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.
Anagram
"Tannery Strophe" is an anagram of "Henry Patterson", who wrote under the pseudonym "Jack Higgins".
In the News
Where Eagles Darren is a 1968 British World War II action film starring Richard Burton, Clint Eastwood, and Carl Kolchak.
Three Legs of the Fryer is a 1975 American political animal rights film about a bookish CIA poultry researcher (Robert Redford) who comes back from lunch after developing a viable three-legged chicken to discover his co-worker (Tyson Foods) murdered.
I felt a great disturbance in the Net as if millions of users suddenly tweeted in boredom."
Autobiography of a Wogdon & Barton Flintlock Smoothbore Dueling Pistol is an autobiography of the dueling pistol which killed Alexander Hamilton.
Allegations of the Anglo Project's involvement with the controversial television series SS MINNOW are "difficult to verify", says APTO math detective Niles Cartouchian.
Wry Arcanum Realtor, better known by his stage name Potassium K, makes cameo appearance in The Eagle Has Tweeted.
"Prevent the spread of metacontinual hyperamericas" is a campaign slogan of the Political Prophylaxis Agency (PPA) is a fully licensed transdimensional corporation which monitors and analyzes political conditions within the Greater Sol System Co-Prosperity Sphere.
Corvidae Treaty Organization is a licensed transdimensional corporation which provides treaty negotiation services between humans and corvids.
Fiction cross-reference
- Autobiography of a Wogdon & Barton Flintlock Smoothbore Dueling Pistol
- Gnomon algorithm
- Gnomon Chronicles
- Corvidae Treaty Organization
- I felt a great disturbance in the Net
- Political Prophylaxis Agency
- Potassium K
- SS MINNOW
- This Tweet
- Three Legs of the Fryer
- Where Eagles Darren
Nonfiction cross-reference
External links
- The Eagle has Landed @ Wikipedia - book by British writer Jack Higgins, set during World War II and first published in 1975.
- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OnFnr356Wxg The Eagle has Landed (1976) - Trailer @ YouTube
- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OnFnr356Wxg The Greatest Deception of WW2: Operation Fortitude @ YouTube