Little Boy Lost (disambiguation)
Encyclopedia
Little Boy Lost may refer to:
A Little Boy Lost (novel), a 1905 novel by W. H. Hudson (1841–1922)
A Little Boy Lost (novel), a 1905 novel by W. H. Hudson (1841–1922)
- Little Boy Lost (novel)Little Boy Lost (novel)Little Boy Lost is a dramatic novel by Marghanita Laski that was published in 1949. It was then republished in 2001 by Persephone Books.-Film, TV or theatrical adaptations:...
, a 1949 novel by Marghanita Laski - Little Boy LostLittle Boy LostLittle Boy Lost is a 1953 Paramount Pictures black-and-white drama motion picture starring Bing Crosby. Others in the cast include Claude Dauphin, Christian Fourcade, Gabrielle Dorziat, and Nicole Maurey....
, a 1953 motion picture based on Laski's book starring Bing Crosby - Little Boy Lost (1978 film)Little Boy Lost (1978 film)Little Boy Lost is a 1978 Australian drama film starring Nathan Dawes as Stephen Walls, John Hargreaves as Jacko Walls, Lorna Lesley as Dorrie Walls, Tony Barry as Constable O'Dea and Steve Dodd as William Stanley, the Aboriginal tracker....
, a 1978 Australian motion picture based on the true story of a missing child, Stephen Walls. - Little Boy Lost (The Twilight Zone)Little Boy Lost (The Twilight Zone)"Little Boy Lost" is the first segment of the fourth episode of the first season of the television series The New Twilight Zone.-Opening narration:- Synopsis :...
, a 1985 episode of The New Twilight Zone - Little Boy Lost (song)Little Boy Lost (song)Little Boy Lost, was an Australian hit song, recorded by Johnny Ashcroft. He composed this song from a lyric idea put forward by DJ, Tony Withers.-Historic event:The song accurately relates the saga of Australia’s greatest land and air search...
, a single release by Johnny Ashcroft. - The/A Little Boy Lost, a pair of poems by William Blake within his collection, Songs of Innocence and of ExperienceSongs of Innocence and of ExperienceSongs of Innocence and of Experience is an illustrated collection of poems by William Blake. It appeared in two phases. A few first copies were printed and illuminated by William Blake himself in 1789; five years later he bound these poems with a set of new poems in a volume titled Songs of...
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