Egmidio enriquez autobiography of a flea

          The relative role of host phylogeny and ecology on parasite community structure is analyzed in three sympatric paralichthyids from Argentine..

          All article titles and authors are listed below, and print versions can be found at the State Depository Libraries.

        1. All article titles and authors are listed below, and print versions can be found at the State Depository Libraries.
        2. The document provides a formal report on the short story "The White Horse of Alih" by Emigdio Alvarez Enriquez.
        3. The relative role of host phylogeny and ecology on parasite community structure is analyzed in three sympatric paralichthyids from Argentine.
        4. Recent work suggests that parasites of seabirds and other waterbirds are important as indicators of environmental quality, biogeography.
        5. Materials from the Harold W. Manter Laboratory of Parasitology Library, University of Nebraska State Museum, Lincoln, Nebraska, United States.
        6. The Autobiography of a Flea

          1887 erotic novel

          Title page of the falsely dated "1901" edition (actually published c. 1935)[1]

          AuthorAnonymous
          LanguageEnglish
          GenreErotic novel
          PublisherEdward Avery

          Publication date

          1887
          Publication placeUnited Kingdom
          Media typePrint (hardcover)
          Pages274 pp
          OCLC48562620

          The Autobiography of a Flea is an anonymouserotic novel first published in 1887 in London by Edward Avery.

          Later research has revealed that the author was a London lawyer of the time named Stanislas de Rhodes.[2]

          The story is narrated by a flea who tells the tale of a beautiful young girl named Bella, whose burgeoning sexuality is taken advantage of by her young lover Charlie, the local priest Father Ambrose and two of his colleagues in holy orders.

          Bella is then employed to procure her best friend, Julia, for the sexual enjoyment of both the priests and of Julia's own father.

          The book was