Gifts For Book Lovers HAPPY NEW YEAR TO
Transcription
Gifts For Book Lovers HAPPY NEW YEAR TO
By Appointment To H.R.H. The Duke Of Edinburgh Booksellers www.bibliophilebooks.com ISSN 1478-064X £35 NOW £17.50 78843 WORLD HERITAGE SITES: 4th Edition by UNESCO Publishing 936 sites are inscribed on the World Heritage List in 153 countries including 725 cultural, 183 natural and 28 mixed sites all of which have been recognised for their ‘outstanding universal value’. The opening pages provide colour maps of World Heritage Sites in Europe, North America and the Caribbean, South America, Africa, Oceania, Asia, the Middle East and the Arabian Peninsula to guide us through this complete guide to all 936 sites in this HAPPY NEW YEAR TO ALL OUR LOVELY CUSTOMERS We thank you for your loyalty, enthusiasm and wonderful letters over the past year. Dorothy of Bristol writes: “Just want to say THANK YOU for all the wonderful books which I could not have known about or afforded. As always, I make a big list and have to edit it and cross off things, but the process is enjoyable. Keep up the good work. Best wishes to you all for a Happy New Year” Timeless classics in Literature, the best crop of History we have had in some time, superb Handicrafts and baking titles, Early Learning and Children’s, and a huge warehouse clearance JANUARY SALE, this is a book lover’s bonanza. Take advantage while the prices are this low and of course of our £3.50 flat rate postage and packing for however many books you buy. and the Team wish all our lovely customers a very healthy and happy 2016. 78793 DARLING MONSTER $40 NOW £10 78645 JERUSALEM Stone and Spirit $60 NOW £12 ○ ○ 79047 PRECIOUS AND THE MYSTERY OF MEERKAT HILL by Alexander McCall Smith Once upon a time in Botswana in Africa there was a little girl who would later grow up to be a famous detective named Precious Ramotswe of the No.1 Ladies’ Detective Agency. Having already cracked the case of the missing cakes at school, she now has a new mystery to solve. Her two new friends have the funniest and most resourceful pet you can imagine, but they are upset that their family’s most valuable possession, their cow, has gone missing. Precious has a plan to find the missing animal. Yes, meerkats do appear, particularly in Iain McIntosh’s utterly charming black, red and white silhouette illus. 90pp. Suit ages ten to adult. £9.99 NOW £4 See companion 79048 PRECIOUS AND THE MYSTERY OF THE MISSING LION in Children’s 78872 SOPHIA LOREN: A Life in Pictures The beautiful, iconic Sophia Loren rose to fame in the in the 1950s, becoming not only one of the greatest Italian actresses, but feted and loved throughout the world. Voluptuous and sensual, Sophia married film producer Carlos Ponti with whom she had two children. Bursting with photographs, here is Sophia in all her guises, from sexy siren to devoted mother and from sophisticated lady to a casually dressed cheeky young woman cuddling Elvis Presley! There are many still shots and posters from her films, as well as a biography recounting her life from her earliest days. This is the story of how an illegitimate child born into nearpoverty rose to become an internationally famed film star of Houseboat, Two Women, The Fall of the Roman Empire and The Millionairess. She also loved singing. It is the stunning collection of photos of this larger-than-life lady that will make this a treasure for any Sophia Loren fan. 12x10", 190pp, colour and b/w illus. 78665 MASTERPIECES OF ANCIENT EGYPT $39.95 NOW £14 78626 GHOSTS OF EMPIRE £9.99 NOW £5 ○ - Antoine de Saint-Exupery ○ Gifts For Book Lovers see page 11 78925 FIRST NORTH AMERICANS: An Archaeological Journey by Brian Fagan The compelling and little-known story of the original settlers thousands of years ago to America, and when and how they arrived. What kind of landscape did they find and how did their societies develop? Fagan describes the controversies over the first settlement, which probably occurred via Siberia towards the end of the Ice Age, and debates over the routes used as humans moved south into the heart of the continent. A remarkable diversity of huntergatherer societies evolved in the rapidly changing North American environments after 10,000 years ago, and the book explores the ingenious ways in which people adapted to every kind of landscape imaginable, from Arctic tundra to open plains and thick woodland. Later chapters recount how Native Americans developed increasingly sophisticated cultures, culminating in the spectacular Ancestral Pueblo societies of the Southwest who built striking cliff dwellings and the elaborate coastal developments of California and the Pacific Northwest. The author traces the origins of the moundbuilder societies of the Eastern Woodlands which reached their apogee in the flamboyant Mississippian culture. He also looks at the elaborate cosmology and spiritual beliefs and ends with the Algonquian and Iroquoian peoples and St. Lawrence Valley. Plus the devastating consequences of European contact. See the bird-effigy smoking pipes, copper masks, whale, seal and other mammal-hunting native techniques through the ice, hunting bison, astonishing eagle helmets and ivory carvings and other exciting archaeological finds. 190 illus, 26 in colour. 272pp. £19.95 NOW £8.50 78933 WRITING TALK by Alex Hamilton A dear friend of Bibliophile’s, Alex Hamilton, aka ‘Pooter’ kindly signed every copy of this book from his own stocks. In his long career in literary journalism over the last 50 years, Alex has probably met and talked in depth to most of our great writers more than anyone else, from hardnosed bestselling authors, novelists to cartoonists in every genre from thrillers and whodunits to short stories, romance and erotica, science fiction and fantasy, poetry and ‘This World’. For the piece ‘Saving Graces’ on Graham Greene, Alex travelled to the South of France; for ‘What Secrets Are’ interviewing Muriel Spark, to Italy. Margaret Atwood, Beryl Bainbridge, Arthur Koestler, Joseph Heller, James Michener, cartoonists Calman, Felwell and Hergé, Daphne du Maurier, Michael Moorcock, Stephen King and Harold Robbins are among the role call from this selection, edited by Alex’s talented wife Stephanie. Collected from his life’s work, it is a stimulating and rare insight into £25 NOW £15 With collectable Red Vinyl Single! 78860 DAVID BOWIE: Mick Rock Tin ONLY £15 War is not an adventure. It is a disease. It is like typhus. 78698 THE VENETIANS ONLY £8 Alex (r) signing with our Annie. 78791 COMPLETE WINE SELECTOR $24.95 NOW £7.50 BIBLIOPHILE BOOKS UNIT 5 DATAPOINT, 6 SOUTH CRESCENT, LONDON E16 4TL TEL: 020 74 74 24 74 CONT. OVER PAGE 78816 MILLER’S COLLECTIBLES $27.99 NOW £8 78981 AIR ARSENAL NORTH AMERICA: Aircraft for the Allies 1938-1945 by Phil Butler with Dan Hagedorn ○ ○ • Science & Invention page 13 JANUARY CLEARANCE SALE - First Come, First Served Pg 18 $29.95 NOW £9 WAR AND MILITARIA ○ ○ ○ • Fascinating Lives page 16 79025 THE HOLY BIBLE WITH ILLUSTRATIONS FROM THE VATICAN LIBRARY $599.99 NOW £150 See more spectacular images on back page tremendous heavyweight book, dripping with colour of the most extraordinary places in the world featuring gorgeous colour photos and maps. Castles and gardens, basilicas, lakes, rice terraces in the Philippines, churches of Moldavia, Angkor, the Victoria Falls, archaeological sites in Oman, the mausoleum of the first Qin Emperor in China and the Great Wall, the historic city of Toledo in Spain, the rock sites of Cappadocia with obelisks and needles reaching heights of 40 metres in the landscape, the medina of Marrakesh in Morocco, Cordoba with its mezquita in Spain, the Vatican City, the Taj Mahal, the Mammoth Cave National Park USA, Old Jerusalem and included for this 4th edition ancient villages of northern Syria, the citadel of the Ho dynasty Vietnam and more. With time line, locator map, extra information and country by country index. A magnificent publication, 872pp in sturdy softback. ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ • Pet Owner’s Manuals page 15 ○ ○ ○ ○ • Cosy & Warm Knits page 10 ○ The Favrile ‘Aquamarine’ vase of 1914 and the ‘Dragonfly’ table lamp are some of the tallest and most astonishingly beautiful examples of ‘Aquamarine’ glass ever produced. The sinuous seaweed, the numerous trapped air bubbles, the varying depths and poses of the fish heighten the underwater effect. See pages 154 to 55 of this glamorous heavyweight tome, which makes full use of black backgrounds to highlight the luminescent effects of this exceptional glassware. It is a definitive account of Louis Comfort Tiffany’s highly collectable art glass, which he considered his signature artistic achievement, produced between the 1890s and 1920s. Called Favrile glass, every piece was blown and decorated by hand. The book presents the full range of styles and shapes from the exquisite delicacy of the Flowerforms to the dramatically dripping golden flow of the Lava vases, from the dazzling iridescence of the Cypriote vases to the glazed-pottery like opaqueness of the Brown pieces and more. See the Diatreta or Cage Cup, a magnificent three dimensional design with latticework, now very rare, ‘paperweight’ and Byzantine, cameo vases and rose bowls. All beautifully photographed in 225 colour illus. 228pp, 10" x 12", published by Thames & Hudson. Inside this issue... CATALOGUE NO. 338 JAN 2016 ○ Est. 1978 78920 ART GLASS OF LOUIS COMFORT TIFFANY by Paul Doros Britain ran short of munitions in World War II and lacked the dollar funds to buy American and Canadian aircraft outright, so President Roosevelt came up with the idea of Lend-Lease to assist the Allies. This meticulously researched big book covers the details of the aircraft involved, the take-up by different countries, the logistical complexities of transportation and an account of “Due Process - how it all worked”. The build-up began in 1938 before the outbreak of war, and by 1941 the British and French were ordering almost 10,000 aircraft, more than twice the number made for U.S. internal consumption. Standardisation was key for the smooth running of the operation, and at the “Arcadia” meeting in December 1941 the Allied heads of state agreed to the pooling of British and American aircraft production. Churchill urged the Americans to increase their targets and the huge flow of orders enabled companies like Lockheed to enter the “big league” for the first time. The second part of the book is a gazetteer of the types of aircraft delivered under the purchase and lend-lease agreements. The Cessna T-50 Bobcat, for instance, was designed as light transport but was selected as a twin-engine conversion trainer by the RAF and the US and Canadian air forces, while the Sikorsky Hoverfly helicopter was used for training by the Royal Navy. The Boeing Superfortress with a range of over 5,000 miles was ordered by the USAAF following Pearl Harbor. 320pp, hundreds of black and white photos with some in colour, serial numbers, requisition numbers. Superbly comprehensive. £40 NOW £10 78790 COLLISIONS OF EMPIRES by Prit Buttar Sub-titled ‘The War on the Eastern Front in 1914’ here is a magisterial account of the chaos and destruction that reigned when three powerful empires collided. Driven by firsthand accounts and new, detailed archival research, the author examines the battles of the Masurian Lakes and Tannenberg in East Prussia, followed by the Russo-Austrian clashes in Galicia, the failed German advance towards Warsaw, and the vicious fighting in the Carpathian Mountains. Although the myriad of alliances and suspicions that existed between the Russian, German and Austro-Hungarian empires in the early 20th century proved to be one of the primary triggers for the outbreak of World War One, much of the actual fighting between these nations has largely been forgotten in the West. An excellent chronicle of the Baltics from Osprey CONTINUED OVER PAGE Jo Nesbo, Ian Rankin & more in Crime Fiction - see page 3 Chesterton, Casanova, Dickens, Huxley, Conan Doyle in Literature see page 10 Christmas Cards & Books REDUCED - see page 34 Full listings of all subjects page 2 78814 LIBERTY BOOK OF HOME SEWING $27.50 NOW £10 78929 A MAN MOST DRIVEN £20 NOW £7 78802 GRUMPY CAT: A Grumpy Book £8.99 NOW £5 www.bibliophilebooks.com 2 ORDER HOTLINE: 020 74 74 24 74 Writing Talk continued the minds and lives of some of the most fascinating creators of modern culture. Here are the struggles, victories, serious or humorous commitments made by them and their addiction to the kind of fiction they like to write. Alex has an enormous vocabulary and had us reaching for the dictionary on several occasions. Taut and wondrous, he grabs the moment and in these very short pieces we are there with him in the moment with these most creative of minds. All copies kindly signed by the author, the 390 page paperback ends with ‘Curse Agin Book Stealers’ spotted on a noticeboard in a Cambridge library. £9.95 NOW £5 WAR & MILITARIA CONTINUED Publishing. 472pp with many photos and maps and Dramatis Personae of the nations including Serbian military commanders. Tiny remainder mark. £15 NOW £7.50 79045 OPERATION SUICIDE by Robert Lyman Sub-titled ‘The Remarkable Story of the Cockleshell Raid’, this is the first new narrative account of this enthralling raid and its aftermath for over 50 years. In 1942, 12 British canoeists armed with limpet mines were sent to paddle 100 miles up the Gironde estuary, in the middle of winter, in an audacious attempt to sink German blockade ships in Bordeaux Harbour. It was fully expected that all 12 would die in the attempt. Two ripped their collapsible canoes as they were manhandling them out of the submarine. Two drowned when their canoes capsized. A further six were captured by the Germans and later executed. Nevertheless, the damage they had caused represented a significant blow to the German war effort, one that Churchill himself claimed shortened the conflict by six months. By complete chance, the two canoeists who managed to escape, Major ‘Blondie’ Hasler and marine Bill Sparks, stumbled into the arms of the French Resistance. Across France and Spain, they made a risky and arduous journey, crossing the Pyrenees in the company of a Gestapo agent intent on betraying them all. The author has used German records which were captured by the British in 1944 and which remain censored until 1976. With photos, 346pp. £18.99 NOW £8 78980 SUB-MACHINE GUN by Maxim Popenker and Anthony G. Williams A comprehensive, full-colour look at the advances in construction and design of the SMG, or Sub-machine gun, from its development during the First World War to today’s sophisticated weapon. The closequarter trench combat experienced during the 1914-18 campaign needed something with more fire-power than a handgun or rifle, but smaller and more lightweight than a machine gun. Various ideas were tried, but eventually the solution arrived at was a fully automatic shoulder gun firing pistol ammunition. Part one of this book explains the history, design, ammunition design and cartridge design of the SMG, while part two is an alphabeticallyarranged account of the development and SMG weapons used in countries around the globe. Over 500 photographs depict the weapons, components, cartridges etc. while clear diagrams show the workings and various parts of the guns. 320pp. Colour illus and diagrams. £29.95 NOW £10 78840 WHERE THE IRON CROSSES GROW: The Crimea 1941-44 by Robert Forczyk Throughout its history the Crimea has seen much conflict, and it is still a disputed region today. During the Second World War it mirrored the conflict on the Eastern Front though differed in the fact that naval forces played a vitally important role due to Crimea, planted firmly in the North Sea, was ideal for naval supply and amphibious landings. Informatively written, it also contains a few eye-witness accounts, such as a German officer writing ‘The attackers poured out of the depression. There were at least one hundred Russians streaming with a loud “Urrah!” toward our seven-man Pak crew and one machine gun position. Rifle shots slammed into the side of the vehicle and ricocheted off the gun shield of our Pak gun... An unteroffizier lying next to me near the wheel of the carriage was firing short, sustained bursts from his machine pistol when he suddenly rolled backward, screaming with pain. We had no time to assist the wounded, only to fire, fire and fire to save our lives.’ This significant, knowledgeable account of how both the Soviet and the German armies were defeated in barbaric fighting, not only analyses the conflict in detail but also explores the horrific ethical cleansing atrocities practiced by both sides. 336pp, b/w illus. Remainder mark. £20 NOW £7 78606 DARK DEFILE: Britain’s Catastrophic Invasion of Afghanistan 1838-1842 by Diana Preston In 1838 the British government, convinced that its Indian territories were threatened by Russia, Persia and Afghan tribesmen, ordered its mighty Army of the Indus into Afghanistan with the aim of ousting the independent-minded King Dost Mohammed and install in Kabul the unpopular puppet ruler Shah Shuja. Tragically over-confident, they expected a quick campaign and were completely unprepared for the nature of Afghan terrain and fighters. With their only routes of retreat being the few narrow passes such as the Khyber, Bolan and Khoord-Kabul, despite taking Kabul in 1840 the army soon found itself trapped, and when the tribes finally united in 1842 this seemingly omnipotent fighting force was slaughtered as it tried to retreat from Kabul to Jalalabad - only one man, Dr William Bryden, made it back to tell the tale. Thus ended the First Anglo-Afghan war and so began “The Great Game” between Britain and Russia for dominance of Central Asia which would continue for another 60 years. Diana Preston skilfully interweaves the events leading up to invasion, the complex interplay between the countries and tribes and the arrogance and resilience of the British commanders and Afghan tribesmen respectively. She unravels the combination of geography, political and military mismanagement and many ignored warnings that saw 16,000 British and Indian troops killed and employs some rarely seen letters, diaries and eye-witness accounts to bring her narrative to life. Over 170 years later, items seized from the retreating British are passed down through Afghan families in memory of their ancestors. 307pp, illus. $28 NOW £7 78625 GERMAN PANZERS OF WORLD WAR II by Jorge Rosado and Chris Bishop Although they existed for less than a decade, Hitler’s Panzer Divisions transformed the face of modern warfare. Keen to avoid the bloody attritional strategies of WWI, the German army showed the world their mastery of a new form of warfare, the Blitzkreig. Blitzkrieg had its roots in tactics employed - ultimately too late - in 1918, where special heavily armed assault divisions would attack the weaker points in the Allied lines, their superior firepower at the point of contact allowing them to break through and then encircle the enemy. Country after country fell to these tactics, which cost Hitler very little in terms of time and troops. The Panzerkampfwagen (literally “armoured combat vehicle” and usually abbreviated to Panzer) had arrived and the Nazis swept unchecked across Europe and North Africa in less than two years, until the Operation Barbarossa attack on Russia exposed the strategy’s limitations. This exceptionally detailed volume organises all the Panzer types that saw action in WWII by division, then year-by-year through the course of the war and all the different campaigns, from the invasion of Poland to the death throes of the Third Reich, defending Berlin from the Allies. The book is separated into two sections, Wehrmacht and Waffen-SS divisions. As the war continued, SS Panzer divisions were much better equipped than those of the Wehrmacht. With over 600 colour artworks and b/w photos and exhaustive technical specs, division organisation and full history of each division and vehicle. 384pp, 7¾”×9¾”. £29.99 NOW £12 78322 SECRET WARRIORS by Taylor Downing Key scientists, code-breakers and propagandists of the Great War are the subject of this historian’s revelatory account. It was a modern, industrial and technological war, but the war effort wasn’t confined to the battlefield. Engineers and chemists, doctors, code-breakers, writers and scientists all played vital roles. Here are the bluff military adventurers and the clumsy gentlemen scientists, the boffins and many interesting characters, electronic eavesdropping and large-scale chemical weapons in their infancy. 438pp in paperback, photos. £9.99 NOW £4 78446 LIVERPOOL VCs by James Murphy The Victoria Cross was instituted by Royal Warrant signed by Queen Victoria in 1856. This volume chronicles the lives and times and gallant deeds of a small contingent of Victoria Cross holders, 23 men of Liverpool who covered themselves in glory on foreign battlefields while the city was growing up. 18 were Dicky Sams, native-born Liverpudlians, and five made a home in the city - labourers, clerks, tradesmen, servicemen, volunteers and professional soldiers, rich and poor, rascals and angels, literate and illiterate. The author recalls other actions in which they were involved in the anecdotal entries and clears up myths and errors of facts that have grown up around them. 243pp, illus. £19.99 NOW £8 78432 COMPLETE GEORGE CROSS by Kevin Brazier The George Cross is for ‘Acts of the greatest heroism or the most conspicuous courage in circumstances of extreme danger’. Here is a complete chronological record of the lives, careers and exploits of all of the George Cross holders in this unique book. Read about 14 year old Geoffrey Riley in Yorkshire who, in a violent thunderstorm in 1944, went to the rescue of 76 year old Maude Wimpenny. Heroic first aid at the Standard Motor Company, Royal Naval Volunteer Reserves, gallantry in action in Malta and Dunkirk, here too are Empire gallantry medals, the Edward medal and George Crosses awarded after the Second World War. Fascinating, anecdotal entries, photos, 242pp. £25 NOW £7.50 77578 GREAT BATTLES OF WORLD WAR TWO: Book and DVD by Dr Chris Mann Pearl Harbor, the Battle of Britain, Operation Barbarossa, Monte Cassino and Market Garden are good examples where the knock-out blow was rarely achieved. Here 28 such important actions including the Siege of Leningrad, the D-Day Landings, the Battle of the Bulge, Iwo Jima and the battle for Berlin and more are presented with full-colour tactical maps. More than 250 fantastic images and artworks illustrating the soldiers, uniforms, bewildered populace and military technology of the era, many never before seen. Colour and b/w illus. 240pp in large softback along with a 30 minute DVD highlighting ten crucial moments of World War Two. Box set with elastic fastener. £19.99 NOW £6 War & Militaria cont. 77161 SHERMAN TANK: A Pocket History by John Christopher Once described as the ‘worst tank that ever won the war’, the Sherman Tank was never going to be the equal of the German heavies, the Tiger and Panther in a direct tank-on-tank confrontation. The Sherman’s strength lay elsewhere - in its reliability, manoeuvrability, and the sheer weight of numbers produced. It became ubiquitous, and was produced in such prodigious quantities that the interchangeability of parts was what made the Medium Tank M4, as the Sherman was officially designated, a war winner. Built in the States in car factories, railway works and new bespoke factories, the Sherman came in many variants and was converted for other uses by the Allied forces. The Brits made it a bigger gun, made ‘funnies’ that could wade ditches, build bridges, even float in the sea and clear minefields. The Sherman lasted in service into Korea with the Americans and was sold overseas to Israel, Uganda, India, Paraguay, Argentina and Mexico, with the last coming out of service in 1989 in Chile. The book presents new and archive images of this most famous tank. Slightly larger than postcard size softback, 126pp, colour throughout. £8.99 NOW £2.50 76566 GOOD SOLDIER: The Biography of Douglas Haig by Gary Mead Posterity has not been kind to Douglas Haig, who commanded the British Expeditionary Force on the Western Front for much of the First World War. Received wisdom presents him as an idiot who sent men to their slaughter in scarcely credible numbers both at the Battle of the Somme in 1916 and Passchendale a year later. This book re-examines Haig’s record in these battles and views his predicament with a fresh eye. More importantly, it re-evaluates Haig himself, exploring his character and convictions and his unstinting work on behalf of ex-servicemen’s organisations after 1918. 509 paperback pages, maps, archive photos. £14.99 NOW £3.50 78435 EDGEHILL: The Battle Reinterpreted by Christopher L. Scott, Alan Turton et al The authors start with a clean slate analysing original military and civil documents, walking the ground to explore topographical features and examining rare archaeological finds. They present a new study of a key battle in the Civil Wars, reexamining one of the most mysterious battlefields at Edgehill. Each is an expert in the areas of battlefield interpretation, military equipment and organisation, and battle casualties and care. They debunk myths and all have first-hand experience of the formations, drills and weapons of the period from military re-enactments they are involved in. 224 very well illustrated pages with maps, line art, details of combatants, deployment, attack, counter attack and concluding implications plus Edgehill today. £25 NOW £9 78447 MEMOIRES OF THE ROYAL NAVY 1690 by Samuel Pepys Although the Diary is now Pepys’s most famous work, it was unknown until long after his death. In fact he published only one book in his lifetime, this account of the administration of the Navy from 1679 until his dismissal from office with the regime change in 1688. Pepys is able to provide a fascinating insider’s view of the working of the Admiralty, replete with technical detail on shipbuilding and the operations of the dockyards. However, the wealth of fact and figures is misleading, and far from impartial. A new introduction by David Davies explains the political controversy around the book’s publication. The original appendix is a detailed list of the state of the fleet in December 1688 and this edition is illustrated with contemporary drawings of typical ships. Pepys served as Clerk of the Act from 1660-1679 and then Secretary of the Admiralty from 1684-1688. He lost office when the Glorious Revolution placed William and Mary on the throne. Facsimile reprint of the 1906 Clarendon Press edition. 136pp. Illus. £19.99 NOW £6.50 78488 CIVIL WAR: Fort Sumter to Appomattox by Gary Gallagher, Stephen Engle et al The American Civil War spanned four bloody years of fighting in which over 620,000 American soldiers and sailors lost their lives. From its outbreak at Fort Sumter, South Carolina in April 1861 until its conclusion at the Appomattox Court House, more than 10,000 battles, engagements and skirmishes were recorded. Instead of conserving the old America, it steadily and profoundly reshaped the political, economic and social contours of the nation. By the time it ended, the original American republic was gone. From the First Battle of Bull Run to Sherman’s March to the Sea. Here is the impact of the new rifle on civilians and military personnel, the liberated slaves, the destruction of the region’s farms and factories and most significantly, the breaking of the spirit of the Southern people. 150 contemporary b/w and colour images, 40 specially commissioned colour maps. 334pp. £25 NOW £10 76339 GUIDE TO BATTLES: Decisive Conflicts In History by Richard Holmes and Martin Marix Evans The book tells the story of the world’s most dramatic and important clashes from the Greco-Persian Wars and Punic Wars through medieval Wars of the Roses, the French Revolutionary Wars, the Napoleonic Wars, World Wars One and Two, the Americas with the War of Independence up to the Falklands War, Islamic wars, Japanese wars up the First and Second Gulf Wars, and in Africa the French conquest of Algeria to the Boer Wars. 300 key battles and battle formations. Maps, paintings and photos. Paperback, 429pp, remainder mark. £10.99 NOW £2.50 78330 TAKING COMMAND: The Autobiography by General David Richards David Richards retired in 2013 after over 40 years of service. His career saw him rise from Junior Officer with 29 Commando to Chief of the Defence Staff, the professional Head of the British Armed Forces. He served in the Far East, Germany, Northern Ireland and East Timor, was the Brigade Major in Berlin when Rudolf Hess, Hitler’s deputy, died in Spandau Prison. In 2006 he commanded NATO forces in Afghanistan and became the first British General to command US Forces at theatre level since WW2. He won acclaim when he brought together a coalition army and irregular forces in Sierra Leone. He sat on the National Security Council during the campaign to oust Colonel Gaddafi in Libya and advised the government during the early years of the Civil War in Syria. Here is his characteristically outspoken account of his career. 365pp, colour photos. £20 NOW £6.50 76608 DOUBLE CROSS: The True Story of the D-Day Spies by Ben Macintyre This epic event in world history has never before been told from the perspective of the D-Day spies who were, without question, one of the oddest military units ever assembled. These included a colourful assortment of MI5 handlers - as well as their counterparts in Nazi Intelligence - and the five spies who formed Double Cross’s nucleus: a dashing Serbian playboy, a Polish fighter pilot, a bi-sexual Peruvian party girl, a deeply eccentric Spaniard with a diploma in chicken farming, and a volatile French woman whose obsessive love for her pet dog very nearly wrecked the entire plan. Their enterprise was saved from catastrophe by a shadowy sixth spy whose heroic sacrifice is uncovered here for the first time. 400 pages, illus, map. £16.99 NOW £7 77104 TIME: THE CIVIL WAR: An Illustrated History edited by Kelly Knauer The magnificent images captured by Mathew Brady, Timothy O’Sullivan, Alexander Gardner and others and the large-scale maps by veteran Time cartographer Jackson Dykeman make even the most complicated campaigns easy to follow. It shows the combat at sea with the new ironclad ships and the difficulties that beset both black and white Americans after the emancipation of the slaves. Here are the great generals: Robert E. Lee, Ulysses S. Grant, Stonewall Jackson and William T. Sherman and, of course - President Abraham Lincoln himself. There are not only the battles familiar from history such as Vicksburg and Gettysburg, but also those that time has obscured like the Northern victory at Chattanooga, the needless Union blood-bath at Fredericksburg, and the brilliant Confederate triumph at Chancellorsville. Analysed year by year from 1861 to 1865 inclusive. 202 pages 31cm x 28.5cm, colour and archive photos, maps and contemporary documents. $29.95 NOW £11 Contents ART & ARCHITECTURE AUDIO - BOOKS ON CD BIOGRAPHY / AUTOBIOGRAPHY CHILDREN’S COLLECTABLES / ANTIQUES CRIME CRIME FICTION EARLY LEARNING FOR CHILDREN ENTERTAINMENT / SHOWBIZ EROTICA / SEX FICTION FOOD & DRINK / COOKERY GREAT BRITAIN & MAPS HANDICRAFTS / CRAFT HEALTH & BEAUTY HISTORICAL BIOGRAPHY HISTORY HOBBIES HOME ENTERTAINMENT / CDs / DVDs HOW TO... HUMOUR LITERATURE MISCELLANY / STATIONERY MODERN HISTORY / CURRENT AFFAIRS MUSIC & DANCE MYTHOLOGY NATURE / COUNTRYSIDE PETS PSYCHOLOGY & SOCIOLOGY RELIGION & PHILOSOPHY SCIENCE SCIENCE FICTION / FANTASY SPORT TRANSPORT TRAVEL & PLACES WAR & MILITARIA WAR MEMOIRS WORD BOOKS JANUARY CLEARANCE SALE CHRISTMAS BOOKS REDUCED 20 32 16 29 23 26 3 31 28 25 23 26 22 9 32 33 5 31 32 32 7 10 30 27 12 8 33 15 35 36 13 34 35 14 14 1 27 8 18 34 www s. c o m w.. b i b l i o p h i l e b o o k ks 77606 HIROSHIMA NAGASAKI by Paul Ham The Might of the Nazis 78519 HITLER by A. N. Wilson An acclaimed biographer of figures as diverse as Queen Victoria and C. S. Lewis, A. N. Wilson has now written a short, readable and interesting life one of history’s most difficult subjects: Adolf Hitler. Many biographers have tried to penetrate the psyche of this monstrous figure and Wilson places responsibility squarely on Hitler’s shoulders both for the Holocaust and for the military blunders that led to Germany’s defeat in World War II. In 1940 Himmler expressed an aspiration to expel all Jews from the country by enforced emigration, but three years later he addressed a gathering of SS officers “in a toneless voice” saying that anyone who shrank from the task of extermination on home ground was “lily-livered”. Under the cover of war and with Hitler as “demonic maestro” a mass slaughter took place. “No-one will ever plumb the murky depths of this terrible story.” Meanwhile Germans had no dentists or other professions where Jewish practitioners had led the field. As the war turned against him, Hitler himself was pumped with at least 28 different drug cocktails, not including the sedatives that were needed to calm him down. Resistance to the Nazis was useless, as the secret police were everywhere, and the July plot failed because the bomb was planted under a marble table. Wilson analyses Hitler’s failures, his delusions and crude Enlightenment beliefs in science and progress, and discusses his legacy in terms of our own society’s hang-ups. 215pp. $24.99 NOW £7 78074 HITLER’S SAVAGE CANARY: A History of the Danish Resistance in World War II by David Lampe On 9 April 1940 the Luftwaffe sprinkled the four million people of Denmark with leaflets explaining how they were about to be invaded and to go about their business as usual - the same bombers that dropped the leaflets were also carrying a payload of high explosive to rain down on Copenhagen in case King Christian rejected Hitler’s surrender ultimatum. The next day the Wehrmacht rumbled largely unopposed across Denmark, Hitler turning her into a “model protectorate” - Churchill said that Denmark was to become “a sadistic murderer’s canary”. Totally isolated from the Allies and at the mercy of the occupying enemy, the Danes managed to create an extraordinary resistance movement fuelled only by national pride and a sense of human decency, one of which began within four hours of the invasion with the “Ten Commandments”, a list of ten ways in which people could make the Germans’ life difficult. By 1945 they had published over 26 million illegal newspapers, set up radio guides for Allied aircraft and sabotaged ports, railways and airports so effectively that German supply ships and aircraft in Denmark were effectively stuck there. Most amazing of all was the safe evacuation of 7,200 Danish Jews by train to Sweden from right under the Nazis’ noses, the only occupied country to have achieved such a feat - this canary had the talons of an eagle. Here is the inspiring story of how untrained civilians refused to stand idly by. First published in 1957, this is the 237pp US paperback edition of 2010. Foreword by the Danish Ambassador to London. $14.95 NOW £5 78619 EXORCISING HITLER by Frederick Taylor Sub-titled ‘The Occupation and Denazification of Germany’, following the destruction of the Third Reich in 1945, this was an event nearly unprecedented in history. The country’s cities lay in rubble, its economic base devastated. The German people stood at the brink of starvation, millions still in POW camps. This was the starting 77186 SECRET HISTORY OF AL-QA’IDA by Abdel Bari Atwan Atwan is a journalist with insider knowledge who in 1996 spent three days with bin Laden in his Tora Bora hideout, and a profile of the Al Qa’ida chief starts the book. In that year he was approached by bin Laden’s representatives offering an interview with their leader who was then in hiding. Atwan was not blindfolded on his approach to the Tora Bora Eagle’s Nest, which the mujahedin had captured from the Soviets. He examines the significance of cyber-warfare for the concept of jihad, the Al Qa’ida strategy of forcing up oil prices, and the psychology of the suicide bomber. 292pp, paperback. £8.99 NOW £2 77428 VC HEROES by Nigel Cawthorne In 1854, the Distinguished Conduct Medal was established by Royal Warrant to be conferred on ‘other ranks’ in the British Army, but not officers. Queen Victoria herself favoured a single decoration without classes, open to all. The VC has been only 16 times since the end of WW2 in 1945. Three of these awards were made to recipients who had paid the ultimate sacrifice. Forged in battle, from the shell-scarred hills of Korea, to the windswept marshland of East Falkland and today’s counter-insurgency operations in Afghanistan, each one of these VCs has a uniquely inspiring tale to tell. 303pp in paperback. £7.99 NOW £2.50 War & Militaria point as the Allies set out to build a humane, democratic nation on the ruins of the vanquished Nazi state. Oxford historian Frederick Taylor describes the bitter endgame of war, the murderous Nazi resistance, the vast displacement of people in Central and Eastern Europe and the nascent Cold War struggle between Soviet and Western occupiers. The occupation was a tale of rivalries, cynical realpolitik and blunders, but also of heroism, ingenuity and determination, not least that the German people rebuilt their battered country. There are astonishing revelations from the commandant of Belsen Concentration Camp, Eisenhower in a letter to his wife ‘God, I hate the Germans’, guidance to GIs in Germany and beliefs and instructions from speeches by Goering: ‘And if the German people loses here, then the next ruler will be a Jew! And what a Jew is, this must be known to you. And if anyone doesn’t know about the revenge of Juda, let him read about it. This is not the Second World War, this war is the great racial war.’ With very moving photographs. 438pp. £25 NOW £9 78500 HITLER’S FORTRESSES by Chris McNab One of the greatest engineering projects of the 1930s was Hitler’s West Wall, which encompassed 14,000 pillboxes and stretched for over 390 miles. Germany had already taken steps to defend its western frontier with plans to construct the so-called Neckar-Enz and Wetterau-Main-Tauber lines as there were no constraints on their construction, being outside the demilitarised zones. However, the plans were abandoned following Hitler’s decision to occupy the Rhineland, and so work on the West Wall began. Another edifice, the Atlantic Wall, was ordered in rather a kneejerk action as a barrier to an anticipated Allied invasion and in response to British raiding along the English Channel. Later, Runstedt, who was the commander of the German forces in the west in 1944, said scathingly, ‘The Atlantic Wall was an enormous bluff, less for the enemy than the German people, rooted in Hitler’s romantic fervour for architectural grandeur. Hitler never saw the Atlantic Wall, not even one part of it.’ It took millions of tonnes of concrete, yet failed to deter the Allied amphibious invasion of France. Other topics include Hitler’s headquarters, defensive lines in Italy, field fortifications and specialist fortifications. An in-depth study, attractively produced and with dozens of illustrations, plans, and cutaways. 396pp. Colour and b/w illus. £30 NOW £12 78635 HITLER’S ELITE: THE SS 1939-45 edited by Chris McNab Perhaps the evil of the SS can be summed up by these words in a 1943 speech by Himmler, ‘What other nations can offer in the way of good blood of our type, we will take, if necessary, by kidnapping their children and raising them here with us. Whether nations live in prosperity or starve to death interests me only so far as we need them as slaves for our culture: otherwise, it is of no interest to me. Whether 10,000 Russian females fall down from exhaustion while digging an anti-tank ditch interests me only insofar as the anti-tank ditch for Germany is finished.’ This comprehensive study of the SS, the most infamous military formation of all time, consisting of hundreds of thousands of men, traces the organisation’s growth and explores its political origins. Chapters examine the Waffen-SS soldier, the Allgemaine-SS and Nazi Police State, the days of victory and the diversification and destruction. ‘The period 1934-1939 saw the expanding SS take over responsibility for political police work, and it extended its tentacles into many other areas of Party and government function. By the outbreak of war it would have been impossible to define exactly the role within the German state of this huge organisation.’ Many colour plates depict the various uniforms as well as over 200 photographs. 384pp. Colour plates, b/w illus. £30 NOW £15 77417 DIG WW2: Rediscovering the Great Wartime Battles by Jean Hood A journey through the allied Battle for Europe, unearthing a Spitfire buried in the Donegal peat bog, joining a team diving on a tank graveyard off Malin Head, and venturing into a sealed bunker on a D-Day beach. Jean Hood delves deeply into the stories such as the programme of ‘starfish’ sites, and the mystery of the launch ramps pointing at London. Others, such as Hobart’s Funnies, the Hamilton-Pickett ‘pop-up pill-box’ and Turner’s dummy aircraft simply celebrate British eccentricity. 272 pages 25cm x 20cm, colour and b/w photos and details of museums. £25 NOW £4 77746 SMITH & WESSON HAND GUNS by Roy McHenry and Walter Roper The story of how Horace Smith and Daniel Wesson formed their handguns company in 1854. Originally published in 1945 and here offered in a facsimile softback edition, beginning with 24 chapters that describe in detail the how the company was founded and grew, plus all the developments, patents, characters and competitors like Colt and Enfield. There then follows 63 detailed illustrations showing the various models, their unique hammer mechanism and reproductions of vintage advertising copy. Exhaustive description of every S&W firearm ever made, with all dates, model names, specific uses like policing, automatics and supers and serial numbers. 235pp, 19.7 x 27cm. $12.95 NOW £5.50 Arguing against the use of nuclear weapons, the book presents the grisly unadorned truth about the bombings, blurred for so long by post-war propaganda. In this harrowing history of the Hiroshima and Nagasaki bombings, Paul Ham draws on hundreds of interviews to prove that the bombings had little impact on the eventual outcome of the Pacific War. More than 100,000 people were killed instantly by the atomic bombs, mostly women, children and the elderly. Ham demonstrates convincingly that misunderstandings and nationalistic fury on both sides led to the use of the bombs and gives powerful witness to its destruction through the eyes of 80 survivors, from 12 year olds forced to work in factories to wives and children who faced the holocaust alone. Covers the Manhattan Project, Potsdam, an epilogue entitled Dead Heat, appendices including the surrender speeches of Emperor Hirohito, an index and Japanese terms. Photos, small remainder mark, 629pp. $35 NOW £6 77653 GORDON: Victorian Hero by C. Brad Faught During 1884 and early 1885 no one was more famous than General Charles Gordon. Trapped in the middle of a million square miles of unforgiving Sudanese desert, supplies and morale running low in Khartoum and in the face of thousands of so-called ‘Dervishes’ intent on Islamic Jihad, Gordon held out for ten months before finally being put to the sword in January 1885, two days before his 52nd birthday. Traces his life from his childhood in England, training as an engineer at the Royal Military Academy in Woolwich, Corfu, the Crimea, parts of Eastern Europe, Asia and Africa. 115pp, paperback, maps and photos. £11 NOW £4 77678 TRENCH KNIVES & MUSTARD GAS With the 42nd Rainbow Division in France by Hugh S. Thompson One of the most celebrated American units sent to France following the 1917 US declaration of war was the 42nd Division, known as the Rainbow Division. Hugh Thompson sought service as soon as war was declared, secured a commission and after completing Officer Training was sent to France with the first contingent of unassigned officers of the Rainbow. After a stint in the trenches of Lorraine, where he was wounded and gassed, he was on the receiving end of one of Ludendorff’s last desperate offensive “hammer blows” at Champagne-Marne and took part in the September 1918 assault on the St. Mihiel salient, where he received the leg wounds that would end his war and dominate the rest of his life. Newly edited edition. 205pp, photos. £26.95 NOW £5 77769 BATTLEFIELD DETECTIVES: Unearthing New Evidence on the World’s Most Famous Battlefields by David Wason Re-examines seven of the most important battles in history. We see how dramatically the coastline near Pevensey (where William landed) and Hastings has changed since 1066 and how two very different styles of fighting and leaders fought each other to a standstill. Was Agincourt really a victory for the English longbow and the source of the two-fingered salute, or was it a crowd disaster just waiting to happen? Oceanography forces a rethink of the events surrounding the defeat of the Spanish Armada, and, 200 years old this year, military psychologists examine whether Marshal Ney, who directed the French at Waterloo was unfit for command. The Battle of Balaklava is remembered for the pointless annihilation of the Light Brigade, but the team point out that the real heroes where the 600 Turks whose gallant defence held off the Russians. The myth of Custer’s Last Stand at Little Bighorn is demolished. 255pp, colour and b/w photos. £12.99 NOW £5 77848 VOICES FROM BRITAIN: Broadcasts from the BBC 1939-45 by Henning Krabbe Here are justly famed pieces of oratory such as Churchill’s “We shall fight them on the beaches”, “The Few” and “The end of the beginning” and the magisterial “Survey of the War” from 13 May 1945, but also a wide range of less well known radio speeches. As well as Churchill here are transcripts of broadcasts by Chamberlain, Atlee, Bevin, Charles de Gaulle (an especially good one, damning the collaborators of Vichy France), George VI, Queen Wilhemina of Holland, King Haakon of Norway, Roosevelt, E.M. Forster and broadcasts by BBC announcers on the World, Home or European services describing events such as Dunkirk, the Blitz, the invasion of Russia, the fall of Stalingrad, the fall of Singapore, the D-Day landings, the Liberation of Paris, the German surrender and the Atomic Bombings of Japan which really make the hairs on your neck stand up. 2013 softback reprint, 50 b/w photos. 286pp. £16.99 NOW £7.50 77959 WAR PHOTOGRAPHY: Images of Conflict edited by Thomas Barfield Canadian troops on a tank, First World War, Burundi Army in action against Hutu rebels 2000, a sniper in Kosovo, May 1999, revenge in Kulna, 1971, Cyprus 1964, Sinn Féin volunteers drill with dummy rifles, 1916, German troops with a flame thrower, 1917, French troops charging, evacuation at Gallipoli, Serbian women in training 1914, an Afghan woman with a gun in modern times, British troops in Basra, prove the extent of damage and horror inflicted by war. Here front line photographers expose the bare reality. Colour and b/w photos. 320pp, compact paperback. £7.99 NOW £3 77647 CHURCHILL AND THE KING by Kenneth Weisbrode ! Concerning the wartime alliance of Winston Churchill and George VI, Weisbrode suggests how the King’s shy nature was offset by Churchill’s willingness to cast himself as the nation’s saviour. The King had been a supporter of appeasement and Neville Chamberlain. Churchill had backed the King’s brother during the abdication crisis. The pair met nearly every week privately over lunch during the War and worked through the many problems facing their nation and empire. Both 3 made strong marriages to devoted wives; both had even overcome speech impediments so as to rouse their followers on radio and in person. King George gave Winston insider status; the Prime Minister in turn gave the King public confidence and poise. A perceptive study of friendship in power. 