Genre Adventure. Page - 40
five years ago a young girl by the name of Alexandria Morgan was envalved in a terrifing accident while driving home with her mother and father from her grandparents in a terrible blizzared on there way home. They crashed when the car surved off the road and crashed in a large tree. The impacted killed both her parents but somehow she was able to esacped out the car before it exploded to nothing.
In the far future of 1919, in the fictional city of England named Euvokia, the prime minister Benjamin Juvencivilla wins a battle against the protagonist only known as BJ. After BJ survives being thrown through a window, he suffers from amnesia, but wishes only to kill the man who injured him badly. Throughout his journey, he loses his sense of being himself, and becomes the masked murderer only known as "Scaramouche."
Jerry, just having satisfied his curiosity by traveling down that road that led, to his surprise, to the Yukon River, now has another itch to scratch: what is up the river?
Still captivated by the river's raw beauty, Jerry just has to find out. While the Fall season is still providing the river with light and warmth, Jerry decides a camping trip is in order.
With a couple of days off from his duties at the Air Force station, Jerry decides to take a camping trip to find out what wonderful surprises would be awaiting his arrival.
And what exactly does he find? Well the answer to that lies beyond The Road and Up the River.
Henry Rider Haggard, generally known as H. Rider Haggard or Rider Haggard, came from a line of Danish descent and was born at Bradenham, Norfolk, the eighth of ten children, to Sir William Meybohm Rider Haggard, a barrister, and Ella Doveton, an author and poet.[2] He was initially sent to Garsington Rectory in Oxfordshire to study under Reverend H. J. Graham, but unlike his older brothers who graduated from various private schools, he attended Ipswich Grammar School.[3] This was because[4] his father, who perhaps regarded him as somebody who was not going to amount to much,[5] could no longer afford to maintain his expensive private education. After failing his army entrance exam, he was sent to a private crammer in London to prepare for the entrance exam for the British Foreign Office,[3] for which he never sat. During his two years in London he came into contact with people interested in the study of psychical phenomena.[6]