The Glass Inferno is a 1974 novel by American writer Thomas N. Scortia and Frank M. Robinson.[1] It is one of the two books that was used to create the movie The Towering Inferno, the other being the 1973 novel The Tower by Richard Martin Stern.[2]
^"Publication: The Glass Inferno". isfdb.org. Retrieved 2023-09-12.
^Canby, Vincent (1974-12-20). "'The Towering Inferno' First-Rate Visual Spectacle". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2023-09-12.
TheGlassInferno is a 1974 novel by American writer Thomas N. Scortia and Frank M. Robinson. It is one of the two books that was used to create the movie...
bought the rights to the novel shortly after its publication for roughly $400,000, and Stern's book, in combination with the novel TheGlassInferno by Thomas...
Tower, but the film rights had already been taken by Warner Bros. He looked for an alternative and found a similar story in TheGlassInferno. Rather than...
Inferno This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title Glass Tower. If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link...
written, as the standardized Italian language. It is divided into three parts: Inferno, Purgatorio, and Paradiso. The poem discusses "the state of the soul after...
speechwriter for politician Harvey Milk, author (TheGlassInferno adapted into the 1974 film The Towering Inferno) Norman Rockwell – American painter and illustrator...
writer and friend of Harvey Milk's known for authoring The Dark Beyond the Stars and TheGlassInferno Robert Rodi – novelist, comedian, critic, and comic...
tree of the genus Coprosma, in the family Rubiaceae, native to New Zealand. Common names include taupata, tree bedstraw, mirror bush, looking-glass bush...
Riders, The Dark Beneath the World originally published 1990 in Warhammer: Red Thirst, The Mutant Master originally published 1997 in Inferno! issue 1...
group work by French artist Auguste Rodin that depicts a scene from theInferno, the first section of Dante Alighieri's Divine Comedy. It stands at 6 metres...