208pp. Remainder mark. $26.95 NOW £8 78307 LENINGRAD: Siege and Symphony by Brian Moynahan Leningrad - martyred by Stalin, starved by Hitler, immortalised by Shostakovich. Brian Moynahan’s unsparing, heartrending account of the Siege of Leningrad lays bare the story of the relentless, mindless depredations heaped by both Hitler and Stalin upon one of the most cultured and vibrant cities in the world. And yet, in its description of Shostakovich’s composition of his Seventh Symphony, and its defiant, triumphant première in July 1942 amongst the burnt-out ruins of the city he loved so much, the books becomes a grand testament to the strength of the human will and the enduring power of great art. 542pp illus paperback. £9.99 NOW £4.50 77845 RANK AND RATE: Volume II: Insignia of Royal Naval Ratings by E. C. Coleman ! The Royal Navy was slow to introduce distinguishing rate badges for those serving on the “lower deck”, and even when they did, in 1853, a uniform was still four years away. The introduction of reserves, the recruitment of nurses and the creation of the WRNS created the need for recognition of a new officer structure and rank and rating, which had to be clearly related to the Navy, then came the Royal Fleet Auxiliary, the Merchant Navy and the volunteer and youth organisations. The stripes, badges and buttons are catalogued separately in order of rank, rate and date of introduction WRNS, Royal Marines, QARNNS and Auxiliaries for wherever possible and actual examples are photographed. There are also a great many original photos of personnel wearing the insignia over the past 150 years. 96 8¾”×12" pages, colour and b/w illus. £19.95 NOW £11 CRIME FICTION Having gathered these facts, Watson, I smoked several pipes over them, trying to separate those which were crucial from others which were merely incidental. - Arthur Conan Doyle, The Crooked Man 78678 PHANTOM by Jo Nesbo Harry Hole, the troubled, incorrigible Oslo police officer has led us through Jo Nesbo’s international bestsellers The Snowman and The Leopard. He returns in a reckless, full-tilt investigation on which his own tenuous future will come to depend. When Harry left Oslo for Hong Kong, desperately fleeing the traumas of life as a cop, the unthinkable happened. The son of the woman he loved, lost and still loves, has been arrested for murder. Oleg, the boy Harry helped raise but couldn’t help deserting could never be a killer and he has come back to prove it. Barred from rejoining the police force, Harry sets out on a solitary, increasingly dangerous investigation that takes him deep into the world of the most virulent drug ever to hit the streets and into the maze of his own past. Electrifying crime fiction from the master Norwegian noir. 378pp with deckle pages in this US first edition glamorous hardback with quality dust jacket. $25.95 NOW £7 78831 STRANGE CASE OF DR JEKYLL AND MR HYDE: Leather Bound Edition by Robert Louis Stevenson With satin pagemarker, silver gilded page edges, cross-hatch pen and ink and silhouette drawings, here are The Story of the Door, Search for Mr Hyde, Dr Jekyll Was Quite At Ease, The Carew Murder Case, Incident of the Letter, Remarkable Incident of Dr Lanyon, Incident at the Window, The Last Night, Dr Lanyon’s Narrative and Henry Jekyll’s Full Statement of the Case in this unabridged edition of this classic. The novel was inspired by a disturbing dream that prompted Stevenson to write the first draft in a mere three days which he burned upon his wife Fanny’s criticism and wrote another draft within days, quite remarkable considering the rich language, well crafted plot and surprising ending of this classic work. 116pp in glamorous leather bound hardback with silver foil and tipped in illustration on the front cover. $19.95 NOW £6.50 78604 THE CONSTANT GARDENER by John Le Carré This eloquent, forceful and uncompromising novel was made into a major film, and it is amazingly seductive, pulling you in deeper all the time. It is a magnificent exploration of the new world order. The novel opens in northern Kenya with the gruesome murder of Tessa Quayle - young, beautiful and dearly beloved to husband Justin. When Justin sets out on a personal odyssey to uncover the mystery of her death, what he finds could make him not only a suspect among his own colleagues but a target for Tessa’s killers as well. By the master chronicler of the betrayals of ordinary people 4 Crime Fiction cont. caught in political conflict, John le Carré portrays the dark side of unbridled capitalism as only he can. Justin Quayle is an amateur gardener, aging widower and ineffectual bureaucrat who discovers the extraordinary courage of the woman he barely had time to love. 482pp in paperback. $16 NOW £5 78680 POPPET: A Jack Caffery Thriller by Mo Hayder Set in a high security mental health ward, something is not right at the Beechway Psychiatric Unit. First one resident turns violently to selfharm, then another to suicide, both of them recalcitrant patients with no prior history of self-directed violence. Whispers between the inmates have travelled to the staff that the place is being terrorised by a creature called The Maude. The superstition is dismissed, but the surviving victims certainly saw something and what of the drawing the dead woman left behind showing the creature wearing the sweater of a recently released patient? Detective Jack Caffery is called in to investigate. By the award-winning English crime writer. 379pp. $25 NOW £5 78876 A BURNABLE BOOK by Bruce Holsinger A work of love and lives by a medieval academic. This is a burnable book, a work of high treason certain to destroy any man who holds it. London, 1385, a city of shadows and fear, a kingdom haunted by the spectre of revolt and ruled by the headstrong young King Richard II. It is a place of poetry and prophecy, where power is bought by blood. For John Gower, part-time poet and full time trader in information, secrets are his currency. When close confidant, fellow poet Geoffrey Chaucer, calls in an old debt, Gower cannot refuse. The request is simply to track down a missing book, easy for a man of Gower’s talents who knows the back alleys of Southwark as intimately as the courts and palaces of Westminster. But what Gower does not know is that this book has already caused one murder and that its contents could destroy his life, because its words are behind the highest treason - a conspiracy to kill the king and reduce his reign to ashes. 473pp with cast of characters including English royals, officers of the City of London, common women, tradesmen and freeman and keepers of books in Oxford and Florence. Map. £14.99 NOW £5 78613 DYING ON THE VINE by Aaron Elkins The celebrated Skeleton Detective is visiting friends at a vineyard in Tuscany when murder leaves a bitter aftertaste. A hiker in the Apennines stumbles upon the skeletal remains of a couple. The carabinieri investigate and release their findings - they are dealing with a murder-suicide. The evidence makes it clear that Pietro Cubbiddu, the owner of the local wine empire, shot and killed his wife and then himself the likely motive being his discovery that Nola had been having an affair. Skeleton Detective Gideon Oliver and his wife Julie find themselves in a morass of family antipathies, conflicts and mistrust to say nothing of the local carabinieri’s resentment. When yet another Cubbiddu relation meets an unlikely end, it becomes bone-chillingly clear that the killer is far from finished. Stylish mystery full of amazing information about the art and science of forensic anthropology. 294pp US first edition 2012. Remainder mark. $29.95 NOW £6 78640 HUNTING SHADOWS: An Inspector Ian Rutledge Mystery by Charles Todd Rutledge is summoned to the quiet, isolated Fen country to solve a series of seemingly unconnected murders before the killer strikes again. August 1912. A society wedding at Ely Cathedral in Cambridgeshire becomes a crime scene when a guest is shot just as the bride arrives. The local police are forced to call in Scotland Yard but not before there is another shooting in a village close by. One victim was an Army Officer, the other a solicitor standing for parliament. There paths have never crossed. What links these two murders? The case reminds Rutledge of a legendary assassin whispered about during the war and his own dark memories come back to haunt him. 330pp, US first edition. Remainder mark. £16.99 NOW £6 78651 KILLER’S ART by Mari Jungstedt ‘One of best writers of Scandinavian crime fiction.’ - Harlan Coben. Yes, here is Nordic noir at its best. On a cold Sunday morning, art gallery owner Egon Wallin is found murdered and hanged naked on the medieval city wall of Visby. When his death is connected to the theft of a famous painting, the reader is brought into the exclusive Swedish art world and an underworld of prostitution and drugs. In this hairraising story, Superintendant Anders Knutas is facing one of the toughest investigations in his career. 362pp in paperback. $14.95 NOW £4.50 ORDER HOTLINE: 020 74 74 24 74 78326 SKELETON ROAD by Val McDermid By the mistress of the psychological thriller, here is the number one bestseller, discounted for the first time. When a skeleton is discovered hidden at the top of a crumbling, gothic building in Edinburgh, Detective Chief Inspector Karen Pirie is faced with the unenviable task of identifying the bones. She is drawn deeper into a dark world. Meanwhile, someone is taking the law into their own hands in the name of justice and revenge, but when present resentment collides with secrets of the past, the truth is more shocking than anyone could have imagined. A spine-chilling thriller which wrong-foots the reader. 456pp in paperback. £7.99 NOW £4 76981 THE BAT by Jo Nesbo The first Harry Hole thriller by the musician, songwriter and economist and prize-winning author Jo Nesbo. Detective Harry Hole is meant to keep out of trouble. A young Norwegian girl on her gap year in Sydney has been murdered, and Harry has been sent to Australia to assist in any way he can. When the team unearth a string of unsolved murders and disappearances, nothing will stop Harry from finding out the truth. The hunt for the serial killer is on, but the murderer will only talk to Harry. But he might just be the next victim... 425pp, paperback. £6.99 NOW £3.50 78282 AGATHA RAISIN: Something Borrowed Someone Dead by M. C. Beaton Incomer Gloria French is at first welcomed into the Cotswold village of Piddlebury. She raises funds for the church and cares for the elderly, but has a bad habit of borrowing things and not giving them back, so when she is discovered dead, poisoned by a bottle of elderberry wine, folk in the village don’t mourn her passing too intently. Parish councillor Jerry Tarrant hires Agatha Raisin to track down the murderer, but the residents don’t seem to want to find who the murderer is. Her investigations are further hampered by the emotional upset of finding her ex, James Lacey, has fallen in love with the young detective Toni Gilmour. And now the murderer is targeting Agatha… 198pp. £14.99 NOW £5 78279 AGATHA RAISIN AND THE POTTED GARDENER by M. C. Beaton Agatha is taken aback when she finds a new woman ensconced in the affections of her attractive bachelor neighbour, James Lacey. The beautiful Mary Fortune is superior in every way, especially when it comes to gardening, and with Carsely Garden Open Day looming, Agatha feels this deficiency acutely. So when Mary is discovered murdered, buried upside down in a pot, Agatha seizes the moment and immediately starts yanking up village secrets by their roots and digging the dirt on the hapless victim. 218pp in paperback. £7.99 NOW £4 78280 AGATHA RAISIN AND THE VICIOUS VET by M. C. Beaton Best let sleeping vets lie... Retired PR supremo Agatha Raisin is enjoying life in her pretty Cotswold village and it even seems likely that the attractive new vet, Paul Bladen, has taken a shine to her. But before romance can blossom, Paul is killed in an accident with Lord Pendlebury’s horse. Only the circumstances are rather suspicious. Agatha decides that once she must play amateur sleuth. This cloud has a silver lining as she persuades her usually standoffish neighbour James Lacey to become her partner in the quest. 234pp in paperback. £7.99 NOW £4 78281 AGATHA RAISIN AND THE WALKERS OF DEMBLEY by M. C. Beaton Trespassers will get their heads staved in. After six gruelling months spent in London, Agatha Raisin returns to her beloved Cotswold village of Carsely and to her attractive neighbour James. James is less than thrilled to see her, but Agatha is soon consoled by a sensational murder. The victim found in a field is hiker Jessica Tartinck, who spent her life enraging wealthy landowners by insisting on her walking club’s right to hike over their property. Now she is found in the cornfield, battered over the head Agatha lures the reluctant James into her investigation. 218pp in paperback. £7.99 NOW £4 78851 AGATHA RAISIN: Set of Four by M. C. Beaton uy all four and make further savings. £38.96 NOW £10 76585 MURDER IN THE AFTERNOON: A Kate Shackleton Mystery by Frances Brody Young Harriet and her brother Austin have always been scared of the quarry where their stone mason father works, so when they find him dead on the cold ground, they scarper quick smart and look for some help. When help arrives however, the quarry is deserted and there is no sign of the body. Did he simply get up and run away? It seems like a sinister disappearing act and an unusual situation requiring the expertise of Kate Shackleton. This is one case where surprising family ties make it her most dangerous and delicate yet. 387pp, paperback. £8.99 NOW £3 76576 KILLING GROUND: The Ultimate Collection by Gerald Seymour The US Drug Enforcement Agency is desperate to capture Mario Ruggerio, the would-be leader of the Sicilian Mafia and mastermind behind the international drugs trade. Charlotte Parsons, a young English schoolteacher, was the family’s nanny four years ago. When she is asked to take up her old job she is excited at the prospect of leaving behind a sleepy Devon village. But Charlie doesn’t realise that she is the live bait in an American trap. The book’s anti-Mafia judge is evocative of the real life judge Giovanni Falcone. 491pp, paperback. £8.99 NOW £2 76636 SCAREDY CAT by Mark Billingham It was a calculated vicious murder at Euston station. The victim had been followed home on the tube, then strangled in front of her child. At the same time a second body is discovered at the back of Kings Cross station. It eerily echoes the murders of two other women, both stabbed to death months before on the same day. DI. Tom Thorne sees the link and comes to the horrifying conclusion that it is not one serial killer the police are up against, it is two. To stop them both, Thorne must catch a man whose need to manipulate is as great as his need to kill. 369 page paperback. IAN RANKIN THRILLERS 79015 THE FLOOD by Ian Rankin The Flood was Ian Rankin’s first published novel, not a crime novel although it contains secrets and revelations and nor is it a thriller. Mary Miller has always been an outcast. As a child, she fell into the hot burn, a torrent of warm chemical run-off from the local coal mine, and her hair turned white. Initially she was treated with sympathy, but all that changed a few days later when the young man who pushed her in, died in an accident. Now many years later, Mary is a single mother caught up in a faltering affair. Her son Sandy has fallen in love with a strange homeless girl, and both mother and son are forced to come to terms with a dark secret from Mary’s past. One dark paperback. 252pp. ONLY £2.50 78277 ACT OF VIOLENCE by Margaret Yorke Peaceful Mickleburgh is the ideal English market town, or so it seems. In fact, it is a perfectly constructed façade, having hidden the secrets of its inhabitants for generations. But the casual murder of a man trying to prevent an act of vandalism shatters its genteel appearance. Parents are forced to consider whether their children could be involved, friends avoid each other’s eyes, and partners word their conversations carefully. Someone in the town is close to the murderer, someone with a past that threatens to resurface, damaging the whole community. 282pp, paperback. £9.99 NOW £4 78175 PIETR THE LATVIAN: The First Maigret Novel by Georges Simenon The iconic detective is taken from grimy bars to luxury hotels as he traces the true identity of Pietr the Latvian. ‘His clothes were well cut and made of fairly light worsted. He shaved every day and looked after his hands. But his frame was proletarian. He was a big, bony man. Iron muscles shaped his jacket and sleeves and quickly wore through new trousers.’ 162 page paperback, remainder mark. £6.99 NOW £4.50 78160 CARTER OF LA PROVIDENCE: Inspector Maigret by Georges Simenon A companion to code 78175 Pietr the Latvian written by the most addictive of writers. A well dressed woman has been found strangled in a stable near a canal. Why did her glamorous, hedonistic life come to such a brutal end here? Surely her aristocratic, taciturn husband knows, or maybe the answers lie with the crew of the barge La Providence? Penguin paperback, 150pp. £6.99 NOW £4.50 78130 TWO FOR SORROW by Nicola Upson Mystery writer Josephine Tey has decided to write a novel based on Amelia Sach and Annie Walters, the notorious ‘Finchley baby farmers’, unaware that her research will entangle her in a desperate hunt for a modern day killer. A young seamstress, an ex-convict determined to reform, has been found brutally murdered in the studio of Tey’s friends, the Motley sisters, amid preparations for a star-studded charity gala. Inspector Archie Penrose is not convinced this murder is the result of a long standing domestic feud, and a horrific accident involving a second young woman supports his convictions. 485pp, paperback, remainder mark. $14.99 NOW £4 78110 PORTOBELLO by Ruth Rendell An intricate tale that weaves together the troubled lives of several people in London’s Notting Hill. Walking to the shops one day, 50 year old Eugene Wren discovers an envelope on the street bulging with cash. A man plagued by shameful addiction, and his own good intentions, he hatches a plan to find the money’s rightful owner. He prints a notice and posts it around Portobello Road. This ill-conceived act creates a chain of events that links Wren to other Londoners, afflicted with their own obsessions and despairs. As each volatile character comes into his life, and that of his trusting fiancée, the consequences will change them all. 290 pages. $26 NOW £5.75 78101 MURDER SHORT AND SWEET edited by Paul Staudohar Spanning over 150 years of material the stories range from old favourites penned during the golden age of mystery fiction 1925-40 such as The Adventure of the Speckled Band by Arthur Conan Doyle featuring Sherlock Holmes who turns his all-seeing eye on a baffling death in a lady’s locked bedchamber. Thomas Burke’s The Hands of Mr Ottermole tests the limits of every urban dweller’s psyche when a motiveless murderer wreaks havoc in fog-enshrouded London. In Lamb to the Slaughter, Roald Dahl does not mince words, but his main character must as she struggles to conceal an absurd murder weapon - a frozen leg of lamb. Also includes Agatha Christie, John Updike, Dorothy L. Sayers, Ruth Rendell and Ellery Queen among others. 501pp. £7.99 NOW £3.50 78994 BEGGARS BANQUET by Ian Rankin Rankin started off life as a short story writer and here are 22 mini masterpieces with titles such as Someone Got To Eddie, The Only True Comedian, Video, Nasty, The Hanged Man and Death Is Not The End. From Suburban murders to the sinister workings of a serial killer’s mind, from a bent cop with a terminal approach to his work to a hit man who gets more than he bargained for in a crowded fairground, here is a super collection from the modern-day master of crime. The streets of Edinburgh’s Old Town has seen more than their fair share of blood. 376pp in paperback. £7.99 NOW £3.50 79005 THE COMPLAINTS by Ian Rankin The Complaints are the cops who investigate other cops. Malcolm Fox works in the Complaints and Conduct Department, so he is not a popular man. He has just had a result, and should be feeling good about himself, but he has got problems of his own. Now he is given a new task. There is a cop called Jamie Breck and he’s ‘dirty’. The problem is no one can prove it. Fox takes on the job and learns that there is more to the Breck case than anyone thinks. This knowledge will prove dangerous, especially when a vicious murder intervenes far too close to home for Fox’s liking. This impressive novel exposes the underbelly of a city scarred by violence. 381pp in paperback. £8.99 NOW £3.50 79014 EXIT MUSIC: His Last Case May Be A Killer by Ian Rankin It’s late autumn in Edinburgh and late autumn in the career of DI Rebus. As he tries to tie up some loose ends before retirement, a murder case intrudes. A dissident Russian poet has been found dead in what looks like a mugging gone wrong. By apparent coincidence, a high-level delegation of Russian businessmen are in town, and everyone is determined that the case should be closed quickly and clinically. Meanwhile a brutal and premeditated assault on a local gangster sees Rebus in the frame. Has the inspector taken one step too far in tying up those loose ends? Only a few days shy of the end to his long, inglorious career, will Rebus even make it that far? Classic Rankin. 380pp in paperback. £8.99 NOW £3.50 79064 IAN RANKIN: Set of Four by Ian Rankin Buy all four paperbacks and save even more. £33.96 NOW £11 77920 DEATH OF A SCHOLAR by Susanna Gregory ‘It was my friend, Bram Stoker, who told me of the legend of the Wanderer, a man who made a bargain with the Devil himself. Once I would have dismissed such tales as mere fancy but I knew what I had seen, and there is no mind so open as that of a desperate man.’ This dark, gothic Victorian thriller unfolds in a twilight world of music halls, boxing booths and travelling theatrical shows, and pits a formidable Pinkerton detective against a man who fears more than justice. 457pp in paperback. In the summer of 1358 the physician Matthew Bartholomew returns to Cambridge to learn that his beloved sister is in mourning after the unexpected death of her husband, Oswald Stanmore. Aware that his son has no interest in the cloth trade that made his fortune and reputation, Oswald has left the business to his widow, but a spate of burglaries in the town distracts Matthew from supporting Edith in her grief, and attempting to keep the peace between her and her wayward son. Meanwhile a new foundation, Winwick Hall, is causing consternation amongst Matthew’s colleagues in Michaelhouse. A perfect storm between the older establishments and the brash newcomers is brewing when the murder of a Guildsman is soon followed by the death of one of Winwick’s senior Fellows. Set in Restoration times. 454pp. Map of Cambridge in the 1350s. 2014 hardback. Amelia Peabody is only too happy to drop everything in England and travel out to help a Lady Baskerville whose husband Henry has died suddenly under bizarre circumstances at the site of a tomb in Luxor. The newspapers are proclaiming ‘The curse of the Pharaohs has struck!’ Amelia and her husband Emerson find the camp in Luxor in disarray and the workers terrified by the appearance of an apparition which Amelia promptly christens ‘The lady in white’. Armed with nothing more than her trusty parasol, Amelia sets about bringing order from chaos and her self much closer to danger. 312pp, paperback. An Enzo Macleod investigation set in Gaillac, South-West France. Gil Petty, America’s most celebrated wine critic, is found strung up in a vineyard, dressed in the ceremonial robes of the Order of the Divine Bottle and pickled in wine. For forensic expert Enzo Macleod the key to this unsolved murder lies in decoding Petty’s mysterious reviews which could make or break a vineyard’s reputation. Lurking beneath the tranquil façade of French viticulture lurks a back-stabbing community riddled with rivalry, and someone who is ready to stop him even if they have to kill again. 388pp in paperback. $19.95 NOW £4.75 78085 KINGDOM OF BONES by Stephen Gallagher £6.99 NOW £3.75 77919 CURSE OF THE PHARAOHS by Elizabeth Peters £7.99 NOW £3.75 £19.99 NOW £5 77917 THE CRITIC by Peter May £7.99 NOW £4 www s. c o m w.. b i b l i o p h i l e b o o k ks 77072 OUR KIND OF TRAITOR by John Le Carré In the wake of the collapse of Lehman Brothers and with Britain on the brink of economic ruin, a young English couple takes a tennis vacation in Antigua. There they meet Dima, a Russian who styles himself the world’s number one money launderer. Dima wants among other things a game of tennis. Back in London, the couple is subjected to an all-night interrogation by the British Secret Service which also needs their help. Their acquiescence will lead them to a precarious journey through Paris to a safe house in Switzerland, helpless pawns in a game of nations that reveals the unholy alliances between the Russian mafia, the City of London, the government and the competing factions of the British Secret Service. 307pp. ONLY £5 78058 ENGLISH MONSTER OR THE MELANCHOLY TRANSACTIONS of William Ablass by Lloyd Shepherd A riveting police procedural and a thrilling tale of life at sea. Plymouth 1564. Young Billy Ablass arrives in the busy seaport with the burning desire of all men - to get and keep money. Setting sail on a ship owned by Queen Elizabeth herself seems the likely means to a better life, but the kidnapping of hundreds of human souls in Africa is not the only cursed event to occur on England’s first official slaving voyage. On a sun-blasted Florida islet, Billy too is to be enslaved. London 1811. Along the twisting streets of Wapping, bounded by the ancient Ratcliffe Highway and the modern wonder of the London Dock, two families have fallen victim to foul murder. Charles Horton, a senior officer of the newly formed Thames River Police Office must deliver revenge to a terrified populace. 424pp in paperback. £7.99 NOW £3 78021 SEDUCTION OF THE INNOCENT by Max Allan Collins Comic books are corrupting America’s youth. Or so the esteemed Dr Werner Frederick would have people believe, people like the Congressmen holding hearings on banning violent crime and horror ‘funny books’. And when the crusade provokes a most un-funny murder, Jack Starr, comics syndicate trouble shooter, has no shortage of suspects. Was it the knife-wielding delinquent or the naked seductress? A frustrated publisher or an outraged cartoonist? Or was it a comic book reader? With hard-boiled cartoons, 269pp in paperback. £7.99 NOW £2.50 77976 JEWELS OF PARADISE by Donna Leon A captivating tale of music, history and greed from a master of literary crime fiction. Caterina Pellegrini is a young Venetian musicologist hired to find the truthful heir to an alleged treasure concealed by a once-famous but now almost forgotten baroque composer. Sworn to secrecy she can solve the mystery only by searching through the papers contained in the composer’s two chests that have not been opened for centuries. From professional to personal she is drawn into one of the most scandalous affairs of the baroque era. 276pp. £17.99 NOW £5 77922 EXTRAORDINARY PEOPLE by Peter May Forensic expert Enzo Macleod takes a wager to solve the seven most notorious French murders using modern technology, and a total disregard for the justice system. As midnight strikes, a man desperately seeking sanctuary flees into a church. The next day his sudden disappearance will make him famous throughout France. Deep in the catacombs below the city, Macleod unearths dark clues deliberately set, as he draws closer to the killer and discovers that he is to be the next victim. 347pp in paperback. £7.99 NOW £2.75 78039 AN IMMORAL CODE: A Caper Court Novel by Caro Fraser Now a QC at the eminent chambers of 5 Caper Court, Leo Davies has a big case on his hands. With Anthony Cross at his side, Leo finds himself representing a group of investors desperate to claim back the fortunes they unwittingly lost. At home, the delicate façade of his marriage to Rachel is swiftly crumbling and meanwhile Anthony’s burgeoning relationship with a colleague leaves Leo jealous at heart. But even these distractions won’t stop Leo from making a play for one of his clients, the handsome TV celebrity Charles Beecham. But while Leo eyes Beecham, Beecham’s own interests may lie elsewhere. 414pp in paperback. £7.99 NOW £3.50 78084 JUDICIAL WHISPERS: A Caper Court Novel by Caro Fraser For Leo Davies, the charming brilliant barrister at one of London’s most prestigious chambers, life is good. It is only when he applies to take silk and become a QC that whispers begin of his scandalous sexual past. Leo, a man who has always meticulously divided his personal and professional lives, is unnerved to discover just how much his colleagues seem to know. Could attaching himself to a suitable woman be the solution? When fellow barrister Anthony Cross falls in love with beautiful solicitor Rachel Dean, Leo realises he may have to callously hurt them both to save his own career. 446pp in paperback. £7.99 NOW £3.50 78115 THE PUPIL: A Caper Court Novel by Caro Fraser Of the two pupil barristers at the prestigious chambers of 5 Caper Court, only one can win the coveted role of junior tenant. In his quest for admission to the élite world of London’s Commercial Bar, Anthony discovers that behind the elegant doors of chambers lie hard choices, deceitful politics and dangerous corruption. We meet his ageing hippy father, a fickle girlfriend and discover his confusing relationship with charismatic barrister Leo Davies. A lovely twisty turny plot, 349pp in paperback. £7.99 NOW £3.25 Crime Fiction 5 77686 LAMENTATION by C. J. Sansom THE RAILWAY DETECTIVE Inspector Colbeck 78559 A TICKET TO OBLIVION by Edward Marston Summer 1859 and young Imogen Burnhope and her maid Rhoda board a non-stop train to Oxford to visit her Aunt Cassandra waiting at the terminus. All the passengers alight at Oxford, but the two women are nowhere to be seen. When he learns his daughter is missing, Sir Marcus Burnhope contacts Scotland Yard for help and Inspector Colbeck is assigned to the case. Is it a simple case of runaways or a larger more sinister conspiracy at work? 348pp in paperback. £7.99 NOW £3.50 78562 BLOOD ON THE LINE by Edward Marston 1857 and on the LNWR train to London, a criminal is being escorted to his appointment with the hangman. But the wily Jeremy Oxley, conman, thief and murderer, has one last ace up his sleeve - a beautiful and ruthless accomplice willing to do anything to save her lover, including cold-blooded murder. When the Railway Detective Inspector Robert Colbeck learns that Oxley, his arch nemesis has escaped, black memories of their shared past leave him no choice but to do his duty whatever the cost. With the faithful Victor Leeming at his side, could Colbeck have finally met his match? 349pp in paperback. £7.99 NOW £3.50 78566 INSPECTOR COLBECK’S CASEBOOK by Edward Marston Thirteen tales from the railway detective in this special collection from the publisher Allison & Busby. A young porter is found dead in a coal tub. Colbeck devises a trap to catch a thief and a burnt train carriage holds a gruesome secret in a small country village. As Colbeck and his trusty aide Victor Leeming begin to piece together clues and motives about each crime, it becomes clear they must stay one step ahead of the culprits to solve the cases. With a new suspect at every turn, can the duo unearth the real villains? Includes The End of the Line, The Barber of Ravenglass and Wetting the Coal as we steam back to the dirty, Victorian age when railways were transforming lives. Packed with jealousy, vengeance and duplicity. 286pp in paperback. £7.99 NOW £3.50 78576 THE STATIONMASTER’S FAREWELL by Edward Marston Told with great colour and wonderful sense of period. Inspector Robert Colbeck and his assistant Victor Leeming are despatched to Exeter to close in a killer, but find themselves in mortal danger. It is 1857 and Joel Heygate is the popular stationmaster at Exeter St David’s railway station. So when the charred remains of a body are discovered on Bonfire Night, everyone is horrified to discover that they belong to Mr Heygate. Can justice prevail or will Colbeck’s beloved Madeline be robbed of a husband on the very eve of their marriage? 382pp in paperback. £7.99 NOW £3.50 78939 RAILWAY DETECTIVE: Set of Four by Edward Marston Buy all four paperbacks and save even more. £31.96 NOW £12 77348 WANT YOU DEAD by Peter James When Red Westwood meets handsome, charming and rich Bryce Laurent through an online dating agency there is an instant attraction. But as their love blossoms, the truth about his past and his dark side begins to emerge. Everything he has told Red about himself turns out to be a tissue of lies. Within a year and under police protection, she evicts him from her flat and her life. Bryce is obsessed with her, and he intends to destroy everything and anyone she has ever known or loved and then her too. 405pp, page marker. £20 NOW £5 77721 DARK HEART OF FLORENCE by Michele Giuttari After enduring years at the mercy of an infamous serial killer, the people of the city of Florence are relived at news of his death, until a senator and his butler are found brutally murdered. Chief Superintendent Michele Ferrara suspects that the case isn’t closed and as he becomes trapped in a spiral of vendettas and corruption, a powerful adversary is conspiring against him from the shadows. He is confronted with dead ends and unreliable theories and finds himself faced with something rotten at the heart of the city. 371pp. £14.99 NOW £5 77478 GORKY PARK by Martin Cruz Smith ! A fine reprint of the 1981 blockbuster thriller. They lay peacefully, even artfully, under their thawing crust of ice, the centre one on its back, arms folded as if for a religious funeral, the other two turned, arms out under the ice like flanking emblems on embossed writing paper. They were wearing ice skates. It did indeed become a triple murder investigation for Chief Inspector Arkady Renko. Three corpses have been found in Moscow, but why the horrific mutilations? And why had they been buried in the snows of Gorky Park? 559pp, paperback. £7.99 NOW £3.75 From the popular Shardlake series, here the glamorous hardback with colour maps on the endpapers of old London 1546. As King Henry VIII is slowly and painfully dying, his Protestant and Catholic councillors engage in a final and decisive power struggle. Whoever wins will control the government of Henry’s successor, eight year old Prince Edward. As heretics are hunted across London, the radical Protestant Anne Askew is burned at the stake, the Catholic party focus their attack on Henry’s sixth wife, Matthew Shardlake’s old mentor, Queen Catherine Parr. She has written a confessional book ‘Lamentation of a Sinner’ so radically Protestant that if it came to the King’s attention it would bring down both her and her sympathisers. Inexplicably the book has vanished and only one page has been found, clutched in the hand of a murdered London printer. 642pp with page marker. £20 NOW £6 77508 TREACHEROUS PARADISE by Henning Mankell Hanna Lundmark escapes the brutal poverty of rural Sweden for a job as a cook on board a steamship headed for Australia. To her surprise she finds love in the form of a ship’s mate whom she marries, but disaster strikes when her husband contracts a fatal illness. Jumping ship at the African port of Lourenço Marques, Hanna decides to begin her life afresh. Hanna becomes embroiled in a sequence of events that lead her to inheriting the most successful brothel in town. She is determined to befriend the prostitutes working for her, and change life in the town for the better. But the distrust between blacks and whites and the shadow of colonialism lead to tragedy and murder. 390pp. £17.99 NOW £5 77014 COMFORTS OF A MUDDY SATURDAY: An Isabel Dalhousie Novel by Alexander McCall Smith Isabel is asked to help a doctor who has been disgraced by allegations of scientific fraud concerning a newly marketed drug. Our ever-curious moral philosopher finds her interest piqued. Would a doctor with a stellar reputation make such a simple but grave mistake? If not, what explains the tragic accident that resulted in the death of a patient? Could he be the victim of someone else’s mistake? Or perhaps he has been wilfully deceived by a pharmaceutical company with a great deal to gain. Isabel has an ongoing struggle with her housekeeper over the care of her small son Charlie but her combination of spirit and unabashed nosiness guarantees a delightful adventure. 240pp. $23.95 NOW £6.50 76990 BAKER STREET TRANSLATION by Michael Robertson When brothers Reggie and Nigel Heath decide to lease law offices at 221B Baker Street, they discover that their new location comes with an unusual stipulation the responsibility of answering mail that arrives for the previous resident, one Sherlock Holmes. An elderly American heiress wants to leave her entire fortune to Sherlock Holmes. A translator wants Sherlock Holmes to explain a nursery rhyme. Media mogul Robert Buxton, Reggie’s rival for the love of actress Lauran Rankin, has gone missing. It’s up to Reggie to unravel this tangled mess before an important upcoming royal event or something very bad will happen to the guests at the event, and to Laura. 278pp. £16.50 NOW £4 78286 AUTUMN KILLING by Mons Kallentoft From the Swedish crime writing Malin Fors series. It is Autumn in Linköping and the heavens have opened, but not even these biblical rains can wash away the blood of crimes past and present. Then the brutally stabbed body of self-made Internet billionaire Jerry Petersson is discovered floating face down in the moat surrounding his home, the imposing Skogsa Castle. Malin Fors, the brilliant but flawed star of the police force is already struggling to keep her life together following the recent murder attempt on her teenage daughter. The case forces Malin to delve deeper into her own family’s past and the secrets she uncovers threaten to drown her too. 503pp, paperback. £7.99 NOW £4 77921 DOLLMAKER by Richard Montanari Mr Marseille is polite, elegant and erudite and he would do anything for his true love, Anabelle. And he is a psychopath. In a quiet Philadelphia suburb, a woman cycles past a train depot with her young daughter and finds a murdered girl posed on a newly painted bench, strangled. Beside her is a formal invitation to a tea dance in a week’s time. Seven days later, two more young victims are discovered in a disused house, posed on painted swings. At the scene is an identical invitation though this time there is something extra waiting for detectives Kevin Byrne and Jessica Balzano. A delicate porcelain doll. 485 pages in 2014 hardback. £12.99 NOW £4.50 78315 OSTLAND by David Thomas Berlin, February 1941, and a murderer is on a killing spree. Georg Heuser is the idealistic, brilliant young detective set to crack the case. July 1959, West Germany and lawyers Max Kraus and Paula Siebert are investigating war crimes of unimaginable magnitude committed near the Russian Front, the empire of Nazis called Ostland. The man accused is called Georg Heuser. Paula and Max have only one question left ‘What has happened to make this good man become a monster?’ A mix of thriller, courtroom drama, fact and fiction. 434pp, paperback. £7.99 NOW £4 78289 BLEED FOR ME by Michael Robotham Ray Hegarty, a highly respected former detective, lies dead in his daughter Sienna’s bedroom. She is found covered in his blood. Everything points to her guilt, but psychologist Joe O’Loughlin isn’t convinced. 14 year old Sienna is Joe’s daughter’s best friend and Joe has watched her grow up and seen the troubled look in her eyes. Against the advice of the police he launches his own investigation, embarking upon a hunt that will lead him to a predatory schoolteacher, a conspiracy of silence and a race-hate trial that is captivating the nation. 470pp, paperback. £7.99 NOW £4 77105 TOOTH TATTOO: A Peter Diamond Investigation by Peter Lovesey Peter Diamond, head of the Criminal Investigation Division in Bath, is investigating the murder of a young woman whose body has been found in the canal. The only clue to her identity is a tattoo of a musical note on one of her teeth. Strange things are happening meanwhile to concert violinist Mel Farran who finds himself scouted by a very élite classical quartet, one whose previous violinist disappeared without trace. Despite the mystery shrouding the group, the chance to join is too good to pass up, and Mel finds himself in a cushy residency at Bath Spa University with the quartet, and embroiled in the unusually musical murder investigation. 348pp. $25.95 NOW £6 78319 PRESENT DANGER by Stella Rimington When MI5 officer Liz Carlyle arrives in Belfast, danger immediately follows and she quickly learns that the peace process in the province is precarious. Liz suspects The Fraternity to be a front for renegade IRA men. It looks as though a plot is being hatched against the security forces and Liz and her colleague Dave Armstrong believe that a former French Intelligence officer is involved. During their investigations Dave goes missing and Liz fears the worst, especially when she discovers that the obvious suspects have all disappeared. 326pp, paperback. £7.99 NOW £4 78318 PLOTTED IN CORNWALL by Janie Bolitho Rose Trevelyan has been commissioned to paint the portraits of two sisters who live on Cornwall’s Bodmin Moor. Rose’s curiosity is aroused when she hears from one of her art students that the sisters have something to hide, and when she also learns that two of the student’s relatives have disappeared, Rose starts to wonder how they are connected. Is she about to uncover secrets that everyone would rather she left alone? 255pp in paperback. £7.99 NOW £4 78288 BETRAYED IN CORNWALL by Janie Bolitho The stunning Cornish landscape is the backdrop for a series of mysteries featuring Rose Trevelyan. Painter and photographer Rose is not too concerned when her friend Etta does not turn up to the opening of her exhibition, but when she hears the following day that a young man fell of a cliff in suspicious circumstances, events take a darker turn. Police believe drugs were involved in the deaths but Rose knows better. As she starts to make connections with the help of DI Jack Pearce, things begin to go terribly wrong. 250pp in paperback. £7.99 NOW £4 HISTORY Man is a history-making creature who can neither repeat his past nor leave it behind. - W. H. Auden, The Dyer’s Hand 78633 HISTORY OF KING RICHARD III by Sir Thomas More Our good friend and Bibliophile customer and pen pal Sister Wendy Beckett has written the foreword to this ‘remarkably vivid account, almost a novel in its immediacy and intimacy. More enters into every convolution of the plot, every emotion of the players.’ History (Unfinished) was written by Master Thomas More, then one of the under sheriffs of London, in 1513. Edward IV has recently died, leaving his offspring and potential future monarch 12 year old Edward, Prince of Wales, and Richard, Duke of York, aged nine. However, disturbing the natural succession is their Uncle Richard, Duke of Gloucester, who will stop at nothing to become King. Richard conspires to have the Princes abducted and imprisoned in the Tower of London. He usurps their birthright, alleging that Edward is a bastard and not a legitimate heir to the throne. Richard persuades London to accept him as King and according to More’s account, has the Princes smothered to death to secure his position as monarch. Much of what modern scholarship knows of Richard III stems from this biography. Freshly edited and presented alongside a glossary of archaic terms. 102pp in paperback. £6.99 NOW £5 78607 DAWN OF GENIUS by Alan Butler Sub-titled ‘The Minoan SuperCivilisation and the Truth About Atlantis’ Butler discovers the real origins of Western society. The modern world looks back to Ancient Greece for the birth of philosophy, for the origins of science and even the foundations of democracy. But long before Greece flirted with geometry, astronomy and inclusive politics, there was a far more innovative and pioneering culture, the Minoans. From the enigma of the Phaistos Disc to accounts of the destruction of Atlantis, a worldwide catastrophe that took place around 1600BC, the book celebrates the culture that was shattered in an instant, a disaster that drove the world into a dark age from which it has taken over 3,000 years to emerge. 234pp in paperback. £10.99 NOW £5.50 6 ORDER HOTLINE: 020 74 74 24 74 History cont. 78626 GHOSTS OF EMPIRE by Kwasi Kwarteng Sub-titled ‘Britain’s Legacies in the Modern World’ this brilliant book helps us understand the political situation in the world today and there is something new to learn on every page. The ghosts of the British Empire continue to haunt today’s international scenes and many of the problems faced by the Empire still have not been resolved. In Iraq, Kashmir, Burma, Sudan, Nigeria and Hong Kong, new difficulties resulting from British Imperialism have arisen and continue to baffle politicians and diplomats. This powerful book addresses the realities of the British Empire from its inception to its demise, skewering fantasies of its glory and cataloguing both the inadequacies of its ideals and the short-termism of its actions. The book comes alive with wild and wonderful characters and is crisply written - Kitchener the Imperial Hero, The World of Sir Hari Singh, Saddam Hussein and Beyond, Hierarchies and Democracy Postponed are Among The Chapters. 465pp in paperback, colour and other photos and map. £9.99 NOW £5 78634 HISTORY OF THE REIGN OF KING HENRY VII by Francis Bacon ‘Bacon poured into this book the distillation of a lifetime’s reading and an insider’s experience of how high politics actually works.’ In 1485, Henry Tudor defeated King Richard III at the Battle of Bosworth Field, and at one stroke became King Henry VII of England, ended the long-running War of the Roses and founded the Tudor dynasty. Although his military victory was a conclusive one and he went on to marry a Yorkist wife, thus uniting the warring houses of York and Lancaster, Henry’s claim to the throne by descent was in fact rather tenuous. Consequently his rule was troubled by rebellions and conspiracies, including various desperate attempts by the royal imposters Lambert Simnel and Perkin Warbeck. Henry’s diplomatic relations, the ruthless taxations that made him rich but alienated his subjects, and his efforts to secure peace are all chronicled in this compelling portrait of ‘a dark prince’. Bacon’s unique work is the first biography of its kind, a classic of modern literature. 180pp in paperback with a new foreword by Brian Thompson, the book was first published in 1622. £8.99 NOW £4.50 78698 VENETIANS: A New History From Marco Polo to Casanova by Paul Strathern The city-state or Republic of Venice was the first great economic, cultural and naval power of the modern Western world. Like the British Empire that came after its final fall to Napoleon in 1797, the Venetians were a seafaring island race whose empire was out of all proportion to the size of their homeland and whose influence extended to the limits of the known world. Unlike the British, and more like post-independence America, its empire was more concerned with domination of trade rather than territorial possessions. Venice, presided over since the earliest times by the Doge and the Council of Ten, was also notoriously inward-looking and isolationist when it wanted to be, prized stability over risk-taking and was extremely suspicious of any “cult of personality”. Paul Strathern has taken a different approach toward Venice’s fascinatingly complex history by shining a light upon the most celebrated personalities of the Republic, emblemic people who by their very success and fame found themselves frequently at odds with the authorities. It may be expected that a libertine such as Casanova would ruffle a few feathers, but even Marco Polo and his family, who in effect established the great Venetian trading empire in the late 13th century, struggled with the snobbery and high-handedness of the ruling families. As well as these, he also examines such luminaries as Petrarch, Galileo, Titian, Vivaldi, Tiepolo, Canaletto and many others alongside the influential members of the ruling elite with whom they so often clashed. Packed with excellent, maps and eight pages of colour plates. 354pp. ONLY £8 78978 NAPOLEON’S BRITONS and the ST HELENA DECISION by Paul Brunyee The people of Brixham, Devon, were pleased to see two of His Majesty’s ships sail into their harbour, but were perplexed when their boats carrying bread and other supplies were not allowed to approach. Then two boys in a baker’s boat saw a man surreptitiously drop a bottle over the side. They managed to retrieve it and a note inside read ‘We have got Bonaparte on board.’ Within five minutes of reaching the shore ‘there was not a soul in Brixham, except babies, ignorant of the news’. As the information spread, boats thronged the ships and people clustered on the quay. Obligingly, Napoleon appeared several times. The Emperor had been forced to surrender and abdicate, and assumed that he would be able to live in Britain. In the event, however, he was exiled to St. Helena, where he spent his last years in captivity. This fascinating account is of Napoleon’s later years as seen through the eyes of the Britons who knew him and seemed to grow quite fond of him. Paperback. 