmer Gantry le charlatan (Elmer Gantry) (1960) de Richard Brooks avec Burt Lancaster, Jean Simmons, Arthur Kennedy, Dean Jagger, Shirley Jones, Patti Page et Edward Andrews
Tendre Poulet (1978) de Philippe de Broca avec Annie Girardot, Philippe Noiret, Catherine Alric, Hubert Deschamps, Paulette Dubost, Roger Dumas, Raymond Gérôme, Guy Marchand, Simone Renant et Georges Wilson
Judy (2019) de Rupert Goold avec Renée Zellweger, Darci Shaw, Rufus Sewell, Michael Gambon, Finn Wittrock, Richard Cordery, Jessie Buckley et Bella Ramsey
Cinquième Colonne (Saboteur) (1942) d'Alfred Hitchcock avec Robert Cummings, Priscilla Lane, Otto Kruger, Alan Baxter, Clem Bevans, Norman Lloyd, Alma Kruger et Vaughan Glaser
Robin des Bois, prince des voleurs (Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves) (1991) de Kevin Reynolds avec Kevin Costner, Morgan Freeman, Christian Slater, Alan Rickman, Mary Elizabeth Mastrantonio, Nick Brimble et Michael McShane
La Fine Fleur (2020) de Pierre Pinaud avec Catherine Frot, Melan Omerta, Fatsah Bouyahmed, Olivia Côte, Marie Petiot, Vincent Dedienne et Serpentine Teyssier
Maigret et l'Affaire Saint-Fiacre (1959) de Jean Delannoy avec Jean Gabin, Michel Auclair, Valentine Tessier, Robert Hirsch, Paul Frankeur, Michel Vitold, Camille Guérini, Serge Rousseau et Micheline Luccioni
On a volé la cuisse de Jupiter (1980) de Philippe de Broca avec Annie Girardot, Philippe Noiret, Francis Perrin, Catherine Alric, Marc Dudicourt, Paulette Dubost et Roger Carel
Gosford Park (2001) de Robert Altman avec Maggie Smith, Michael Gambon, Kristin Scott Thomas, Camilla Rutherford, Charles Dance, Geraldine Somerville, Tom Hollander, Stephen Fry, Helen Mirren et Emily Watson
Meurtre à Hollywood (Sunset) (1988) de Blake Edwards avec Bruce Willis, James Garner, Malcolm McDowell, Mariel Hemingway, Kathleen Quinlan, Jennifer Edwards, Victoria Alperin et Patricia Hodge
Iron Claw (The Iron Claw) (2023) de Sean Durkin avec Zac Efron, Jeremy Allen White, Harris Dickinson, Holt McCallany, Lily James, Maura Tierney et Stanley Simons
Séries
La croisière s'amuse Saison 1
Une traversée de chien - L'Amour fou - Ami ou Ennemi - Farces et Attrapes - Une célébrité encombrante - Le Grand Air - Le docteur voit double - Le Grand Amour - Le Père du commandant - Monnaie de singe - La vie est belle au large - Tel est pris qui croyait prendre - Jeux de mains - Les Grandes Retrouvailles : première partie - Les Grandes Retrouvailles : deuxième partie - La Victoire en dansant - Le Gros Lot - Coupable, mais de quoi ? - Souvenirs Souvenirs - Il y a des jours comme ça - Qui comprend quelque chose à l'amour ? - Le commandant connaît la musique - Coup de folie - Ne comptez pas sur moi pour tomber amoureuse
Coffre à Catch
#148 : Bonne année 2024 à tout l'univers d'Agius ! - #149 : Zack Ryder : Woo Woo Woo, tu le sais ! - #150 : L'exceptionnel retour de Colby ! - #151 : Les adieux au catch de Tommy Dreamer ? - #152 : Tommy Dreamer enfin champion de la ECW !
