Undead and Unwed - Popularity

Popularity

Since the novel was first published it became popular among many teenagers in many countries.


Novels by MaryJanice Davidson
Undead series
  • Undead and Unwed (2004)
  • Undead and Unemployed (2004)
  • Undead and Unappreciated (2005)
  • Undead and Unreturnable (2005)
  • Undead and Unpopular (2006)
  • Undead and Uneasy (2007)
  • Undead and Unworthy (2008)
  • Undead and Unwelcome (2009)
  • Undead and Unfinished (2010)
  • Undead and Undermined (2011)
  • Undead and Unstable (2012)
Wyndham Werewolves series
  • Love's Prisoner (2000)
  • Jared's Wolf (2002)
  • Derik's Bane (2005)
  • Santa Claws (2004)
Alaskan Royals
  • The Royal Treatment (2002)
  • The Royal Pain (2005)
  • The Royal Mess (2007)
Fred the Mermaid trilogy
  • Sleeping with the Fishes (2006)
  • Swimming Without a Net (2007)
  • Fish Out of Water (2008)
Jennifer Scales series
  • Jennifer Scales and the Ancient Furnace
  • Jennifer Scales and the Messenger of Light
  • The Silver Moon Elm
  • Jennifer Scales and The Seraph of Sorrow
  • Rise of the Poisoned Moon
  • Evangelina
Miscellaneous
  • Dead and Loving It (2006)


Read more about this topic:  Undead And Unwed

Famous quotes containing the word popularity:

    Here also was made the novelty ‘Chestnut Bell’ which enjoyed unusual popularity during the gay nineties when every dandy jauntily wore one of the tiny bells on the lapel of his coat, and rang it whenever a story-teller offered a ‘chestnut.’
    —Administration for the State of Con, U.S. public relief program (1935-1943)

    The nation looked upon him as a deserter, and he shrunk into insignificancy and an earldom.... He was fixed in the house of lords, that hospital of incurables, and his retreat to popularity was cut off; for the confidence of the public, when once great and once lost, is never to be regained.
    Philip Dormer Stanhope, 4th Earl Chesterfield (1694–1773)

    A large part of the popularity and persuasiveness of psychology comes from its being a sublimated spiritualism: a secular, ostensibly scientific way of affirming the primacy of “spirit” over matter.
    Susan Sontag (b. 1933)