224pp, colour illus. £16.99 NOW £5 78929 MAN MOST DRIVEN: Captain John Smith, Pocahontas And the Founding of America by Peter Firstbrook Everyone knows the story of Pocahontas and how in 1607 she saved John Smith. Were it not for his leadership, the Jamestown colony would surely have failed. He fought and beheaded three Turkish adversaries in duels. He was sold into slavery, then murdered his master to escape. He sailed under a pirate flag, was shipwrecked and marched to the gallows to be hanged, only to be reprieved at the eleventh hour. And all this happened before Captain John Smith was 30 years old. Far more than an ambitious explorer and soldier of fortune than these tales suggest, and far more ambitious self-promoter, this major new biography traces his exploits across three continents, testing his own writings against the historical and geographical reality on the ground. 419pp, illus and maps. £20 NOW £7 78317 PERSIAN FIRE by Tom Holland An award-winning history book about the first world empire and the battle for the West. In the 5th century BC, a global superpower was determined to bring truth and order to what it regarded as two terrorist states. The superpower was Persia, incomparably rich in ambition, gold and men. The terrorist states were Athens and Sparta, eccentric cities in a poor and mountainous backwater, Greece. The story of how their citizens took on the most powerful man on the planet is as heartstopping as any episode in history. Chapter headings include Greece and the Aegean, Mesopotamia and Iran, The Peloponnese, Attica, Marathon, Thermopylae, and The Battle of Salamis. 418pp, colour photos and maps. £12.99 NOW £6 78323 SECRETS OF THE KNIGHTS TEMPLAR by S. J. Hodge Highly trained and adhering to strict chivalric code, the Knights Templar is one of the most mysterious and powerful religious orders in history. Their success on the battlefield brought them both extraordinary wealth and political influence and also ensured they would be entrusted to guard Christendom’s greatest secrets. From the true location of the Holy Grail to the Templars’ involvement in the Battle of Bannockburn, and from the sudden downfall of the Order to the claims of those who believe they descended from its Grand Masters, Hodge lloks at their rituals and codes. 292pp in paperback, colour illus. £9.99 NOW £5 78411 LOST VICTORIAN BRITAIN by Gavin Stamp This book features 200 notable buildings that were destroyed to make way for modernisation. Alfred Waterhouse’s Eaton Hall in Cheshire, was destroyed in the sixties apart from the chapel and stable block. Many gems which have disappeared are more modest in scale, for instance the Tiber Street County Primary School in Liverpool, demolished within the past 20 years, and Norman Shaw’s New Zealand Chambers in London’s Leadenhall Street, destroyed by bomb damage in World War II. While London’s 21st century skyline is undoubtedly impressive, some magnificent buildings were demolished to make way for the modern City, among them the Coal Exchange with its superb cast-iron rotunda, the Sun Fire Office with its Italianate façade, and, after a huge fight, the buildings that were swept away to create the new Mansion House Square. Columbia Market in Bethnal Green was surely one of the capital’s finest Gothic buildings. Glasgow, Leeds and Bradford are among the northern cities whose architectural heritage has been diminished by indiscriminate development. 192pp, softback, photos. £12.99 NOW £6.50 78442 IVAN THE TERRIBLE: A Military History by Alexander Filjushkin The first specialist study of the tsar’s military strategy to be published in English, the book examines all of Russia’s military campaigns in Eastern Europe and Western Siberia during the period of 1533 to 1585. It describes in full the organisation and equipment of Ivan the Terrible’s army and the forces of his enemies - the Poles, Lithuanians, Tatars and Livonian Knights. He was responsible for establishing serfdom and devastating much of Russia. He was also the first Russian ruler to invade Europe and his campaigns against the Livonian Confederation were initially very successful. In 1558, Russian soldiers occupied Dorpat and Narva, and laid siege to Reval, creating vital trade routes over the Baltic Sea. At the Battle of Ergema, the Russians defeated the Knights of the Livonian Order, fuelling Ivan’s dreams of a Russian Empire. However as Eric XIV of Sweden recaptured Reval, the Poles joined forces. In 1571, an army of 120,000 Crimean Tatars crushed the Russian defences and burned Moscow to the ground. Increasingly paranoid, Ivan carried out a number of terrible massacres. 40,000 were killed at Novgorod in 1570, many tortured and murdered in front of Ivan and his son. 306pp, illus and maps, colour plates. £25 NOW £9 25247 HISTORIES by Herodotus, introduced by Tom Griffiths Herodotus (c480 - c425 B.C.) is the Father of History and his Histories are the first piece of western historical writing. They are also the most entertaining. Why did Pheidippides run the 26 mile and 385 yards from Marathon to Athens? And what did he do when he got there? Was the Battle of Salamis fought between sausage sellers? Which is the oldest language in the world? And what is the best way to kill a crocodile? Answers as well as many fascinating insights into the Ancient World. 734pp in paperback. ONLY £4 78293 ENGLAND ARISE by Juliet Barker What caused a group of men and women from all parts of England to unite in armed rebellion against both the Church and the State, demanding a radical political agenda? This intriguing, enlightening account of the background to the Peasant’s Revolt, as well as the revolt itself, provides a fascinating insight into the everyday life of 14th century Britain. Eventually, in 1381, people’s mutterings turned into a major uprising as the commoners fought back, demanding justice and lower taxation. In Essex a riot occurred when a royal official tried to collect unpaid poll taxes, and the confrontation spread to Kent where Wat Tyler led rebels to London to meet the young King Richard II. In the mayhem, Tyler was killed by the King’s party, and the revolt spread across much of the country. Eventually Richard mobilised troops to quell the uprising. It is possible that Wat Tyler and Jack Straw were the same person. The author remarks ‘What will surprise most readers is that the three most famous protagonists of the revolt [Tyler, Straw and Balle] scarcely appear at all in my account... there are remarkably few references to them in contemporary sources.’ Had the revolt succeeded, English society would have been transformed, anticipating the French Revolution by 400 years. 506pp, colour paintings and photos. £25 NOW £7 47915 JEWISH ANTIQUITIES by Flavius Josephus IN CK BA O C K T The works of the Jewish writer Flavius S Josephus represent one of the most important records of Judaism and the Jews that survives from the ancient world. It is an account in 20 books of Jewish history from the creation to the outbreak of the Jewish revolt against Rome in AD66. Here is all the drama of the Old Testament transformed into an historical narrative of Greco-Roman character. More importantly, it is our only continuous account of Middle Eastern affairs that led up to the revolt. We have the famous translation of Josephus’ works by Cambridge professor William Whiston. 902 page paperback. ONLY £4 75030 TITANIC: The Last Night of a Small Town by John Welshman This study takes eight survivors and looks at the experience in the context of their lives as a whole. Also included are Herbert Lightoller, the Second Officer whose story dominated the book and film A Night to Remember, the Assistant Wireless Operator Harold Bride, and Arthur Rostron, the captain of the Carpathia which came to the rescue of the Titanic. The featured passengers include nine-year old Frank Goldsmith, travelling in third class with his parents to start a new life in Detroit, a Finnish domestic servant emigrating with her new husband, Colonel Archibald Gracie, an amateur military historian travelling first class, and seven year old Eva Hart. 324pp, photos. £18.99 NOW £4 76933 CREATION OF THE AMERICAN SOUL: Roger Williams, Church and State, and the Birth of Liberty by John M. Barry Roger Williams was the first person to describe individual liberty in modern terms. His mentor, Edward Coke, the greatest jurist in English history, inculcated in Williams the concepts of individual rights, and limits to state power, and was sent to the Tower for his views. Williams developed an ‘altogether revolutionary’ and dangerous point of view. The first man in the world to insist that government should receive its power from and be controlled by its citizens, he proposed that there should be a hypothetical wall separating the church and the state. Threatened with execution, Williams was forced to flee Britain, and founded a new society in Providence, Rhode Island. 150 years later, his ideas were widely realised by Thomas Jefferson. 464 pages. £25 NOW £4 77006 CALAMITIES AND CATASTROPHES by Derek Wilson In ten entertaining chapters the historian identifies the very worst years of human history from the destruction of the Roman Empire in 541 to the immediate aftermath of the American Civil War in 1865, from the march on Leningrad in 1942 to the Vietnam War of 1968. He delves into the natural forces beyond human control that have wiped out whole peoples and above all shows how history has a horrible habit of repeating itself. His last chapter, 1994, looks at genocide or ethnic cleansing. He begins with plague, Mongols and religion. 281pp in paperback. $15 NOW £4 77649 CROWN, ORB AND SCEPTRE by David Hilliam Sub-titled ‘The True Stories of English Coronations’ the book is packed with facts about how the service, traditions and accessories have changed over the years, plus a full description of all the Crown Jewels. The book covers 1,000 years of English coronations from that of the Saxon King Edgar in Bath Abbey in the year 973 to the memorable occasion nearly ten centuries later with the televised coronation of Elizabeth II on 2nd June 1953. Read the strange-but-true stories of astrologers, gargantuan banquets, medieval merrymaking, how fate was unkind to Queen Anne, 300 years of robe making, plus beautiful colour plates depicting historical scenes. 264pp, paperback. 77034 HISTORY OF THE WORLD: Sixth Edition by J. M. Roberts and Odd Arne Westad Published by Oxford University Press, this monumental volume runs to 1260 pages and includes no less than 86 supporting maps. The scope begins before history with Homo Sapiens and the possibility of civilisation, Ancient Mesopotamia and Egypt, the Classical Age and the Hellenistic world, India, Imperial China, Mughal India, the Age of Revolution, the Anglo Saxon World, the Era of the First World War, the Making of New Asia, the Ottoman Heritage, and into the Cold War and beyond. It is a one-volume survey of the major events, changes and personalities and a tour of the vast landscape of human history. Roberts’ 1976 original has been updated in 2013. This sixth edition offers a fuller discussion of Central Eurasia and the late Byzantine Empire thanks to new knowledge of major migration patterns; a broader dialogue on early human life based on recent archaeological and anthropological finds; and a more complete presentation of social and cultural roles of women and young people. $45 NOW £12.50 77270 FROM KITCHEN TO GARRET: Hints for Young Householders New and Revised Edition by Mrs Panton First published in 1887, this proselytising volume describes in minute detail every nuance of taste and economy, and advises how to avoid the perils awaiting couples setting up their home, from choosing a house and over-seeing the interior decoration to managing the servants. Here is a suggestion for draping a door in the hall and there a window so adorned with frills that you can hardly see out of it, although couples were advised always to use washable cretonne for curtains because it was ‘healthy’. A bewitching revelation of life as it was lived 120 years ago. 287 pages, line drawings. £12.95 NOW £3.50 77368 EMPIRE OF THE DEEP by Ben Wilson Looks at the rise and fall of the British Navy which is nothing less than the story of Britain, our culture and our empire. For a few decades after the Battle of Trafalgar, Britain truly ruled the world’s waves. For much of her history, Britain was a third-rate maritime power, assailed by myriad seaborne threats from the lawless waters surrounding her. Wilson provides lucid expositions of shifting laws, ideas and arguments. The sea boils and timbers creak as you read this salty, invigorating work. Colour photos and 16 maps. 692pp, softback. £12.99 NOW £6 77378 MILLENNIUM by Tom Holland An exhilarating sweep across European history either side of the year 1000. In AD900, few would have guessed that the splintering kingdoms of Europe were candidates for future greatness. It was the age of Otto the Great and William the Conqueror, of Viking seakings, of hermits, monks and serfs. It witnessed the spread of castles, the invention of knighthood, and the founding of a papal monarchy. A brilliant narrative spotlight on the so-called ‘Dark Ages’ which saw the triumph of Byzantium, the ascent of Islam and the lingering disaster of the Crusades. 476pp, paperback, colour illus, maps. £12.99 NOW £4.50 77526 CHIVALRY: The Origins & History of the Orders of Knighthood by Kevin Gest The book sets out the key facts relating to the various Orders of Chivalry in existence in Britain and introduces the beginning of the knighthood orders from the early years of mounted warriors. Then, it investigates the main western orders which have a connection with our islands, such as the Hospitallers or Knights of Malta or St. John, the Knights Templar (or poor soldiers of Christ), the Most Noble Order of the Garter, the Golden Fleece, Roman Eagle and so on, and summarises other significant orders of chivalry. The author looks at the cultural legacy of each one, and the buildings and artefacts that remain, as well as its connections with Masonry and its place in present day life. 247 slightly chaotic pages, diagrams, photos in colour. £19.99 NOW £6 77637 ARAB REDISCOVERY OF EUROPE by Ibrahim Abu-Lughod Attaining the status of a modern classic, the book is a study in cultural encounters and here has the new introduction by Rashid Khalidi. At the start of the 19th century, Arabs were unprepared for the social, economic and political progress Europe had made. By 1870 however their vague notions had evolved into a fairly sophisticated knowledge of the various European nations. The new reform movements in Egypt and the Fertile Crescent had incorporated into their programme some of the ideological premises and political institutions of European Liberalism. This pioneering work traces the role of the Arab Intelligentsia in increasing Arab awareness of Europe and in shaping visions of Arab political futures. A fascinating background to today’s world. 190pp, paperback. £14.99 NOW £4 77652 GLADIATOR by Konstantin Nossov Gladiators were famously popular in Ancient Rome for seven centuries, from the 3rd century BC to the 4th century AD. Curiosity about the gladiators disappeared, yet in 1766, a new wave of interest in their lives and actions arose when some gladiatorial weapons were found in Pompeii. The Roman gladiatorial games comprised both single combat and team fighting. They also included beast hunts and mock naval battles which were called venatio and naumachia respectively. These two plus munus are all examined in the book. Types of gladiator, equipment, methods of combat, amphitheatres, organising the events and the day of the show plus a conclusion questioning whether it is craving blood or a blood sport are covered in this very well illustrated large paperback. Some champions survived up to 150 combats. In return for long-term contracts, they earned huge annual salaries. 208pp, colour artworks, photos, illus. $19.95 NOW £7.50 £7.99 NOW £4 BIBLIOPHILE BOOKS UNIT 5 DATAPOINT, 6 SOUTH CRESCENT, LONDON E16 4TL TEL: 020 74 74 24 74 www.bibliophilebooks.com www s. c o m w.. b i b l i o p h i l e b o o k ks History continued 78022 THE SHADOW KING by Joe Marchant Marchant traces King Tutankhamun’s eventful afterlife, from the glamorous treasure hunts of the 1920s to high-tech scans and DNA tests in volatile modern Egypt. After resting undisturbed for more than three millennia, King Tut’s mummy was suddenly awakened when archaeologist Howard Carter discovered the boy king’s tomb and the mummy’s story. Our archaeological adventure leaves from forgotten archives in London to the scorched Egyptian desert uncovering new gems including an anonymous pharaoh dipped with gold and a piece of Tutankhamun kept in a drawer in Liverpool. The book reveals the truth behind many mysteries such as what happened to the poor king’s penis. 288pp, photos. £17.99 NOW £5 77326 A HISTORY OF BRITAIN: Book IV The Stuarts, Cromwell and The Glorious Revolution 1603-1714: New Edition by E. H. Carter and R. A. F. Mears Shows how the calamities of a Civil War, the execution of one King and the deposition of another, all owed something to the personalities of such Kings as Charles I and James II, but even more to their preferences in religion. Opening with the terrorism of the Gunpowder Plot, and leading on to the protracted struggle between King and Parliament, this book was first published in 1937 now revised. 183 pages, maps and outline summary of events. £10 NOW £2.75 77744 RENAISSANCE SECRETS: Recipes and Formulas by Jo Wheeler This beautifully produced volume from the V&A transports us to the clandestine world of Renaissance medicinal and trade secrets. The range of recipes and potions contained herein is astounding, from plague amulets which sound worse than the plague itself to methods for manufacture and glazing of ceramics and glass, and from hair oil, perfume and lip balm to chicken soup and “biscuits to excite Venus”and Florentine Viagra from 1583 which includes 1.5oz of powdered lizard! Also here are trade secrets of the textile, illustration and clothing variety alongside real objects from the V&A vast collections, giving us the full compelling stories behind these amazing formulae. Writers used the new medium of print to inform an ever-broader public of the latest “must-have” concoctions. 112pp, 6½”×12", colour illus, red silk bookmark. £19.99 NOW £7 78019 PERILOUS QUESTION: Reform or Revolution? by Antonia Fraser Britain on the Brink, 1832 is the sub-title to this dazzling recreation of the tempestuous two year period leading up to the passing of the Great Reform Bill. The era begins with the accession of William IV. It is lit with notable characters. The reforming heroes of the Whig aristocrats led by Lord Grey, the all-too-conservative opposition headed by the Duke of Wellington supported by the intransigent Queen Adelaide, with hereditary memories of the French Revolution. Finally there were revolutionaries like William Cobbett, author of Rural Rides, the radical tale of Francis Place and Thomas Attwood of Birmingham, the charismatic orator. There were urban riots put down by soldiers and agricultural riots led by the mythical Captain Swing. The underlying grievance was the fate of the many disfranchised people who lived in the new industrial cities of Manchester, Leeds, Sheffield and Birmingham. Could a rotten system reform itself in time? On 7th June 1832, it did, by one vote. Reform had been chosen. 320pp, colour and b/w photos. £20 NOW £8.50 78028 INSIDE THE RENAISSANCE HOUSE by Elizabeth Currie A beautifully designed Victoria & Albert Museum publication which takes us on a tour, room by room, of the Italian Renaissance house. The sala was devoted to games and music as well as entertaining in as much style as possible, with rich maiolica and pewter to impress the guests, and a range of new utensils in the kitchen. The camera or bed chamber was far from the private space it is today - marriage and childbirth were celebrated there with select social gatherings, and the family’s fine textiles and furnishings were shown off alongside the devotional objects and personal trinkets concerned in the daily rituals of worship and hygiene. From ordinary looking earthenware jars to beautifully decorated jugs, a harpsichord, carved furniture and a brass engraved salver, the book is beautifully decorated. 80 colour plates. 96pp. £14.99 NOW £5 78246 SPARTA’S KINGS by John Carr This overview of Sparta’s kings is an interesting and well-researched guide to the intriguing history of ancient Greece. The Spartans believed that Lelex, c.2000BC, was the first king of the Lakonian Valley; he appears to have been the first to consolidate a viable society there on the foundation of Neolithic settlements. Throughout the mythical and semi-mythical eras the names of various kings were passed down. The Trojan War seriously upset Greece’s domestic economy, causing the prestige and power of centres such as Sparta and Mykenai to shrink. By 1120 BC twin brothers Eurysthenes and Prokles were kings of Agiad and Eurypontid respectively, due in part to the fact that their mother refused to divulge which twin was born first. This chronological account of the kings begins with the founding Herakleidai clan, and follows through to the Roman Conquest in the 2nd century BC, telling the story of the men who led Sparta in both war and peace. 188pp. Illus. £19.99 NOW £8.50 78243 MARTELLO TOWERS WORLDWIDE by Bill Clements British Martello towers were constructed in the late 18th and 19th centuries as gun towers to defend the English coast from French invasion. Building of the British towers commenced in 1805 with a line of 74 towers between Folkestone and Seaford, whilst a further line of 29 towers commenced erection in 1809, between Clactonon-Sea and Aldeburgh. After the work was completed, further towers were built in Scotland, Ireland, Canada and other places, and although the war ended in 1815, building continued until the 1850s in lands where fortifications were needed to defend the colonies. Here are detailed lists of the towers, with specifications, locations and their uses today (many are now houses, museums or restaurants). 240pp, illus, plans. £19.99 NOW £9 HUMOUR ’Tis a good thing to laugh at any rate; and if a straw can tickle a man, it is an instrument of happiness. - Dryden 78858 CATS WITH GUNS by Jonathan Parkyn 40 hilariously silly photomontages of cats posed with revolvers, rifles, pistols, automatic and semiautomatic weapons. Possibly the silliest and funniest cat book we have seen (and believe us, we’ve seen a few!), here are 44 pussies packing heat, and just in case you thought this was an entirely frivolous exercise in photoshopping, the adjacent page gives full details and history of the breed and its favoured firearm with details of the weapon’s specifications and history. The sphynx, the hairless modern-day ancestor of the giant Sphinx that guarded the Great Pyramid of Giza, prefers to back up its inscrutable countenance with a Beretta Model 92, whereas the weapon of choice of the cold-resistant Norwegian Forest is the equally weatherproof AK-47. The American Selkirk Rex naturally selects the stubby barrelled Smith and Wesson .38 to settle its turf wars and the suave Burmese, the James Bond of the cat world, goes nowhere without his Walther PPK. Colour throughout, great fun in 96pp. ONLY £5 78811 LAUGH YOUR WAY TO HAPPINESS by Lesley Lyle The founder of the website laughterbusiness.com reveals the amazing scientific evidence that proves regular laughter can greatly improve our mental and physical health - strengthening the immune system, lowering blood pressure, improving circulation and reducing stress. Here are simple daily exercises to encourage more laughter in your life - smiling, fooling yourself and not others, hypnosis, random acts of kindness, when the pupil is ready the teacher will appear, learn about the Mountain Goddess Festival in Japan full of natural, spontaneous and joyous laughter, laughing in the car or when you drop something, the power of gibberish, shoulder rolls, breathing, even laughter and grieving. 236pp with list of useful resources and websites. Paperback. Remainder mark. £8.99 NOW £3.50 78592 BITEBACK DICTIONARY OF HUMOROUS POLITICAL QUOTATIONS by Fred Metcalf A brilliant anthology of mieux mots used in the theatre of politic over the centuries containing politics with a liberal dose of sex, drugs and Frank Zappa. Baldwin, Stanley, Cameron, Cuba, the House of Lords, Boris Johnson, taxation to tyrants, race to royalty, Kennedy to Palin, Churchill’s gravitas meets Oscar Wilde’s wit: ‘Patriotism is the virtue of the vicious.’ Churchill: ‘We are all worms, but I do believe that I am a glow-worm.’ 342pp in paperback. £9.99 NOW £4 78638 HOUSEHOLD TIPS OF THE GREAT WRITERS by Mark Crick Geoffrey Chaucer’s feisty onion tart, shelf erecting with Julius Caesar, caring for heather with Alan Bennett, pruning a rose bush with Pablo Neruda to unblocking a sink with Jean-Paul Sartre, here is a book to cover all your domestic needs in a part homage, part survival guide. It is a pitch perfect companion for every Bibliophile, the well-read and the domestically challenged. These literary and visual pastiches of writers and their relationships with food is laugh a minute. Here is Goethe applying sealant around a bath, plum pudding à la Charles Dickens and burying bulbs in autumn with Sylvia Plath and more. 278pp of mirth and with a ‘Preface’ by Mrs Isabella Beeton. Grouped by In the Kitchen, DIY Tips and In the garden. £12.99 NOW £5 Don’t miss out on our Clearance Sale on page 18 7 78800 FRIENDS FOREVER by Anne Rogers Smyth This must be just about the most perfect book to give to a friend; it’s warm, witty and fun, gorgeous to look at and contains 42 stunning colour photos from the animal kingdom, each with a special quote or message. The message by a shaggy, windswept alpaca is ‘There’s no such thing as a bad hair day in the eyes of a good friend’, while that by the picture of two animated stripybeaked puffins reads ‘Time flies when you’re chatting with a good friend’. ‘Going with the flow’ says the caption on the charming, paw-waving sea otters, ‘A good friend isn’t nosy but asks all the right questions’ reads that by the beak-rubbing toucan and parrot, while the three bubble-blowing smiling dolphins are captioned ‘A little silliness goes a long way with friends’. Adorable - definitely the best present for your bestie! 7" square, 92pp, colour photos. Remainder mark. £7.99 NOW £4.25 78838 WHAT’S YOUR POO TELLING YOU? by Josh Richman and Anish Sheth Do you look before you flush? Our poo-phoria of excrement compares floaters vs sinkers, monster poos, pebble poo, the hanging chad, the ritual poo, ring of fire, log jam, green goblin, the streak, snake and more, describing the symptoms, look, shape, texture, synonyms and nuggets of info about plop in general. With hysterically funny descriptions, the book is actually co-written by a medical doctor who demystifies the inner workings of the digestive tract and explains your health by what you leave behind in the loo. 96pp, illus. $9.95 NOW £4 79013 EVIL CATS by Elia Anie When fluffy cats get mean, 8 out of 10 cats will rip to pieces this book while their owners are not looking. One dastardly cartoon cat steals a sock as lady owner loads washing machine. Evil cat beheads teddy. Naughty kitties terrify birds, wearing costumes, try on nappies, play with dental floss and mark their territory in ways we thought only humanly possible. Wickedly evil kitty cartoons throughout. £7.99 NOW £3.50 Now in his late 80s, Limerick (where else?) born O’Flynn has published over 50 novels, plays, works of poetry, short stories and biography in English and Gaelic. He has selected 24 comic poems from the Irish tradition, introduces each with a history of the work and then provides us the full text (plus variations down the years) in both English and Gaelic. It will be of no surprise to learn that many of the songs and poems had double meanings. Pubs, publicans and their customers feature widely and there are ruminations on tobacco, the holy orders, horses, bailiffs, unsavoury characters both male and female and even a herring. 192pp paperback. $14.95 NOW £4 20320 COMPLETE NONSENSE by Edward Lear The Owl and the Pussy-Cat, Calico Pie and The Pobble Who Has No Toes, together with Edward Lear’s crazy limericks, have entertained adults and children alike for over 100 years. This edition, illustrated by the author, contains all the verse and stories of The Book of Nonsense, More Nonsense, Nonsense Songs, Nonsense Stories and Nonsense Alphabets and Nonsense Cookery. It has a biographical Preface by Lear himself, and concludes with some delightful ‘heraldic’ sketches of his cat, Foss. 272pp. Paperback. ONLY £2 IN 71723 A DYSLEXIC CK WALKS INTO A BRA... BA T O C K S by Nick Harris ‘Doctor, doctor, my wife has lost her voice. What should I do to help her get it back?’ ‘Try coming home at 3 o’clock in the morning.’ ‘What’s the difference between a banker and a trampoline? - You take off your boots to jump on a trampoline.’ Wisecracks, cheeky wordplay, Doctor Doctor, battle of the sexes, blondes, children, psychiatrists, old people, music, marriage and divorce, lawyers, law and order, farming, drunks, death, art and books, army, navy and air force and animals are among the long jokes, one liners, funny lists and excruciating puns on this wide variety of subjects. Telling jokes will never go out of fashion and as Woody Allen memorably put it: ‘I am thankful for laughter, except when milk comes out of my nose.’ 416pp in paperback. ! The New Yorker magazine began publishing in 1925 and has never lost its original flair. Famous names such as Arthur Miller, Ogden Nash, Roald Dahl, Roddy Doyle, John Updike, James Thurber and a host more bring their wit and wisdom to bear to create an unforgettable collection of one-liners, short stories, essays and jokes. Here are Good Dogs, Bad Dogs, Top Dogs, Underdogs and even a new essay by Adam Gopnik on the immortal canines of James Thurber. Our favourite is the sign at the entrance to a beer garden on the Rhine: ‘Das Mitbringen von Hunden ist Polizeilich Verboten’ - or ‘The Withbringing of Dogs is Police-Wise Forbidden’, but we also love one dog saying to another: ‘On the Internet, nobody knows you’re a dog!’ How true. 395 fun-filled pages packed with cartoons, line drawings, colour photos, covers, and list of contributors. £30 NOW £14 308 musings, unlikely facts, inspired puns, daft plays on words and jokes, each delightfully illus. with pen and ink Victorian-style drawings. Were you aware that Tic-TacToe is actually a form of gout caused by eating too many mints? Imagine the office atmosphere if Peter Parker and Clark Kent worked at the same newspaper! 320pp. £12.99 NOW £3 77266 MR DARCY’S GUIDE TO COURTSHIP: The Secrets of Seduction by Fitzwilliam Darcy The secrets of seduction from Regency England’s most eligible bachelor features beauty tips from Miss Caroline Bingley, the improper courtship techniques of Messrs Wickham and Collins, reflections on spinsterhood from Miss Emma Woodhouse, how to pen an effective advertisement for a spouse, Mr Darcy’s counsel to correspondents including Lord Byron, the Duke of Wellington and Mr Willoughby. Includes making oneself agreeable and escaping the unwanted attentions of rogues and fortune hunters, 224pp, paperback, woodcut illus and little quizzes. £7.99 NOW £2.25 77364 BLEAK EXPECTATIONS by Mark Evans Recounts the remarkable adventures of young Pip Bin as he tries to make his way in a world made all horrible by the machinations of his cruel guardian, Mr Gently Benevolent. Gasp as our hero suffers misfortunes such as prison, poverty, the workhouse and at least one close relative dying. Sigh as Pip finds love with London’s most eligible frail beauty, Miss Flora Dies-Early. As heard on Radio 4. 403pp. £14.99 NOW £2.50 77634 WONDERFUL WONDER OF WONDERS by Jonathan Swift Most famous for his masterpiece Gulliver’s Travels, Jonathan Swift was also the foremost satirist of his day. Here he treats us to a condensed biography of his posterior, enlivened by some inspired wordplay. Beware, the words arse, bottom, rump, push up against Rump Parliament and an accurate description of the birth, education, manner of living, religion, politics, learning of the late 1680s when it was first written. Swift is in fine scatological form and there is a note to assist the modern reader. 124 blunderful pages. £9.99 NOW £2 78082 IRISH HUMOROUS POETRY by Criostoir O’Flynn £7.99 NOW £3.50 76387 BIG NEW YORKER BOOK OF DOGS by Malcolm Gladwell 76897 A BILLION JOKES! (VOLUME ONE) by Peter Serafinowicz 77658 ITWIT: Fake Apps for Genuine Idiots by Fintan Coyle and Dan Louw Too busy to know when to go to the toilet? Download iGopoo. Fresh out of clean underwear? SniffTester will tell you which pants are okay for one more day. Dying, scary teeth, ambulance chasers, self-service tills, Booze Views price £1.99, Cat Scan to check what your cat is doing all day (99p) and tons more crApps, this book is full of it. 102pp, colour screen shots. £7.99 NOW £2.75 77665 MORE CHINGLISH: Speaking in Tongues by Oliver Lutz Radtke Keep valuables snugly, dumplings stuffed with the ovary and digestive glands of a crab, monopoly wrinkly old folks clothing, on a menu ‘Binaural infected cucumber’ under a photograph of it, on another ‘Onion explodes the distant senate’, a beautiful brass plaque outside the Resist Bacteria Hotel. Welcome to the wonderful world of chinglish, not lost in translation on us, signs, menus and more. Full page colour photos, softback. £7.99 NOW £3 77675 SHIT LONDON: Snapshots of a City on the Edge by Patrick Dalton More disastrous spelling mistakes like Look Leet on a zebra crossing in Covent Garden, amusing headlines on newsstands, the C missing on Coral bookmakers, ‘Glamerous Hair and Beauty’, the rules at South Bank book market - ‘No mobiles, no wigwams, none of that, or anything else.’ From Tooting Broadway and Camden to Wimbledon Village, a chip shop in Waterloo to a nearby church in Mile End inscribed over the portal, ‘This is the gate of Heaven’, is this a highway to London’s typographic hell? Hilarious colour photos. £9.99 NOW £3.50 77770 BEST OF PUNCH CARTOONS: 2000 Classics edited by Helen Walasek ! Punch is a national treasure, a British institution that has amused generations of readers for over 160 years and this is the largest selection of cartoons ever published in one entire volume. It has attracted some of the finest comic writers in the English language from William Thackeray to P. G. Wodehouse and Alan Coren and legendary political cartoons by giants like Tenniel and Partridge. Here are witty cartoons from the pens of the great - Leech, Du Maurier, Phil May, H. M. Bateman, Pont, E. H. Shepard, Fougasse, Emett, Anton, Thelwell, Searle and Heath among them. Social stigma, attitudes and observations, sport and recreation, British life unfolds through these witty pens as we move through the decades, wars, and changing times. We still love the one of three Daleks at the bottom of a staircase: ‘Well, this certainly buggers our plan to conquer the Universe.’ 608 page tome. £30 NOW £10 8 ORDER HOTLINE: 020 74 74 24 74 MYTHOLOGY Earth Dragon, which can grow to 100 feet in length with a similar-sized wing span. Luckily they are introverts, so with a bit of luck, you won’t ever come across one! Paperback, 11"x8",144pp, colour illus. $17.95 NOW £6 The fairies break their dances, and leave the printed lawn. 78126 TALES OF HANS CHRISTIAN ANDERSEN Illustrated by Joel Stewart - A. E. Housman 78668 MIDAS TOUCH: World Mythology in Bite-Sized Chunks by Mark Daniels Who could fail to be fascinated by a woman who turns her love-rival into a snake-headed gorgon whose very glance turns mortals to stone? The Greek and Roman myths are but a small part of the pantheon of world mythology, as this masterful introduction to the subject demonstrates. From the greatest civilisations to the tiniest localised societies, humans have created a rich catalogue of major and minor deities, monsters, heroes and myths, tales constructed to explain what was once inexplicable and also to honour great triumphs, disasters or people and which also act as creative tools to illustrate life’s most important lessons. Mark Daniels explores epics from Australian Aboriginal, Maori, Sumerian, Egyptian, Chinese, American Indian, South and Central American, Greek, Roman and Norse traditions. He untangles the complex web of men, gods and monsters, revealing how these tales of the past have had so much effect on the culture of the present. Entertaining, enlightening, authoritative and beautifully concise. 224pp, illus. £12.99 NOW £6 78785 BOOK OF THE DRAGON by Ciruelo ‘Throughout history, dragons and human beings have been unable to live peacefully side by side. As a result, mankind has not been able to benefit from ancient dragon knowledge.’ Ciruelo, the creator of this beautiful book, is a fantasy illustrator, and his designs of cloudhazy castles, stalactite-encrusted caves, willowy maidens and, naturally, fearsome dragons, are a delight. Here are descriptions of the types of dragons, their culture and customs, and the legends involving dragons. Apparently, the most common and abundant dragon species found on our planet is that of ‘Draco rex cristatus’, commonly known as the Great WORDS AND DICTIONARIES Thanks to words, we have been able to rise above the brutes; and thanks to words, we have often sunk to the level of the demons. - Aldous Huxley 78650 JUST MY TYPE: A Book About Fonts by Simon Garfield Fonts surround us every day on street signs and buildings, posters and books and on every product we buy. Where do they come from and why do we need so many? Who’s is behind the business-like subtlety of New Times Roman, the cool detachment of Arial or the maddening Comic Sans - and the movement to ban it? Typefaces are now 560 years old, but we barely knew their names until about 20 years ago when the pull-down font menus on our first computers made us all the gods of type. Beginning in the early days of Gutenberg and ending with the most adventurous digital fonts, Garfield unravels our age-old obsession with the way our words look including how Helvetica took over the world, the graphic vision of Beatlemania, the ‘Times’ in New Type, Futura and more. With dozens of illustrated examples, 356 naturally beautifully typeset pages and samples of 200 fonts from Albertus to Zeppelin II. $27.50 NOW £6.50 78629 GOOD PROSE: The Art of Non-Fiction by Tracy Kidder and Richard Todd The authors met at the offices of ‘The Atlantic Monthly’ in Boston, wrote an article together and were soon working on a book which went on to win the Pulitzer Prize. Advice on how to write narratives, whether it is better to use first or third person, memoirs, essays, fact, style, editing is all here. One writer argues ‘that something dishonest tends to lurk in all relationships between authors and their subjects. Certainly, all such relationships contain competing narratives. The subject has a story, the writer has a story, and the two don’t coincide exactly.’ Notes on usage cover some problematical grammar such as who and whom, or may and might, as well as words and phrases to avoid as they have either been done to death or have already an out-dated ring about them. 196pp. $26 NOW £6.50 To many of us, just the mention of Hans Christian Andersen whisks us instantly back to our childhood, tucked up cosily in bed as our parents read to us the stories of The Ugly Duckling, Thumbelina, The Little Mermaid and The Princess and the Pea. They are all here in this excellent translation by Naomi Lewis of 13 of Andersen’s bestloved tales, intriguingly illustrated by Joel Stewart. It contains other favourites too, such as The Snow Queen where Gerda, during her adventures to seek her beloved friend Kay who has a splinter of ice in his heart and another in his eye, travelled in a coach ‘lined with iced cake and sugar candy, while the space beneath the seat was packed with fruit and ginger nuts.’ With background information. Paperback, 8x7", colour illus and mono sketches, 208pp. £9.99 NOW £6 78168 GODS, HEROES AND MEN OF ANCIENT GREECE by W. H. D. Rouse First published in 1934, renowned classical scholar W. H. D. Rouse delighted his students with his conversational style and childlike wonder to make the legends come alive. Many of the characters are familiar - Helen of Troy, Icarus, Zeus, Athena. From the strong-arm heroics of Heracles to the trickery of the Trojan Horse, from the seductions of Circe the Sorceress to the terrors of the Cyclops and Minotaur, here are the big names of Pan, Hermes, Artemis, Jason, the Ram with a Golden Fleece, the Argonauts and the brazen bulls and the dragon’s teeth. With genealogical chart and pronouncing index. 190pp in paperback. Remainder mark. $14 NOW £5 23956 AESOP’S FABLES illustrated by Arthur Rackham with an introduction by G.K. Chesterton The fox and the grapes, the dog in the manger, the wolf in sheep’s clothing and many others have entered the languages and idioms of most European tongues. Aesop’s celebrated simple tales embody truth powerful for both adults and children. 199pp in paperback. ONLY £2 78166 GESSAR KHAN: A Legend of Tibet by Ida Zeitlin The legend of Gessar Khan is one of the world’s great epics, existing in many versions, and this reprint of a classic retelling from the 1920s follows the Tibetan version of the story. Gessar had a miraculous birth and demonstrated magic powers in his youth, and he also wooed the Lady Rogmo in disguise, winning his bride by plucking the golden feathers from the tail of the Garuda Bird. Whereas previously he had ridden a shrunken foal, he was now transformed into the hero Gessar Khan, a warrior mounted on a lordly steed, with a helmet wrought of the light of the sun and moon and a countenance that showed he was beloved of Buddha. His exploits included journeying to China and slaying the twelve-headed giant who had captured the Lady Aralgo of Ten Thousand Joys. But following her rescue Aralgo gives Gessar a potion that causes forgetfulness, and as a result of the treachery of his rival Chotong, Gessar’s wife Rogmo is also kidnapped. The hero finally triumphs. 200pp, paperback, woodcut illus. $18.95 NOW £5 77108 UNDERSTAND GREEK MYTHOLOGY by Steve Eddy and Claire Hamilton When Theseus tracks down the Minotaur in the Cretan labyrinth, he lays down a thread to guide his return. His is a journey of self discovery and many of the elements in the story hold their own symbolic importance. From Achilles to Agamemnon, Demeter, Echo, the Golden Fleece, Homer, Persephone to festivals, sacrifices, virgin goddesses, the Underworld, key mythological figures have reverberated through Western culture, providing a rich bedrock of inspiration for poets, musicians, thinkers and psychologists. 156pp in paperback, illus. £9.99 NOW £4.50 77743 MEANING OF HOME by Edwin Heathcote The architectural correspondent of The Financial Times draws on Jung’s ideas about symbols and archetypes to suggest that buildings have hidden meanings. Individual rooms have in the past been associated with rites of passage - birth, marriage, death - but in today’s world it is more likely to be the communal kitchen, or the rituals of a family Christmas, that leave their mark on the character of a house. If the front door is the crossing between public and private spheres, the hall is a place of introduction, a social space whose name has the same derivation as “hell”, while the old-fashioned ceiling rose represents the secrecy of the domestic sphere. 192pp. £12.99 NOW £4 78822 ON WRITING ROMANCE: How to Craft A Novel That Sells by Leigh Michaels ‘Not every story with a horse and ranch in it is a Western; not every story with a murder in it is a mystery; and not every book that includes a love story can be classified as a romantic novel.’ A romantic novel is a book about lovers, and if you took out the love story then there wouldn’t be much left. However, other novels, maybe mystery or adventure, could have the lovey-dovey bits removed and still be a good read. If your burning desire is to write a romantic novel, you need to decide which type to write because there are many kinds, each needing a different approach. For instance a historical novel is completely unlike chick lit (usually, though of course, there will always be an exception to the rule). Here is advice on how to create your main characters, on writing gay romance, establishing a framework, conflict and getting down to writing. Invariably sex will rear its head, so the author gives guidance on writing love scenes, from tender moments to full-blown erotica. After reading this, writing the next ’50 Shades of Grey’ will be a doddle. Appendices include how to write a query letter, cover letter and synopsis as well as a reading list of recommended romantic novels. 264pp, $22.99 NOW £5 78637 HOROLOGICON by Mark Forsyth Sub-titled ‘A Day’s Jaunt Through the Lost Words of the English Language’ this comes from the author of the bestselling ‘The Etymologicon’ as was heard on BBC Radio 4. Forsyth unveils a selection of obsolete, oh-so-wonderful words to savour and cherish. Whether you are out on the pickaroon or ogopogoing for a bellibone, this wonderful book is a lexical lamppost. Arranged from dawn till midnight includes trying to get back to sleep, mugwumps, lunch, arranging your evening, hogging the wine, fanfreluching to undressing, the words are arranged according to the hour of the day. 258pp in paperback. £8.99 NOW £5 78706 WORD PUZZLES by House of Puzzles The earliest word puzzles date back to the Ancient Greeks who were very fond of their riddles and here you will find everything from antonym challenges and anthologies to crafty ciphers to decode, several of which owe their birth to Lewis Carroll. Try grid runner, gap words, jumbles, doublets and symbolic logic tangles among the 200 superb puzzles to challenge your logic and word power in this fine array of brain teasers. With answers. 224pp in paperback. £5.99 NOW £3 79058 WORDS OF WISDOM: Philosophy’s Most Important Quotations and Their Meanings by Gareth Southwell The purpose of this book is to encourage readers to think, and develop a critical response - not to learn philosophy, but to put it into practice. The discipline is not a unified one, and does not really possess an orthodox creed, so the author has tried to do justice to a wide range of philosophical opinion and hopes that, overall, things balance out. You will find in this compelling compilation not just the stories behind the likes of Plato, Aristotle, Descartes and Wittgenstein, but also scientists, theologians, psychologists, anthropologists and writers of all sorts. After all, as the author points out, many thinkers lived in a time where what they were doing - physics, psychology, sociology or economics - was still part of philosophy. Find out who said what, and in which circumstances, so that you can then ponder on it and wonder whether it was a fair statement. You might well start by thinking around a statement of Peter Singer’s that ‘...the fact that a being is human, and alive, does not in itself tell us whether it is wrong to take that being’s life’. Tricky! 368 pages with photos of the philosophers concerned. £9.99 NOW £5 78247 TOMMY DOUGHBOY FRITZ: Soldier Slang of World War I by Emily Brewer 65 million men fought in WWI. Their soldier slang terms became infused with words from other cultures and ironic mispronunciation of foreign words, and so the men, not just the British Tommies, but also the American Doughboys and the German Fritzs, soon created their own special, almost secret, languages, helping comrades to bond with each other through the grim times and to laugh amidst the sorrow. In the case of the British and Commonwealth troops, words were often adapted from the Hindi, such as puttee, a cloth band wrapped around the leg, pukka (authentic) and backchat (conversation). Words such as thingumyjig, scrounge, cubby hole and chatting all surfaced then. The Americans came up with terms such as pipsqueak (a German shell) and hedgehop (flying low), while from the Germans came badeurlaub (bathing holiday, meaning to sleep in a proper bedroom) dreckfresser (mud glutton, which was how they referred to themselves) and vogelfutter (birdfood, their derisive name for a kind of gruel made from millet). 