ÿþ<HTML> <HEAD> <TITLE>A Day in the Life</TITLE> </HEAD> <BODY BGCOLOR=#000000"> <TABLE ALIGN=CENTER WIDTH="580" CELLSPACING="0" CELLPADDING="3" BORDER="0"> <TR> <TD ROWSPAN="2" WIDTH="150" VALIGN=CENTER ALIGN=CENTER><IMG SRC="Prisoner Pictures/Prisoner Logo 2.jpg" WIDTH="150" HEIGHT="115" ALT="Prisoner Logo"></TD> <TD WIDTH="355" VALIGN=CENTER ALIGN=CENTER><FONT COLOR="#99CCFF" SIZE="4" FACE="Arial, Helvetica, Comic Sans"><B>'A Day in the Life'</B><BR><FONT SIZE="3">by Hank Stein</TD> <TD ROWSPAN="2" WIDTH="175" VALIGN=CENTER ALIGN=CENTER><IMG SRC="Prisoner Pictures/AdayinlifeUS.jpg" WIDTH="120" HEIGHT="186" ALT="Jacket Illustration"></TD> </TR> </TABLE> <P ALIGN=CENTER><FONT COLOR="#99CCFF" SIZE="2" FACE="Arial, Helvetica, Comic Sans"> In the Village there is: <BR><BR>a beach <BR><BR>a theater <BR><BR>a tennis court <BR><BR>and an underground chamber from which mysterious men monitor every move <BR><BR>Each day is like another in the Village: <BR><BR>a trip to the grocer's <BR><BR>a conversation with a Number <BR><BR>an escape attempt. <BR><BR>The Village - a sinister Disneyland for people who know too much about critical government projects and so can never be set free. <BR><BR>And YOU are there. <BR><BR><BR><B>Released in U.S.A. by:</B> <BR>Ace Books <BR><BR><B>Release Date:</B> <BR>1970 <BR><BR><B>Notes:</B> <BR>*Featuring 'Number Six' <BR><BR>*Released in U.K. in 1979 in hardback by Dobson Books Ltd. <BR><BR><IMG SRC="Prisoner Pictures/AdayinlifeHB.jpg" WIDTH="120" HEIGHT="202" NAME="Jacket Illustration"> <BR><BR><BR>*Re-released in U.K. in 1981 by New English Library: <BR><BR><IMG SRC="Prisoner Pictures/AdayinlifeUK.jpg" WIDTH="120" HEIGHT="199" NAME="Jacket Illustration"> <BR><BR>There are no lives anymore, only statistics. And statistics can be sacrificed..." <BR><BR>Every day in the village is just like any other. <BR><BR>There's the beach and the theatre, and the tennis court... and the mysterious underground chamber where every move is watched. <BR><BR>In this sinister wonderland for those who know too much ever to know freedom, the average day is just a trip to the grocer's, a conversation with a Number... and a chance to escape... <BR><BR><BR> </BODY> </HTML>