The Eagle Has Tweeted: Difference between revisions

From Gnomon Chronicles
Jump to navigation Jump to search
No edit summary
No edit summary
Line 11: Line 11:


File:Autobiography of a Wogdon & Barton Flintlock Smoothbore Dueling Pistol.jpg|link=Autobiography of a Wogdon & Barton Flintlock Smoothbore Dueling Pistol|'''''[[Autobiography of a Wogdon & Barton Flintlock Smoothbore Dueling Pistol]]''''' is an autobiography of the dueling pistol which killed Alexander Hamilton.
File:Autobiography of a Wogdon & Barton Flintlock Smoothbore Dueling Pistol.jpg|link=Autobiography of a Wogdon & Barton Flintlock Smoothbore Dueling Pistol|'''''[[Autobiography of a Wogdon & Barton Flintlock Smoothbore Dueling Pistol]]''''' is an autobiography of the dueling pistol which killed Alexander Hamilton.
SS_MINNOW_-_infographic_(JFK).jpg|link=SS MINNOW|Allegations of the Anglo Project's involvement with the controversial television series '''''[[SS MINNOW]]''''' are "difficult to verify", says APTO math detective Niles Cartouchian.


File:Potassium_K_-_Pearls.jpg|link=Potassium K|'''Wry Arcanum Realtor''', better known by his stage name '''[[Potassium K]]''', makes cameo appearance in '''''The Eagle Has Tweeted'''''.
File:Potassium_K_-_Pearls.jpg|link=Potassium K|'''Wry Arcanum Realtor''', better known by his stage name '''[[Potassium K]]''', makes cameo appearance in '''''The Eagle Has Tweeted'''''.
Line 29: Line 31:
* [[Political Prophylaxis Agency]]
* [[Political Prophylaxis Agency]]
* [[Potassium K]]
* [[Potassium K]]
* [[SS MINNOW]]
* ''[[SS MINNOW]]''
* [[This Tweet]]
* [[This Tweet]]



Revision as of 18:54, 11 August 2021

Earliest known book cover for The Eagle Has Tweeted.

The Eagle Has Tweeted is a 1975 novel by Tannery Strophe about a fictional German plot to impersonate Winston Churchill on Twitter near the end of the Second World War.

Psychological compatibility

Patients who responded positively to The Eagle Has Tweeted also participated in clinical trials for SS MINNOW.

In the News

Fiction cross-reference

Nonfiction cross-reference

External links

  • Post @ Twitter (6 August 2021)