218pp. £12.99 NOW £5.50 77388 TEACHING CREATIVE WRITING by Helen Stockton If you want to facilitate a writing group or to inspire, inform and encourage would-be writers, the book moves from planning and structuring courses to giving ideas and exercises. With ideas on lesson content, setting homework, spotting and dealing with problems, adapting for different abilities, group management and feedback and an A-Z of specific genres with examples of learning activities. Learn what to do about upset students, the therapeutic aspects of creative writing, visits by published authors or agents, writing competitions, using symbolism, varying pace, naming characters and more. 207pp in large paperback with tables of lesson plans and diagrams. £12.99 NOW £4.50 Words 78310 MISCELLANY FOR WORD LOVERS by Robin Hosie and Vic Mayhew A fun-packed guide with almost 100 quizzes to turn you into a master of the spoken word. If you enjoy doing crosswords, you will warm to the crossword style clues in the What’s the Word quizzes. Side panels look at topics like the Witty City, Liverpool, which has produced more than its share of great comics and why this may be. Decades like the 60s, quizzes on buildings, sacred and secular, opposites and near opposites, Samuel Johnson, the language of science, birds of a feather, quotes and misquotes and much more. 214pp in paperback. £7.99 NOW £3.50 78489 COLLECTED QUOTATIONS: A Journal to Record and Remember Words of Wisdom by Chronicle Books Record and remember words of wisdom by keeping a pen handy, your eyes and ears open and filling in the categorical sections to create a catalogue of all the quotes that you can enjoy at leisure, to add meaning to life. For each entry there is a date, source and notes, three per page, with priceless quotes every now and again in coloured typeface in this beautifully designed journal-cum-gift book. Grouped by literature, songs and poems, speeches, movies and TV, family and friends and other sources. 188 lined pages. £12.99 NOW £3.75 78496 FRENCH FOR DUMMIES: Portable Edition by Dodi-Katrin Schmidt et al Get started by practicing the French you already know, revising basic French grammar, get started with pronunciation and basic expressions, get your numbers, dates and times straight, make small talk, ask directions and find your way, dining out and going to the market, planning a trip, dealing with money, planes, trains and taxis, a place to stay, handling emergencies, and a whole section of tens - ten favourite French expressions and ten phrases that make you sound French! With mini dictionaries and verb tables. 244pp, paperback. £12.99 NOW £4.50 77197 TEDDY BEARS, TUPPERWARE AND SWEET FANNY ADAMS: How the Names Became the Words by Andrew Sholl The unique piece of clever, humorous, erudite, creative writing, that you are at this very moment reading and admiring, owes its name to a shapely young woman called Belinda Blurb, who was featured ‘in the act of blurbing’ on the jacket of a book by Gelett Burges in 1906. Investigates the most familiar as well as more unusual eponyms, revealing their origins and the stories that surround them. If you are hoovering the carpet while wearing a cardigan, a leotard, bloomers, wellington boots and a balaclava, then you are entering into the spirit of this book. 223 pages, line drawings. £12.99 NOW £3.75 77198 THERE ARE TITTLES IN THIS TITLE: The Weird World of Words by Mitchell Symons Did you know that forty is the only number that has its letters in alphabetical order? That just 1,000 words make up 90% of all writing in English? That the word corduroy comes from the French cord du roi meaning cloth of the king? If not, then you really need this beguiling book. It is bursting with strange but true revelations about the world of words and is such a glorious celebration of language that it will have you eagerly turning the pages to know more. There are marvellous ice-breakers, palindromes, well-known lines from literature and film, hilarious exam answers and more. 192 pages, line drawings. £9.99 NOW £4.75 77273 GENTLEMEN’S LETTER WRITER foreword by John Mitchinson A lovely facsimile reprint of the 1890 original Routledge publication entitled ‘New Letter Writer for Use of Gentlemen with Applications for Situations and A Copious Appendix of Forms of Address, Bills, Receipts and Other Useful Matter.’ Today we are supposed to have abandoned the civilised art of letter writing, and a gentility of using an ink blotter and writing thank-yous. The charm of this book is that in fact it reminds us of how little things have really changed. We still fall in love and want to ‘get on in life’ and are late paying bills, and we still need and like to complain and say thank you. With plenty about books, subscriptions and late returns to the library, a letter to your daughter’s suitor, much about matrimonial affairs and proposals and misunderstandings, school letters, vets, the water company and more. 114pp. £7.99 NOW £2 77320 TRAVEL WRITING: A Practical Guide by Annie Caulfield You may have a great aunt who set up a nudist colony in Fiji or was the first woman whaler in Newfoundland. It covers finding your personal style, clarifying the purpose of your journey, selling your story, making and maintaining local contact, crafting a readable descriptive prose, plus the practicalities of travel and travel writing and writing for other markets. Packed with tips as we meet many authors on our journeys in this book. 96 page paperback. £9.99 NOW £2.50 77907 QUICK PINT AFTER WORK?: And Other Everyday Lies by Luke Lewis ‘Garden Flat’: basically a dungeon with some moss on a paving slab outside. ‘Traditional Boozer’: pub that does not serve wasabi peas. Jargon, clichés, euphemisms lies. Based on the popular BuzzFeed series this hilarious manual includes swear words, British traditions, greetings translated, ways British men address each other, ways of saying goodbye, football clichés, exclamations, euphemisms for sex, food and drink, relationships, the media, critics with books, TV and film, at work and modern life. 275pp, cartoons. £9.99 NOW £3.75 www s. c o m w.. b i b l i o p h i l e b o o k ks 77550 OXFORD DICTIONARY OF QUOTATIONS: 7th Edition edited by Elizabeth Knowles A vast treasury of wit and wisdom spanning the centuries and providing the ultimate answer to the question ‘Who said that?’ (and when, and why). With over 20,000 quotations for all occasions from over 3,500 authors in A-Z format, a comprehensive index to trace that half-remembered line and almost 1,000 quotations added to this new edition from over 500 authors. Includes proverbs, Shakespeare, songs and shanties, Wordsworth and of course Wilde. ‘Wit is the salt of conversation, not the food’ - William Hazlitt. ‘Think only of the past as its remembrance gives you pleasure’ - Jane Austen. Heavyweight 1155 pages with two satin page markers. £30 NOW £13 77376 HOW TO CRACK CRYPTIC CROSSWORDS by Vivien Hampshire Increase your word power and exercise your brain with the many cryptic crosswords that appear regularly in newspapers and magazines. Many of them offer the chance of a prize of cash, books or a posh pen. Find out what makes these puzzles so intriguing yet so infuriating. Hints and tricks to help you find the right answers every time from clever to cunning to downright devious, here are all the different types of clue, how to recognise them, interpret them and of course solve them. With around 150 clues analysed. Abbreviations commonly used, compilers’ favourites, tackling anagrams and more. 118pp, paperback. £6.99 NOW £2.75 78098 MERRIAM-WEBSTER’S EASY LEARNING FRENCH IDIOMS designed by Thomas Callan ‘Se regarder en chiens de faîence’ to look at each other like china dogs = to glare at each other, to be on hostile terms. The image given is a pair of china ornaments set at each end of the mantle piece and the example given is a situation reminiscent of the Cold War, when the two super powers were on hostile terms. This ideal resource contains 250 key phrases and idioms are arranged by topics with illustrations and include appearance, relationships, conflict, achievement and happiness. The clear examples and usage guidance illustrate how French is actually spoken. To help make ends meet = ‘Mettre du beurre dans les ébinards’ (to put butter in the spinach). And when we have a frog in our throat they have a cat in their throat! 224pp in paperback. $8.95 NOW £4 CRAFTS Women derive a pleasure, incomprehensible to the other sex, from the delicate toil of the needle. be achieved even at a late stage by introducing “directional orientation” or “meandering scaffolding” lines that pull elements of the composition together. Finally the author says, “Surprise us!”, giving a few fascinating examples of paintings transformed by an unusual detail. Colour illus. 128pp. $29.99 NOW £6 78988 FRENCH BEADED FLOWERS by Zoe L. Schneider Have you ever wondered what you could make, apart from a necklace for a fairy, with those minute, colourful, irresistible seed beads that fill the counters of craft shops and haberdashery stalls? All you need are seed beads, a roll of fine beading wire and a small pair of pliers. Beginning with details of tools, materials and inspiration - which includes shapes of leaves and flowers, types of beads, and setting up a work area so you don’t ping beads all over the floor - the author then explains the techniques. Here you can learn how to make basic loops before gradually introducing spacer beads, spokes, split leaves, cylinders, wraps, stems, lacing and stamens. Best of all, because the book is spiral bound, the required page will stay open and flat. Once you have mastered these techniques, it’s time to try out some of the gorgeous beaded flower projects, whether an intricate calypso orchid or a delicate wild flax. When you are proficient, then the final project is an ‘Alpine Azalea Tea Tray’; a profusion of gold bead scroll work decorated with intertwined flowers, which surely would become a family heirloom. 256pp, colour photos. $29.99 NOW £5 78805 HANDMADE DESIGNS by Ullmann The first 45 pages of this excellent craft book are devoted to various techniques to ensure that you can make your chosen creation without trouble. Here are the basics explaining how to crochet, use decorative buttons, needle felt and tie various knots, as well as advice on pyrography, glass engraving, papier mache and other techniques. Embroidery basics are included too, with instructions for working many different stitches. Then follow over 140 projects, with step-by-step instructions not only to enhance your home, but also fashion accessories to enhance you! Brooches, purses, necklaces, hats, slippers and bags rub shoulders with engraved glasses, salad bowls, decorated boxes, lamps, notebooks and coasters. The Special Jigsaw Puzzle is inspired - a set of frames cut from felt layers, buttoned together, and with cut-outs to hold your treasured photos, while the pretty candle holder made from star anise is unusual, yet not too difficult to make. All the projects were devised by twelve young, talented people, and this book is absolutely crammed with ideas. 10" x 8.5", 358pp, colour illus and templates, paperback. £19.99 NOW £7 78863 FRANK LLOYD WRIGHT DESIGNS: Sticker Book by Frank Lloyd Wright Collections - Nathaniel Hawthorne, The Scarlet Letter 78809 KNITTED DINOSAURS by Tina Barrett Oh, I so want a pink and grey striped Pterodactyl and a yellow and black striped Quetzalcoatlus! This gorgeous book contains 15 knitting patterns to allow you to create your own stomp of dinosaurs. The patterns are simple to follow, knitted with either double or chunky knit wool, and there is a helpful guide to show beginners how to cast on, knit, purl and cast off. Each dinosaur only takes a few balls of wool, and you’re not tied to one particular make. Just see what you find in your favourite wool shop. As the author states, ‘Even though scientists can tell us each dinosaur’s shape, size or how many spines it had by looking at fossils, no one can definitively tell us what colour they were.’ So pink, purple, emerald, scarlet, cornflower, raspberry and orange are the order of the day. You can make the beasts as cuddly or as scary as you wish, and if you start now you’ll soon have an impressive selection of dinosaurs, from Triceratops to Diplodocus, Tyrannosaurus Rex to Plesiosaur and Ichthyosaurus to Velociraptor, to bestow on your favourite children. Or adults! Paperback. 9"x8", 128pp, colour illus. $16.95 NOW £5.50 78987 MASTER DISASTER: Five Ways to Rescue Desperate Watercolours by Susan Webb Tregay Every painter discards botched studies, but a few months later the rejected image may seem not quite so bad after all. This invaluable book encourages you to make the best of a less than perfect job using tried and tested rescue techniques. Watercolour is a transparent medium that can not be transformed by overpainting, but there are other ways to make your painting a rewarding visual experience. Poorly drawn elements can be eliminated by lifting the paint off and repainting, and the use of a stencil is effective for isolating an offending area: usually it is a relatively small section that will need correction. Knowing your paper is essential for lifting colour, and the author suggests testing the paper for correction methods before beginning to paint. The second troubleshooting technique is breaking up a composition to make it visually more interesting. Unifying the composition can The stained glass window styles and designs, angular bold geometric lines, subtle greens and olives to bold primary colours, concentric circles, rug designs, the 150 reusable colour stickers come in all shapes and sizes. 50 different designs and read about the architect Frank Lloyd Wright inside. For kids ages 3 to 103. Large softback. $7.95 NOW £3.50 78986 LINE: CREATIVE PAINTING SERIES by Gemma Guasch and Josep Asuncion Line in painting means not the image itself, but the way it is made, whether it is precisely defined with pen and ink or blurred with thickly spread impasto. The five sections of this book cover line in landscape, living nature, still life, the human figure and finally abstraction, and in each section different approaches are demonstrated through a wide range of examples and step-by-step experimentation. The Landscape chapter explores the creation of a lunar surface using synthetic paste on cardboard as a base and then creating texture with marble dust, silt, iron shavings and pigment. The Human Figure section starts with the creation of a cartoon-like monocyclist in crayon, and goes on to a painted nude in Expressionist style and flat collages of people crossing a road. Still Life starts with the power of weak and broken pencil lines, followed by a strongly outlined study of a chair and finally the smoky sfumato effect made famous by Leonardo. Living Nature focuses on a superb step-by-step study of a dachshund. There is a final section on tools and techniques. A beautifully illustrated book. 160pp, colour illus. $26.99 NOW £5 78989 PAINTING STILL LIFES by Gabriel Martin Roig Encompassing composition, creating rhythm, colour schemes, light and shade, texture and backgrounds, it helps the student to master the basic procedures. Following on is a series of practical exercises in which you can discover the secrets of painting a monochromatic still life, a still life on a white tablecloth, modelling and chiaroscuro, Handicrafts expressive brushstrokes and how to incorporate and portray a reflective mirror background. The painting of still life in abstract form is also covered. Plenty of step-by-step pictures explain how to create the desired effects and to build up a work of art almost worthy as that of the still-life master, Paul Cézanne! 64pp, colour illus. $12.99 NOW £4 76793 NAKED WALL by Anne Bold-Pryor and Donna Lacis A naked wall demands to be covered, whether with a bold wallpaper design, a collection of antique clocks or a display of Mexican crucifixes. The author starts with painting and texturing your wall, with choice of colour being a key element in providing a background for your draperies or collections. Decorated ceilings can be striking and unexpected, while painting the walls of a room different colours can achieve bold architectural effects. 200 colour photos. 176pp, softback. £14.99 NOW £1.75 77312 ARTS AND CRAFTS INSPIRATIONS: 21 Simple Projects Adapted from Classic American Designs by Robert and Bob Belke 21 American Arts and Crafts projects that can be made at home with a table saw, band saw, drill press and a basic selection of chisels and hand saws. Desktop Book Rack, Revolving Book Case, both in the Mission style, Mission Wine Cabinet, Coffee Table, two Side Tables and a Drop-Leaf Occasional Table, a Wall Clock and a Trestle Table all with full step-by-step instructions, materials and dimensions list, tools, diagrams and photos. 160pp softback, 8¼”×10¼”. £19.99 NOW £4.50 77319 THOMAS LESTER, HIS LACE AND THE EAST MIDLANDS INDUSTRY 1820-1905 by Anne Buck ! It was in Bedford in the 1820s that Thomas Lester became a lace merchant. Lester’s family business was in the forefront of developments. Our book sets Lester’s designs and the development of his business against the fashions of the period, the state of the industry, the skills, pay and conditions of its workers and the development of machine made lace. Using surviving examples the astounding quality of his products is assessed, most being photographed actual size to reveal the incredible intricacy of design and superlative skill of the lacemakers he employed, plus there are Lester’s own original pattern sheets, design drafts, trade cards and early photos. 1982 reprint with low cover price. 118pp, 8½”×11½”. £12.60 NOW £6 77551 PAPER CUTTING TECHNIQUES: For Scrapbooks and Cards by Sharyn Sowell ! Make your scrapbook pages, greetings cards and journals special by adding delicate cut paper elements and silhouettes, patterns and borders. A little girl reading accompanied by two puppies, Santa and his gifts, witchy Halloween, jolly clowns, chickens, birds and lowercase letters are some of the dozens of examples at the end of the book which could be scanned into a computer, photocopied or replicated many times over at any size for making a book for a best friend, a bird house, flowers for a baby’s cradle or just paper chain cards. There is advice on paper, cutting letters and tips for cutting with either scissors or a craft knife. 128pp large paperback. $12.95 NOW £4 77419 MEMORIES OF A LIFETIME: Florals and Nature by Stirling Publishing Here are hundreds of copyright-free images for Mac and PC computers and artwork for scrapbooks and fabrictransfer crafts. It can be downloaded from the CD, photocopied or use the perforated pages. Here are images of little girls in smocks picking lupins, beautiful roses, cherubs and garlands, forget-me-nots, beautiful butterflies and buzzy bees, snowdrops, Mackintosh-style Art Deco floral borders and beautiful sunflowers designed for decorating boxes, journals, making tags for gifts, découpage or collage, fabric arts and crafts. 8½” x 11" in softback, 57pp, colour. $14.95 NOW £4 78814 LIBERTY BOOK OF HOME SEWING by Richard Merritt and Lucinda Ganderton When Arthur Lasendy Liberty opened his shop in Regent’s Street, selling imported textiles, the Aesthetic Movement was at its height and its followers soon turned out to be Liberty’s most important customers. The shop quickly began selling decorative items from China, Persia, India and Japan, and then approached dyer Thomas Wardle, who had previously collaborated with William Morris on redeveloping vegetable dyes, to create new dyes for imported silks to become known as ‘Liberty Art Colours.’ Nowadays we tend to associate Liberty’s with quality, pretty, small floral prints, but they have a range of patterns, both old favourites and new designs. Using beautiful fabrics, the author explains how to create a range of items to complement the home, from sumptuous paisley lawn pillows to a traditional patchwork crib quilt using delightful Liberty lawn sewn into six-petal rosettes. Other projects include aprons, a kimono, beautiful cushions, a door stop, display board, beanbag, a lamp shade, throws and book covers. Particularly clever and useful is a tote bag which can quickly be reduced in size when you need a smaller bag by the judicious use of press studs. The final chapter concentrates on sewing basics; seams, hems and edges, hand stitches, notions and a glossary of fabrics. 160pp, colour illus and templates. $27.50 NOW £10 9 78818 MY MASTERPIECE: American Needlework Kit by the Metropolitan Museum of Art Inspired by an American crossstitch sampler, follow the instructions in the 20 page booklet, the full colour cross-stitch chart, and use the one piece nine-count Aida cloth and the embroidery thread in six colours and needle provided to get you started. A pretty star shape with bird on top and hearts in the corners, the pack contains all you need to make your own mini masterpiece. Suit ages six to adult. Box set. $12.95 NOW £3.50 78819 MY MASTERPIECE: Japanese Gilded Panel Kit by The Metropolitan Museum of Art The 12 page colour booklet gives you all the instructions you need to make and frame a gilded panel based on a Japanese folding screen. Simply tuck your completed masterpiece into the pocket inside this box and hang your work on the wall for everyone to admire. The pack includes one card stock panel with pre-printed design, two sheets of gold foil, one wooden burnishing tool, paint in four colours, one paint brush and one disposable paper palette. $12.95 NOW £3.50 78820 MY MASTERPIECE: Pacific Island Mask Kit by the Metropolitan Museum of Art A beautifully designed, easy-to-use kit containing everything you need to make and frame a masterpiece based on an Eharo mask from Papua New Guinea. Includes 12 page instruction booklet, 12 pre cut pieces of balsa wood, chalk in three colours, one length of jute rope, and one bottle of glue (which we hope has not dried up!) £9.99 NOW £4 77219 REALISTIC RAILWAY MODELLING: STEAM LOCOMOTIVES by Iain Rice ! Now you can create an authentic, realistic loco stud for a steam-era layout. With several hundred magazine articles and 23 books to his credit in the UK and US and over half a century of hands-on experience and research, Iain Rice uses his vast range of knowledge here to create a realistic, authentic and reliable stud of locomotives and rolling stock for a model railway. Biased toward the most popular 4mm/foot scale and building upon the excellent selection of good quality ready-to-run models currently available, he takes the model from the box and shows how they can be improved, modified, detailed and made to run just as well as they look. He also takes a good look at loco-modelling traditions, explains the functioning of a full-scale loco and its relationship with the traffic being worked and takes an in-depth look at mechanisms and detailing, weathering and refining your models. 750 colour and b/w photos. Haynes, 176pp, 8½”×11". £27.50 NOW £12.50 69289 BIG-PRINT QUILTS: 15 Projects Using LargeScale Fabrics by Karen Snyder Here fabric designer and quilt shop proprietor Karen Snyder has one message - Be Bold and Go Big! Usually the big print fabrics that are sold in quilt shops tend to be used for borders and backs, but here Karen shows you how to incorporate large scale fabrics into beautiful traditional and non-traditional quilts, by both keeping them whole or cutting them into smaller pieces. In her introduction she discusses the vast amount of big prints available today and how using them can appear at first daunting for the home quilter. She categorises them, then shows how they are best employed, before moving on to her general instructions section which incorporates the four golden rules of big print quilting - accurate cutting, a ¼” seam allowance, good pressing technique and “measuring through the middle” when measuring up for your borders, which ensures your quilt lies flat. The 15 projects include quilt and table runners and include the Grand Prix for the petrolhead in your life, the visually stunning Picture Window, Big Thunder, Grand Daddy and Big Sky and the delightful cowboy themed “Hercules”. Every project is described in intricate detail with all measurements, requirements and instructions plus colour photos and diagrams all the way. Create a handmade object of beauty for your home. 112pp softback, 8¼”×10¾”, colour. $22.99 NOW £5 77425 SEWING BIBLE: Slipcovers: The Ultimate Resource of Techniques, Projects and Inspiration by Wendy Gardiner Learn the essential hand and machine skills for professional looking results. Techniques covered include: inserting zippers, making ruffles, tucks, pleats and piping, sewing special seams and much more. The book contains easy-to-follow advice, including how to measure existing furniture for new covers and how to choose suitable fabrics. There are 12 stylish step-bystep projects designed by top sewing experts and include a headboard, a bench seat and a bean bag. 144 paperback pages, 27.5cm x 21cm. Colour, diagrams and templates. £14.99 NOW £4 78357 101 WAYS WITH FLOWERS by Good Homes Magazines Tulips, their stems cut short, look stunning arranged in square glass vases with their heads below the rims they can even be stacked to make a colourful talking 10 Handicrafts Cosy & Warm 78985 INSPIRED CABLE KNITS by Fiona Ellis Chunky, warm, nubbly; cable-knit jumpers are a comfort when winter strikes, but, as the author explains, the patterns don’t have to be strictly vertical as tradition decrees. They can morph and wander, appearing to find their own path through the pattern. Taking inspiration from tree bark, sand ripples on a beach, jagged lightning, leaves and even a butterfly’s wing, she has produced a selection of garments such as sweaters for women, men and children, hats, scarves, tops and cardigans, all knitted in cable stitch but as variations on a theme. In addition, each pattern has thought-provoking comments from the author to spur you on as you knit. I particularly like her suggestion of photographing each section as it’s knitted, to remind yourself of all your hard work. Definitely cable knitting with a twist! Paperback, 144pp, colour photos, charts. £16.99 NOW £6.50 78871 SHADES OF WINTER: Knitting With Natural Wool by Ewa Andinsson and Ingalill Johansson Living up to its title, this inspired collection of knitting designs is in winter colours of natural white, beige and grey, using undyed, ecological wool. Jumpers, dresses, hats, shawls, gloves, leg-warmers and cardigans fill this book, all exquisitely photographed by Ewa K. Andinsson at Sweden’s Icehotel, making it a delight to browse through even if you can’t knit! The muted shades of the natural wool emphasise the beauty of the stitch work: I especially like the delicate vintage 1950s-style lacy ruffled beige cardigan knitted in babyweight wool, perfect over a toning dress. Using a variety of textures, from elaborate cables through to simple stocking stitch, all the garment patterns are fully detailed, together with measurements and needle sizes. Paperback,160pp., colour photos. £16.99 NOW £6.50 77285 KNITTED LETTERS: Knit Your Own Letters and Words into Clothes, Cushions and More by Catherine Hirst and Erssie Major Incorporate any combination of letters into jumpers, cushions, blankets and more. Choose from nine different alphabets, each in a stylish and distinctive typeface. Each has space and instructions for you to incorporate your own chosen letters, including numbers and punctuation. Our favourite is the baby blanket. 144 paperback pages 24.5cm x 19cm, colour photos and work charts. £9.99 NOW £3.50 point. Cheer someone up with a zingy arrangement of sky blue delphiniums combined with orange snapdragons, or make a Christmas wreath using blue thistles and lilac freesias mixed in with the more traditional ivy and snowberries. If you feel really creative, why not experiment combining flowers with fruits or vegetables? At the end of the book are practical tips and a selection of floristry suppliers. Paperback, 224pp. Colour photos. £6.99 NOW £3 77717 CERAMICS: A World Guide to Traditional Techniques by Bryan Sentance There is something truly primal about the making of pottery. What is truly amazing is the difference between the traditional materials, methods and decoration of ceramics around the world, from Delft tiles to Yemeni water pipes and Nepalese lamps to German hunting-scene jugs and Roman roof tiles. Lecturer, author and exhibitor Bryan Sentance organises his enormous subject into eight main headings - Raw Material, Forming, Pre-fired Decoration, Firing, Glazes, Alternative Finishes, Use and Function and finally Quality of Life - and within these he addresses over 75 topics of astounding diversity. 848 illus (753 colour). Thames & Hudson, 216pp, 10"×11". $45 NOW £8 78029 LETTERING: From Formal to Informal by Rosemary Sassoon Letter form and design is fascinating whether looking back at ancient calligraphy, illuminated manuscripts, other archival material or modern day design and typefaces. The author’s journey from her very early formal training to the lively and imaginative work she does with her students today fills these pages together with Edward Johnston’s notes and Mary’s own work. The book particularly features work done by her Italian and Australian students and is a whistle stop tour of the development of lettering from the early 20th century to the present day. Artworks in themselves, the examples fill nearly every page in black and red lettering and alphabets and examples for every designer and hobbyist to copy. An A&C Black publication, 112 very large pages in softback. £15.99 NOW £6 ORDER TEL: 020020 74 74 24 24 74 74 74 74 HOTLINE: ORDER LITERATURE AND CLASSICS Every author, however modest, keeps a most outrageous vanity chained like a madman in the padded cell of his breast. - Logan Pearsall Smith 78673 ON TREMENDOUS TRIFLES by G. K. Chesterton G. K. Chesterton (1874-1936) made his name in journalism, working with Hilaire Belloc at The Speaker and was a prolific writer of literary criticism, poetry and detective fiction, best known for his Father Brown stories. Taking as inspiration subjects as diverse as the importance of fairy tales, the great art of lying in bed and the advantages of having one leg, Chesterton embarks on a tour of seemingly slight topics demonstrating that they afford as much pleasure as the grander things in life, if not more. It is an uplifting celebration and insight into his preoccupations and sees him setting out a philosophy valuable to all those in danger of taking life too seriously. He writes of trains and taxis, shopping and pottering, trips to the country, games of croquet, and the contents of pockets. 98 page paperback. £7.99 NOW £4 78476 INFERNO by Dante Alighieri Illustrated by Gustav Doré and with introduction and notes by Stefano Albertini, this lovely cloth bound edition has gold tooling on the black and red striking cover. In 1855 Paul Gustav Doré decided to illustrate Dante’s ‘Divine Comedy’, but in 1861 when the plates for the Inferno were ready he was unable to find a publisher willing to invest on the project. Undeterred he published the plates and text himself and the book proved a great success. Manuscript editions of the ‘Divine Comedy’ became available between 1308 and 1322 and the first printed edition published in Italy in 1472. This edition has been prepared and designed for a modern audience and explains the topographical structure of Dante’s Hell and the astronomical, geographical and theological doctrines of the Middle Ages. The realm of Hell occupies the immense cone-shaped chasm formed at the moment of Lucifer’s fall. The damned souls populate this chasm and Dante’s classification of sins follows closely Aristotle’s Nichomachean Ethics. All of the cantos in their entirety and with excellent footnotes and beautiful Doré woodcut illus. 256pp. £9.99 NOW £5 78688 SOMEBODY’S LUGGAGE by Charles Dickens Stumbling upon some luggage that has been left behind in the hotel he works in, a waiter searches through it to try to identify its owner. ‘Somebody’ remains anonymous, but secreted away in different parts of the luggage are a number of stories. Impressed by their quality, the waiter succeeds in getting them published. The identity of their author remains a mystery until a visitor comes calling. The book is a wonderful composite of tales reprinted in its entirety for the first time since its original publication in 1862. ‘All The Year Round’ is a rediscovered gem from Dickens’ later life. With contributions by four eminent Victorian writers in this marvellous collection of short stories. 135pp in paperback. £6.99 NOW £4 78595 BOY AT THE HOGARTH PRESS by Richard Kennedy In 1928 after a rather unsuccessful education at Marlborough College, 16 year old Richard Kennedy was put firmly under the wing of Leonard Woolf as his protégé at his publishing house. Some 40 years later, and by then a professional illustrator, Richard wrote his recollections of his time with Virginia and Leonard Woolf in candid and often hilarious detail. It tells of the success that Virginia enjoyed, their chaotic office with its collapsing shelves, his own often hapless attempts to keep pace with the literary giants around him. A unique peep into the Bloomsbury set. ‘The truth was that I had really only read Orlando, Mrs Dalloway and The Common Reader...’ Delightful line art, captions and doodles, 88pp in paperback. £7.99 NOW £4 78583 ALEXANDER by Klaus Mann Published with a foreword by Jean Cocteau, here is a captivating early work of historical fiction, by a troubled and unjustly neglected writer. This historical fantasy, written by the son of the wellknown German novelist Thomas Mann, takes Alexander the Great for its subject, charting his life and career and examining his obsession with conquest and supremacy, regardless of its effects on his friends and lovers. It is a fascinating study of power and highly political connotations. 214pp in paperback. £8.99 NOW £4 78603 COMMONPLACE by Christina Rossetti ‘The three central characters, the sisters Catherine, Lucy and Jane Charlmont are a means of exploring the plight on mid-19th century middle class women as they swirl down the marriage-stream towards the rapids of lonely old age.’ Andrew Motion. When William Charlmont is lost at sea, his devoted wife lies dying in childbirth and charges Catherine, their eldest daughter, to await his return. Years later and now in her 30s, Catherine remains faithful to her promise, resigning herself to a life of spinsterhood. A charming and witty tale accompanied by more of Christina Rossetti’s longneglected short fiction this is a delightful novella of love, matrimony and sisterhood. 116pp in paperback. £6.99 NOW £4 78582 AFTER THE FIREWORKS by Aldous Huxley As an acclaimed novelist, Miles Fanning has grown accustomed to the attentions of fawning admirers, yet little prepares him for the determination of the gauche Pamela Tarn who resolves not only his world, but also his bed. Initially repelled by the enormity of the age gap between them, he vows never to acquiesce and resorts to his most boorish behaviour to break his hold on her. Yet as they are drawn inexorably together, they embark upon a tempestuous and ultimately destructive love affair. This satirical novella sees the author of ‘Brave New World’ turning his characteristic humour and keen observation to the dual notions of obsession and control. An exciting 140pp in paperback. £7.99 NOW £4 78612 THE DUEL by Giacomo Casanova Translated for the first time into English, this autobiographical novel is an important example of Casanova’s inimitable writing style and is presented here with the corresponding extract from his memoirs, written some 15 years later. Casanova, the Prince of Italian adventurers, is remembered as a libertine and rogue, yet few know the true story of his remarkable life, and of the duel he once fought with a Polish Count. On the run from the Venetian authorities, Casanova was forced to become an exile. His reputation afforded him shelter throughout Europe, yet he soon found himself implicated, insulted and forced to enter into a duel over a ballerina. Describing the dramatic encounter and its surprising outcome with sardonic and even blasé humour, Casanova creates a work of thrilling adventure and proves his literary prowess. 112pp in paperback. search for truth. Where is God? Taking the maxim ‘seek and ye shall find’ literally, a recently converted African girl embarks upon her own quest to find God. With only her bible as a guide, she plunges into the jungle where alongside snakes and lions she meets a dazzling array of religious and philosophical figures, from the God of Noah to Jesus, the Prophet to Voltaire, each seeking to convince her of their claim to be truth. First published 1932, here is 80 page paperback with fabulous woodcut illus. £7.99 NOW £4 78866 MY FAVOURITE STORIES OF WALES edited by Jan Morris From three medieval tales from the Mabinogion, through three folk stories, two narrative poems, two romantics and three contemporaries, this is a super compilation of Welsh story-telling at its very best. Dylan Thomas’s mystic tale, The Followers, tells of how he and his friend get a fright. As usual, Dylan’s observations are spot on as he notes that the barmaid had two gold front teeth, ‘like a well off rabbit’s’! Welsh folk-lore invariably includes fairies, treasure, time confusions, wizards and unseen worlds, some of which are captured in The Changeling, which tells how a woman retrieves her son from the Others after tricking the boy who has taken his place. Robert Grave’s poem Welsh Incident amusingly captures the long-windedness of a Welsh narrator, determined to spin out his story as much as he can. A lovely read to while away chilly winter evenings. 127pp. Last sold at. £16.50 NOW £7 78590 BETRAYAL by Marquis de Sade The Baron de Téroze has already successfully married off his older daughter to a colonel of the Dragoons. Now it is time for him to arrange his younger daughter’s nuptials. A corrupt magistrate from Aix seems to him the ideal candidate, much to the disgust of the young daughter who is in love with another man. Vowing to rid the beautiful marchioness of her odious old husband, her lover, sister and brother-in-law conspire in a series of hilarious manipulations that ultimately results in complete humiliation and defeat for their hapless guest. As a companion piece, Emilie de Tourville tells the chilling story of another unfortunate younger sister whose elder, lawyer brothers exact revenge of her for compromising their family’s honour. Two elegant tales of love and deception and a scandalous glimpse into the Marquis de Sade’s society and its hidden proclivities. 116pp in paperback. £6.99 NOW £4 78641 HYDE PARK GATE NEWS: The Stephen Family Newspaper by Virginia Woolf, Vanessa Bell, Toby Stephen £6.99 NOW £4 78623 FOXES COME AT NIGHT by Cees Nooteboom The Dutch writer is a superb stylist who observes the world with a combination of melancholy and astonishment and has been described by A. S. Byatt as ‘One of the greatest modern novelists.’ Set in the cities and islands of the Mediterranean and linked thematically, the eight stories in this collection read more like a novel, a meditation on memory, life and death. The protagonists collect and reconstruct fragments of lives lived intensely and now lost, crystallised in memory or in the detail of a photograph. In ‘Paula’, the narrator evokes the mysterious, brief life of a woman he once loved. In ‘Paula II’, the same woman is aware of the man thinking of her, and the time they spent together, his fear of the black night when the foxes appear. Death it seems is nothing to be afraid of in these stories. Apologies for sticker. 144pp. £12 NOW £4 78636 HOLLY TREE INN by Charles Dickens A journeying gentleman finds himself snowed in at the Holly Tree Inn and resolves to entertain himself by recording the stories he hears from his fellow tenants. Trapped for a week, he is regaled with tales from the barmaid and the landlord and these fictional delights include an intriguing mystery by a master innovator of the genre, Wilkie Collins, as well as classically Dickensian sparks of humour and romance. The book presents the complete 1855 Christmas number of Dickens’ periodical ‘Household Words’ which was adapted for the stage, published 1855. 130 page paperback. £7.99 NOW £4 78581 ADVENTURES OF THE BLACK GIRL IN HER SEARCH FOR GOD by Bernard Shaw ‘Life is greater than death, and hope than despair, I will do the work that comes to me only if I know that it is good work; and to know that, I must know the past and the future and must know God.’ So controversial was this book when it first appeared in 1932 that it provoked a public outcry with George Bernard Shaw decried as a blasphemer. This brilliantly sardonic allegory showcases some of his more unorthodox thoughts on race, religion and God and remains a fascinating tale of the universal As children, Virginia Woolf, her sister and brother collaborated on their own newspaper, recording the day-to-events of their family home at 22 Hyde Park Gate. Ingeniously mimicking the style of the leading newspapers of the day, the children present a charming portrayal of their lives in London and at their holiday home in St. Ives. Aristocrats, academics, politicians and artists, singing lessons, annual regattas, advertising for a wife, plus the children’s fictional and poetic creations, photographs and facsimiles make up a chronicle of joyful and rollicking late Victorian family life. 240pp in paperback. £9.99 NOW £4 78679 PILGRIMS by Mary Shelley A knight living alone in his isolated mountain fortress shows hospitality to a pair of pilgrims seeking shelter. Entreating him to tell them of his sorrow, the knight unburdens himself of his loss and tragedy, unaware of the true nature of the two young people’s pilgrimage, until a revelation transforms his understanding of the past and reveals the possibility of a new future. A poignant tale of betrayal, heartbreak, revenge and redemption, it is an exquisite work of Gothic storytelling. Accompanied here by four other short stories, The Dream, The False Rhyme, The Invisible Girl and The Mourner, the stories echo tragic aspects of Mary Shelley’s own life. She is best remembered for Frankenstein. 100 page paperback. £6.99 NOW £4 78696 UNDER THE NET by Iris Murdoch Her brilliant début novel which was first published in 1954 entranced the nation to Iris Murdoch’s writing - a flawless fusion of the mundane and the marvellous, laughter and lyricism, farce and philosophy. In a nutshell, the novel is Jake Donaghue’s account of how he became the writer, portrait of the artist as a restless, feckless, penniless young man, on a quest. He scrapes a living as a hack translator of French fiction and sponges off his girlfriend and others. When he is kicked out of his latest lodgings he embarks on a series of fantastic and hilarious adventures around London involving movie stars, majestic philosophers, bookies, singers and a celebrity hound. 286pp in paperback. £8.99 NOW £5 Literature continued www s. c o m w.. b i b l i o p h i l e b o o k ks 78692 TRAGEDY OF THE KOROSKO by Arthur Conan Doyle A group of Western tourists collect aboard the Nile steamer Korosko anticipating a trip filled with sightseeing and civilised colonial pleasures. But one morning during an excursion in the desert they are kidnapped by a group of Dervish camel-men, their relationships, their beliefs and their very survival placed in jeopardy. Conan Doyle evokes the uncertainty of the late-Victorian era, cultural hegemony, but also a time when the moral authority of Western imperialist powers was starting to be called into question. Each of his carefully drawn characters takes their part in the cultural and spiritual debate that underlies the story. Written in 1898 and permeated with sharp humour this is high melodrama, and still very pertinent today. 122pp in paperback. £6.99 NOW £4 78644 JEEVES AND THE WEDDING BELLS by Sebastian Faulks In an homage to P. G. Wodehouse and authorised by his Estate, here is a delightfully witty story of mistaken identity, a midsummer village festival, a cricket match and love triumphant. Bertie Wooster, recently returned from a very pleasurable soujourn in Cannes, finds himself at the stately home of Sir Henry Hackwood in Dorset. Bertie is more than familiar with the country house set-up - a veteran of the cocktail hour, and thanks to Jeeves his gentleman’s personal gentleman, is never less than immaculately dressed. However on this occasion it is Jeeves who is to be seen in the drawing room while Bertie finds himself below stairs. Bertie you see has met Georgiana and though she is clever and he has a reputation for foolish engagements, it looks like it could be the real thing. Georgiana is the ward of Sir Henry who has struck a deal that she should become Mrs Rupert Venables. Must Bertie pass himself off as a servant when he has never so much as made a cup of tea? Does Jeeves have an ulterior motive? 259pp. £16.99 NOW £6 78662 MANON LESCAUT by Antoine François Prévost First published in 1731, Prévost’s story proved hugely influential, inspiring a number of operas and ballets. The compelling character of the duplicitous Manon of the Abbé Prévost is emotionally inert, a giggling empty-headed minx. Does she really love him or could she really love anyone? She prefigures a host of 19th century Romantic heroines in this truly ground-breaking novel of passion and immortality, and one of the most famous love stories of all time. The Chevalier des Greux is still a young man but life and bitter experience have already taken their toll. The kindness of a stranger persuades him to reveal his troubles and he unfolds his story, his helpless and ill-starred love for Manon, a lower-class girl with whom he eloped to begin a new life together. But it was to prove a mutually destructive affair giving him in turn the joy of sexual love and the misery of betrayal and moral degradation. 158pp in paperback. £7.99 NOW £4 78666 MEMOIRS OF A MADMAN and NOVEMBER by Gustav Flaubert One of Flaubert’s earliest writings but published only after his death, ‘Memoirs of a Madman’ presents us with a young man as he reflects, alternating between musings on the present and memories of the past, on the years that have brought him to ‘madness’, recalling the innocence of his boyhood, the first stirrings of sexual awakening and his abrupt initiation into the adult world. The second autobiographical novella in the collection is ‘November’ which Nadine Gordimer called ‘An unsurpassed testament of adolescence’. In the story, love is not only short lived but one dimensional, a brief holiday romance and first intense sexual experience. It seems that Elisa, older and more experienced, took the initiative and began a theme for Flaubert of masculine passivity. She has become a prostitute because she likes sex. 196pp in paperback. £7.99 NOW £5 78052 CLASSIC ENGLISH LOVE POEMS edited by Emile Capouya 87 Classic poems of love from 48 poets in a charmingly illustrated collection with woodcuts and other masterpieces, many well known, which complement the writing. Here are the timeless love lyrics of Geoffrey Chaucer, Sir Philip Sidney, William Shakespeare, Ben Jonson, John Donne, Robert Herrick, Andrew Marvell, Aphra Behn, John Dryden, Alexander Pope, Lady Mary Montague, John Keats, Percy Bysshe Shelley, Lord Byron, William Wordsworth, Elizabeth Barrett Browning, Emily Brontë, Christina Rossetti, Thomas Hardy and Gerard Manley Hopkins among others. Come Into the Garden, Maude and Now Sleeps the Crimson Petal by Alfred Lord Tennyson sit alongside Robert Browning’s Meeting at Night and Two in the Campagna. 144 page softback. £10.99 NOW £4 78137 WE THINK THE WORLD OF YOU by J. R. Ackerley Breezy and sad, the book combines acute social realism and dark fantasy. Frank, the narrator, is a middle aged civil servant, intelligent, acerbic, self-righteous, angry. He is in love with Johnny, a young, married, working class man with a sweetly easy going nature. When Johnny is sent to prison for committing a petty theft, Frank gets caught up in a struggle with Johnny’s wife and parents for access to him. Their struggle finds a strange focus in Johnny’s dog, a beautiful but neglected German shepherd named Evie. It is she in the end who becomes the improbable and undeniable guardian of Frank’s inner world. 209pp, paperback reprint. £8.99 NOW £4 78159 BRIEF GUIDE TO C. S. LEWIS by Paul Simpson Sub-titled ‘From Mere Christianity to Narnia’. Simpson charts Lewis’s journey from religion to atheism and then under the influence of his friend J. R. R. Tolkien, through theism to Christianity. The author’s marriage to the American writer Joy Davidman Gresham, his battle with cancer, discussions of fiction, not only the Narnia series but also the science fiction trilogy Out of the Silent Planet and his remarkably accessible religious writings, from the ‘Screwtape’ letters to ‘Mere Christianity’, the guide assumes no biblical scholarship. The focus is in what Lewis wrote rather than the specific texts that he dissects. 