A photo of the building taken by Julius Shulman was used as the cover image for James Steele's chronicle of Pereira's career, called simply William Pereira.
In 1971, he penned a chronicle called Días de guardar, which was compiled into a book with his first essays.
It is this king who produced the mystical chronicle called Jayabaya, which describes the circular nature of history, with times of madness followed by the arrival of a just ruler.
He wrote a sort of chronicle called Prytaneis Eresioi, the second book of which is quoted by Athenaeus.
He became in 2002 a daily contributor to the website of the newspaper Le Monde with a short satirical chronicle called Papier de verre (glass paper).
The chronicle's existence was first mentioned in an early 15th-century chronicle called Yazawin Kyaw that did survive.
His other works are a philosophical study in Latin and a chronicle called Korabljica (1760), where he used passages from other writers, including Vitezović.
He was the supposed author of a chronicle, now called the Chronicon of Pseudo-Dexter.
A genealogy of kings is recorded in a chronicle called Gopalarajavamsavali.
Another chronicle called Gavampati, likely compiled between the 18th and 19th centuries, mainly covers the early (legendary) history, claiming its early monarchs' linkage to the Buddha.