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  1. World Without End is a best-selling 2007 historical fiction novel by Welsh author Ken Follett. It is the second book in the Kingsbridge Series, and is the sequel to 1989's The Pillars of the Earth.

    • Ken Follett
    • 2007
  2. Oct 4, 2007 · WORLD WITHOUT END continues the story of Kingsbridge, a medieval town noted for the awe-inspiring Gothic cathedral designed and built some 200 hundred years earlier in the 12th century by Jack Builder.

    • (252.7K)
    • Hardcover
  3. World Without End is an eight-episode 2012 television miniseries based on the 2007 novel of the same name by Ken Follett. It is a sequel to the 2010 miniseries The Pillars of the Earth, also based on a Follett novel.

    No.
    Title
    Original Air Date
    1
    "Knight"
    4 September 2012 ( 2012-09-04)
    2
    "King"
    11 September 2012 ( 2012-09-11)
    3
    "Prior"
    18 September 2012 ( 2012-09-18)
    4
    "Check"
    25 September 2012 ( 2012-09-25)
  4. World Without End – Ken Follett. 2007 | Historical Fiction | 1264 pages. Ken Follett’s masterful epic The Pillars of the Earth enchanted millions of readers with its compelling drama of war, passion and family conflict set around the building of a cathedral.

  5. World Without End: With Ben Chaplin, Charlotte Riley, Nora Waldstätten, Oliver Jackson-Cohen. The English town of Kingsbridge works to survive as the King leads the nation into the Hundred Years' War with France while Europe deals with the outbreak of the Black Death.

    • (9.2K)
    • 2012-10-17
    • Drama, Romance, Thriller
    • 47
  6. In 1989 Ken Follett astonished the literary world with The Pillars of the Earth, a sweeping epic novel set in twelfth-century England centered on the building of a cathedral and many of the hundreds of lives it affected.

  7. Jul 27, 2010 · A feast of conflicts and struggles among religious authority, royal governance, the powerful unions (or guilds) of the day, and the peasantry . . . With World Without End, Follett proves his Pillars may be a rarity, but it wasn’t a fluke.” —New York Post.