284pp, paperback. $13.95 NOW £4.50 78164 DRACULA by Bram Stoker When first published in 1897, the novel was a commercial failure, yet Bram Stoker’s Dracula has come to be revered as the epitome of the horror novel and a literary classic, exploring the sanity and dark corners of sexuality and desire. Sent to Transylvania to help a local Count complete the purchase of an English estate, young solicitor Jonathan Harker unwittingly enters into a battle that risks his very soul and those of his friends and loved ones. Harker discovers that his client, the charismatic and seductive Count Dracula, is not all that he seems. Under the direction of Dr Abraham Van Helsing, Harker, his fiancée Mina Murray, and friends Dr John Seward and Quincy P. Morris lead the charge in what will be the ultimate battle of good and evil. The original horror classic presented in a deluxe hardcover edition as a facsimile of the 1897 edition. Included is a sneak peak at Dracula the Un-Dead. 438 roughcut pages, red satin bookmark. $24.95 NOW £5 78171 INCIDENT AT VICHY by Arthur Miller A searingly dramatic journey into the moral vacuum of the Holocaust. In Vichy France in 1942, eight men and a boy are seized by the collaboration authorities and made to wait in a building that may be a police station. Some of them are Jews. All of them have something to hide, if not from the Nazis, then from their fellow detainees and inevitably from themselves. For in this claustrophobic antechamber to the death camps, everyone is guilty, and perhaps none more so than those who can walk away alive. 72 page paperback. $12 NOW £4.75 78298 GREAT MODERN POETS: The Best Poetry of Our Times edited by Michael Schmidt Choosing 50 poets to represent a century must have been no easy task. Included are Robert Frost, W. B. Yeats, Wallace Stevens, Rudyard Kipling, William Carlos Williams, Ezra Pound, Robinson Jeffers, Marianne Moore, T. S. Eliot, e.e. Cummings, Allen Tate, Laura Riding, W. H. Auden, Elizabeth Bishop, Dylan Thomas, Robert Lowell, Allen Ginsberg, Frank O’Hara, John Ashbery, Adreinne Rich and Sylvia Plath. Over 150 essential poems are accompanied by a brief discussion of poetry providing insight, observations and historical context for each poet and their work. 224 large pages, photos. Softback. £12.99 NOW £5 78456 EARLY POEMS AND JUVENILIA by Philip Larkin ! Born in 1922 and brought up in Coventry, Philip Larkin became Librarian at the University of Hull, a post he held until his death in 1985. His Collected Poems has become essential reading on any bookshelf, covering his four published volumes and late work. But Larkin was a prolific writer in his youth, and wrote over 250 poems in the years leading up to his first collection. And here it is now in glamorous Faber hardback. Draws on the pamphlets, manuscripts and workbooks from 1938-1946. 382pp. £25 NOW £8 78461 TABLES OF THE LAW by Thomas Mann GIFTS FOR BOOK LOVERS 78857 BRAVE NEW WORLD: Book Lover’s Mug by Aldous Huxley and buyenlarge.com Microwave and dishwasher safe, one of the original stylish book jacket designs in medium and light blue with white writing is the striking transfer design on this white heavy porcelain mug. Very capacious, sturdy with handle (yes, handy!) and in presentation box it holds 16floz or 473ml of liquid. Lovely to keep your tea warm! Special import. ONLY £10 78867 THE ORIGIN OF SPECIES: Book Lover’s Mug by Charles Darwin and buyenlarge.com Mann’s ironic and incisive style is brought to this, the most dramatic and significant story of the Hebrew Bible. The Tables of the Law recounts the early life of Moses, his preparations for leading his people out of Egypt, the Exodus itself and the incidents at the oasis Kadesh, as well as the engraving of the stone tablets of the Law at Sinai. The tale of the ethical founding and moulding of a people sharply rebukes the Nazis for their intended destruction of the moral code set down in the Ten Commandments, lending Thomas Mann’s famous irony to this account of the shaping of the Jewish people. 114pp, a beautiful short novel. Microwave and dishwasher safe, one very large leaping frog and one smaller one, both in blue on a bright green background with The Origin of Species, Charles Darwin as the bold transfer on this heavyweight white porcelain mug. Holds 16floz or 473ml of liquid to keep your huge mug of tea or coffee warm. Based on one of the original book jacket designs and specially imported. ONLY £10 78462 TRADITIONAL BOOK PLATE CAT DESIGN by That Company Called If Use to personalise your favourite books and make sure they always return home! With a traditional Thomas Bewick woodcut design, these book plates are printed with a peel off self-adhesive back. This is important as some book plates can stick together if they are stored in damp or humid conditions. Contains 12 book plates of one design. Approx 7 x 9cm with a black cat striding across a wooden gate with the words Ex Libris below. £10 NOW £3 23783 COMPLETE FATHER BROWN by G.K. Chesterton Father Brown, one of the most quirkily genial and lovable characters to emerge from English detective fiction, first made his appearance in The Innocence of Father Brown in 1911. That first collection of stories established G.K. Chesterton’s kindly cleric in the front rank of eccentric sleuths. This complete collection contains all the favourite Father Brown stories, showing a quiet wit and compassion that has endeared him to many, whilst solving his mysteries by a mixture of imagination and a sympathetic worldliness in a totally believable manner. The Complete compenduim is 800pp. Paperback. ONLY £2 30326 DON QUIXOTE by Miguel de Cervantes Translated by P. A. Motteux From first publication ‘Don Quixote’ was a best-seller, initially taken as a knockabout account of a mad Spanish gentleman and his cowardly peasant squire, but later reinterpreted as an enlightenment text, a representation of universal human nature, a myth of a tragic hero defending man’s nobler aspirations, a study in alienation, a spiritual autobiography, a metaphor for Spain’s imperial decline, a tragedy and comedy in one. P. A. Motteux’s vigorous and lively translation brilliantly catches the tone and comedy of the Spanish original. 992pp paperback. ONLY £2.50 58192 WOMAN IN WHITE by Wilkie Collins When the hero, Walter Hartright, on a moonlit night in north London, encounters a solitary, terrified and beautiful woman dressed in white, he feels impelled to solve the mystery of her distress. The intricate plot is peopled with a finely characterised cast, from the peevish invalid Mr Fairlie to the corpulent villain Count Fosco and the enigmatic woman herself. 502pp. Paperback. 11 ONLY £1.99 78467 LITTLE BOOK HOLDER: BLUE by That Company Called If Looks like a lightweight - performs like a heavyweight! You can now use your free hands to stroke the cat and pat the dog! Just clip this muscular miniature on to your hardback and paperback books and let Little Book Holder take the strain while you get to grips with your reading. (And, yes, it really works!) Awarded Highly Commended Gift of the Year 2009 (under £10 category.) Turquoise blue, heavy plastic shaped like a man (with big arms and feet!). ONLY £3 78466 GIMBLE TRAVELLER: White by That Company Called If Comfortable ‘hands-free’ reading comes to a beach or garden or sofa near you! This ingenious variation on the popular Gimble now expands to fit the larger size ‘C’ books but cleverly contracts to fit neatly smaller A and B paperbacks and inside your travel bag. Of course, there’s nothing to stop you using your Gimble Traveller at home, donning your sunglasses and sombrero and just pretending you’re on holiday! Fits and holds paperback books up to 40mm (over 1½”) thick and will hold the pages open and still allow them to be turned easily. Slip the gimble over your book with the larger loop placed over the thicker side - when you reach the middle you can swap it over. White lightweight plastic design adjustable to fit all books, or as a cookbook holder, leaving your hands free to scratch your nose (or whatever!) ONLY £6 78464 ORIGINAL BOOK JACKET: TAN SUEDE by That Company Called If With a choice of real tan suede (78464) or genuine dark brown leather (78463), these beautifully made jackets will cover, protect - and disguise - your hardback and paperback books. The jacket fits neatly over the top of your book’s own cover and the ‘tuck-in’ flaps are adjustable to fit most popular sizes, so you can easily swap it over to a new book when you have finished. If you love your books, why not dress and protect them in style with The Original Book Jacket! Awarded Highly Commended Gift of the Year 2009 (Mind, Body and Soul category) Measures 210mm x 140mm. Boxed for gift giving. ONLY £13 78463 ORIGINAL BOOK JACKET: DARK BROWN LEATHER by That Company Called If Genuine dark brown leather, 210mm x 140mm. ONLY £13 78474 EMMA by Jane Austen Emma is the story of the eponymous Miss Woodhouse who having lost her companion Anne Taylor to marriage, sets out on an ill-fêted career of match-making in the town of Highbury. Taking as her subject the pretty but dreary Harriet Smith, she manages to cause misunderstandings with every new tactic she employs. Though precious and spoilt, Emma is charming to all around her and so it takes her some time to learn her lesson and profit from spending less time worrying about how other people should live their lives. With four clear introductions by renowned Austen scholars, a timeline, colour map, embossed clothbound cover and tipped in front cover illus. Colour illus and bookmark, 350pp. ONLY £2.50 78471 A CHRISTMAS CAROL: And Two Other Christmas Books by Charles Dickens When ‘A Christmas Carol’ was first published in 1843 it was an overnight success. None would produce a character as extraordinarily memorable as Ebenezer Scrooge. Misers the world over meet their match in this most committed of miserable skinflints, but even Scrooge is not beyond being saved by the magically redemptive powers of the three spirits from Christmas’s past, present and future that visit him on Christmas night. The complete text in a modern readable typeface, clear introductions by Dickens scholars, an illustrated character list, timeline of Dickens’ world, a colour map of Dickens’ London, cloth bound, gold tooled with tipped in illustration on the cover and coloured endpapers and bookmark. 207pp. £12.99 NOW £5 76217 THE AWAKENING AND OTHER STORIES by Kate Chopin This is the first paperback edition to bring out in one volume Kate Chopin’s extraordinary novel The Awakening (1899), along with the complete text of her two collections of short stories, Bayou Folk (1894) and A Night in Acadie (1897), and 12 uncollected tales. The Awakening is an evocative story of female emancipation, set in the sensuous environment of Southern Louisiana, where the young Edna Pontellier reclaims her own individuality. Chopin’s stories are brilliantly observed and often humorous, alert to the foibles, weaknesses and small triumphs of her characters. Paperback, 508pp. ONLY £2 Boxed. £12.99 NOW £5 59994 THE CASTLE by Franz Kafka Translated and with an introduction by John R. Williams which reads, ‘The novel remained unfinished, indeed, it breaks off in mid-sentence. We have no indication whatever whether K will ever gain acceptance or be granted access to Klamm. Max Brod claimed that Kafka told him K was to be informed on his death bed that the Castle authorities had, exceptionally, given him permission to stay in the village.’ Kafka’s final novel was written during 1922 when he was already at an advanced stage of TB which was to kill him. The novel is an allegory of the sprawling Austro-Hungarian Empire as it disintegrates into modern nation states. It is the search by a central European Jew for acceptance or perhaps it is a spiritual quest for salvation. 283pp, paperback. ONLY £2.75 76934 GENIUS OF DICKENS by Michael Slater Slater illuminates the truth of a famous tribute paid to Dickens: ‘The more you want out of the Master, the more you’ll find in him.’ Widely ranging over Dickens’s fiction, journalism, letters and speeches, the book looks at ideas and inspirations behind Britain’s greatest novelist and his beliefs, social and artistic ideals, Dickensian ‘values’ and the ambition that shaped his prodigious output. An inspiring portrait of the man and the writer. 184pp. £10.99 NOW £2 78477 JANE EYRE by Charlotte Bronte Jane Eyre was Charlotte’s first published novel and has long been the most popular of all literary classics. It tells the moving story of Jane, an orphan entrusted to the care of her aunt by her dying uncle. The aunt cares greatly for her own children but dislikes Jane whom she punishes unfairly. Jane is sent to a boarding school, a strict Evangelical school where despite the austerities of her environment, she finally meets pupils and teachers who nurture and encourage her. From there she goes to work as a governess at a large country mansion where she falls in love with the mysterious master of the house, the Byronic Mr Rochester, a charismatic character with a troubled past who is already married to a beautiful and wealthy Creole woman who has become insane, violent and bestial. Colour map, timeline, Who’s Who, scholarly introduction. Clothbound luxury hardback, 408pp. £12.99 NOW £5 12 Literature continued 78472 CLASSIC FAVOURITE FAIRY TALES OF ANDERSEN AND GRIMM Deluxe, scarlet, satin bound outsized luxury edition with tipped in illustration and gold tooling on the cover, colour illustrations by Edmund Dulac, Walter Crane, Fritz Kredel, Mabel Lucie Attwell and other children’s book illustrator favourites, here are 320 glamorous, collectable, beautiful pages. Hans Christian Andersen’s 32 fairy tales include The Tinder Box, Little Claus and Big Claus, The Princess and the Pea, The Little Mermaid, The Wild Swans, Something Ole Lukoie, The Swine Herd, The Snow Queen, The Little Match Girl, The Story of a Mother and The Dryad. Old classic favourites and many forgotten stories are joined with 35 more fairy tales from the Brothers Grimm including The Golden Bird, The Travelling Musicians, Old Sultan, The Sleeping Beauty, The Willow-Wren and The Bear, The Frog Prince, Cat and Mouse in Partnership, Rapunzel, Tom Thumb, Clever Gretel, Sweetheart Roland, The Golden Goose and The Seven Ravens. £20 NOW £8.50 78492 COMPLETE SMOKING DIARIES by Simon Gray One of the funniest books Philip Hensher of the Spectator has ever read in his life, curmudgeonly, charming and capricious, these finely crafted diaries were written when the playwright Simon Gray turned 65. He began to keep a diary in which he reflected on a life filled with cigarettes (continuing), alcohol (stopped), several triumphs and many more disasters, shame, adultery, friendship and love. Collected together here for the first time, the volumes of The Smoking Diaries (The Smoking Diaries, The Year of the Jouncer, The Last Cigarette and Coda) form a brilliant and moving account of life’s unsteady progress, filled with painful selfdisclosure and comedy. 846pp. Satin bookmark. £25 NOW £6.50 76878 ONE FOR THE BOOKS by Joe Queenan This collection of book-related journalism includes bizarre bookstores Queenan has known, and also bad books, on which he is something of an expert, dividing them into “the stupid, the megastupid, and the ones written by O. J. Simpson”. In Paris he visits key sites associated with writers, although in England he would not bother with “the pub where A. S. Byatt’s cribbage league dukes it out every Thursday night”. A delight for every bibliophile. 244pp. $24.95 NOW £2 77543 LES MISERABLES by Victor Hugo A novel peopled by colourful characters from the 19th century Parisian underworld - the street children, the prostitutes and the criminals. In telling the story of escaped convict Jean Valjean and his efforts to reform his ways and to care for the little girl he rescues from a life of cruelty, Victor Hugo drew attention to the plight of the poor and oppressed. Valjean becomes a successful businessman and generous benefactor to his ward, Cosette, but the implacable Inspector Javert hounds him from town to town, seeking justice. Les Misérables is a masterful detective thriller, a comic and tragic story of romance and revolution set during the Paris Uprising of 1832, first published in 1862. 908 pages. £9.99 NOW £4.75 77552 PEAKE’S PROGRESS: Selected Writings and CED Drawings: EDU of Mervyn Peake R edited by Maeve Gilmore Mervyn Peake (1911-1968) is best known as the author of the ‘Gormenghast’ trilogy, and as one of the great 20th century illustrators, in particular of Alice. ‘Peake’s Progress’ is a selection compiled by his late wife, Maeve Gilmore, from every period of his work as writer and draughtsman. It contains a remarkable work from childhood, ‘The White Chief of the Umzimbooboo Kaffirs’, the early ‘Mr. Slaughterboard’, which foreshadows the ‘Titus’ books, two plays, ‘The Wit to Woo’ and ‘Noah’s Ark’, plus a wealth of short stories, poems and nonsense verses and drawings - all of them adding new perspectives on this prolific and astonishingly original writer. Beautifully typeset, this handsome edition includes a preface by Peake’s son, Sebastian. A British Library reprint of 1978 original with new Introduction. 576 pages with Peake’s own remarkable line art. £25 NOW £10 76629 TALE OF THE HEIKE translated by Royall Tyler Here is the original Samurai saga of pride, romance and warfare from medieval Japan. An epic story from the 14th century about the 12th century wars between the Heike and Genji clans, it is a masterpiece of Japanese culture. We meet the ruthless warlord Kiyomori who dies burning with such rage that water poured on him boils; Hotoke, the beautiful young dancer who renounces wealth and fame to follow her conscience; Shigemori, the tyrant’s righteous son, who struggles against all odds to uphold fairness and justice; and Yoshitsune, the daring commander who defeats the enemy in battle after battle, only to be condemned by his jealous, powerful brother. Rich in scenes of battle and warfare. Landmark translation with genealogies and maps. 734pp. £30 NOW £7 77989 ZASTROZZI by Percy Bysshe Shelley Shelley’s particular genius lay with poetry. Here his vivid love story dramatises the misplaced passion between Matilda, Contessa di Laurentini, Verezzi, the object of her crazed desire, and Matilda’s murderous accomplice, the mysterious Zastrozzi. When Matilda discovers that her love is unrequited, she traps Verezzi in her castle and orders Zastrozzi to kill Julia, her rival. But Zastrozzi has his own agenda. First published when Shelley was only 18. 116pp, paperback. £6.99 NOW £2.50 ORDER HOTLINE: 020 74 74 24 74 77548 OXFORD COMPANION TO CLASSICAL LITERATURE Third Edition edited by M. C. Howatson ! In print for over 70 years, extensively revised and updated for this new third edition. It covers the lives and works of the classical writers as well as plot summaries, literary styles and characters (heroes, gods, kings and queens), placing them in the wider context of the history and society of the Greek and Roman worlds. Over 3,100 fully revised and updated A-Z entries include topical entries on subjects such as aesthetics, age groups, anti-Semitism, Byzantium, calendars, Cicero, Cynegeticus, Diana, Euripides, politics, genre, love and sexuality, Oedipus, Punic Wars, Rome, slavery, theatre, Tiber and universal and natural law. Contains six detailed maps showing important locations with literary connections, as well as a chronology showing events of both historical and literary significance. Clear headwords and layout, 632 pages. £40 NOW £14 77687 SHAKESPEARE’S RESTLESS WORLD by Neil MacGregor Sub-titled ‘An Unexpected History in Twenty Objects’. The Director of the British Museum and renowned Shakespearian scholar Neil MacGregor uncovers the extraordinary stories behind 20 objects from the period to recreate an age both distant and surprisingly familiar. A 400-year-old Venetian glass goblet symbolises how the mystery and excitement of Venice (“like a rotten post gilded on the outside”) was depicted to agog audiences watching Shylock and Antonio’s battles in The Merchant of Venice. A 65cm long model of a ship from the 16th century was not intended to be a toy - it was an offering to God to give thanks for the delivering of a ship from the tempestbrewing witches. MacGregor’s brilliant understanding of the Bard, his age and his audience is magisterially distilled into simple physical objects that allow us to enter deftly into our forefathers’ mental and spiritual world. 320pp paperback, illus in colour and b/w. ALL COPIES SIGNED BY THE AUTHOR. £12.99 NOW £6 77975 ISLAND: Collective Stories by Alistair MacLeod Set against the unforgiving landscape of Cape Breton, Nova Scotia, these stories are all concerned with the complexities and mysteries of the human heart. Steeped in memory and myth and washed in the brine and blood of the long battle with the land and the sea, they celebrate a passionate engagement with the natural world and a continuity of the generations in the face of transition - in face of loss and love. The collection begins with The Boat written in 1968 and The Vastness of the Dark 1971 and ends with Island 1988 and Clearances of 1999. 431pp, paperback. £8.99 NOW £3.25 77603 CLASSIC POETRY: An Illustrated Collection selected by Michael Rosen Waltzing Matilda by Banjo Paterson is coupled with one of his many ballads about Australian life. Several poems from ‘A Child’s Garden of Verses’ make an appearance alongside beautiful poetry from Thomas Hardy like Snow in the Suburbs, Cristina Rossetti with Sonnets, Lewis Carroll with The Mock Turtle’s Song, Emily Dickinson, Oh Captain! My Captain!, Browning’s My Last Duchess, poetry from Emily Bronte and Edward Lear with Calico Pie, Tennyson’s Sweet and Low and The Eagle, Paul Revere’s Ride, Kubla Khan, and How Doth My Little Crocodile are among the lyrics, ballads, dramatic monologues, parodies, sonnets, and free verse. Silhouettes, pencil drawings, line art and painted scenes. Ages 10 to adult. 160pp large softback, colour. $12.99 NOW £5.50 77659 JONATHAN WILD THE GREAT by Henry Fielding Based on the career and crimes of a real-life 18th century gangland criminal, it is an hilarious black comedy of manners and morals. Jonathan Wild treads his own path to fame and glory by way of theft, fraud and betrayal. Under the guidance of Mr Snap, a sheriff’s officer and receiver of stolen goods, Wild becomes an expert pickpocket and organises a gang of thieves whose stolen wares he receives and resells at great profit for himself. His crimes are played out against a backdrop of colourful characters such as the whore Miss Molly Straddle, the cardsharp Count La Rouse and the ‘base and weak’ Mr Thomas Heartfree. 190pp, paperback. £7.99 NOW £4 77977 MEETING THE DEVIL: A Book of Memoir preface by Alan Bennett Autobiography has been an essential element in the ‘London Review of Books’ since its founding in 1979. This volume collects many outstanding pieces of memoir that first appeared in its pages. Edward Said pays homage to the belly dancer and movie star Tahia Carioca. Jenny Diski imagines her own burial. Hilary Mantel tackles a strongman on her hospital bed. Julian Barnes writes about not getting the Booker Prize. Andrew O’Hagan confesses to his past as a schoolboy bully. AJP Taylor hallucinates. Alan Bennett discusses the lady who lives in his drive. Tariq Ali relates his misadventures in Pyongyang. Frank Kermode tells his wartime stories. There are reports from poker tables and coal mines, stories of double agents, online romance and stigmata. A study in the art of the self-portrait. 394pp. £25 NOW £6 78015 LITERARY THEORY: A Very Short Introduction by Jonathan Culler An Oxford University Press handbook about the controversial subject of Literary Theory. Said to have transformed the study of culture and society in the past two decades, it is accused of undermining respect for tradition and truth, encouraging suspicion about the political and psychological implications of cultural products rather than admiration for great literature. The handbook sketches key ‘moves’ and speaks directly about literature in the future, for human identity and the power of language. 149pp, paperback. £7.99 NOW £3.75 77979 RITES OF PASSAGE by William Golding Sailing to Australia in the early years of the 19th century, Edmund Talbot keeps a journal to amuse his Godfather back in England. Full of wit and disdain, he records the mounting tensions on the ancient, stinking warship, where officers, soldiers, sailors and emigrants jostle in the crammed spaces below decks. Then a single passenger, the obsequious Reverend Colley, attracts the animosity of the sailors, and in the seclusion of the fo’castle, something happens to bring him into a ‘hell of self-degradation’. Paperback, 278pp, facsimile reprint. £7.99 NOW £2.75 MUSIC AND DANCE Music is well said to be the speech of angels. - Thomas Carlyle, The Opera 78869 POP & ROCK PIANO HITS FOR DUMMIES by Robbie Gennet Do they, in the words of the old advertisement, laugh when you sit down at the piano? Well, they won’t laugh about your playing ability any more if you invest in a copy of this collection of musical favourites from the pop world. Naturally, you need to be able to read music and to have a basic knowledge of how to play the piano, but these arrangements also have a descriptive entry for each song which should help to improve your interpretation and understanding of the piece. Here, as well as the background history, the tune is analysed, explaining the key, chords and any special features that you should take into account when you play. The music is in standard piano notation, and also shows the basic chords and their matching guitar frames. Amongst the songs are Candle in the Wind, Good Vibrations, Hey Jude, Mandolin Rain, Rainy Days and Mondays, and Imagine. Even the words are given in case you want to sing along as you play. Sheet music. Paperback, 12x9", 232pp. £15.95 NOW £7 78860 DAVID BOWIE: Mick Rock Tin Vinyl and Book With the A side ‘Starman’ and B side ‘Suffragette City’, the bright red coloured vinyl 45" single enclosed in this tin box set collection is collectable in itself. Entitled ‘Starman: The Photography of Mick Rock’, the softback book enclosed is completely dedicated to the many faces, looks, attitudes and expressions in words, pictures and music of the great musician and legend, David Bowie. ‘I’m a tightrope walker. Always have been. That’s the only way I know how to live. The artist doesn’t exist. He’s strictly a figment of the public’s imagination. None of us exist. We are in the Twilight Zone. We’ve taken over from the false prophets of Jesus’ time: spreading a phoney religion and getting paid for it. We’ll all go to hell.’ - David Bowie. A glamorous piece of EMI music merchandise, highly collectable and specially imported exclusive to Bibliophile. ONLY £15 79020 THE DOORS: A Lifetime of Listening to Five Mean Years by Greil Marcus ‘Jim writes most of the lyrics.’ Young sings about a dead crack baby ‘You’ll never go to school, you’ll never get to fall in love, never get to be cool’. If those aren’t rock ‘n’ roll, what is? A fan from the moment The Doors’ first album arrived, Greil Marcus saw the band many times at the legendary Filmore Auditorium and the Avalon Ballroom in 1967. Five years later it was all over. 40 years after the singer Jim Morrison was found dead in Paris and the group disbanded, Marcus muses on how one could drive from here to there, changing from one FM pop station to another, and be all but guaranteed to hear two, three, four Doors songs in one hour. Unsatisfied and in the larger sense unfinished, The Doors remained absolutely alive. This is the first book to bypass their myths and mystique, and the death cult of Jim Morrison and focus solely on the music of Ray Manzarek, Jim Morrison, John Densmore and Robbie Krieger. You really feel in the room and soak up all the cultural and musical references of the time. 210pp, illus. £14.99 NOW £6.50 78854 ALFRED’S BASIC GUITAR METHOD 1: Book, CD and DVD by Morty Manus and Ron Manus Updated and expanded third edition of a book recognised for over 50 years as the best-paced and most comprehensive guitar method available. This edition features a new layout making it easier to read and learn. Included are blues, country, folk, jazz and rock styles plus pop songs. A DVD with iPod compatible video has been added for the visual learner. Learn how to hold your guitar, tune it, the basics of reading music, notes on all six strings, chords, scales and songs, bass-chord accompaniments and duets. With photos and diagrams, the book is for use with acoustic or electric guitars. Songs include Singin’ in the Rain, Take me Home Country Roads, Over the Rainbow and Annie’s Song. Combined paperback, DVD and enhanced CD pack. $24.99 NOW £6.50 78482 APATHY FOR THE DEVIL: A 1970s Memoir by Nick Kent Rock writer Nick Kent began interviewing the stars for the NME (New Musical Express) when barely out of his teens, but as his cutting edge writing brought him nearer to them his life began to mirror theirs. Soon, he was deeply into the use of drugs, with ever-worsening use of heroin. To the distress of his parents, Nick, who had been reared mainly on classical music, discovered pop around the age of ten. Three years later he was invited to a concert in Cardiff featuring ‘old-school Tin Pan Alley dancers and prancers’, but at the bottom of the bill was a new group, the Rolling Stones. Nick was astounded when he was suddenly surrounded by ‘young women in a collective state of extremely heightened sexual psychosis,’ screaming at the group. He sweeps you along in this exciting read as he becomes more and more enmeshed in the pop world, gaining work as a music reviewer, constantly interviewing the rock greats, accepting invites to concerts, parties and other events. He first smoked pot at the Bath Festival in 1970, and by 1971 was deeply involved with the drug. Dylan, Sex Pistols, Bowie, Stones, Led Zeppelin and many others - here are the seventies excitingly brought to life in this vivid account. Paperback. 408pp £12.99 NOW £5 78853 ACOUSTIC GUITAR SONGS FOR DUMMIES by Greg Herriges If you have ever air-strummed along to great rock hits, here is your chance to play them for real. 33 famous hits are collected here in standard notation and tablature for guitar, and in the back of the book there is a beginners’ section on how to read notation, while a central section provides performance notes for each song. It is assumed that you will know how to hold, tune and strum a guitar, and how to look cool while doing it, but if not, there is another “Dummies” book that will give you the basics. Arranged alphabetically, the numbers start with Across the Universe by Lennon and McCartney from the Let it Be album, while Band on the Run is by McCartney solo from the third Wings album. Hits by John Denver include Annie’s Song and Leaving on a Jet Plane, and variations on the theme of blue eyes come from Pete Townshend’s Behind Blue Eyes and Stephen Stills’ Judy Blue Eyes, with its iconic Indian-style drone strings. Bob Dylan’s Tangled up in Blue from the 1975 Blood on the Tracks album is one of the great song lyrics of all time, and the ultra-famous Mrs Robinson by Simon and Garfunkel was first heard in the film The Graduate but later appeared in their fourth album. 272pp, softback. £15.95 NOW £6.50 78921 BRITTEN’S CENTURY edited by Mark Bostridge Celebrating 100 years of Benjamin Britten, contributors include Alan Bennett, Michael Berkeley, Ian Bostridge, Edward Gardner, Stephen Hough and Blake Morrison. Through an extraordinary range of worldwide performances and his well-managed legacy, it is a reassertion of Britten’s central place as one of the greatest composers this country has ever produced. Here are essays by performers of his music as well as pieces by biographers and music critics. His operatic output, orchestral works, contribution to the revival of the English song, creation of the Aldeburgh Festival and the workings of the present day Britten-Pears Foundation and its promotion of his music are all revealed. Biographically, this book moves on beyond the relationship with Peter Pears and the salacious speculation about his infatuation with various boys to a consideration of his experience as an outsider, a homosexual living in a largely homophobic society. 184pp. £16.99 NOW £6 77734 JIMI HENDRIX EXPERIENCE edited by Marcus Hearn Jimi Hendrix left New York for London in September 1966 and a week later he joined Cream onstage, leaving Eric Clapton speechless with admiration for Hendrix’s dazzling and athletic performance style on the electric guitar. Hendrix and Clapton became friends and appear together in a number of these photos, but the rivalry remained. By October, Hendrix had been teamed with Noel Redding and Mitch Mitchell as the Jimi Hendrix Experience. These 130 stills from Rex photographic agency, some previously unpublished, capture the group during their heyday in 1967. An iconic photo series shows Hendrix posing in his signature military coat with a Dylan badge outside the flat in Montagu Place loaned to Hendrix’s manager by Ringo Starr. His style, sense of design, jewellery, dark eyes and talent held everyone mesmerised. On tour in spring 1967 Hendrix made headlines by setting fire to his guitar. Hendrix’s final UK performance was at the Isle of Wight Festival in 1970 before his shocking and untimely death. A superb photo album. 160pp, 25 x 29.6cm. £14.99 NOW £6.50 78483 ART OF TAP DANCING: Mega Mini Kit by Running Press The metal heel and toe taps provided with the kit screw into your shoes, a bit like the old blakeys but better! Become a Fred Astaire or Ginger Rodgers and join the ranks of rat-tat-tatters everywhere. The 32 page book gives a history and how-to of this lively, low impact work-out and great dance form. In handy presentation box, pick up you cane and tap! £5.99 NOW £3 www s. c o m w.. b i b l i o p h i l e b o o k ks 77728 GEORGE HARRISON: Living in the N I Material World CK K C BA by Olivia Harrison S T O George Harrison, aka “the quiet Beatle” was a perfectly normal post-war Liverpool lad (albeit with a huge guitar talent!) who ended up at the age of 21 with the world at his feet. Unlike many however, his saturation in what the material world could offer at such a young age caused him to seek the spiritual side of life. Olivia Harrison married George in 1978 and they remained together until George’s death in 2001. In 2010 she worked with Martin Scorsese (who provides the book’s foreword) to make a documentary about her husband’s life entitled “Living in the Material World” and this magnificent volume was produced to accompany the film’s release in 2011. With unequalled access to Harrison’s entire personal archive, she traces the arc of her late husband’s life, from the earliest photos from bombed out Liverpool (we see twoyear-old George at a VE Day party), through his guitarobsessed boyhood, the astonishing success of the Beatles from 1958-70, his discovery of Indian culture and music in the late 1960s to his days as independent musician, film producer and bohemian squire. It is also crammed with touching memorabilia - ticket stubs, postcards, letters, telegrams, handwritten chord diagrams, music, lyrics and mantras (including his original draft for My Sweet Lord). Plus shots on the sets of films that Handmade produced, including the one that started it all off, The Life of Brian. Alongside the amazing photos sit hundreds of pieces of related commentary from George, Olivia and all those associated with his life and work, which are particularly resonant and intriguing. 10"×11", 400pp, 300 colour and b/w images, many full and double-page. £26.99 NOW £10 77752 TEMPERAMENT by Stuart Isacoff The piano can growl and sing and beat time and if you keep it in tune, it will be an obedient servant. Through it, a Chopin prelude can gently weep across the keys; Debussy’s perfumed phrases can swirl in gentle clouds. From the elements that shaped the temperament, or character, of pivotal thinkers to endless efforts to temper or transform the material world into something more desirable, altering the purist and most beautiful harmonies into something grotesque. Musical art, religion, politics and science and great thinkers from Leonardo to Newton are tangled into this complex and clever little book. 260pp, paperback. £8.99 NOW £4 77965 BLUE MOMENT by Richard Williams Sub-titled ‘Miles Davis’s ‘Kind of Blue’ and the Remaking of Modern Music’, here is a groundbreaking exploration of how this album influenced the whole course of late 20th century music. Recorded miraculously in a few hours in a converted Manhattan church and first released in 1959, Davis’s album was a meditative, melancholy masterpiece. It profoundly influenced his band mate John Coltrane, and artists as diverse as John Cale and The Velvet Underground, The Who, Soft Machine, Brian Eno and early Roxy Music, Talking Heads and U2. All music lovers can gain much from this unsurpassed insight in which Williams is very strong on the note-by-note mechanics of the music. 310 page paperback. £9.99 NOW £3.75 76304 JOHANNES BRAHMS: The Complete Sonatas for Violin and Piano by Johannes Brahms Brahms composed just three sonatas for violin and piano. Musicians will be delighted to own all three works in this single volume compilation, reprinted from authoritative editions. Both Sonata No.1 in G Major, Op78 and Sonata No.2 in A Major, Op100 are intensely lyrical in nature containing some of Brahms’ most beautiful and expressive melodies. Sonata No.3 in D Minor, Op108 is a tempestuous work full of fire and passion. Softback, 88pp plus removable violin score. £14.95 NOW £3 77666 NOISE: A Human History of Sound and Listening by David Hendy To tell the story of sound - music and speech, but also echoes, chanting, drumbeats, bells, thunder, gunfire, the noise of crowds, the rumbles of the human body, laughter, silence, conversations, mechanical sounds, noisy neighbours, musical recordings and radio - is to explain how we learned to overcome our fears about the natural world and how we learn to communicate with, understand, and live alongside our fellow human beings. Oratory in Ancient Rome was important not just for the words spoken but also the tone, cadence, pitch of the voice and how the audience might have responded to it. Breaking up the history of sound into prehistoric noise, the age of oratory, the sounds of religion, the sounds of power and revolt, the rise of machines and what he calls our ‘amplified age’, Hendy teases out continuities and breaches in our long relationship with sound. 382pp. $27.99 NOW £6 77182 LIVING YEARS: The First Genesis Memoir by Mike Rutherford The author is a founding member of the talented prog rock group Genesis. In 2010, he was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. Against a background of drink, drugs and line-up changes, Mike’s father, a World War II naval officer, was always there. He would watch Genesis grow, supporting them from the very beginning when they toured the country in the back of a Hovis bread van. Captain Rutherford remained loyal, earplugs at the ready. However, when his father suddenly died, Mike was forced to re-examine their relationship. 243 pages, colour and archive photos. £20 NOW £4 77416 DARIA KLIMENTOVA: Agony and Ecstasy: My Life in Dance by Daria Klimentova with Graham Watts Prima Ballerina with the English National Ballet until her retirement in 2014, Czech-born Klimentova experienced a resurgence in her late career when she was partnered by the young Vadim Muntagirov. Her long partnership with Dmitri Gruzdyev had been more turbulent. When she was invited as a guest artist to Cape Town and took full advantage of numerous appearances on TV. She was next invited as a principal by Scottish Ballet, followed by a move to ENB. Klimentova’s mostperformed ballet is The Nutcracker, mainly as the Sugar Plum Fairy, with Odette/Odile in Swan Lake coming a close second. Strictly Gershwin and Alice in Wonderland, both choreographed by Derek Deane, are among her modern successes. 288pp, colour photos, appendices of ballets, partners, roles. £19.99 NOW £5 77518 50 YEARS OF BRITISH POP: 20th Century in Pictures by Huw Pryce British groups and artists have blazed a trail of glory through the world of pop music. Their achievements are celebrated here in 300 stunning images from the unique archives of the Press Association. Now, back in the lime-light where they belong, here are the Arctic Monkeys, Boyzone, Rod Stewart, David Bowie, the Spice Girls and literally hundreds more golden oldies and memories of stars of the stage and your favourites for you to admire for ever. 299 pages, action photos in colour and b/w. £14.99 NOW £3 77521 AIR GUITAR: A User’s Guide by Bruno McDonald ! Chuck down the hairbrush when you stand in front of the mirror, pick up a big cardboard guitar, wear your devil horns and play like a rock god. You will learn not only about our fret-fondling favourites but also air punching for the anthem songs, scissor kicks, pointing, strumming, jumping, moves like the Hendrix, the duck walk popularised by Chuck Berry and Angus Young, mounting the monitor, kneeling and a’ rockin’, the Jimmy Page, the Joey Ramone, and how to win an air guitar competition. 50 favourites for Axemen of all ages. Colour, 80pp. $14 NOW £2 SCIENCE AND MATHS You never fail until you stop trying. - Albert Einstein 78691 TIME: ALBERT EINSTEIN: The Enduring Legacy of a Modern Genius by Time Magazine Sixty years after his death in 1955 Albert Einstein is still the famous scientist ever. In 1999 Time Magazine chose him as its Person of the Century, and since its founding in 1923 the magazine has amassed a rather impressive archive of Einstein photos and articles which form the basis of this richly illustrated concise biography. We follow young Albert from his birth in Ulm in Germany in 1879 to his solid but unremarkable student days and on to his first job in the technical department of the Swiss patent office. Once he had the financial stability that the job offered and the family stability that his wife Maric and their daughter provided, Albert finally had time to devote time to his own unique ideas on the nature of light, mass, gravity and energy. 1905 was his annus mirabilis - in five papers published that year he proposed ideas that would literally change the world, tying the whole lot up with the most important equation in physics, E=mc². As well as insights that gave the world, for better and worse, the atomic age, a new understanding of gravity, the concept of black holes and the weird things that happen near the speed of light, his warm, funny and lovable personality endeared him to the world. However, this was not enough to overcome the fact that he was Jewish as far as the Nazis were concerned, and in 1931 the forwardthinking Einstein family fled Germany for the USA. Even today scientists continue to pore over the full implications of what Einstein saw. 96pp, colour and b/w photos and diagrams. £16.99 NOW £6.50 78707 WORKING STIFF by Judy Melinek and T. J. Mitchell Sub-titled ‘Two Years, 262 Bodies and the Making of A Medical Examiner’ far from the magic we see on TV, the book describes forensic pathology in the real world and is full of compelling detail. It is the fearless memoir of a young pathologist’s ‘rookie season’ as an NYC medical examiner and the cases, hairraising and heartbreaking and impossibly complex, that shaped her. Just two months before the September 11th terrorist attacks, Dr Judy Melinek began her training, with her husband T. J. and their toddler Daniel, holding down the home front. She performed in autopsies, investigated death scenes and counselled grieving relatives. Here she takes readers behind the police tape of some of the most harrowing deaths in the Big Apple, including a first hand account of the events of September 11th, the subsequent anthrax bioterrorism attack, and the disastrous crash of American Airlines flight 587. Murders, accidents and suicides land on her table, poison, bones and misadventures in medicine all part of her tale. 256pp. £16.99 NOW £7 Science 13 78642 INVENTORS AND INVENTIONS by Louis Hill et al If you remove the back of your mobile phone you will find an unassuming block that is hardly exciting to the eye. It is this, the Lithium-ion battery, which has driven the incredible advances in electronics in the past decade and is now powering more and more road vehicles and other crucial applications. The Li-ion battery is a classic tale of invention and the man who invented it, Michael Whittingham. This exceptional book picks some of the world’s most important inventions and those involved in their invention - be it a single person in a single brainwave or a number of people over a period of time during which other factors have a major effect on that invention, maybe even its overall viability. Divided into eight chapters: Early Inventions, Domestic, Entertainment, Engineering and Transport, Medicine, Warfare, Exploration and Agriculture and Food, we look at 150 innovative ideas which have had a lasting effect on human society. From numbering systems, money and alphabets, through the light bulb, refrigeration, soap, the zip, photography, TV, the electric guitar, pencil, typewriter, paper, the Internet, GPS, ball bearings, bicycles, roads, aeroplane, cement, vaccination, false teeth, machine guns, atom bombs, maps and telescopes to combine harvesters and animal husbandry, even Viagra, perfume and the Swiss army knife, this is an endlessly fascinating and surprising read. Colour and b/w photos, diagrams, 240pp, 9¼”×11¼”. £24.95 NOW £10 78655 LIFE OF DISCOVERY: Michael Faraday by James Hamilton Sub-titled ‘Giant of the Scientific Revolution’, Michael Faraday lit up the world of science and here is a superb biography of this amazing, reclusive and deeply contradictory man. Born in 1791, he was a blacksmith’s son, gifted with rare intelligence and intuition. A devout member of a small Christian sect that believed in the literal truth of the Bible, he was nevertheless open to all that mankind could glean from earthly knowledge. As apprentice to the esteemed Humphry Davy of the Royal Institution, he helped develop the miner’s safety lamp and went on to make a landmark study of induction, the connection between electricity and magnetism, and the idea of the electromagnetic field. From electric motors to precisionmade eyeglass lenses, steel razors to liquid chlorine, his inventions, often designed with self-created instruments, have become staples of modern life. He steered clear of politics, remained devoted to his wife, yet found a confidante in the bright, liberated and flirtatious daughter of Lord Byron. Trying to reconcile his severe religion with his demanding work, he eventually suffered a mental breakdown. 465pp by this outstanding Oxford biographer. With woodcut illus, a diagram of a safety lamp (1814) and other experimental apparatus, and a map of Faraday’s London. $35 NOW £7.50 78660 LIVES OF THE PLANETS by Richard Corfield A sweeping tour of our solar system from the Sun to the recently demoted Pluto, from the Kuiper Belt to beyond the edge of the interstellar void. Ranging historically from Galileo’s Telescope to Kepler’s latest search for life on other planets, Corfield deftly describes the colourful history of humanity’s unfolding discovery of our solar system’s secrets. He balances politics and science in a history of captivating ‘hold-your-breath’ attempts at planetary exploration and his subject is wondrous to behold. From an Oxford Research Fellow we have this 268 page US paperback edition, illus. $16.99 NOW £6 77939 TEACH YOURSELF MATHEMATICS: A Complete Introduction by Trevor Johnson and Hugh Neill The scales of a pinecone and the spiral of a snail’s shell all follow the same sequence of numbers called the Fibonacci sequence. In today’s technological age, mathematics underpins all of our technology from civil engineering to pharmacy. The book covers all key areas including mathematics, fractions and percentages, geometry including trigonometry, statistics, probability and algebra. Use this easy-to-navigate and easy-toremember system. 390pp, paperback. £11.99 NOW £6 78120 SCIENTIFIC DISCOVERY: From the Brilliant to the Bizarre by Len Fisher The Ig Nobel Prizes are a parody of the Nobel prizes, awarded each October for ten unusual or trivial examples of scientific research. In 1901 Duncan MacDougall was convinced that the human soul had a weight (conveniently neglecting mass) and his experiment with a near-death volunteer showed that the departed soul did indeed weigh ¾oz. This led to a wealth of extremely useful work in the fields of heat and energy transfer, not to mention post-mortems. Even scientists as eminent as Newton, Galileo, Franklin, Volta and Schrodinger had some pretty bonkers theories that nevertheless paved the way for useful discovery. 