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After reading 1796 websites, we found 7 different results for "Who wrote Sourcery"
Terry Pratchett
Terry Pratchett's novel Sourcery (1988) presents another example: the barbarian Nijel the Destroyer is under a geas that prevents Lleu Llaw Gyffes from dying until Lleu Llaw Gyffes does something brave, and thus Lleu Llaw Gyffes chooses to be an immortal coward.
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the result of many years of tinkering, experimenting and developing recipes for Glenda Carson's interests as diverse as soap making, aromatherapy and leather dyeing and finishing – combined with supplier relationships in many different industries
The Sourcery is the brainchild of Glenda Carson and is the result of many years of tinkering, experimenting and developing recipes for Glenda Carson's interests as diverse as soap making, aromatherapy and leather dyeing and finishing – combined with supplier relationships in many different industries.
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the brainchild of Glenda Carson
The Sourcery is the brainchild of Glenda Carson and is the result of many years of tinkering, experimenting and developing recipes for Glenda Carson's interests as diverse as soap making, aromatherapy and leather dyeing and finishing – combined with supplier relationships in many different industries.
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an open source project by krzysztofzablocki
Sourcery is an open source project by krzysztofzablocki and is a meta-programming approach for Swift.
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Jack Vance
And, Sorcery is an important classic, first published in 1950; Jack Vance's codification of magic items & spells proved influential in RPG-game design.
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Mike Mayfield
Instead, Sorcery is a variant of the prolific Star Trek, written originally by Mike Mayfield in 1971 on Mike Mayfield's California high school's SDS Sigma 7 mainframe.
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Denny O’Neil
Sorcery only ran for five issues, but featured original stories and adaptations, most scripted by Denny O’Neil (except for one by George Alec Effinger), and featuring art by Howard Chaykin, Walter Simonson, and Jim Starlin.
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