Les Simpson Saison 1
Noël mortel - Bart le génie - L'Odyssée d'Homer - Simpsonothérapie - Terreur à la récré - Ste Lisa Blues - L'Abominable Homme des bois - Bart a perdu la t��te - Marge perd la boule - L'Odyssée d'Homer - L'Espion qui venait de chez moi - Un clown à l'ombre - Une soirée d'enfer
Downton Abbey Saison 5
Tradition et Rébellion - Un vent de liberté - Le Bonheur d'être aimé - Révolution à Downton - Tout ce qui compte… - Étape par étape - Désillusions - Menaces et Préjugés - La Réconciliation
Castle Saison 4
Renaissance - Lame solitaire - Casse-tête - L'Empreinte d'une arme - L'Art de voler - Démons - Otages - Dans l'antre du jeu - Course contre la mort - Détache-moi
Kaamelott Livre IV
Tous les matins du monde première partie - Tous les matins du monde deuxième partie - Raison et Sentiments - Les Tartes aux fraises - Le Dédale - Les Pisteurs - Le Traître - La Faute première partie - La Faute deuxième partie - L’Ascension du Lion - Une vie simple - Le Privilégié - Le Bouleversé - Les Liaisons dangereuses - Les Exploités II - Dagonet et le Cadastre - Duel première partie - Duel deuxième partie - La Foi bretonne - Au service secret de Sa Majesté - La Parade - Seigneur Caius - L’Échange première partie - L’Échange deuxième partie - L’Échelle de Perceval - La Chambre de la reine - Les Émancipés - La Révoquée - La Baliste II - Les Bonnes - La Révolte III - Le Rapport - L’Art de la table - Les Novices - Les Refoulés - Les Tuteurs II - Le Tourment IV - Le Rassemblement du corbeau II - Le Grand Départ - L’Auberge rouge - Les Curieux : première partie - Les Curieux : deuxième partie - La Clandestine - Les Envahisseurs - La vie est belle - La Relève - Les Tacticiens : première partie - Les Tacticiens : deuxième partie - Drakkars ! - La Réponse - Unagi IV - La Permission - Anges et Démons - La Rémanence - Le Refuge - Le Dragon gris - La Potion de vivacité II - Vox populi III - La Sonde - La Réaffectation - La Poétique II : première partie - La Poétique II : deuxième partie
Affaires sensibles
Henri Martin, debout contre la guerre d’Indochine - 1923 : Germaine Berton : l’anarchiste qui tua pour venger Jaurès - Prince de Conty : où sont passés les lingots de l'épave? - De Paris à Dakar, le rallye du désert - Cannes 1987, Pialat et sa palme - Affaire Mis et Thiennot, la fin de l'énigme judiciaire ? - Agnès Le Roux, la disparition d’une héritière - Les mystères de Chevaline
The Crown Saison 6
Un engouement fanatique - Hors du temps
Le Voyageur Saison 2
La Forêt perchée - La tentation du mal
Alfred Hitchcock présente Saison 5, 6, 3, 7
Arthur - La Vengeance - Chantage - Pan! vous êtes mort
Spectacles
Concert du Nouvel An en direct du Musikverein, à Vienne (2024)
Adele Live At The Royal Albert Hall (2011)
Sexe et jalousie (1993) de Marc Camoletti et Georges Folgoas avec Jean-Luc Moreau, Marie-Pierre Casey, Patrick Guillemin, Marie Lenoir et Bunny Godillot
Billy Cobham's Glass Menagerie (1981) live at Riazzino, Switzerland
Agents Are Forever : Danish National Symphony Orchestra (2020) avec Caroline Henderson
Bonté divine (2010) de Frédéric Lenoir et Louis-Michel Colla avec Jean-Loup Horwitz, Benoit Nguyen-Tat, Saïd Amadis et Roland Giraud
Livres
Kid Paddle, Tome 1 : Jeux de vilains de Midam
Détective Conan, Tome 20 de Gôshô Aoyama
Castle, Tome 1 : La dernière aube de Brian Michael Bendis, Kelly Sue DeConnick et Tom Raney
James Bond : Le guide officiel de 007 de Lee Pfeiffer et Dave Worrall
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Contes et legendes : la rose bleue - Thomas Tessier
Une jeune princesse possédait toutes les qualités que l’on pût désirer. Ses yeux d’un bleu profond illuminaient un visage ravissant, et tout le monde admirait la façon qu’elle avait de raconter des histoires. Sa mère était morte à sa naissance, et son père l’adorait et ne lui refusait rien.La princesse cependant avait un défaut : se considérant comme une personne parfaite, elle exigeait que tout…
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1985 edition of Phantom by Thomas Tessier.
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