248pp paperback. $14.95 NOW £4.50 78328 SPY WHO CHANGED THE WORLD Klaus Fuchs and the Secrets of the Nuclear Bomb by Mike Rossiter Klaus Fuchs was a refugee from Nazi Germany, where his Communist Party activism made him a target for organised violence. Arriving in England he collaborated closely with the émigré German physicists Frisch and Meitner, who were working on nuclear research at Birmingham University. In 1941 Fuchs travelled to London ostensibly to meet an old friend but probably to make his first contact with Soviet intelligence, and later in the war he was transferred to Camp Y in Los Alamos, where the project was to develop nuclear diffusion to make a weapon. It was probably in 1944 that he made contact with his Soviet handler, Harry Gold, and gave him details of the problems they were experiencing with the Manhattan Project. At Los Alamos Fuchs had worked on modifications to the Nagasaki bomb for the Bikini tests and was in close contact with William Penney, head of the British bomb programme. This enabled him to claim that he passed on information to the British as well as the Soviets, who by that time were Britain’s Allies. It’s a story in which many questions still remain. 344pp, photos. £20 NOW £5 76941 CIRCULATION: William Harvey’s Revolutionary Idea by Thomas Wright Diminutive, brilliant and choleric, William Harvey had a huge impact on anatomy and modern biology. His obsessive quest was to understand the movement of blood which overturned beliefs held by physicians since Roman times. Francis Bacon, England’s Lord Chancellor and a recalcitrant patient of Harvey’s; John Donne, a poet and preacher fascinated by anatomy and the human heart; and King Charles I, Harvey’s beloved patron and witness to many of his experiments. His theory altered the culture and language of its time. The biography charts the remarkable rise of a Yeoman’s son to the position of King’s Physician. 246pp, illus. £16.99 NOW £4 77195 NUMBERLAND: The World in Numbers by Mitchell Symons ! Pythagoras thought that numbers rule the universe - and how right he was. This book views the world from a different perspective, taking in the flora and fauna of the natural world, the human body, creepy-crawlies, music, art, literature, love and marriage, TV, celebrities, religion, history, science - we could go on and on. Did you know, for instance, that during your lifetime you are likely to shed 57 litres of tears? 256 mind-stretching pages. Line drawings. £12.99 NOW £5 77672 RED COSMOS by James T. Andrews Sub-titled ‘K.E. Tsiolkovskii, Grandfather of Soviet Rocketry’. Tsiolkovskii first conceived multistage rockets that would later be adapted as the basis of both the US and Soviet rocket programmes. This provincial scientist was sanctioned by Stalin to give a speech in Red Square on May Day 1935, lauding the Soviet technological future while also dreaming and expounding on his own visions of conquering the cosmos. Later the Khrushchev regime used him as a ‘poster boy’ for Soviet excellence during its Cold War competition with the US. A cultural, technological and political biography. 147pp, illus paperback. £20.50 NOW £5 77660 KEEPER OF THE NUCLEAR CONSCIENCE by Andrew Brown Jósef Rotblat (1908-2005) came to England as a research scientist in 1939. His wife was trapped in Warsaw. He became a key physicist in the embryonic British atom bomb project. Early 1944 he transferred to Los Alamos to work on the Manhattan Project but left under controversial circumstances by the end of the year. The subsequent bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki intensified his ethical concerns over the involvement of scientists developing weapons of mass destruction. It drove Rotblat to become deeply involved in the anti-war movement and was one of the 11 illustrious signatories to the Russell-Einstein Manifesto of 1955. He helped establish the international Pugwash Conferences on Science and World Affairs and remained their driving force during six decades. He and Pugwash shared the 1995 Nobel Peace Prize. 347pp, photos. £18.99 NOW £4.50 77716 BRAIN SUPREMACY: Notes From the Frontiers of Neuroscience by Kathleen Taylor Progress in neuroscience is accelerating, particularly as scanning technologies such as fMRI and PET, which can observe changes in the living brain as it undertakes certain tasks or receives certain stimuli, have improved enormously and become much more accessible. Few would question the benefits to be gained and its practical application to combatting disease and helping conditions such as autism, but what about the other potential uses for this knowledge, such as manipulation of the healthy brain for commercial or military gain? In this richly informative (and with much dry wit, we might add) account Dr Taylor explains the ingenious experiments that give us clues as to how learning, memory and other brain functions work, and how painstakingly such knowledge is acquired. 380pp, colour and b/w illus and diagrams. £18.99 NOW £6.50 See also Nature on page 33 14 ORDER HOTLINE: 020 74 74 24 74 TRANSPORT If you drink, don’t drive. Don’t even putt. - Dean Martin 78984 MEN OF POWER: Rolls Royce Chief Test Pilots Harvey and Jim Heyworth by Robert Jackson Tough combatants with split-second reflexes, Harvey and Jim Heyworth both brought a distinguished war record to their appointments as test pilots at Rolls Royce. Harvey started his flying career with the RAF, taking part in the Hendon aerobatic display of 1934 before accepting a post with Rolls Royce. He remained a Squadron Leader with the reserves and in 1939 was recalled to the RAF. Throughout the Battle of Britain Harvey flew a Hurricane and then was posted north to take part in the “Newcastle Blitz” in which “Heyworth’s Hurricanes” pounded the enemy aircraft while they were still over the sea. Harvey’s squadron suffered no casualties and this was the last time the Germans ventured over northern England in daylight. The following year Harvey returned to Rolls Royce, but meanwhile his 19-year-old brother Jim was awarded his wings and joined No. 12 Bomber Squadron as one of their first volunteers. His first mission was the disastrous raid against German battlecruisers in Brest harbour where Jim’s Wellington was attacked by a Messerschmitt, but the plane withstood the onslaught as Jim directed the gunners to shoot it down. Jim alternated periods as an instructor with flying missions and in 1944 was rewarded with a bar to add to his DFC. A month later he was transferred to Rolls Royce, joining his brother in the process of developing the jet engine. 192pp. £19.99 NOW £8 78983 FLYING FROM MY MIND by David G. Cook When former RAF pilot David Cook saw an advert for the foot-launched glider VJ-23 he knew it was for him. Earning only £25 per week in 1972, Cook was living in a converted railway carriage but his aim was to win the annual Selsey Birdman contest, in which £3000 was offered to anyone who could launch themselves off Selsey pier and stay in the air for 50 yards. The first attempt saw the glider flying within a few feet of the finish line, and if the tide had been lower, Cook could probably have secured the glittering prize. For the next attempt he enlisted support, and at the 1975 rally the glider was launched by himself and three able men at a run. This method required the launchers to launch themselves off the pier as well as the craft, and one of them was a nonswimmer, but in spite of exceeding the 50-yard limit, the attempt was disqualified. Still in need of money, Cook took up hang-gliding and at last achieved success as the VJ23 won every class in which it was entered. He soon decided to add a small engine and propeller, and in spite of being arrested on the beach path near Aldeburgh during the trial period, Cook was soon piloting the first hang-glider to cross the Channel, at 9hp, achieving the lowest-powered flight crossing in the history of aviation. Before long he was receiving awards from royalty, making films and setting up in business. 228pp, photos. £19.99 NOW £8 78990 THE LIFE OF A SAILOR: SEAFARERS’ VOICES by Frederick Chamier This eyewitness account of seafaring in the early 19th century was for a long time assumed to be fiction, but recent research has confirmed its autobiographical status. Chamier’s experiences at sea started in 1809 when at the age of 13 he was appointed to the Salsette following a process of networking by seafaring relatives. A theme of the book is the way the Navy was riddled with nepotism, and when Chamier is appointed lieutenant he encounters the resentment of the other Midshipmen, older and more experienced but with no hope of promotion. The Salsette sees action almost immediately at Flushing and then proceeds to the Mediterranean. At Gibraltar one of the seamen is flogged and Chamier’s account is a rare example of an eyewitness description of this brutal punishment. At Smyrna Lord Byron hitches a lift to Constantinople, and Chamier describes Byron’s abortive attempt to swim the Hellespont, followed by a second more successful bid the next day. In Constantinople some Turks come aboard and when Chamier tells them that smoking is not allowed, they attempt to buy him as a slave, with the other Midshipmen playing along. When the Salsette is ordered for blockading duties Chamier leaves, joining the Arethusa on a voyage to Africa to hunt slave traders. Lively and readable. 228pp. £13.99 NOW £5 77562 STEAM TRAILS: Manchester to Leeds by Bob Pixton and Eric Bentley Eric’s love of steam trains is reflected in these superbly nostalgic photos. They cover everything to do with railways from tracks to tunnels, signal-boxes to sidings, water troughs to workings, and a host of oddities. There are complicated shots of trains performing shunting operations, puffing painfully up hills and crossing rivers on precarious looking viaducts, not to mention junctions, and even shots of sheds. 96 pages 25cm x 19cm, colour and archive photos, route map. £16.99 NOW £4 77986 TRANSPORT DESIGN: A Travel History by Gregory Votolato 78295 FIGHTING SHIPS 1850-1950 by Sam Willis Published in conjunction with the National Maritime Museum and with a foreword by N. A. M. Rodger this remarkable book measures 12" across by 14" high. It is a stunning collection of 150 large scale paintings, drawings, photographs and ship plans that tell the story of naval warfare from the first iron and steam ships to the deadly U-boats and aircraft carriers of WWII. Depicted in striking details are the bombardments of Sveaborg during the Crimean war, the battles of Tsushima and Jutland, the evacuation of Dunkirk, the attack on Pearl Harbor, the Battle of Midway, the DDay landings as well as the Japanese surrender. Arranged chronologically, the ships illustrated include HMS Warrior, the first iron-hulled heavily armoured warship, the mighty HMS Dreadnought, the cruiser Aurora which ignited the Russian revolution, the formidable German battleship Bismarck and British aircraft carriers HMS Argus and Illustrious and the Japanese giant Akagi among many others. Artists include the official British war artist Richard Eurich, and great naval artists like Gustave Bourgain and William Lionel Wyllie plus powerful photographs often taken by the sailors themselves. With an expert text on the key naval conflicts and the complexity of each warship, we can enter the fire room of the US battleship Mississippi, see a burn victim in a Wandsworth hospital 1914 and marvel at the depiction of the sea by Claus Bergen in his painting The Commander on page 131. A spectacular heavyweight huge volume, 224pp. £25 NOW £12.50 77832 BELFAST BUILT SHIPS by John Lynch Belfast has a long and proud shipbuilding heritage, the industry playing a great part in the shaping of the city’s identity and culture. It was all begun by Robert Hickson, a Liverpool engineer who arrived in Belfast in 1853 to run the recently established Belfast Ironworks. He launched just eight vessels between then and 1858, but it was his 1854 appointment of a 23-year-old Yorkshireman as manager which was historic. That man was Edward Harland, and by 1858 he had taken over the yard, having engaged one Gustav Wolff as engineer and draughtsman and the firm of Harland and Wolff was born. This company, together with Workman Clark and McIlwaine & Co, had fascinating and turbulent histories. Amazingly little is known about the 1500 plus vessels they produced up until the beginning of the 21st century, with one notable exception - the 46,238 ton Titanic. Reveals the fascinating stories and stats of all the ships built and launched in Belfast from 1858-2003. With full alphabetical ship index and building lists with ship type, propulsion, construction, displacement, dimensions, dates, owners and many photos and other illus. 304pp softback. £19.99 NOW £8 78230 STEAM JOURNEY by Roger Siviter Remember standing on the bridge as the steam train passed beneath, and being engulfed in thick black smoke that made your eyes water. Throughout Britain steam is still run on preserved lines, and sometimes even on mainlines. This is a look at the later days of steam, starting with the 1950s when steam engines were beginning to be phased out, finally disappearing in 1968 from the mainline routes. Also covers industrial steam and investigates South African steam. Superb colour and b/w photos. 80pp, 28 x 22cm. £17.99 NOW £4 77859 LIFEBOAT: Courage on Our Coasts by Nigel Millard Since its founding in 1824, the Royal National Lifeboat Institution has saved some 140,000 lives at sea, at a cost of over 600 lives of servicemen. In 2013 it rescued an average of 23 people a day around the coast of Great Britain and Ireland. Its 235 stations house boats that are ready to put to sea at a moment’s notice. This magnificently produced book honours the dedication of those crews who freely give their time and occasionally, tragically, their lives in the face of danger, and their families who wait for news when the lifeboats are out. A stunning visual tribute to British coastal waters and those who inhabit them, it is a selection of over 300 photos taken by professional photographer and RNLI crewman Nigel Millard. With a clockwise circumnavigation of the British and Irish coasts, meeting crewmen and fundraisers. 240pp, colour, 10¾”×9". £25 NOW £7.50 77148 BRITISH TOY BOATS 1920 ONWARDS: A Pictorial Tribute by Roger Gillham ! Here a concise yet comprehensive record of products of the major manufacturers of British waterborne toy boats from 1920 onwards, plus a listing and description of all models made, also includes a gripping look at many of the smaller, lesser-known manufacturers. The most prolific toy-boat-producing companies were originally family concerns: the three Lines brothers (Tri-ang), Frank Hornby (Meccano/Hornby) Frank Denye (Star), Geoffrey Jenkins (Bowman) and John Sutcliffe (Sutcliffe). A thumbnail account of the history of the various companies is included in each chapter and the final section documents the Lines family. 141 softback pages 25cm x 25.5cm, 550 colour illus, glossary. £19.99 NOW £5 Organised by air, land and water, from canoes to space craft, limousines to Zeppelins, here is the evolution of many types of transportation including the relationship between mass transit and the travel experience, design styles, economics, entertainment and customised comfort. See the vibrant modern décor of the QE2 resulting from a successful collaboration of a group of young British artists, architects and designers who gave form to the upbeat mood of Swinging London in the 1960s. 143 illus, 240pp in large softback. £17.95 NOW £4 78157 ADVANCED AIRCRAFT MODELLING illustrated by Richard Caruana The Junkers Ju 88A-4, Spitfire, Hawker Tempest, P-47D Thunderbolt Razorback and Bubbletop, Dauntless SBD-3, Supermarine 352 Spitfire, Fokker D.XXI (camouflage and markings), Focke Wulf Fw 190D-9, Messerschmitt Bf 109 and single seat fighter Ki-61 Hien are among the 14 aircraft chosen with text, fact boxes, colours to use, excellent photography, history and background in this essential reference for the aircraft modeller. Includes 120 colour profiles, history of camouflage and markings and 12 award winning models. Aimed at all levels of modeller with tips for colour mixing, paint brush and air brush techniques and more. Rendered artworks and colour and archive photos. Large 178 page softback. £35 NOW £6.50 78229 AIR FRANCE by Geoff Jones Air France was formed in 1933, an amalgamation of several small French airlines. By now, air travel was becoming more reliable and popular, and by 1938 Air France carried 104,000 passengers, with a fleet of 47 land planes and 12 seaplanes. After World War II Air France became state owned and the state still has a stake in the combined Air France/KLM business. The 1970s were dominated by Concorde, and, in a triumph of organisation, not least years or political wrangling and delicate negotiations, cumulated in a simultaneous arrival of An Air France Concorde and a British Airways Concorde at New York’s JFK international airport in 1977. Other planes flown by Air France include the De Havilland Comet, the Vickers Viscount and the Sud Aviation Caravelle. 160pp. Colour and b/w photos. £19.99 NOW £5 78437 IMAGES OF WAR: Flying Legends of World War Two by Philip Handleman Allied Force’s WWII bomber, fighter, trainer and transport aircraft together with vital data on development history, combat record, famous pilots and significant air battles are presented from a close up vantage point. Performance, range and weapon loads are also included and the unique colour photographs are from the collection of the late William B. Slate, an aviation photographer who captured the thrilling perspective from close-up, inflight vantage points from an aircraft flying in formation with its subject. Dozens of colour and mono photos. 108pp, large softback. £12.99 NOW £5 76452 LONDON’S CLASSIC BUSES IN BLACK AND WHITE by John A. Gray The London Transport “Routemaster” rear entry/exit bus first hit the streets of the capital in 1954. This superb selection of fully captioned b/w photos taken between 1948 and 2001 celebrates London’s great buses and the routes they plied. Gray’s spots the smallest details pertaining to bus, driver, conductor, passengers, roads, other vehicles and even street furniture like pillar boxes and signage which turns this into far more than just a collection of photos. And the adverts - “Wool, the Wealth of the Commonwealth”, Capstan Non-Filters and Eno’s Fruit Salt - wonderful stuff! 96pp, 9"×10", over 130 photos, many full page. £14.95 NOW £4 76620 MY GOLDEN FLYING YEARS by Air Commodore D’Arcy Greig The story begins in France in late 1918 when Greig was flying FE2b night bombers, then through the early 1920s as he served in Iraq, piloting Bristol fighters for three years against rebel insurgents and dissident tribesmen. Back in England, Greig became an instructor at the Central Flying School and finally he recalls his experiences commanding RAF’s High Speed Flight and participating in the 1929 Schneider Trophy Race. Greig is the master of practical joking, having fun with explosives and enjoying daredevil high flying adventures with other airmen. 276pp, 16 pages of photos. £20 NOW £6.50 77262 MAP OF EDINBURGH 1893 by W. & A. K. Johnston Map making skills acquired over two generations ensured that Johnston’s were considered to be the foremost mapmakers in the world. The city of Edinburgh annexed neighbouring districts and viewed overall, the 1893 map shows a number of elements uniquely associated with the city. The grid-like regularity of the New Town streets, begun in the east around St. James and St. Andrew’s Squares in 1767 is striking. The majority of the New Town houses were actually built in the 19th century. Immediately to the south and bounded by the Castle, gardens and Calton Hill, the density and complexity of Old Town streets is immediately apparent. Here too are the newly created exclusive villa suburbs of the Grange, Blackford and Morningside. Topography defines the main features of the map with the volcanic plugs Arthur’s Seat, Calton, Blackford and Craiglockhart and the Braid Hills. Folded map. £9.99 NOW £4.50 BIBLIOPHILE BOOKS UNIT 5 DATAPOINT, 6 SOUTH CRESCENT, LONDON E16 4TL TEL: 020 74 74 24 74 77269 GREAT WESTERN RAILWAY MAP 1924 (Paddington to Penzance) by Geoffrey Kichenside ! Land’s End, Mounts Bay, St. Michael’s Mount, Newlyn and Penzance are the destinations on this fabulous historical map. The Cornish Riviera Limited, one of the most famous British express trains, was THE holiday train from Paddington to the historic city of Plymouth, and the mysterious land of legend beyond the Tamar to Newquay, Falmouth, St. Ives and Penzance. From the Paddington area we see Wormwood Scrubs and Kensal Green Cemetery. With places of interest marked, the return route is presented on a beautiful, coloured scroll map of appro eight feet long and seven inches width, printed on one side. In a glamorous cardboard tube. £14.99 NOW £6 77423 O. S. NOCK POCKET ENCYCLOPEDIA OF BRITISH STEAM RAILWAYS AND LOCOMOTIVES by O. S. Nock The classic handbook which was first published in 1967, reprinted 1970, 1975 and 2009, improved on the original 192 coloured illustrations with the second volume seeing a further selection of historical steam locomotives illustrated in colour. This standard reference was written by O. S. Nock who has been as well-loved as his Blandford Pocket Encyclopedias covering British Steam Locos and British Steam Railways. Combines the text and illustrations from both of these two pocket encyclopedias. 386 colour illus of carriages, rolling stock, signals, railway coats of arms and classic locomotives. Softback. £9.99 NOW £4 77642 BOEING 747 1970 ONWARDS (ALL MARKS): Haynes by Chris Wood A Haynes Owners’ Workshop Manual which describes the anatomy of this huge aircraft, how it is flown and operated, and how the engineers keep Boeing’s bestselling version of its 747 airworthy. From 22nd January 1970 the wide-body 747 ‘Jumbo Jet’ enabled airlines worldwide to slash ticket costs. In 2005 a major redesign of the 747 (747-8) was launched that draws in technology from Boeing’s 787 model. Pilot and author Chris Wood sets his gaze on the 747-400 version and lifts the inspection panels on this most numerous of all 747 models. Refuelling, water servicing, automatic landing, climbing, cruising, handling, stalling, descent and approach, all the controls are described, cutaways and charts, masses of colour photos, diagrams, cutaway illustration of the Pratt & Whitney PW4000 to first class luxury is all graphically described. 168pp, large and colourful pages. £21.99 NOW £6 77669 PROFILES OF FLIGHT: Panavia Tornado by Dave Windle and Martin Bowman Strike, antique-ship, air superiority, air defence, reconnaissance and electronic warfare fighter-bomber, the Tornado has been the backbone of the RAF within its many different theatres of operation. The aircraft started as a European venture between Germany, Italy and the UK, based on the original swing-wing technology invented by Barnes-Wallis. It has also been successfully exported to two Middle-Eastern air forces and is likely to remain in service for several years to come. Our book contains the world famous colour profiles created by Dave Windle of the type in different operational modes, configurations and colour schemes. Includes archive and worldwide quality monotone photographs. Colour profiles. 88 landscape pages. £19.99 NOW £8 TRAVEL AND PLACES Travel and change of place impart new vigour to the mind. - Seneca 78643 ITALY: An Illustrated History by Joseph Privitera Italy, the cradle of civilisation. Without Dante, Petrarch, Michelangelo, Vivaldi, Monteverdi, Puccini, Quasimodo and Pirandello, Italy’s history is incomplete. This history is written in the Renaissance mode, covering the full variety of Italy’s achievements and its cultural contribution to the modern world. A map of the Boot explains its geography and two islands, Sicily and Sardinia, then we begin at the beginning, 478AD, enter the Barbarians and the Middle Ages. Here are city-states, the Medicis, Venice, invasions, monarchs, the Napoleonic period, Garibaldi, the Knight Errant and Count di Cavour, the most accomplished statesman, the golden age of Italian opera and more. Many illus, 144pp. £12.50 NOW £5 78730 PARIS AND SURROUNDINGS MAP by Berlitz Motoring Map Drive in France with confidence whether you are a seasoned motorist or first time driver abroad. With a quick reference to driving rules and regulations, road signs and common symbols with their English translations, French words and phrases and distance indicators to plan your journey, our large scale fold out colour map extends from Rouen, Chartres, Fontainebleau, Troyes and Reims in the northwest and the entire city of Paris, its Péripherique and the wonderful areas of Montparnasse, the Eiffel Tower and Notre Dame. Fully indexed, scale 1:200,000. Also one for all Francophiles or armchair travellers. Softback. £4.50 NOW £3 www.bibliophilebooks.com www s. c o m w.. b i b l i o p h i l e b o o k ks Travel & Places continued 78924 EVEREST 1953 by Mick Conefrey Sub-titled ‘The Epic Story of the First Ascent’ this is a wonderful addition to Everest literature. On the morning of Queen Elizabeth II’s coronation, the first news ebbed through to the British public that Everest had finally been conquered. Actually beset by crisis and controversy, both on and off the mountain, from funding panics to Sherpa rebellions, hostile press to menacing weather, John Hunt and his team had to draw on unimaginable skill and determination to succeed. An intimate insight into the forgotten personalities behind the ascent, including Eric Shipton, the enigmatic ‘Mr Everest’, and Tom Bourdillon and Charles Evans who came within 100 metres of being the first to the summit, the book recounts a bygone age of self-sacrifice and heroism. It uses letters and personal diaries to reveal the immense stress of the climbers which they often heard from their fellow team members. Did Tenzing or Hillary reach the top first? Ralph Izzard of the Daily Mail even hiked up to base camp alone to discover the answer, only to be met with stony silence and a cup of tea. The book charts how the ascent affected the original team in subsequent years and its immense cultural impact today. 322pp, eight pages of mainly colour photos. £20 NOW £7.50 78611 DREAMING OF TUSCANY: Where to Find the Best There Is by Barbara Milo Ohrbach Private gardens, the finest cooking schools, the best craftsmen and workshops, the most elegant antiques markets, food markets overflowing with cornucopia of local produce, tiny museums that open once in a blue moon, astounding art and, naturally, outstanding hotels and restaurants that you will not find on TripAdvisor! Between the book’s covers, related in spectacular colour photography and with the author’s infectious enthusiasm, is the essence of Tuscany. Here are the smells of baking bread, rich espresso, harvested grapes and herbs, the sounds of campanile bells, idle chatter over drinks and the echo of footsteps down a post-lunch empty ancient street and - wow! - the tastes; peppery olive oil, flaky pecorino, sweet tomatoes, piquant salami and creamy gelato. Tiny trattorias, artisan crafts, vineyards that date from Roman times and those endless azure skies, this book evokes its subject like no other. Add to that a wealth of practical insider info on where to stay, how to rent locally and how to get the absolute best from your visit from local people. 224pp, colour, 9½”×11". £12.95 NOW £6 78889 KON-TIKI EXPEDITION by Thor Heyerdahl The spirit-lifting adventure is now reissued and updated with a new epilogue. It is the classic tale of survival against almost insurmountable odds when, in 1947, Thor Heyerdahl and five companions crossed the Pacific Ocean on a balsa-wood raft. It was an extraordinary bid to prove Heyerdahl’s theory that the Polynesians undertook the same feat on similar craft over a thousand years ago. From building the model raft, we are taken deep into the Andes, see Indian women spinning wool as they walk, the explorers lashing nine big logs together with hemp ropes, ready to start in Callao Harbour and under full sail in the open sea. Cooking, the bamboo cabin, beards, catching fish to eat, a shark once on deck, tropical heat, coconuts and reefs and more. 271pp in facsimile reprinted paperback with sadly rather dark original photos. £9.99 NOW £4 79065 VICTORIAN ENGLAND AND WALES 1897: West Wales OS Map by Old House Books ! Covering Anglesey, Holyhead Island, Carnarvon Bay, Merioneth, Montgomery, Cardigan, Pembroke, Carmarthen and Brecknock right down to Milford Haven and Freshwater Bay, Swansea Bay in Glamorgan and the Gower peninsular, this coloured Ordnance Survey map sheet three West Wales was first published in The Royal English Atlas to commemorate the Diamond Jubilee of Her Majesty Queen Victoria. Four miles to the inch, coloured folded map. Softback. £9.99 NOW £4.50 77761 WONDERS OF THE ANCIENT WORLD: Antiquity’s Greatest Feats of Design and Engineering by Justin Pollard There are features on 40 great ancient wonders in this fascinating book. The Colossus of Rhodes was a giant statue said to bestride the harbour mouth, but modern archaeology has shown that to be impossible. The Hanging Gardens of Babylon are perhaps the greatest mystery. The Great Ziggurat of Ur only exists at its lowest level, and though it looks like the Pyramids it was not a tomb but a temple. The Pont du Gard was the highest and widest aqueduct of the Roman world and an extraordinary feat of practical engineering. 192pp, glossary, timelines, colour photos. 77633 WHEN IN ROME: 2,000 Years of Roman Sightseeing by Matthew Sturgis In every age - Classical, Christian, Medieval, Renaissance, Baroque, Neoclassical, Romantic or Modern people have flocked to Rome to see its wonders. The buildings, the statues, the paintings, the artefacts that have impressed each generation of travellers from the time of the Roman Republic in the 2nd century BC to the present age of mass tourism. What did the wealthy milords making the Grand Tour in the 18th century consider the greatest painting of all? And how did this differ from the choice of the Romantic poets only a few decades later? The most unusual questions which are asked and answered in this one-of-a-kind book. 280 pages, colour plates and maps. £20 NOW £5 78040 ANTARCTICA: A Biography by David Day The first ever major international history of the world’s most forbidding and mysterious continent. For centuries it was suspected that there must be an undiscovered continent in the southern hemisphere, but explorers failed to find one. On his second voyage to the Pacific, Captain Cook sailed further south than any of his rivals, but he had to be content with claiming sub-Antarctic islands for King George. It was not until 1820 that the continent’s frozen coast was finally sighted. Territorial rivalry intensified in the 1840s when British, American and French expeditions sailed south to chart portions of the continent. Here is the story from 18th century voyages to the explorers of the early 20th century and rivalries of today as governments, scientists and environmentalists and oil companies compete for control. 614 heavy pages, 16 pages of photos and a 1703 map of the world on the endpapers. £25 NOW £7.50 78106 PALAZZI AND VILLAS OF ROME by Caroline Vincenti Montanaro and Andrea Fasolo This colourful books show 60 buildings which span from the 15th to the 19th centuries, listed in alphabetical order. As well as the exteriors, here are rooms filled with priceless treasures, paintings, fabulous ceilings and crystal chandeliers. The 16th century Villa Medici was ‘a home built to enchant and to astonish’, and at one time amongst its art collection was a Madonna by Raphael, as well as works by Andrea Del Sarto and Pontormo. The 17th century Palazzo Barberini contains what is probably the most brilliant baroque decoration in a Roman palazzo, Pietro de Cortona’s ‘The Triumph of Divine Providence’ with its stunning perspective and glorious colouring. Paperback, 192pp. colour photos, 19 x 13cm, rare 2001 publication. ONLY £4 78107 PARIS: An Architectural Guide by Heinfried Wischermann The 228 buildings featured here are described in both historical and architectural detail, while the most important buildings have in-depth technical descriptions and plans. In 1869, during the construction of a new road, an oval Roman-style theatre was unearthed dating from 100 B.C. This Lutetian Arena could have catered for an audience of 15,000. The Pont Neuf, the oldest intact bridge in Paris, was built between 1578-1607, and stretches 233 metres across the Seine. In 1993, after the Louvre’s complete renovation, which now includes the outstanding glass pyramid, the sculpture collections and several other important departments of the museum were finally moved to their new quarters. Paperback, 148pp, photos, plans. £12.50 NOW £5.50 78111 PRAGUE: An Architectural Guide by Radomira Sedlakova The first published guide to the architecture of Prague, covering everything important from the Middle Ages to the end of the 20th century. Prague is a living textbook to ten centuries of European architecture. The author begins with a concise yet well-detailed description of the city and how it grew, from the earliest records from the 9th century onwards. Then arranged as chronologically as possible from Romanesque through Gothic, Renaissance, Baroque, Classicist to 19th and 20th century buildings, the sites, 208 of them, are described in full. Here are churches, convents and synagogues, castles, palaces, grand city dwellings, department stores, bridges, business headquarters, civic buildings, historic houses and more, with all historical and architectural details, technical descriptions and planimetric maps for the biggest and all location details. Photos, 148pp. £12.50 NOW £6 78457 FROM CAPE WRATH TO FINISTERRE by Björn Larsson £20 NOW £6.75 78012 HERE & THERE: Collected Travel Writing by A. A. Gill A travel book? In a way. Musings on life seen from the cockpit and deck of a yacht? Certainly. It is only when he is travelling that Björn Larsson feels really content. Cabo Finisterre, the furthest point of Spain or Galicia jutting into the Atlantic, is a place Larsson has seen and sailed past at close quarters, in a northerly gale that blew up in minutes. He outlines his own biography in the first chapter of his book. With no possessions except those that would fit into a boat, he spent four years in France, 15 in Denmark, one in Ireland, two years sailing and a total of six years living on board his boat. This book is based on his sailing Celtic waters. 341pp, foldout map. £12.99 NOW £3 Mysticism, Islamic piety and animism coexisted peacefully and for Andrew Beatty and his family, Java appeared a model for our strife-ridden world, a recipe for multiculturalism. He lived with his family for 2½ years in a village in East Java and when he arrived, he was ‘A. A. Gill is Away’ is the monthly column in Gourmet Traveller, Gill’s perceptive, controversial, colourful and humorous column. He ponders Italy’s ability to turn organised crime into a tourist attraction and stumbles upon lobster-shaped coffins in Ghana. His many travel pieces collected here will make you more curious about the world we live in. Remainder mark. 272pp in paperback. £12.99 NOW £4 78460 A SHADOW FALLS IN THE HEART OF JAVA by Andrew Beatty 15 entranced by a strange and sensual way of life. But a harsh and puritanical Islamism, fed by modern uncertainties, was driving young women to wear the veil and young men to renounce the old rituals. The mosque loudspeakers grew strident, cultural boundaries sharpened and as a wave of witch-killings shook the countryside, Beatty and his family began to feel like vulnerable outsiders. Set among the rice fields and volcanoes of Java. 318pp, paperback. £12.99 NOW £4 78287 BERLIN by Rory Maclean Here is an utterly beguiling and original portrait of the city of Berlin, devastated by Allied bombs, divided by a Wall, then reunited and reborn. No other city has repeatedly been so powerful and fallen so low, and few other cities have been so shaped by individual imaginations. We encounter an ambitious prostitute refashioning herself as a princess, Marlene Dietrich flaunting her sexuality, and Hitler fantasising about the mega-city Germania. Other names worth mentioning include Frederick the Great, Christopher Isherwood, Bertolt Brecht, Leni Riefenstahl, Albert Speer, Joseph Goebbels, Bill Harvey and The Tunnel, David Bowie and ‘Heroes’ and more volatile and creative characters. 421pp, illus. £9.99 NOW £5 76311 LONELY PLANET NEW YORK CITY: Special Collector’s Edition by Brandon Presser et al Get the best out of a trip to New York City, the Big Apple, with this tried and tested handbook. The top 16 suggestions include Central Park, classic New York eats, the Statue of Liberty and Ellis Island, Brooklyn Bridge, the Museum Mile, the inverted ziggurat designed by Frank Lloyd Wright, MoMA, the High Line which is the disused railway track offering fantastic views during a quiet stroll, Williamsburg, jazz in the West Village, and good old Times Square. Plus an understanding of the history, arts, architecture, NYC on screen and painting the town pink. Removable New York City map. 456pp, paperback. ONLY £3.50 76312 LONELY PLANET PARIS: Special Collector’s Edition by Catherine le Nevez, Christopher Pitts et al The Eiffel Tower, the Champs-Elysées and Grande Boulevards, the Louvre and Les Halles, Montmartre and Northern Paris, Le Marais and Ménilmontant, Bastille and Eastern Paris, the Islands, the Latin Quarter, St-Germain and Les Invalides, Montparnasse and Southern Paris, plus day trips, top itineraries, the top 16, museums and galleries, what to see for free, nightlife and drinking, shopping and entertainment, sports and activities. Plus a little bit of history, fashion, architecture, literary Paris, painting and the visual arts and music and cinema. Directory A-Z, transport and language and a Paris city map. 432pp, colour photos. Paperback. ONLY £3 76621 A NEW ACCOUNT OF THE EAST INDIES by Alexander Hamilton ! Published in 1970 by Nico Israel of Amsterdam, volumes one to two are bound in one glorious leather gold blocked binding and has been edited by Sir William Foster in a facsimile of the 1930 Argonaut Press original. The importance of Alexander Hamilton’s account of his experiences in the East (1688-1723) was written after his great voyages through Europe, to Barbary and to Jamaica before finally going in 1688 to the East Indies in his early 20s. After his return from China, Hamilton in 1694 took his first independent venture and appears to have called at Malacca in 1696. He found the survivors of the Scottish East India Company’s vessel Speedwell which, like the Harwich, had been wrecked after careening. In 1702 he hired the Albemarle for a trading voyage from Surat to the Malabar Coast and back (volume one page 165) but whether this was before or after the Achin venture cannot be determined. The following year he made his fourth voyage to China in a ship of 40 guns manned by a crew of over 150 (volume two page 119). An old friend, now a Sultan, offered him the present of the island of Singapore, but he refused the gift! His next voyage was to Bengal and early in July 1705 he anchored off Calcutta with three ships, the Vintaghurry, the Buckhurst and the St. George. We follow him to the Red Sea, to Siam, the Persian Gulf and read about him in the Minutes of the Court of Directors of the East India Company. Facsimile reprint, 226pp, four gatefold maps and woodcut illus. ONLY £11 76795 OCEAN BOULEVARD by David Baboulene David Baboulene runs away to sea in a cloud of romantic dust for the first of his globetrotting adventures. It takes him across the world and back, from New Orleans and Houston, Barbados and Jamaica, through the Panama Canal to Sydney and Melbourne then back across the Pacific, through the Gilbert and Solomon Islands, Samoa, Tonga, Fiji and the Azores, to a triumphant homecoming in Liverpool. Despite the laughs, the real journey in this strangely moving tale takes David from boy to man and here are his tall tales and youthful high jinks, hilarious tours such as the one in Barbados. 318pp, paperback. £8.99 NOW 80p 77739 LETTERS FROM AMERICA: Travels in the USA and Canada by Rupert Brooke Brooke died famously young. In May 1913, the poet embarked on a year long expedition of North America, visiting the United States, Canada and finally the South Seas. He sent his impressions home in a series of letters, written for publication in the Westminster Gazette. He reflects on the beauty of arriving by boat at night in New York, the grandeur of the Niagara Falls and the Canadian Wildernesses. He is blunt in his judgements on society, business and cities, playful in his accounts of Anglo-American relations, and finally humbled by the vastness of the landscape. With Henry James’s foreword. 124pp, paperback. £7.99 NOW £3.75 77110 VENICE: A New History by Thomas Madden This perfect guide to the magical city of Venice is not only encyclopaedic, encompassing everything from Attila the Hun to Katherine Hepburn’s tribulations while filming Summertime, but also readable and amusing. Peopling his tale with doges, popes, knights, merchants and famous figures from Charlemagne to Marco Polo, and Casanova to Lord Byron, the author explores all aspects of Venice’s breathtaking achievements. Here are the stories of its unparalleled navy, its role as an economic powerhouse and birthplace of capitalism, its popularisation of opera, the stunning architecture of its watery environs, and more. These are set in the context of the rise and fall of the Byzantine Empire, the crusades to the Holy Land and the power of Turkish sultans. 446 pages, colour plates and maps. $35 NOW £7 77134 PANTHER SOUP: A European Journey in War and Peace by John Gimlette A very special piece of travel writing journeying to past familiar European landmarks with someone who knew them in the post-war chaos of the 1940s. By the end of World War Two, in the hinterlands of France and across the German plains, what happened to the battlefields? Who lived on them? Is there any trace of the 2.7 million Americans who smashed their way into the Reich or the 12 million who followed? With telling testimony from the survivors linking old and new worlds, ideals and ideologies. 402pp, paperback, photos. £8.99 NOW £3 77141 A TRAVELLER’S HISTORY OF GREECE by Timothy Boatswain and Colin Nicolson This history will help readers to make sense of modern Greece. The gazetteer, cross-referenced to the main text, highlights the importance of sites, towns and battlefields as well as details of ancient battles. 338 paperback pages with line drawings, maps, a note on transliteration, spelling and pronunciation, chronology of major events, heads of state since independence and historical gazetteer. £9.99 NOW £1.75 77520 ADVENTURER’S HANDBOOK: From Surviving an Anaconda Attack to Finding Your Way Out of the Desert by Mick Conefrey and Adam Burton Logs some of the greatest and most famous adventurers ever, to provide a winning combination of intrepid tales of yesteryear and witty retro tips. How do you survive a charging elephant? What is the best way to serve polar bear meat? Where do you find water in a desert? Includes David Livingstone, Ernest Shackleton and John Hunt. Discover which famous explorer was cooked by Hawaiian natives, and who was left on an ice floe in the Arctic by his drunken captain. 242 pages, line drawings and maps. £10.99 NOW £3.50 77571 100 CITIES OF THE WORLD: Book and DVD by Falko Brenner Beautifully packaged in a card folder with elasticated fastener is a spectacular large paperback plus 60 minute accompanying DVD. We begin in Africa in Algiers and Tunis and Casablanca, travel across to Asia, throughout Europe, Central and South America, North America to Oceania landing finally in Auckland and Wellington. For each entry there is a geographical location map, facts about population, places of interest, famous citizens, famous views in large and small colour photographs, sights not to miss whether geographical or historical, the beautiful architecture of Lisbon and Vienna, the colourful houses of Warsaw, to squares, harbours, churches and dramatic skylines. 240 page paperback, colour photos, 60 minute colour DVD. £19.99 NOW £8.50 PETS It often happens that a man is more humanely related to a cat or dog than to any human being. - Henry David Thoreau 78802 GRUMPY CAT by Grumpy Cat Cooper ‘If you’re happy and you know it, get away from me,’ says our favourite Grumpy cat. Grumpy Cat lives in Arizona, and doesn’t care whether or not you’ve heard of it. He (or possibly she) says there’s a lot of dirt and sticks, and it’s mostly barren and devoid of life, pointing out, ‘It’s not all desert. Sometimes there’s something green, like a tree. Which is the worst.’ Here are plenty of photos of Grumpy Cat, together with those that share Grumpy’s life - Dog, Kitten, Cactus. Of them all, if Grumpy does care about anything, it’s probably Cactus as they can hang out together, though they don’t talk much, ‘we mostly just stare off into space and think about things we dislike.’ Grumpy explains how to get into a grumpy mood, how to be grumpy, the anatomy of a frown, how to visualise grumpiness, a grumpy reading list and grumpy in translation. You even can host your own grumpy party, complete with a special litter box cake sounds yummy! Grumpy hates the dog as it likes to sniff inappropriate places with a cold wet nose, and the kitten because it loves to cuddle and it is constantly saying ‘I wuv you’. Colour a picture of Grumpy Cat, join the dots to reveal how Grumpy is feeling, do the Grumpy word search or the Grumpy crossword where every answer seems to be No. As Grumpy remarks, ‘I tried looking on the brighter side of life. It hurt my eyes.’ One to amuse cat-lovers for hours. Poor Grumpy Cat, he can’t help having an upside-down smile. Colour illus, puzzles. £8.99 NOW £5 16 Pets continued 78777 67 REASONS WHY CATS ARE BETTER THAN DOGS by Jack Shepherd Beastmaster and Buzz Feed websites editorial director Jack Shepherd purr-fectly pairs witty text with hilarious photographs and facts that only National Geographic can provide in an age-old battle, cat vs dog. Love reason 64 - cats are fiercely protective parents. Mother cats love their kittens almost as much as they love giving penetrating death stares to anyone with the temerity to mess with them. On the opposite page a little Chihuahua sits at a party - ‘This mother dog is enjoying a delicious Margarita while her puppies talk to strangers.’ Cats and dogs dress for Halloween, in birthday party hats, caught hiding, wearing a box entitled ‘Poop Factory’, black cat with his fangs in a flip-flop, table manners and lap etiquette, snuggling with babies, as students, having conversations with their humans, the cat chasing and the dog paddling with a baby fox, the contrasting pictures are really funny, have captions and nuggets of wisdom. Ultimately, it advocates the supremacy of cats. Softback, colour photos. ORDER HOTLINE: 020 74 74 24 74 Walkies! 78810 LABRADOR RETRIEVERS by Katharina Schlegl-Kofler 78844 MINI ENCYCLOPEDIA: The World of Koi by Keith Holmes and Tony Pitham ‘Alert, friendly, good-natured, and always eager to please - these are the qualities that Labradors use to sneak into our hearts.’ As far as we know, the St John’s Dog, from Newfoundland, was the ancestor of the Labrador, but because of import laws which took effect in 1895 it became difficult to import the dogs and so it was necessary to create hybrids from other breeds with similar characteristics. Thus our much loved Labradors today possibly include water spaniels and pointers in their blood. Dog-devotees, particularly Lablovers, will drool over the glorious photos in this largeformat book. Here are Labradors posing, playing, eating and resting, as well as plenty of adorable tumbling puppies. A double-page spread shows all the salient points of a Labrador from the shape of its muzzle to the otter tail ‘with no feathering.’ Everything you need to know about caring for your dog is here; choosing, care, house-training, activity, nutrition, disease, breeding, development and preventive health care. 11"x 9.5", 144pp, colour illus. Illustrated top right. 78586 ANIMAL WISE: The Thoughts & Emotions of Our Fellow Creatures by Virginia Morell In eight sections, Stinky Situations, Messy Matters, Food Foul-Ups, Sexual Stirrings, Problems with People, Wilful on Walks, Horrible at Home and Doggy Damage, each featured problem is lucidly explained and its causes analysed. Does your dog chase your cat? How do you introduce a new kitten and does your dog view your pet rabbit as prey? Chasing joggers, obsessed with following scents, stealing children’s toys, going crazy when visitors ring the doorbell, vomiting, digging up the garden, and more, this superbly presented handbook gives clear guidance on how to prevent or get rid of misbehaviour. Many humorous cartoons on the lighter side of the humancanine relationship. Colour photo, 160pp in large paperback. £9.99 NOW £4 The colourful varieties of koi fish make them one of the most charming and relatively easy-tokeep pets. Good filtration and water quality in your pond are vital if koi are to remain healthy all year round. Our mini encyclopedia is packed with sensible advice and practical guidance looking at equipment and systems, how to build a pond, and plans and step-bystep sequences for both a liner and a brick-built rendered pond. Then the best bit - fish and prized exhibits, their anatomy, nutritional needs, healthcare, breeding and showing in this richly illustrated guide to all colour varieties like the spectacular Hikarimoyo, Koromo, Showa and Hikariutsuri with their metallic lustre and dark finnage. 208pp in well illus softback, colour photos. $14.95 NOW £4 Virginia Morell is well-known in the field of animal behaviour, being a prolific contributor to Science and National Geographic. She explores the frontiers of research on animal cognition and emotion and offers some amazing insights into the hearts and minds of wild and domesticated animals, suggesting that there are many parallels between their behaviour and our own. Did you know that ants can teach, earthworms make rational decisions, rats love to be tickled and higher primates grieve? Some dogs have 1,000 word vocabularies, songbirds practise songs in their sleep, crows improvise tools, jays can plan ahead and even moths can remember when they were caterpillars - incredible stuff! Animal Wise takes us on a dazzling odyssey into the lives of animals from ants to elephants and wolves to sharp-shooting archer fish and rival pods of dolphins engaged in turf wars like something out of West Side Story. Morell takes us to field sites and labs around the world and introduces us to pioneering researchers and their surprisingly intelligent subjects. She probes the moral and ethical dilemmas of recognising that even “lesser animals” exhibit memory, feelings and selfawareness. 292 roughcut pages. $26 NOW £6 78803 GUINEA PIGS: A Complete Pet Owner’s Manual by Barron’s Guinea pigs are among the oldest domestic animals in South America with a reputation for being a bit boring and even a little stupid. But they are also extremely curious and adept at learning, provided they are given the proper encouragement. They are herd animals and should never be kept singly. Learn all about their teeth, tongue, feet, coat, eyes, nose and ears, a day in the life of a guinea pig, guidelines for happiness, determining their sex, photography and guinea pig portraits, making them a welcome home, courtship rituals and parenting, chubbiness and weight, exciting indoor and outdoor exercise areas, sickness and health. With informative and attractive checklists and side bars and handsome colour photos. 64 page paperback. BIOGRAPHY / AUTOBIOGRAPHY OK, we love cats at Bibliophile as you all know, but Lottie our whippet has chosen this selection! £16.99 NOW £6.50 78796 DOGGY PROBLEMS SOLVED by Amanda O’Neill $14.99 NOW £3.50 78834 TRICK IS IN THE TRAINING by Stephanie Taunton and Cheryl Smith Meet Apple, the Australian cattle dog demonstrating grapevine, the figure of eight through the owner’s legs which looks so impressive. See Gypsy the Border Collie demonstrating the hoop jump, Ketchup the Northern Terrier demonstrating jumping through your arms and Trouble, the Mixed Breed demonstrating the Alley-oop for a hug with his owner seated on a low chair. For each trick there are prerequisites of sitting or standing, the uses of each performance, the actions to take, timing, command, signal and problems. Get him to roll over, take a bow, play dead, high five or just stay. We have fallen in love with Matilda, the Basset Hound on page 5! Have fun, learn new things and at the very least have something to show off on your walks in the park, or indeed on YouTube or Facebook! Canine ‘tricks’ are showy extensions of your dog’s natural behaviour. Also tips on putting your dog’s training into use for fun, in competitive shows or even film roles. Instructive and fun colour photos. 104pp in large softback. $14.99 NOW £4 78801 GREYHOUNDS: A Complete Pet Owner’s Manual by D. Caroline Coile Known since ancient times for its hunting and racing prowess, the greyhound is increasingly popular and much loved as a pet, particularly Saving Greys on which there is a whole special chapter in this informative book. Describes the origins, anatomy, physical traits, temperament, feeding, healthcare, training, grooming, exercise and play activities. Understand your greyhound’s voice, body language and their meanings like the smile, the pleading eyes, eye care and teeth, ear mites, weight reduction diets, watering the lawn and not the floors and other little accidents and their possible A life spent making mistakes is not only more honourable, but more useful than a life spent doing nothing. - George Bernard Shaw causes, first aid, walking and grooming. With checklists and side bars and colour photos of the most handsome greys, whites, blacks and our favourite, the brindle. 96 page paperback. $9.99 NOW £2.75 78845 YORKSHIRE TERRIERS: A Complete Pet Owner’s Manual by Sharon Vanderlip The diminutive but spirited Yorkshire Terrier has always been a favourite and is now one of the most popular small breed dogs in the world. Who can resist those big black pleading eyes, long silky coat, blue and tan colours and diminutive size? With a little bow in their hair, shiny white teeth and an adoring nature, here are all of the typical Yorkie origins, behaviour, physical traits, temperament and more. With expert advice on choosing and training your dog, feeding, healthcare, exercise and grooming, health, personality and their meaning, stepby-step directions for everyday care, checklists and sidebars. Delightful doggie colour photos throughout, 96 page softback. $9.99 NOW £2.75 78781 BASSET HOUNDS: A Complete Pet Owner’s Manual by Joe Stahlkuppe Everything about purchase, feeding and healthcare in one classy Barron’s handbook from this excellent series we have acquired packed with information and advice to help you take good care of your Basset Hound. Looks at the origins, anatomy, physical traits, temperament, feeding, healthcare, training, grooming, exercise and play activities for this calm dog, an ideal companion for children. Understand his voice, body language and their meanings, exercising your Basset, grooming, adoption and selection, safety, training, pack behaviour, the five basic commands, hunting with your Basset, field trialling with your Basset, dietary concerns, preventing health problems, emergency care and more. With dozens of gorgeous puppies and fully grown elongated dogs in colour photos. 96pp in paperback. $8.99 NOW £2.75 78782 BEAGLES: A Complete Pet Owner’s Manual by Lucia Roesel-Parent and Debbie Bruce A Beagle is not an easy pet to keep and requires a lot from you. You have to remain devoted for 12-15 years and provide good, constant and ever more expensive health care. From selecting a breeder and puppy, there are tips and fact boxes on kennel conditions, puppy aptitude test on social attraction, following, restraint, social dominance, retrieving, touch, sight, sound sensitivity and structure before looking at basic training, travelling, good and bad toys, Beagles and children, grooming and healthcare, the proper diet, feeding your senior or overweight Beagle, what to do if your Beagle gets sick, body language vs. words, clicker training, jackpotting rewards, all manner of training, besides the history of Beagles for work in the field and Beagle shows. Filled with attractive doggie colour photos, 96pp in paperback. $8.99 NOW £2.75 78825 PUG HANDBOOK by Brenda Belmonte Outgoing and fun loving, the personality of the Pug attracts young and old alike and life with one is never dull. Called a Mopsi in Finnish, all of the European names for the Pug are given and we learn that Prince William of Orange in 1688 brought with him a large number of Pugs to Britain. Covering their origins, kennel club breeding standards, colour and variations, purchasing your Pug puppy, house training and destructive chewing, cat chasing, aggression, adoption, breed rescue, retired pugs, we look carefully at food and the finicky eater, coat types and making your Pug pretty with pedicures and wrinkle care, the importance of training and the tools and equipment to help you and your Pug, plus health, disease, performing Pugs with agility and tracking and showmanship, and the life of the senior Pug. Colour photos, 168pp in paperback. £10.99 NOW £4 £7.99 NOW £3 78833 TRAINING YOUR PET FERRET by Gerry Bucsis and Barbara Somerville Not quite as cute as a meerkat, but increasingly popular as family pets, ferrets are furry, cuddly and bursting with energy - and very loveable. If you are thinking about buying one or already have one, here is the only book currently on the market that speaks directly to the issue of training. The good news is that you can begin ferret training at any time, though the sooner the better for a happier ferret and owner. Some ferrets don’t like the smell of Bitter Apple spray. Tape down a plastic rubber to protect your carpet. Learn about hazardous houseplants. Get your ferret to perch comfortably on your shoulder or hitch a ride in your hoodie. Lots of tricks, safety in the car, special toys and bedding, winter warmth, walking on a leash, coming when called, poop safety, it is a nononsense Barron’s publication. Colour photos throughout, 80 page paperback. ONLY £3 78275 A GIFT FROM BOB by James Bowen Bob is quite a famous cat now; he has featured in several books like A Street Cat Named Bob, as well as on YouTube and other media sites. James, at one time a homeless drug addict, rescued Bob a few years ago and nursed him back to health. James busks and sells Big Issue while Bob sits on his shoulder. This wonderful, warm account tells how James desperately needed to earn money a few Christmases ago. It was snowy, bitterly cold, and he had to pay his gas and electric bills as well as buy some food. It didn’t help when he tripped on ice and smashed his guitar. Yet people rallied round, and suddenly James realised how lucky he was to have so many friends. And Bob was happy too, just so long as no one tried to rearrange his beloved Christmas tree which had to be ‘just so’. 178pp, sketches. £12.99 NOW £5 78528 CAT WIT by Kate May Quips and quotes for the feline-obsessed and those who think their magnificent moggy really is the cat’s pyjamas, here are quotes on fantastic felines to dip your paw into. ‘I don’t know he’s there until I yawn and my mouth closes on a whisker.’ ‘Anything not nailed down is a cat toy.’ ‘A meow massages the heart.’ 191 pages of cat wisdom, glamour pusses and cat worship since the days of Ancient Egypt, P. G. Wodehouse to today’s YouTube videos. £9.99 NOW £4 76659 DOG HAIR: The Best Doggy Hair-Dos for Fashion-Conscious Hounds! edited by Clare Churly Just as with humans, a new haircut can transform a puppy, whether you give it an image of carefully coiffed class, sporty sass or a blast from the past. From the Mohawk to the mullet, the bob to the beehive, with this 78620 FIRST WELL: A Bethlehem Boyhood by Jabra Ibrahim Jabra ‘As we began descending the hill towards the Sultan’s pool, the ramparts of the old city and the minaret of David the Prophet became visible to us, bathed as they were in the violet twilight of the setting sun...’ Jabra’s love of the Arabic language comes through, even in translation: ‘Words glowed in my mind’ he writes. ‘I imagine myself walking on coloured silk carpets spread over the waves of a wondrous sea of dreams.’ As a child in British Mandate Palestine, the author recalls daily life in Bethlehem and Jerusalem with pin-sharp observation. His writing is funny, moving and tender. His Christian family, his school friends and the eccentric characters of the surrounding streets all come to light. Camels, eating, drinking, barefoot through the dusty streets and rubbish dumps ‘The heat and sweat were causing my buttocks to become even more inflamed’, pigs and chickens, slave girls, shiny oranges and the school and teachers he loved, the book ends when he is 13 years old. ‘The beautiful city of Jerusalem was there for me to discover, neighbourhood by neighbourhood, stone by stone, the old part and the new, its past and present. There were also the Egyptian magazines which every week brought us knowledge, humour and news of Cairo’s political conflicts and literary battles.’ 216pp in paperback. £8 NOW £4 78793 DARLING MONSTER edited by John Julius Norwich An enticing collection of letters from the author’s mother that cover the period 1939-1952. How could they be dull when his mother was the aristocratic socialite Lady Diana Cooper? According to her son, her bed was her office, and she would sit there for hours, cross-legged, writing in pencil so as not to get ink on the sheets. The letters are vivacious, gossipy, filled with her CONTINUED OVER PAGE guide you can explore the short and sweet, the midlength for mutts, and the long-haired hounds, or model your style on Jennifer Aniston, Pocahontas or Russell Brand. There are even some hilarious doggy disasters. 96 pages, photos in colour. £7.99 NOW £2.25 76713 KENNEL CLUB: MY DOG & ME: A Record Book by The Kennel Club Comes in user-friendly stiff ring-bound cardboard with sections for you to enter all the important information about your dog. Starting with your dog’s name, sex, colour, breed and date of birth, there are spaces to record likes, favourites foods, toys and a paw-print. Pages for details of your vet, kennel, dog walker, pet store, insurance claims and other important information. Space to note down health checks, worming and flea treatments with space to enter your dog’s favourite places. Ends with a pocket storage to use as a gallery for photos. 140pp, ringbound folder, colour photos, elastic fastener for when it bulges! £14.99 NOW £3.50 77503 SOLOMON’S TALE by Sheila Jeffries Solomon is an old cat waiting to be reincarnated, a tiny ball of fur found on a doorstep in the middle of a thunderstorm. He is born the runt of a litter and with the help of his Angel learns how to use his Psi-sense, or Satnav as humans call it, to locate Ellen, who is now married to Joe. Joe, too, grows to love him, but Joe has problems. He drinks, is violent and is unable to afford mortgage repayments. There is already a cat in place by the fire, a flirtatious black and white called Jessica. 227pp. £8.99 NOW £3.50 78278 AFTER CLEO CAME JONAH by Helen Brown The bestselling author of ‘Cleo’, like many of us, Helen Brown swore she would never get another kitten. Some say your previous cat chooses their successor. If so, what in cat heaven’s name was Helen’s beloved Cleo thinking when she sent a crazy kitten like Jonah? But while she was recovering from surgery, an unscheduled visit to a pet shop resulted in the explosive arrival of the Siamese kitten. Helen was struggling with her eldest daughter Lydia whose craving to become a Buddhist nun in war torn Sri Lanka was matched by Jonah’s yearning to be an outdoor cat in a decidedly indoor cat neighbourhood. Heart warming reading. 324pp, paperback. £8.99 NOW £3 78274 CAT IN THE WINDOW by Derek Tangye ‘I first met Monty in room 205 of the Savoy Hotel. He was six weeks old, and when I came in the room he was tumbling, chasing, biting an old typewriter ribbon dragged temptingly across the carpet. He was the size and colour of a handful of crushed autumn bracken.’ The Minack Chronicles tell the story of how Derek Tangye and his wife Jean left behind their cosmopolitan lifestyle in London to relocate to a cliff top daffodil farm in Cornwall, where they lived in a simple cottage surrounded by their beloved animals. The second in the series and tells of their beloved ginger cat Monty. 106pp, paperback. £6.99 NOW £3.50 Biography / Autobiography continued observations on the world in general. Her husband, Duff Cooper, ran the Ministry of Information for Winston Churchill. Diana writes to her son, ‘Papa came home all right about nine, as Winston dines at seven in a little blue sort of workman’s overall suit. He looks exactly like the good pig who built his house of bricks.’ Speaking of a tea party she held in 1949, with Princess Margaret as a guest, she wrote ‘She might have been one of our own daughters - gay and talkative, funny and as attractive as a mother could wish. We made her talk and tell us journey stories and good she was about the Pope. “O he was ever so sweet. I was told I must curtsey to him three times. I imagined I should have room but when the door opened he was right there and I went - donk donk - donk into his lap.” I expect donk is the family word for curtsey, don’t you?’ Anecdotes abound, from her aged godmother suddenly shuffling off into a corner and wriggling to remove her drawers as the elastic had broken to a true story told to her by David Niven of the way a Commando tricked the Germans on the Channel Islands into revealing the number of officers and men in the garrison. Amusing, gossipy, indiscreet; these letters are a joy. 520pp, b/w illus. Remainder mark. $40 NOW £10 78923 E. M. FORSTER: A New Life by Wendy Moffat Based on extensive research to Forster’s previously-restricted diaries at King’s College, Cambridge, this sensitively written biography is the first to show how deeply his ideas on freedom, tolerance, sexuality and love permeated every aspect and act of his life and work. One of the great mysteries in the life of E. M. Forster (1879-1970) is why, after the publication of A Passage to India in 1924, he never published another novel although he lived to be 90 years old. At the end of his last novel his readers were left with the melancholy sight of Aziz and Fielding, friends of different races and cultures, riding out of the novel down separate paths. It would not be until after his death that Maurice, his novel of a homosexual affair, would be published. E. M. Forster led a full and energetic life, as a successful broadcaster, leading figure in Europe’s intellectual life and brilliant essayist. Apparently casually assembled, Abinger Harvest and Two Cheers for Democracy are two of the most influential 20th century essay collections. He helped create the more tolerant world we know today with the support of colleagues from Lowes Dickenson and Constantine Cavafy to Christopher Isherwood and Benjamin Britten. 408pp. 16 pages of photos. £25 NOW £7 78703 WHY BE HAPPY WHEN YOU COULD BE NORMAL? by Jeanette Winterson The providence of this book’s title is possibly one of the most telling and heart-wrenching parts of this poignant memoir regarding the author’s lesbianism. Born in Manchester in 1959 and adopted into a family of Pentecostal evangelists, Jeanette Winterson is best known for her prizewinning semi-autobiographical debut novel Oranges Are Not the Only Fruit. This soul-baring memoir is the story of her life’s work to find happiness. Growing up with “a religious zealot disguised as a mother” with two sets of teeth (matt for everyday and pearlised “for best”) plus a revolver in the top drawer in a northern industrial town in the 60s and 70s, frequently locked out of the house and spending the night on the doorstep, it is a painful past. Winterson thought she had bested her demons, but they rose again, sending her on a journey to madness and back in search of her biological mother, who she eventually tracked down a few years ago - named Ann, still living in Manchester and a follower of her lost daughter’s career. She also reveals that Jeanette’s (or Janet as she named her) father was a rather handsome teddy boy, then touchingly texts her after their first meeting “I hope you weren’t disappointed”. US edition of 230 roughcut pages. £14.99 NOW £6 78669 MORTALITY by Christopher Hitchens and Graydon Carter Christopher Hitchens was one of the most widely read and controversial writers of the late 20th and early 21st century. The articles he wrote for the world’s best known periodicals, particularly when he got onto the subject of religion, politics and literature, were typically incendiary, and his debating style, in which he never pulled any punches, made him a staple on the talk show and lecture circuits, as well as many friends and enemies. It was in June 2010, while on a book tour to promote his bestselling memoir “Hitch-22” that he was suddenly struck with an excruciating chest pain which saw him “deported from the country of the well across the stark frontier that marks off the land of malady”. The diagnosis was oesophageal cancer, which had already spread and the prognosis was not good, which in typical Hitch style meant he threw himself into everything with even more gusto than before, despite often being greatly weakened and in terrible pain. Through the ensuing 18 months up to his death on 15 December 2011 he adamantly stuck to his atheist beliefs, refusing to find solace in religion, determined to meet death head on with his eyes wide open. In this riveting, brave account of the course of his illness he describes its torments, the taboos associated with it and how a terminal disease transforms experience and changes our relationship with our world. By turns personal and philosophical - and, remarkably given what he was going through, always with humour and a scything wit - Hitchens embraces the full range of human emotions as the cancer invades ever deeper and he is forced to grapple with the enigma of imminent death through a fog of medication and physical torment. An ultimately tragic but amazingly uplifting account, with a touching afterword by his wife Carol who “finally gets the last word”, something she rarely did while her husband was alive! 126pp. $22.99 NOW £6 www s. c o m w.. b i b l i o p h i l e b o o k ks 78514 WEST’S WORLD by Lorna Gibb Born at the end of the Victorian era, Rebecca West spent her life in rebellion and was a pioneering feminist in matters of sex. Her most famous affair was with H.G. Wells, who fathered her son Anthony early in their 10-year relationship and caused Rebecca endless heartache. She met him after she had written an unfavourable review of one of Wells’s books and their relationship was turbulent, full of intense passion and intellectual cut and thrust. Wells was unfaithful to both Rebecca and his wife, and by 1953 Rebecca was looking for some stability in her life. She was one of the generation who found it difficult to marry because of the scarcity of young men, and she issued Wells with an ultimatum. He told her to disregard the scandal that followed her everywhere, and in despair she started an affair with Max Beaverbrook. Wells meanwhile was being pursued by an infatuated admirer called Hedwig Gattenrigg who slashed her wrists in an effort to gain his undivided attention. In 1930 Rebecca married a wealthy man but their marriage soon became sexless and she looked elsewhere. In 1946 she renewed acquaintance with a lawyer, Francis Biddle, who was the primary American judge at the Nuremberg trials, and Rebecca accompanied him, writing articles for the London press which were avidly read by the public. When Rebecca died, Bernard Levin described her reporting as “unrivalled”. 320pp, photos. £8.99 NOW £4 77176 HER BRILLIANT CAREER: Ten Extraordinary Women of the Fifties by Rachel Cooke Sheila van Damm became not only a theatre owner but a successful rally car driver in a sport peopled only by testosterone-fuelled males. Patience Gray became a successful cookery book writer. Alison Smithson succeeded as a female architect. Rose Heilbron dominated the court as a Queen’s Counsel. Trouser-wearing rebels Nancy Spain and Joan Werner Laurie became respectively a journalist and an editor. Margery Fish was a famous plantswoman, and Jacquetta Hawkes an archaeologist. All showed what women could be capable of. 324 pages. Archive photos. £18.99 NOW £2.50 77926 A GULL ON THE ROOF by Derek Tangye By the author of the much-loved books collectively known as ‘The Minack Chronicles’ here are his tales from a Cornish flower farm. His books told of how he and his wife Jean left behind their cosmopolitan lifestyle in London to relocate to a cliff top daffodil farm in Cornwall, where they lived in a simple cottage surrounded by their beloved animals. This title is the first in the series, telling of their departure from the city and how they came to Minack which would be home to the Tangyes and their menagerie including Monty the ginger cat. 216pp, paperback. £6.99 NOW £3 77966 CITY LIGHTS & STREETS AHEAD by Keith Waterhouse It is 1952 and Keith has arrived in Fleet Street, in the days of long liquid lunches, of eccentric and inspired newspapermen and of foreign assignments. In 1959 Waterhouse teamed up with Willis Hall to write the stage play of his novel Billy Liar. It was the start of a prolific partnership that produced dozens of scripts for TV, stage and screen. Waterhouse tells of Hollywood days with Hitchcock and Disney, and Hollywood nights with the Rolling Stones and Cap’n Bob Maxwell, the decline of Fleet Street and his own successful adventures as a solo playwright with director Ned Sherrin. A lyrical and very funny memoir. 469pp in omnibus paperback. £12.99 NOW £5 77985 TIMEBENDS: A Life by Arthur Miller Arthur Miller dared to enter the fire that surrounded the most potent sexual myth of the century. His plays have been performed for over half a century, among them All My Sons, Death of a Salesman and The Crucible. This autobiography recalls his childhood in Harlem and Brooklyn in the 1920s and Depression, his successes and failures in the theatre and in Hollywood, the formation of his political beliefs that, two decades later, brought him into confrontations with the House Committee of UnAmerican Activities, and his later work on behalf of human rights as the President of PEN International. He writes with astonishing perception and tenderness of Marilyn Monroe, his second wife. First published in 1987, revised edition. 628pp illus paperback. £12.99 NOW £4.50 77207 EDITH HEAD Isabella Alston and Kathryn Dixon The Hollywood costume designer Edith Head produced sketches for such famous costumes as worn in The Sting, Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid, The Birds, Breakfast at Tiffany’s, The Facts of Life, Vertigo, Funny Face, The Ten Commandments, To Catch A Thief with Grace Kelly in a magnificent shimmering golden ball gown, and Audrey Hepburn again in Sabrina among the famous films with even more famous actors and actresses and directors. Gloria Swanson in her three costumes created by Edith Head for Sunset Boulevard, jungle wear to evening wear in The Jungle Princess, Edith did it all and dressed a stellar cast of female stars, both in character and as themselves including Lucille Ball, Barbara Stanwyck, Mae West, Elizabeth Taylor and Doris Day among them. Her style acumen stretched from the exotic, historical costume she designed for Samson and Delilah and the Ten Commandments to the classic, timeless costumes she designed for Roman Holiday and To Catch a Thief. Our book is a sampling of her most famous works. 96 pages, colour and b/w photos and movie index. ONLY £5 78299 HOW DID I GET HERE FROM THERE? by Claire Rayner For 40 years Claire Rayner listened to the nation’s stories. It is no secret that happiness was spread a bit thinly in her far-from-easy childhood. Born in Stepney, East London, with a father always on the run and often with his family in tow meant the family constantly changed addresses and sometimes even their names. Then when she was 14, pretending she was 17, Claire enrolled as a nursing cadet at the Epsom Cottage Hospital in Surrey, and found her vocation, caring for and helping others. She eventually became the advice columnist extraordinaire, at one point receiving 1000 letters a week. 434pp, paperback, photos. £8.99 NOW £4 78181 THERE WAS A COUNTRY: A Memoir by Chinua Achebe Born in Nigeria to Igbo parents who had converted to Christianity, Achebe distinguished himself academically at a very early age. Achebe went on to the Government College in Umuahia, where English was spoken and many of the teachers had degrees from Cambridge. He won a major scholarship to university in Ibadan and felt pressured into studying medicine, though he later changed to the Arts, losing his funding. Achebe’s first job was with Nigerian broadcasting and here he met his wife Christie. In 1966 an even greater disaster befell the country with the massacre of Igbo Nigerians by the dominant northerners. The Biafran war followed in which Achebe supported the Biafrans who had seceded. He narrowly escaped being killed when his house was bombed, and his friend Christopher Okigbo was killed fighting. Achebe progresses during the book from being a highly educated product of the colonial system to a passionate critic of its legacy. 333pp, paperback. $17 NOW £5 78304 LADY ALMINA AND THE REAL DOWNTON ABBEY by The Countess of Carnarvon Almina Carnarvon was an enormously wealthy heiress, the illegitimate daughter of Alfred de Rothschild. She was contracted in marriage to the fifth Earl of Carnarvon who most famously discovered the tomb of Tutankhamun with Howard Carter. The book is about this extraordinary woman, the family into which she married, Highclere Castle that became her home, the people who worked there, and the transformation of the Castle when it became a hospital for wounded soldiers during WW1. Almina expected a life of sumptuous banquets and expensive dresses when she married at 19. But life at Highclere changed forever and Almina and her staff were forced to draw on their deepest reserves of courage. 310pp, paperback, colour illus. £9.99 NOW £5 78305 LADY CATHERINE AND THE REAL DOWNTON ABBEY by the Countess of Carnarvon In 1922 the young Lord Porchester, known as Porchey to his friends, married the beautiful American Catherine Wendell. Porchey’s father was Lord Carnarvon, the discoverer of the tomb of Tutankhamen, and shortly after their marriage Carnarvon died suddenly, leaving Porchey as the heir to Highclere Castle, now known to millions as the setting of Downton Abbey. The Porchesters’ marriage began to suffer because of Porchey’s affairs, and in the mid-thirties he developed a more serious relationship with Tanis Montagu, a member of the wealthy Guinness family. Meanwhile Catherine, who was a close friend of Prince George, had opportunities to observe the struggles of his brother David, the heir to the throne, to gain acceptance for his divorced mistress Wallis Simpson. Catherine finally had to agree to a divorce from Porchey, who set off to meet Tanis in New York, only to find that she had a new lover and was no longer interested. Catherine herself later found happiness with Geoffrey Grenfell until his death in combat. See the convoluted relationships of this aristocratic family. 350pp, photos. £20 NOW £6 78320 THE PRINCE, THE PRINCESS AND THE PERFECT MURDER by Andrew Rose The strikingly attractive Marguerite Alibert, better known in Paris as Maggie Meller, had a ‘crazy physical attraction’ with the Prince of Wales, later King Edward VIII and Duke of Windsor, long before his relationship with Wallis Simpson. On trial for her life, she was married to ‘Prince’ Ali Fahmy, her bestial and sexually perverted Eastern husband. Enormous riches, couture by Chanel, jewellery by Cartier, accessories by Louis Vuitton. The terrifying dénouement of a tempestuous marriage. Shots fired amid a violent thunderstorm. Sudden death in the luxurious Savoy hotel in London. Triumphant acquittal against the weight of the evidence. This book describes the first physical and emotional obsession of the prince and lifts the veil on the affair between Marguerite Alibert and the Prince of Wales during the Great War, about the Prince’s love letters to Marguerite and evidence from her 1934 memoir. 357pp, paperback, photos. £9.99 NOW £5 78333 WILLIAM S. BURROUGHS: A Life by Barry Miles No one since Burroughs has taken such literary risks, developed such individual political ideals, or produced works spanning such a wide range of media. He is widely regarded as the original cult figure of the Beat Movement and with his publication of Naked Lunch, which was originally banned for obscenity, he became a guru to the 60s youth culture. His biographer follows Burroughs from his Midwestern origins in St Louis to his foray into the pre-war Harvard gay scene. Communal living gave birth to the Beat Movement at Columbia University, ex-patriot culture in Mexico City, Peru and Tangier, the Beat Hotel in Paris and the punk scene in 1970s London, all the while battling and balancing addiction. 718pp, many photos. £30 NOW £6.50 17 77130 IT WASN’T ME, SIR! The Childhood and Schooldays of Bernard Carter by Bernard Carter In a style best described as verbal slapstick, this book recounts the young life of a boy, set in and around a new post-war estate in Derby. Children spent their school days dodging flying chalk, airborne blackboard rubbers and other missiles. There was no escaping the trauma and misery of Sports Day, the mortifying experience of the Christmas nativity play or the ghastliness of a recorder concert. As boys matured, more agony was piled on with sweethearts, girlfriends, lost loves. 190 paperback pages. £9.99 NOW £4 65266 STIRRED BUT NOT SHAKEN: The Autobiography by Keith Floyd and James Steen Keith was one of the first celebrity chefs, the swashbuckling cook who crossed the high seas on a BBC budget and communicated his love of food to millions of viewers. He has made and lost fortunes, been married four times, and dealt with a level of fame that has bemused him. In this honest and revealing memoir, he whooshes the reader through his adventures, from the hilarious to the downright lunatic. 349 pages with colour and b/w photos. £18.99 NOW £6 76485 SPECIAL RELATIONSHIPS: People and Places by Asa Briggs Asa Briggs visits Leeds, Birmingham, Chicago and Melbourne among places that figure in his own ‘map of learning’, a term that he was the first to use. He also speculates on time travel, the history of wine and sport. His career has been as unconventional as this book and outside academic life he focuses on his wide range of friends including John Reith, Dennis Foreman, Harold MacMillan, Jim Callaghan, Denis and Edna Healey, Richard Crossman, Penelope Lively, P. D. James and John Sainsbury among them. 242pp, colour photos. £19.99 NOW £3.50 77048 LAST LION: Winston Spencer Churchill by William Manchester and Paul Reid ! The much-heralded third and final volume of William Manchester’s biography of Winston Spencer Churchill ‘Defender of the Realm, 1940-1965’. Beginning shortly after Churchill became Prime Minister when Great Britain stood alone against the overwhelming might of Nazi Germany, Churchill organised his nation’s military response and defense, compelled FDR to support America’s beleaguered cousins and personified the ‘never surrender’ ethos that helped to win the war. We see Churchill driven from office, rising to warn the world of the coming Soviet menace and hear him speak in opposition to the socialist policies of the Labour government. After his triumphant return to 10 Downing Street, we follow Churchill as he pursues his final foreign policy goal - a ‘summit at the top’ with President Dwight Eisenhower and the Soviet chiefs. Hobbled by ill health and age, he faces the end. Completed by Paul Reid after William Manchester’s series of strokes. A monumental 1182 pages. Remainder mark. $40 NOW £14 77177 HOUSE IN SOUTH ROAD by Joyce Storey Born near Bristol in 1917, Joyce began her autobiography at the age of 66. It follows her pre-war life in Bristol, an era of corset and chocolate factories, of ‘service’ and glamorous silent movies. During the war, like countless other women with an RAF husband rarely on leave, she fights on the home front - air raids, inlaws, machine work and poverty. Then after the war, Joyce begins to enjoy the luxury of a prefab house, first holidays, the growing independence of her four children, but suffers a breakdown in her marriage and her husband’s final illness. 436pp, paperback, family photos. £8.99 NOW £3.50 77480 IN PLAIN SIGHT: The Life and Lies of Jimmy Savile by Dan Davies This fascinating book tells the story of Savile’s life based on the author’s interviews with Savile himself, with his friends and with people who saw what was going on. Interspersed with the life is the story of how the BBC axed the Newsnight programme and then found themselves under investigation for a cover-up. Far stranger and more horrifying then any fiction, the book reveals details of Savile’s early life as the youngest child of seven and his lifelong closeness to his mother, his wartime experiences as a miner and his stellar career as a DJ. Numerous women now testify to Savile’s criminal disregard. Bureaucrats who had heard the rumours were urging caution, knowing that anyone who spoke out would be ridiculed. 584pp. £18.99 NOW £6 77648 THE CHURCHILLS: A Family Portrait by Celia Lee and John Lee Our story focuses on four members of the immediate Churchill family - Lord Randolph, his American wife Jennie, and their sons Winston and John (Jack). Lord Randolph Spencer Churchill was the second son of the 7th Duke and Duchess of Marlborough, John and Frances Churchill, who lived at the stately Blenheim Palace, Woodstock, Oxfordshire. In 1874, Lord Randolph married the stunningly beautiful Miss Jenny Jerome of New York. Jenny would become an established society hostess, befriending Edward, Prince of Wales, and Princess Alexandra. The Churchills’ younger son John served as an army officer in first the Boer War and the First World War. This is the first complete family portrait and Jack’s story is essential to understanding the family dynamic. Looks in depth at financial worries and career development, Jennie’s work on the ‘Anglo-Saxon Review’ and the Hospital Ship ‘Maine’ during the Boer War, Gallipoli, Downing Street 1929-1940, Their Finest Hour 1940-45 and The End of It All, 1945-65. 272pp, paperback. £10.99 NOW £4.50 CONTINUED ON PAGE 20 18 CLEARANCE SALE CLEARANCE SALE No further stocks available of these bestsellers! 74635 PENGUIN ENCYCLOPEDIA edited by David Crystal Easy-to-use with world and political maps, clear headers, 28,000 entries from current affairs to sport, history to science, maps and diagrams. From Frank Muir and the Mujahideen, paper to Portuguese literature. 3rd edition, heavyweight 1488 pages. £30 NOW £13 76632 UNSINKABLE: A Memoir by Debbie Reynolds and Dorian Hannaway Debbie Reynolds is an actress, comedienne, singer, dancer and author, best known for her roles in the films Singing in the Rain and The Unsinkable Molly Brown. She invites readers into the close circle of her family and stories featuring Ava Gardner, Clark Gable, Frank Sinatra, Mick Jagger, Gene Kelly and more. 306 pages illus in colour and b/w. £17.99 NOW £7.50 76008 1000 NUDES: A History of Erotic Photography from 1839-1939 Uwe Scheid Collection by Hans-Michael Koetzle and Uwe Scheid Ranging from the earliest nude daguerrotypes and ethnographic nude photographs to experimental nude photography. All the pictures shown are taken from the late Uwe Scheid’s collection of erotic photographs of nudes, dating mainly from the 1920s and ’30s. 5.5 x 7.7", 576 pages. Hundreds of b/w adult-only images. Text in English, French and German. ONLY £13 74003 GAUGUIN CÉZANNE MATISSE: Visions of Arcadia by Joseph J. Rishel This superbly illus catalogue focuses on three monumental paintings - Paul Gauguin’s Where Do We Come From? (1897-8), Paul Cézanne’s Large Bathers (1900-1906) and Henri Matisse’s Bathers By A River (1909- 1913, 1916-17). Masterpieces by Nicolas Poussin and Jean-Baptiste-Camille Corot also serve as examples of the high value given to Arcadia in the history of French painting. 243 pages 31cm x 25cm with plates in faithful colour, gatefold. $40 NOW £12.50 75895 RIPPEROLOGY: A Study of the World’s First Serial Killer by Robin Odell Don Rumbelow in the foreword, points out that as a serial killer the Ripper is in the small-time league, with the number of his victims usually agreed at five - far fewer than Harold Shipman. Other suspects reflected the prejudices of the times. The author surveys the whole of the literature and assesses the evidence about the gruesome murders committed in 1888. 272pp, illus. £20.50 NOW £7 75681 TRIALS OF THE DIASPORA: A History of Anti-Semitism in England by Anthony Julius Anthony Julius unpacks English anti-Semitism in all its manifestations. Following the medieval Expulsion of Jews and their 17th century Readmission, the process of emancipation was slow, though the author notes that many restrictions on Jews applied to other nonProtestants. Covers the full range of 20th century antiSemitism from the Balfour Declaration and the Palestinian Mandate to the exclusion of Jews from golf. 811pp. £25 NOW £8 74696 JEWELS OF TIME: The World of Women’s Watches by Roberta Naas Features 100 watches with large photos accompanied by inspirational texts, sometimes poetic, sometimes historical or descriptive. Including Cartier’s tiger, lemur and tortoise designs, Chopard’s monkey and penguin and Boucheron’s jewelled elephant. 304pp, spectacular colour photos. 28 x 26cm. £45 NOW £14 75516 PHOTOGRAPHIC HISTORY OF BRITISH FOOTBALL: Facts, Figures, Stats, and Legends, Updated Edition by Tim Hill From 1900 to the present day, this detailed book charts the key events in the history of British football with photos from the Daily Mail archives. It records a time when players wore knickerbockers and tasselled caps, shocks and controversies, tactical developments and rule changes and statistics. 240 pages, colour and b/w. £16 NOW £6.50 76895 BERTIE: A Life of Edward VII by Jane Ridley The elder son of Queen Victoria and Albert. Edward VII gave his name to the Edwardian Age but was always known as Bertie. He was 59 when he finally came to power in 1901. This richly entertaining biography reveals his power struggle with Queen Victoria. Denied any proper responsibilities, Bertie spent his time eating (TumTum), pursuing women (Edward the Caresser), gambling, and race meetings. With family trees, photos and page marker. 608pp. £30 NOW £8 77628 SHAKESPEARE ALMANAC by Gregory Doran A cornucopia of intriguing details about the life and times of England’s most adored playwright. It is a day-byday calendar of the poet’s year, following the rural farming cycle of lambing through sheep-shearing to Harvest Home, Candlemas to Hocktide. Every passing month is enhanced by quotations or the flowers and plants as they bloom, as well as the animals and birds with appropriate illustrations. Some days are accompanied by extracts from influential books of the period. 400 pages 25cm x 19.5cm, illus. £20 NOW £8.50 HOTLINE: 74form 74 24 74choice sold out. Please state aORDER 2nd & 3rd choice on020 order if 1st 76996 I HEART PARIS SHOPPER: 17 x 11 x 6" by Rutu Modan Beautifully designed shopping bag, short carry handle in bottle green. The design features an outdoor café brasserie scene. On the reverse side a couple buzz by on their scooter in a bustling Parisian street scene. 95% recycled material, with a handy wallet inside. ONLY £6.50 75523 THE GLASGOW BOYS IN YOUR POCKET by William Hardie Sir John Lavery, Sir James Guthrie, George Henry, Edward Atkinson Hornel, Joesph Crawhall, Edward Arthur Walton and William Kennedy formed the main group of painters associated with a Glasgow school, known as the Glasgow Boys. They revolutionised Scottish painting in the years between 1880 and 1895. Looks at decoration, realism, background and contains short biographies. Satin bookmark, 192pp. £9.99 NOW £5 76880 PANORAMA OF THE ENLIGHTENMENT by Dorinda Outram Illustrated account of the crucial and profoundly exciting intellectual revolution that, between the late 17th century and the final years of the 18th, changed the Western world. Scientific research and advances in medicine, the first dictionaries and encyclopedias to new attitudes towards marriage and the rights of women. 320 pages 29cm x 23cm, 153 colour and 234 b/w illus, timeline, chronology, biogs of the major personalities of the era. £29.95 NOW £8.50 75786 GLORY OF THE SULTANS by Yves Porter and Gerard Degeorge As exquisite and finely tooled as the Islamic architecture in India it depicts, this cloth bound tome has spectacular full page and other colour illus plus architectural scale plans and a map of the Indo-Pakistani sub-continent. Masterpieces as the Kutub Minar in Delhi and the Taj Mahal of Agra. Onion domes, minarets, Persian arches, fine white marble alternating with the blaze of sandstone, curved arcades, who the buildings were created for, from Gujarat to Bengal, and Kashmir to the Deccan. Close up and full page colour photos, 304 heavyweight glossy pages, 9½” x 12", slipcased, glossary. £50 NOW £23 77393 WORDS THAT BURN: How to Read Poetry and Why - Poems from Eight Great Poets: Book and CD by Josephine Hart The poetry of Elizabeth Bishop is read by actors Charles Dance, Robert Browning by Robert Hardy and Lord Byron by Eileen Atkins, Edward Fox and Tom Hollander. John Milton by Emilia Fox, and Percy Bysshe Shelley by Alan Cox and Dominic West - all recorded live at the British Library. 272 pages, illus, actors’ notes and index of first lines, plus CD. £16.99 NOW £6 75174 COMPLETE PROPHECIES OF NOSTRADAMUS by Mario Reading Michel de Nostredame (1503-66, and henceforth known as Nostradamus) wrote down his prophesies, called the Centuries, in 1555, and one of the first and most dramatic occurred in 1559, when his prediction of the exact manner and cause of the death of Henri II of France came true. He predicted the assassination of Benazir Bhutto, the 2008 Credit Crunch, New Orleans’ flooding, the Iraq War, the Twin Towers disaster. 931pp. $24.95 NOW £7.50 75639 IL DUCE AND HIS WOMEN: Mussolini’s Rise to Power by Roberto Olla In the first biography to offer insights into Mussolini’s private life, using his own complete works and the recently published memoirs of two of his lovers, the author charts the main events in Mussolini’s career, from his humble beginnings in Romagna onwards. No intimate detail is spared. 486 pages, photos. £25 NOW £7.50 77432 CHARLES CONDER 1868-1909 by Ann Galbally and Barry Pearce Moving to Melbourne in 1888 Charles Conder was soon taken up into Melbourne’s bohemian artistic circles, but Paris was the centre of Western art, so it was in Montmartre he moved in 1890 but it was London that really fascinated him and in 1895 he moved to Chelsea. Published to coincide with a major retrospective of Conder’s work in Melbourne and Sydney in 2003-4, with over 100 reproductions of his paintings, prints and watercolours. Beach and seaside watercolours of English resorts such as Newquay, Brighton and Swanage, ladies in their Edwardian finery and studies of the decadent society of Paris and London at the turn of the century. 208pp softback, colour, 9½”×11½”. ONLY £15 76456 A YEAR IN THE LIFE OF GLENCOE by Bill Birkett Glencoe plunges from the desolate wilds of Rannoch Moor to the sea and the burial islands of Eilean Munde. This collection of photos shows the seasonal changes with a wealth of information concerning the region’s history, wildlife, geology, myth, legend and lore. 100 spectacular colour photos, 112pp, 10"×10½”. £12.99 NOW £6 75425 PRINCES OF WALES: Royal Heirs in Waiting by David Loades For over 700 years, the title Prince of Wales has been awarded to royal heirs waiting to accede to the throne of England. From the charismatic soldier the Black Prince and the dissolute prince Hal, to the ill-fated Arthur, Henry and Frederick, whose deaths shook the societies of their time. Illustrates how the role, be it in medieval chivalry or Tudor myth-making, Regency excess or 1920s glamour, reflects and defines the spirit of its age. 280 pages, paintings, photos and original documents. £18 NOW £6.50 76684 THE KILLS by Richard House Long-listed for the Man Booker Prize 2013, this is an epic novel of crime and conspiracy told in four books: Sutler, The Massive, The Kill, and The Hit. Moving across continents, characters and genres, this ambitious novel begins with a man on the run and ends with a burned body. 1010 page omnibus softback. £14.99 NOW £4.50 77149 FAMOUS REGIMENTS OF THE BRITISH ARMY: Volume One A Pictorial Guide and Celebration by Dorian Bond Here, 35 of the most famous regiments are featured, with details of their battle honours, their badges, their most famous sons, and the stories of gallant actions by holders of the Victoria Cross. Artworks and photos illustrate insignia, uniforms and soldiers in action. Flanders, Ireland, America, Africa, the West Indies, the Crimea, from Ramillies to Talavera and Waterloo to Arnhem. 192 pages 25.5cm x 20cm, illus. £18.99 NOW £8.50 74801 TONY BENNETT IN THE STUDIO: A Life of Art and Music Book and CD by Tony Bennett and Robert Sullivan A celebration of Tony Bennett’s lifelong dedication to his passion for painting and singing. He reflects on times he has shared with, and lessons he has learned from, the likes of Frank Sinatra, Pearl Bailey, Louis Armstrong, David Hockney and more. Richly illus with 200 reproductions of his artwork. 212 pages 29.5cm x 27cm. Discography, art and FREE MUSIC CD of six tracks all performed by Tony Bennett. $29.95 NOW £8.50 75954 RESEARCH YOUR SURNAME AND YOUR FAMILY TREE by Dr. Graeme Davis Provides practical activities to investigate the meaning of any British surname. Discover how old it is, where it comes from, and what association it has today and how you can use it to chase your ancestors. 213pp, illus softback. £9.99 NOW £5 72051 LAUGHING GAS by P. G. Wodehouse Joey Cooley is a golden-curled child film star, the idol of American motherhood. Reginald, Third Earl of Havershot, is a boxing blue on a mission to save his wayward cousin from the fleshpots of Hollywood. Both are under anaesthetic at the dentist’s when something strange happens, and their identities are swapped in the ether. 286pp in paperback. £7.99 NOW £4 75831 SEX WITH KINGS by Eleanor Herman The rise of the royal mistress in European courts was sudden. Madame de Pompadour was beautiful, gracious and practically ruled France for 19 years. An irreproachably researched and amusingly written history of European monarchs’ jezebels. Written with a key eye for politics and pleasure. 288pp in paperback, colour plates. ONLY £4 76755 REALISM IN 20TH CENTURY PAINTING by Brendan Prendeville The author uses the work of Eakins, Bellows, Vuillard, Schiele, Hopper, Giacometti, Balthus, Freud and Hockney among others to provide the historical, artistic and critical contexts in which painting has taken a realist turn. 192 fully captioned illus, and current whereabouts of each artwork. 224pp softback. ONLY £6 73871 ALEXANDER: Destiny and Myth by Claude Mossé and Paul Cartledge From his ascension to the throne of Macedon in 336 BC to his stunning conquest of Darius III’s Persian empire, through his Indian campaign, and to his premature death aged 32, the book reconstructs the major stages of his reign. Here is the idea of him as a mythical hero from antiquity to the present time, as reflected in ancient, medieval, early modern and 20th century words and images. 244 pages with chronology, map. $22.95 NOW £6 75304 LA FOLIE BAUDELAIRE by Roberto Calasso Calasso turns his focused attention to the poets and writers of Paris in the 19th century who created what was later called ‘the Modern.’ His protagonist is Charles Baudelaire, a poet of nerves, art-lover, pioneering critic. Calasso ranges through his life and work, focusing on two painters, Ingres and Delacroix about whom Baudelaire wrote acutely. He then turns to Degas and Manet. In a mosaic of stories, insights, dreams, close readings of poems and commentaries on paintings. Illus, 337pp. £35 NOW £8 76624 SEX PRESS: The Sexual Revolution in the Underground Press 1963-1979 by Vincent Bernière and Mariel Primois From 1963 to 1979, Oz, Other Scenes, Yellow Dog, The East Village, Berkeley Barb, Actuel, Suck, Screw and many other journals, magazines, fanzines and underground presses were the voice of a dramatic sexual revolution. Artists such as R. Crumb are showcased together with huge sized reproductions of these revolutionary publications. Big and bold, boobs, pubes, snogging, experimentation, lubes, dildos and much more of the era both from Europe and the US. 240 pages, 8½ x 13", softback. £25 NOW £9 74019 CLAPTON: The Ultimate Illustrated History by Chris Welch This sumptuous book is not only crammed with wonderful pictures but also aims to assess Clapton’s appeal and achievement. His first band was the Roosters, and when he at last got a call - though he had no phone - from a serious Blues band, the Yardbirds, Clapton was on his way to the top. In 1965 Clapton quit the Yardbirds and the following year Cream was formed. 256pp, colour photos, features on his guitars, discography. £25 NOW £9 74023 THE WOODBOOK by Romeyn Beck Hough Assembled between 1888 and 1913 ‘American Woods’ originally published in 14 volumes is a work of breathtaking beauty that has set the standard for study of trees and wood. Taschen’s Wood Book reproduces, in painstaking facsimile, all of the specimen pages from the original volumes. For each tree, three different crosssection cuts of wood are represented (radial, horizontal, and vertical), demonstrating the particular characteristics of the grain and the wealth of colours and textures to be found among the many different wood types. Multilingual edition in English, French and German. 768 pages, 6.6" x 9.6". ONLY £18 77064 MOOMIN WALL DECALS by Tove Jansson The Moomin characters will make any children’s playroom or bedroom simply magical. These 30 stickers can be repositioned and will not leave marks on walls. The big pack includes two 12 x 12" full colour sheets and two 12 x 24" full colour sheets featuring scenes of the Moomin and friends at play; Moomintroll, Moominmamma and Moominpappa, Snork Maiden, Little My, Mymble, Snufkin. $24.95 NOW £5.50 75167 THE FABER BOOK OF LONDON edited by A.N. Wilson What sets London apart from the other great capital cities of the world is that it has evolved in a gloriously haphazard manner. Here are high life and low life, beggars and politicians, criminals, royals, intellectuals and criminals, and, of course, the buildings and byways, railways and canals, the street level and subterranean. 493 paperback pages. £14.99 NOW £5.50 77298 MICROSOFT WINDOWS 8 MADE EASY by James Stables Windows 8 has been designed to make using PCs easier. Packed with Hot Tips, colour photos, big clear screen shots, setting up your email, using your camera and photo Apps, backing up, keyboard shortcuts and all the basics. Large softback, step-by-step illus. 256pp. £9.99 NOW £5 78400 INTERNET MADE EASY FOR THE OVER 50s by Which? Books Buy weekly groceries, ordering prescriptions and healthcare items online, using price comparison sites, tips for buying and selling goods on eBay, setting up a PayPal account, and more. Step-by-step advice, screen shots, the book assumes no prior knowledge. 224pp, large softback. £10.99 NOW £5 75791 GREAT SHORT NOVELS OF HENRY JAMES introduced by Philip Rahv The ten novellas in this marvellous hardback omnibus are: Madame de Mauves, Daisy Miller, An International Episode, The Siege of London, Lady Barberina, The Author of Beltraffio, The Aspern Papers, The Pupil, The Turn of the Screw and The Beast in the Jungle. With biographical introduction, 382pp. $30 NOW £7 73959 HIGH HEELS: Fashion, Femininity, Seduction by Ivan Bartanian Mostly colour photos of models teetering on heels, dressed and semi-clothed, nearly nude, stockings, blindfolded, cuffed and chained, lipsticked, sleek haired, in lingerie, in bondage, in Polaroids and in studios. 192 huge pages and photography from amous names. $49.95 NOW £10 76117 PATRICK LICHFIELD PERCEPTIONS by Martin Harrison A cousin of the Queen, Patrick, Earl of Lichfield was able to take informal photographs of the Royal Family and their circle. He inhabited a world of beauty, class and style creating some of the 20th century’s most iconic images. 224 pages 30.5cm x 25cm with peerless photos. Colour and vibrant b/w. £30 NOW £10 74260 VENETIAN GLASS MOSAICS 18601917 by Sheldon Barr The 1850s found Venice in a deplorable state. Fragments from both San Marco and Santa Maria Assunta on Torcello were being detached and sold to wealthy tourists. A lawyer called Antonio Salviati found two similarly inspired allies, the Muranese abbot and glass historian Vincenzo Zanetti and the Mayor of Murano, Antonio Colleoni, who wanted to resurrect the moribund industries. This compelling account relates how these three men set about revitalizing a number of industries. This volume records such splendours as the amazing mural depicting Aurora and Cephalus on the vault of the avant-foyer of the Opéra Garnier, Paris. 143 pages 30.5cm x 24.5cm. Colour. £39.50 NOW £14 77367 DYING FALL by Elly Griffiths Forensic archaeologist Ruth Galloway spends her life looking at death, but now death has found her, with the news that her friend Dan Golding has been killed. Her grief soon turns to suspicion when she receives a desperate letter from Dan sent the day before he died. 405pp, paperback. £7.99 NOW £4 75790 GREAT PEARL HEIST by Molly Caldwell Crosby This true story opens in 1909. A fabulously wealthy jeweller will be handing over gems worth a fortune in the Piccadilly cafe. The pink pearl heist took place in 1913 when a necklace was stolen from Hatton Garden’s legendary dealer Max Mayer. The pearls are being returned by post from France following a loan to a prospective customer and Grizzard puts his Scotland Yard men in place as postal workers ready to intercept the pearls en route. Would anyone be prepared to give evidence in court? 288pp, photos. ONLY £4 77306 GARDENS THEIR HIDDEN LIFE: Unnoticed Plants and Unseen Animals by Colin Spedding Intended for gardeners who enjoy wildlife, this magnificent volume explores the garden environment, discussing how plants and animals communicate. You can be landlord to water boatmen, voles, pygmy shrews, pond skaters, nymphs, yellow-necked mice and more. Covers specific environments such as ponds and bog gardens. 320 pages 25cm x 19.5cm, colour photos. £25 NOW £7.50 73893 MARY BOLEYN: The Mistress of Kings by Alison Weir The book uncovers the truth about Mary’s much-vaunted notoriety at the French court and her relations with King François I and her role at the English court and how she became Henry’s mistress. 364 pages, colour plates. Genealogical tables of the Boleyns, the Careys and Knollys. $28 NOW £7.50 19 JANUARY CLEARANCE SALE - FIRST COME, FIRST SERVED! 77707 88: The Giants of Jazz Piano by Robert Doerschuk Weaving firsthand reflections with historical insight and musical analysis. Begins with Jelly Roll Morton, on to James P. Johnson, Fats Waller, Duke Ellington, Earl Hines, Count Basie, Marylou Williams, Art Tatum, Oscar Peterson among the 88. 341pp, photos. $29.95 NOW £6 77151 FOUL DEEDS AND SUSPICIOUS DEATHS IN BATH by Kirsten Elliott Bath has a long, dark history of shocking crime, from robbery and revenge in Roman times, through criminal acts in the dark ages, to the highwaymen of the Georgian period and the murderous Victorian underworld. 170 paperback pages, photos. £12.99 NOW £6 75719 A SPY LIKE NO OTHER: The Cuban Missile Crisis, the KGB and the Kennedy Assassination by Robert Holmes Soviet intelligence officers may have been involved in the assassination of President John F. Kennedy. According to Holmes’ research, during the Cuban Missile Crisis, Kennedy relied heavily on information provided by Oleg Penkovsky, an MI6/CIA agent inside Soviet military intelligence. But the double agent’s cover was blown. He was executed, and his boss, General Ivan Serov was dismissed, discredited and consigned to obscurity. Serov’s anger at the West’s ‘victory’ in Cuba, and his resentment at the treachery of his protégé and his own downfall, turned into an obsessive determination to gain revenge. He is said to have worked with KGB rogue officers to enlist a young American loner and loser, Lee Harvey Oswald, to kill the President. 325 pages, archive photos. £20 NOW £6 77226 ZIPOPS EARPHONES - TEAL ZIP UP EARPHONES by Deuce Entertainment Tangle free zip-up headphones. Cleverly, the separate ear pieces are mounted on a zip which simply closes up to the length required under your chin and zips away fully for neat storage. Comes complete with two further sets of comfort foam black ear plugs. Standard socket for phones, tablets PCs etc. Teal pale green earpiece. ONLY £5 76392 ILLUMINATIONS: A Novel of Hildegard von Bingen by Mary Sharratt The life of the unconventional abbess who was offered to the church at the age of eight and entombed in a small room to live in silent submission. It brings to life one of the most extraordinary women of the middle ages, Hildegard von Bingen who found comfort and grace in studying books, growing herbs, writing verse and music. 274pp. $25 NOW £5 76992 BEAUTIFUL BIRD SONGS FROM AROUND THE WORLD: Two CDs by The British Library A new collection of recordings from the British Library Sound Archive. The rich melodious songs of the blackbird, Pied Butcherbird and nightingale full of complexity and the White-browed Robin-chat. 40 examples on 2 CDs, 122 minutes and 42 seconds. ONLY £6.50 77187 SHOP GIRLS by Ellee Seymour Meet Eve, Irene, Betty and Rosemary, working for the exclusive department store Heyworth’s Fashions in Cambridge. Set during the closing years of WW2 and moving into the 1950s and swinging 60s, recreating the camaraderie and friendship. 307pp, paperback. £7.99 NOW £4 69313 COMPLETE STORIES OF OZ by L. Frank Baum Dorothy and Toto meet Scarecrow, Lion and Tin Woodman who are to become her travelling companions along the Yellow Brick Road to the Emerald City. Paperback, 1486 pages. Ages 8+. ONLY £4 75707 JOY OF ESSEX by Peter May The first reference to ‘Essex Man’ came in 1990 in the Sunday Telegraph. He didn’t like foreigners or books and was an aspirational working class East-ender who had made a bit of dosh and moved out to Essex. Let’s see Clacton, Tiptree, Southend’s Pier, Chelmsford sissies through rose-tinted spectacles. 280pp in paperback. £9.99 NOW £4 75983 IN GLORIOUS TECHNICOLOR: A Century of Film and How It has Shaped Us by Francine Stock Film is a communal dream in which our fears and fantasies are revealed, often to startling effect, and it has influenced our behaviour in small but significant ways. Film has helped to forge national identity, galvanise against a wartime enemy or warn of social upheaval via horror or science fiction. 344 pages. £18.99 NOW £4 76453 LONDON’S UNDERGROUND SUBURBS by Dennis Edwards Lured by continual newspaper advertising, and the ease of daily travel by the new London Underground extensions into Hertfordshire, Middlesex, Buckinghamshire and Surrey, how could modern young marrieds resist the attractions of a brand-new home in the country? A delightful glimpse back into a world of wind-up gramophones, wireless sets, cocktails and Abdulla cigarettes. 110 pages, illus. £16.95 NOW £8 74971 LONDON’S EAST END SURVIVORS: Voices of the Blitz Generation by Andrew Bissell In 1940, Hitler’s Luftwaffe started a devastating aerial assault on London’s East End. Bombs rained down as the tightly packed homes, pubs, shops and markets bore the full brunt. Inspired by the childhood memories of the author’s father, who lived in Plaistow, East London, this profoundly moving volume is based on hundreds of indepth interviews with surviving East Enders. They reveal harrowing, eye-witness accounts of the tragic events, including Britain’s worst civilian wartime disaster at Bethnal Green tube station in 1943. 240 pages, archive photos, map and plans. £20 NOW £8 70907 AN EDINBURGH CHRISTMAS DVD by St. Mary’s Cathedral Choir 77196 POETRY OF THE WORLD WARS edited by Michael Foss 75451 MY SONG: A Memoir by Harry Belafonte with Michael Shnayerson ONLY £16 74612 CLASSICAL TRADITION: Harvard University by Antony Grafton, Glenn Most and Salvatore Settis £14.99 NOW £6 75935 HOW TO WORK AS A FREELANCE JOURNALISTby Marc Leverton $30.50 NOW £4 75505 UNTOLD HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES by Oliver Stone and Peter Kuznick Once in Royal David’s City, In the Bleak Mid-winter, Ding Dong! Merrily on High, Noel Nouvelet and It Came Upon a Midnight Clear ending with Hark! The Herald Angels Sing on colour DVD. Featuring Susan Hamilton (soprano), The Holyrood Clarsach Trio on harp and Matthew Owens on organ. A gigantic volume packed with colour plates and essays, we are shown how the Classical tradition has shaped human endeavour from art to government, mathematics to medicine, drama to urban planning, legal theory to popular culture. 150 colour images. 1067pp, 6cm thick and 26 x 21 in a quality stitched hardback. £36.99 NOW £16 76560 GENTLY AT A GALLOP by Alan Hunter Bludgeoned by a jealous husband, drowned in his own beer – that’s how you would expect a middle-aged womanising brewer to be murdered, not savaged to death by a horse. The strange death of Charles Berney, infamous lothario. Inspector George Gently has unravelled this most bizarre case. 187pp, paperback. £6.99 NOW £3.50 77496 ODE LESS TRAVELLED: Unlocking the Poet Within by Stephen Fry Whether you want to write a Petrarchan sonnet for your lover’s birthday or an Epithalamion for your sister’s wedding, this book will give you the tools and confidence to do so. Indeed it is an idiot’s guide to the writing of poetry. 357pp, paperback. £8.99 NOW £4.50 75730 LANGUAGE OF THE ANGELS by Claire Nahmad The author inducts her readers into the mysteries of heavenly magic, transforming power and sublime wonders. Learn how to call on the angel of addictions and obsessions, animals, birds, crystals, clear seeing, friendship, heroes, hope, rivers, sanctuary, the wilderness or the angel of wholeness. Colour illus. 96pp. £10.99 NOW £4.50 75789 GREAT NOVELS OF E.M. FORSTER introduced by Louis Auchincloss Four must-read novels: Where Angels Fear to Tread, The Longest Journey, A Room with a View and Howards End. With the final novel, Forster established his reputation as a writer. Gold tooling. 898pp. $30 NOW £7 75019 THE SPANISH ARMADA: The Great Enterprise Against England 1588 by Angus Konstam The Catholic King Philip II of Spain planned to sail with his vast Armada of ships up the English Channel, meet the Spanish Army off Flanders on the French coast, and ferry them across to England. But, he had not reckoned with the tenacity of the British fleet, with its daring Sea Dogs - Drake, Frobisher, Raleigh and Hawkins. Recounts the Armada’s disastrous return voyage around Scotland and Ireland. 224 pages lavishly illus in colour, maps. £20 NOW £9 74879 WORLD ACCORDING TO BOB: The Further Adventures of One Man and his StreetWise Cat by James Bowen For over a decade James Bowen was a homeless heroin addict living on the streets of London when one day in 2007 he found Bob the ginger cat, and he was the catalyst that enabled James to turn his life around. 286pp. £16.99 NOW £5.50 76178 AMERICAN BOMBER CREWMAN 194145 by Gregory Fremont-Barnes The United States played a vital part in the war effort in the form of the strategic bombing campaign fought between 1942 and 1945. This book seeks to describe the lives of particularly those who served in the most famous bomber aircraft of their day - the B-17 Flying Fortress, the B-24 Liberator and B-29 SuperFortress. 64pp, large softback, photos. £11.99 NOW £5.50 75874 ROGER FENTON, JULIA MARGARET CAMERON by Sophie Gordon Sub-titled ‘Early British Photographs from The Royal Collection’, this superb, historic selection highlights the existence of some of the finest works by two of the leading photographers of the 19th century. Two days after his demise, a Windsor-based photographer was summoned to the Castle to take two poignant shots of Prince Albert on his deathbed, seen here. The Queen had the negatives destroyed. After that, she focused on her children and extended family, as well as on portraits of accomplished individuals of the day. At the time of Queen Victoria’s death, the collection was estimated to have been 20,000 strong. 64 pages, 25 x 25cm, first edition. £18.95 NOW £5 76726 ROBIN HOOD by J. C. Holt With 26 illus, 15 in colour, this is a reprint of the excellent 1982 original. It is the legend of Robin Hood, who he was, the physical setting, the audience, the later tradition and an appendix on a Gest of Robyn Hode. This new edition embodies some important changes and carries the legend back to 1261-2, intermingling it with the activities of real criminals. 265pp, softback, illus. £12.95 NOW £6 74060 SURVIVOR by Sam Pivnik When war broke out, Sam Pivnik was one of a family of nine living in the Polish town of Bedzin. The town’s Jews were ghettoised, starved and brutalised. When the final Aktion came, the Pivnik family hid in an improvised attic, but eventually they were herded into the train for Auschwitz. His struggle for survival was precarious. Transferred to Furstengrube, Sam was taught bricklaying. Finally he was reunited with his brother Nathan in London, but the rest of the family had perished. 304pp. £20 NOW £8.50 This sensitive collection covers not only some of the best poems from such luminaries as Wilfred Owen, Siegfried Sassoon, Robert Graves and Rupert Brooke but also lesser-known, but equally compelling verse by ordinary soldiers, sailors, airmen and civilians. 192 pages, line drawings, index of first lines. Covering tools of the trade, writing reviews and opinion pieces, the news, feature writing, travel writing, lifestyle writing, sports, music journalism, finding ideas, how to approach editors, the self employment checklist and further reading and training. 223pp, paperback. £12.99 NOW £6 76577 KING CHARLES II by Antonia Fraser After the execution of his father King Charles I, the youth led a life of poverty and bitter exile, but this was to culminate in a magnificent escape from the troops of the self-styled Lord Protector Oliver Cromwell and Charles’s eventual triumphant restoration to his throne in 1660. This detailed book spans both periods of his life and shows their relation to each other. 670 pages, plates, family trees of the royal houses of Bourbon and Stuart. £12.99 NOW £7.50 64377 SELECTED ILLUSTRATED WORKS OF CHARLES DICKENS by Charles Dickens This is a complete collection of his supernatural tales, including such classics as The Signalman and The Trial for Murder. The stories include illus from the original editions, featuring the artwork of John Tenniel, Edwin Landseer, George Cruikshank and others. The Christmas Books include The Chimes, The Cricket on the Hearth, The Battle of Life and The Haunted Man. The Ghost Stories include The Queer Chair, A Madman’s Manuscript, The Ghosts of the Mail, The Ghost in the Bride’s Chamber and other tales. 56 spine tingling stories. Deluxe binding in deep red cloth with gold tooling and inset colour plate. Illus, 1408pp. ONLY £10 75166 ILLUSTRATED STEP-BY-STEP COOK edited by Lucy Bannell 300 delicious recipes from classics such as Roast Beef and Yorkshire Pudding or Lemon Meringue Pie to the modern treats of Sushi, Crisp Salmon with Cilantro Pesto or Homemade Pasta. Heavyweight hardback, each recipe are in a colour photographic sequence. Rremainder mark, 544 pages. $35 NOW £10 76126 SCHOOL OF GENIUS: A History of the Royal Academy of Arts by James Fenton For all visitors to Burlington House, we can now better appreciate the collections. Charles West Cope RA’s ‘The Council of the Royal Academy Selecting Pictures for the Exhibition’ 1876 has been chosen together with John Constable’s The Leaping Horse 1825 and John William Waterhouse RA’s A Mermaid for the opening double page spreads of this weighty and substantial history of the foundation of the Royal Academy in 1768. Posters, cartoons, archive and new photos. 320pp, 26.5 x 21cm. Rare April 2006 publication. £35 NOW £10 76347 AN OUTLINE OF EUROPEAN ARCHITECTURE by Nikolaus Pevsner Sir Nikolaus Pevsner reviewed the most beautiful and dramatic structures that represent the styles and cultures of Europe from the 4th century onwards. His grand tour of Romanesque basilicas, Gothic cathedrals, Renaissance villas and Baroque churches eloquently defines ‘the changing spirits of changing ages’. His survey concludes in the post-war years and the start of the redefinition of many devastated cityscapes. 256 pages with over 200 gorgeous colour photos and new plans. 21.6 x 27.9cm. $60 NOW £15 74136 NO FOND RETURN OF LOVE by Barbara Pym Dulcie Mainwaring is always helping others. Her friend Viola is besotted by the alluring Dr Aylwin Forbes, so surely isn’t it prying if Dulcie helps things along? Once life’s little humiliations are played out, maybe love will be returned and fondly, after all. A comic and heart rending read, 288pp in paperback. £8.99 NOW £4.50 77153 INSIDE ROOM 40: The Codebreakers of World War I by Paul Gannon A vibrant account, based on previously secret files, brings to life hidden stories of British codebreakers in WWI who worked inside Room 40 and its military equivalent MI1(b). 287 pages, archive photos. £19.99 NOW £6.50 77180 IS THE VICAR IN, PET? by Barbara Fox A charming memoir of moving from a nice suburban Newcastle to Ashington, a rather dirty mining town in the North-East where her father was to become the new vicar. A childhood where parishioners knocked on the door at all hourst. Heartwarming. 308pp, paperback. £7.99 NOW £4 77124 GEORGETTE HEYER: The Biography of a Bestseller by Jennifer Kloester A comprehensive insight into the life and writing of a ferociously private woman, exclusive access to whose personal papers was granted by Heyer’s son. Georgette Heyer remains an enduring international bestseller, read and loved by four generations of readers and extolled by today’s bestselling authors. 448 paperback pages, photos. £8.99 NOW £4 70571 THE ROYALS by Kitty Kelley The crimes of the House of Windsor speak for themselves. Kitty Kelley has interviewed past and present employees of the royal household, royal friends and relations, courtiers, members of Parliament and other intimate observers. Here are sexual ambiguities, alcoholism, gambling and womanising. Family trees, photos. 575pp, paperback. Remainder mark. $16.99 NOW £4 From his poverty-stricken upbringing in Harlem and Jamaica. In the US Navy during WWII he encountered racism. His 1956 album Calypso was the first solo LP to sell over a million copies and its Banana Boat Song (“Day-O!”) made Belafonte famous the world over. 469 roughcut pages, photos, remainder mark. This book challenges the basic narrative of U.S. history that most Americans have been taught. Probing the dark corners of the administrations of 17 presidents, from Woodrow Wilson to Barack Obama, the writers daringly suggest that the US has drifted a long way from its founding democratic ideals. Beginning with the bloody suppression of the Filipino struggle for independence and spanning the two world wars. 750 paperback pages, illus. £14.99 NOW £7 75928 DYING HOURS by Mark Billingham A cluster of suicides among the elderly - something sinister is taking place. D.I. Tom Thorne is back and must gamble with the lives of those targeted by the killer unlike any he has hunted before. A haunting portrait of London’s dark heart. 496pp in paperback. £7.99 NOW £4 75643 MICROSOFT POWERPOINT MADE EASY by Chris Smith Use at home for creating a household budget, make a slide show, add hyperlinks, speaker notes and create a video of your presentation, step-by-step guides to adding audio, ClipArt, transitions and animations, text alignment, using Presenter View, slide layouts and fact boxes. Colour screen shots. 256pp, softback. £9.99 NOW £4 77956 TROPICS BOUND: Elizabeth’s Seadogs of the Spanish Main by James Seay Dean Sir Walter Raleigh and Sir Francis Drake were celebrated Elizabethan courtiers, but the voyages with which they achieved fame are often forgotten. This book describes some of the 100 Elizabethan voyages made from England to Latin America between 1520 and 1620. 224pp, illus, chronology. £18.99 NOW £7 77611 AIR DISASTERS OF THE WORLD by Xavier Waterkeyn Presents a comprehensive record of aeroplane disasters going right back to the first recorded fatality. Over 200 disasters are examined including bizarre and unusual accidents, hijackings, stories of miraculous survival, celebrities who have perished, the development of black boxes and much more. 288 pages 25cm x 21cm, photos. £16.99 NOW £7 74893 FOR HONOUR AND FAME: Chivalry in England 1066-1500 by Nigel Saul Tells the compelling story of England from the Norman Conquest to the aftermath of Henry VII’s triumph at Bosworth at the end of the Wars of the Roses. The Professor charts the introduction of chivalry by the Normans, the rise of the knightly class as a social élite and its wide-ranging influence on literature, religion and architecture. 416 pages, colour plates. £25 NOW £7 75479 THEY MADE AMERICA by Harold Evans Features 50 innovators, globally recognised names such as Walt Disney, Henry Ford, Charles Goodyear and Estee Lauder, also major inventors and researchers who have not hit the headlines. 496pp, colour photos. $50 NOW £8 75260 POETRY IN DESIGN: The Art of Harry Leith-Ross by Erika Jaeger-Smith Harry Leith-Ross (1886-1973) was born in Mauritius. He studied in Paris then Cornwall. Enjoy his vibrant, colourful, powerful, realistic carefully composed oil paintings and renowned transparent watercolour technique in harboursides, construction workers, cottages, lighthouses and towpaths to watercolours in Holland. 70 of his finest works, 144pp softback, 9"×11½”. £20.50 NOW £5 77188 TEACH YOURSELF TO MEDITATE by Eric Harrison The classic bestseller has now sold over 75,000 copies and provides just 20 simple exercises for peace, health and clarity of mind. An affective way to relax, combat stress, improve your general health, increase your awareness and boost your capacity to think clearly and creatively. Learn a skill to greatly improve the quality of your life. 160pp in facsimile reprint of the 1993 original. Paperback. £9.99 NOW £5 75997 JUDY: A Legendary Film Career by John Fricke Hundreds of never-before-published photos, insights from her co-stars and production histories are produced for each film in which Judy Garland appeared. She starred in A Star Is Born, Meet Me In St Louis, Babes in Arms, Easter Parade, For Me and my Gal and The Harvey Girls and most unforgettably in The Wizard of Oz. Includes list of concerts, fabulous poster art, costume tests. Colour. 352pp, 9" x 12". £20 NOW £5 76196 DESSERTS by James Martin Gâteau Saint-Honoré, Butterfly Cakes, Baked Pear and Honey Tart, classic Lemon Tart, Baked Chocolate and Orange Cheesecake, Figs in Vanilla Syrup, Mincemeat and Apple Jalousie, Spicy Plum Crumble, Apple and Blueberry Pie plus all the sauces, dried fruits, meringues, pralines, Cinder Toffee Honeycomb, Shortbread, and pastry making. Colour photos, 192 large softback pages. £9.99 NOW £5 77135 POLLY: Memories of an East End Girl by Jeff Smith Born in 1911 into a close-knit family, Mary Rebecca Chambers, known to all as Polly, spent her formative years in the heart of the East End of London. Here are the rigours of a school, working life in a sweet factory, the ups and downs of married life and the perils of rationing. 128 paperback pages, photos. £12.99 NOW £4.50 CONT. ON PAGE 35 20 Biography cont. from page 17 77295 BRUCIE: The Biography of Sir Bruce Forsyth by Jules Stenson Sir Bruce Forsyth is perhaps best remembered for hosting The Generation Game and much more recently Strictly Come Dancing. He got his big break in 1958 when he was asked to host the TV series Sunday Night at the London Palladium. The original two-week stint ended up lasting five years and he went on to present game shows like The Price is Right and You Bet! and developed catchphrases that were to last a lifetime ‘Nice to see you, to see you, nice.’ Insight into his life and loves covering his three marriages. 298pp, colour photos. £17.99 NOW £3.50 77296 MARY BERRY: Queen of British Baking the Biography by A. S. Dagnell The Great British Bake Off has once again put Mary back into the limelight and has reignited a passion for baking across the nation. The undisputed Queen of the Aga, Mary took a catering course at her local college before gaining qualifications from the Cordon Bleu School in Paris. As editor for Housewife and Ideal Home magazine, Mary published her first cookbook ‘The Hamlyn All Colour Cookbook’ in 1970 and hasn’t looked back since. But her personal life has been touched by tragedy, as her son William was killed in a car accident at the age of just 19. 244pp, colour photos. £17.99 NOW £3.50 77572 A SPOONFUL OF SUGAR by Brenda Ashford Brenda spent 62 years working as a Norland Nanny and began training at the Norland Institute in 1939 at the age of 18. Chapters include Nannies in Training, The Matron, East End Evacuees, Battle of Britain, We’re All In It Together, Crumpets and Coal Fires, Stolen Kisses and We’ll Meet Again in this warm, funny memoir of the colourful world of wartime England. 291pp in paperback, photos. £6.99 NOW £2.75 77256 COMING UP TRUMPS: A Memoir by Jean Trumpington The indomitable and deliciously forthright Baroness Trumpington of Sandwich, still an active Conservative member of the House of Lords in her 94th year, was born Jean Alys Campbell-Harris in 1922 to an officer in the 7th Hariana Lancers and an American heiress. A privileged childhood was rudely interrupted by her mother’s fortune being wiped out in the Wall Street Crash of 1929 was sent to Paris to study art, French and German. As war broke out she was first a land-girl on a farm owned by Lloyd George but soon joined naval intelligence at Bletchley Park. After the war she worked in advertising in New York’s Madison Avenue, where she met her husband, the historian Alan Barker. She became a Cambridge City Councillor, then Mayor of Cambridge, before moving to Whitehall. They just don’t make them like her anymore! 236pp, 37 colour and b/w photos. £16.99 NOW £6 ART AND ARCHITECTURE Painting is easy when you don’t know how, but very difficult when you do. - Edgar Degas 78870 SALVADOR DALI: The Late Work by Elliott H. King et al Outrageous, imaginative, surrealist artist Salvador Dali (1904-1989) was renowned for his often puzzling, disturbing art works, especially during the 1930s. He created 1,200 oil paintings and countless illustrations and writings. Refreshingly, this book focuses on his later works, from the 1940s onwards, encompassing such themes as his classism and his ‘nuclear mysticism’. Amongst the many art works depicted are The Maximus Speed of Raphael’s Madonna, Christ of Saint John of the Cross, Madonna of Port Lligat, The Medusa and the absolutely amazing (and long-winded) Fifty Abstract Paintings Which as Seen from Two Yards Change into Three Lenins Masquerading as Chinese and as Seen from Six Yards Appear as the Head of a Royal Bengal Tiger. Dali developed a fascination for optical effects and illusions, incorporating them into many of his works, and later, with the help of photographer Philippe Halsman, he translated his ideas into photographic form. The astonishing art work In Volupate Mors, 1951, depicted naked figures forming a skull and it was recreated ‘in the flesh’ by the photographer. Another photographic work, Dali Atomicus used high-speed equipment to depict Dali jumping in mid-air with three cats and a bucket of water, and was achieved by staging the action 26 times. A stunning collection of images from the man whose moustache became an icon in its own right. 11x8", 176pp. Colour and b/w illus. £25 NOW £15 77713 ARTIST’S STUDIO by Dominique de Font-Reaulx These gorgeously furnished studios, outdoor studios packed with organised clutter, easels and works in progress, give us a glimpse of talent and mastery at work. In picture no.20 (of 62) see Pierre Bonnard’s portrait of Rodin sculpting a bust, 1897 and Camille Corot working en plein air, 1871. Paul Delaroche and Honoré Daumier, models including nudes, flowers in the studio of Emile Gallé, Henri Matisse and Rembrandt Bugatti at the zoo are some of the fascinating subjects. Sepia and duotone still life capsules from a bygone era. Paperback. £6.95 NOW £3 HOTLINE: 020www.YouTube.com 74 74 24 74 - Type in bibliophilebooks OverORDER 700 book reviews 78645 JERUSALEM STONE AND SPIRIT: 3000 Years of History and Art by Dan Bahat and Shalom Sabar The spiritual home of the world’s three monotheistic religions, Jerusalem is a crossroads of art, architecture and history on a unique scale. Since 1004BC, when King David declared it to be the capital of his kingdom of Israel, until it was proclaimed the new capital of the State of Israel in 1948, the city has been the arena of countless events that reflect the history of Western and Middle Eastern culture. King Solomon built the Temple where the prophets of Israel preached, their teachings influencing the thinking and morality of the Western world. The Greek and Roman empires left an impressive mark on the city over a period of some 650 years, followed by the Byzantines, the early Muslims then the Crusaders, before the Mameluke and the Ottoman sultans re-established a new Islamic culture, which was ended by the time of WWI, by which time Jerusalem was dominated by Jews and Christians until the end of WWII. In addition to the Old Testament prophets, Jesus preached and disseminated His gospel in Jerusalem, and also made His final mortal appearance there, and 600 years later Mohammed ascended to heaven from the site of the Dome of the Rock. This magnificent book does full justice to the holy places, world-altering personalities and breathtaking landscapes of a city that have captivated artists and clerics of the Abrahamic faiths for three millennia. Complementing the historical narrative are 220 colour illus, many full and double-page, of art, artefacts, maps, coins, jewellery, manuscripts and statuary, the soul of Jerusalem past and present that take us through the tumultuous religious, social, political and artistic history of a unique city. 150pp, 9½”×13¼”. $60 NOW £12 75262 THOMAS HOVENDEN: His Art and Life by Anne Gregory Terhune et al Thomas Hovenden (1840-95) specialised in narrative scenes of domestic rural life and, latterly, on the American Civil War. He studied at the Ecole des Beaux-Arts in Paris under Alexandre Cabanel, whereupon he returned to an astonishingly successful career as a painter and teacher at the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts with Thomas Eakins and Thomas Anschutz. In his paintings black families could be going about their daily chores, reading the Bible or receiving a cordial visit from their ex-masters, or they could be fleeing for their lives. His immense (6’6"×5’3") oil on canvas “The Last Moments of John Brown” (1884) depicts the famous abolitionist stopping to kiss a black child on his way to the gallows in 1859. 133 colour and b/w illus. Photos and daguerreotypes. 276pp, 9"×11½”. £32.49 NOW £5 75861 DICKENS AND THE ARTISTS edited by Mark Bills Dickens was an immensely visual writer and he admired artists, many of whom he counted as close friends. His own daughter Kate Perugini was herself an artist. In his travelogue ‘Pictures from Italy’ we find his views on the Old Masters, a subject discussed in this book by Nicholas Penny in his essay ‘Dickens and Philistinism’. In two essays, one on George Cruikshank, the other on John Leech, Dickens writes of the absurdity of their exclusion from the Royal Academy. ‘Dickens and the Painting of Modern Life’ considers modern painters particularly William Powell Frith and the influence Dickens had upon them. ‘Dickens and the Social Realists’ sees Pat Hardy looking at a later group of artists, Frank Holl, Hubert Herkomer and Luke Fildes. Included such moving art as George Frederic Watts’ ‘Found Drowned’ and Cruikshank’s ‘The Drunkard’s Children’ wood engraving. Colour reproductions, engravings, watercolours and etchings. 188 large pages, softback. £23.80 NOW £6 77725 FIGURES AND PORTRAITS by Françoise Heilbrun Here are not only Lewis Carroll’s portraits of young girls, but also Emile Zola, Alfred Stieglitz’s Portrait of Man Ray, Paul Strand’s 1917 photograph of dirty faced New Yorkers, theatrical portraits, and an Edgar Degas auto portrait with two female friends c1895; beautiful actresses, daring countesses one showing her legs, several series of photographs, groups of women, Julia Margaret Cameron’s portrait of William Holman Hunt, 1864, and of Carlyle three years later, of Virgina Woolf’s mother and the beautiful Maud. A small collection of internationally photography, 1850-1918. Sepia and duotone, paperback. £6.95 NOW £3.50 77492 MANET: Portraying Life by Brian Kennedy and Christopher Le Brun Edouard Manet (1832-1883) was the quintessential painter of modernity. By depicting the Paris of his day, and transforming his sitters into actors in his scenes of everyday French life, he captured the 19th century urban experience, legitimising ‘modern life’ as an artistic subject. Here, leading authorities analyse the influence on the artist of 17th century Dutch painters, identify several parallels with the work of Renoir, and find links with early photography. Two key portraits owned by the Toledo Museum of Art - Portrait of M. Antonin Proust and Mme Edouard Manet - are here joined by a profusion of other masterpieces by a remarkable artist to present a cornucopia of delights. 213 pages 28cm by 24.5cm in colour with photographs of models and sitters. £35 NOW £12.50 77720 CORONATION OF NAPOLEON PAINTED BY DAVID by David Chanteranne and Sylvain Laveissiere David’s huge painting of Napoleon’s coronation dominates a wall of the Louvre and is admired by thousands every year. Around 180 of the faces were portraits and a useful table indicates the names of those who have been identified. Close-ups give the viewer a ringside seat at the event, including subtle nuances of expression on the part of key players. Dignitaries such as Talleyrand look on approvingly, while the expressions of the clergy are more enigmatic. 64pp, softback, over 30 full-page colour reproductions. •15 NOW £3.75 77727 WAR PHOTOGRAPHY: From The Crimean War to World War One by Joelle Bolloch The Musée d’Orsay has an album entitled ‘Incidents of Camp Life’ (Cats 1-13) which contains some 60 prints in a serene mood that contrasts sharply with the letters written by photographer Roger Fenton who had been asked by Queen Victoria to photograph The Crimean War. From the American Civil War, rebel works in front of Atlanta, Fenton’s image of a cooking house of the Eight Hussars, Lieut. Col Brownrigg and some very young Russian boys in military uniform, Ismail Pacha and his attendants, 1855, Lord Burgheish in a group at Head Quarters, inside the hospitals and infirmaries, on the canals, an explosion, armaments and bombs, ruins and the deserted city of Atlanta, portraits and prisons. 62 sepia and duotone illus, paperback. £6.95 NOW £3 76946 VICTORIAN AND EDWARDIAN FURNITURE AND INTERIORS by Jeremy Cooper The furniture designs of William Morris, C. R. Ashbee and Charles Rennie Mackintosh are even more popular today than in their own lifetimes. Other major figures such as William Burges and Christopher Dresser, once outsiders, are now accepted as great designers whose work is avidly collected. This glamorous Thames & Hudson outsize softback contains rare contemporary photographs of Victorian and Edwardian interiors. 683 illustrations, 74 in colour offer comprehensive coverage of 19th century furniture from the Gothic Revival to Art Nouveau. See the early Ambrose Heal furniture in the Heal’s and Liberty’s chapter, the Arts and Craft movement, wallpaper designs, cabinets, stained glass, textiles and tiles, the influence of Asian, Japanese and Indian decoration, geometric gothic, Pugin furniture from household interiors to the dramatic architecture of the Town Hall, Bradford. 8¾” x 11¾”, 256pp, softback. £19.99 NOW £7 77251 FRANK LLOYD WRIGHT by Bruce Brooks Pfeiffer and Peter Gössel A building by Frank Lloyd Wright (1867-1959) is at once unmistakably individual, and evocative of an entire era. Notable for their exceptional understanding of an organic environment, as well as for their use of steel and glass to revolutionise the interface of indoor and outdoor, Wright’s designs helped announce the age of modernity, as much as they secured his own name in the annals of architectural genius. Based on unlimited access to the Frank Lloyd Wright Archives in Taliesin, Arizona, the collection spans the length and breadth of Wright’s projects, both realized and unrealized, from his early Prairie Houses, through the Usonian concept home, epitomised by Fallingwater, the Tokyo years, his progressive “living architecture” buildings, right through to later schemes like the Guggenheim Museum, New York, and fantastic visions for a better tomorrow in the “living city.” Text in English, French and German. New from Taschen. 13 x 10", 504 landscape pages, quality colour. ONLY £40 78665 MASTERPIECES OF ANCIENT EGYPT: From the British Museum by Nigel Strudwick Author Nigel Strudwick is Assistant Keeper of Egyptian Antiquities at the British Museum and has produced several major travelling exhibitions. He and his wife have worked on the excavation of the Theban Necropolis since 1984. He guides us through the Museum’s magnificent ancient Egyptian and Sudanese collection, arguably the world’s most comprehensive and impressive. We begin with an introduction to and chronology of Ancient Egypt, a history of the Museum’s Egyptian collection and a map of the chief archaeological sites. Then, arranged chronologically, we get right up close to over 200 of the most important and visually impressive objects from the collection. Examples include a wall painting of the martyrdom of the saints (Coptic/ Byzantine period, 6th century AD), bronze figure of a seated cat, sarcophagus lid of Sasobek, stela, reliefs, papyri, statues, lintels, masks, heads, paintings, an oracular shabti decree, a letter from Thebes on papyrus and burial assemblage including chests, jars and coffins. Each is photographed in eye-popping, full-page colour and on the adjacent page Strudwick provides an expert description, history and detailed analysis from a professional’s viewpoint. As well as the Museum’s world famous artefacts such as the Rosetta Stone and the Great Harris Papyrus, the book features a wealth of less well-known but equally significant and beautiful pieces. Ranges from the earliest pre-Dynastic pots and figurines, right through the 3,000 year reign of the pharaohs with their golden funerary items and on to Roman Egypt and the Coptic Christian period. 352pp, 8¾” square. $39.95 NOW £14 77661 LANGUAGE OF ORNAMENT by James Trilling Whether in the monumental architecture of Mycenaean Greece or the inlaid vessels of the Zhou Dynasty China, in the bronze mirrors of early Celtic Britain or the carved and woven ornament of Native Americans, the erotic temple at Khajuraho, India, six silk textiles from France, modern-day tattoos, American knotted rugs, embroidered riding coats from early 19th century India, bronze and iron helmets with coral inlays late 4th century BC found in Italy, ceramic plates, a ceremonial lance-head from 17th century Java, here is the floral ornament, freeform motifs, geometric motifs, figural ornament. 224 page paperback, colour and mono illus. ONLY £5.50 77253 HIROSHIGE: One Hundred Famous Views of Edo by Prof. Dr. Melanie Trede and Dr. Lorenz Bichler With rich colour on every illustration, this reprint is made from one of the finest complete original sets of woodblock prints belonging to the Ota Memorial Museum of Art in Tokyo. Hiroshige (1797-1858) was one of the last great artists in the ukiyo-e tradition. His greatest talent was in creating landscapes of his native Edo (modern-day Tokyo) and his final masterpiece was a series known as “One Hundred Famous Views of Edo” (1856-1858). This resplendent complete collection pairs each of the 120 illustrations with a description, allowing readers to plunge themselves into Hiroshige’s beautifully vibrant landscapes. Literally meaning “pictures of the floating world”, ukiyo-e refers to the famous Japanese woodblock print genre that originated in the 17th century and is practically synonymous with the Western world’s visual characterisation of Japan. Traditionally they depicted city life, entertainment, beautiful women, kabuki actors and landscapes. 5½” x 8", 584 pages, from Taschen. Colour. ONLY £13 77630 TWENTIETH CENTURY CASTLES IN BRITAIN by Amicia de Moubray Among the ancient decaying castles transformed by new owners have been Hever, which William Waldorf Astor made into an opulent Edwardian fantasy where he hosted sumptuous country house weekends. Colonel Claude Lowther awakened the fairy-tale Herstmonceux from its reverie, preferring radical alteration to authentic restoration. At St Donat’s, Randolph Hearst disregarded architectural purity as he turned the castle into a plutocrat’s palace housing his astonishing art collection. Reincarnations during a renaissance in the restoration of the Scottish tower houses and castles include Dunderave and Eilean Donan, which encapsulate the romance of the Highlands. The moated ‘medieval’ castle of Braylsham was in fact completed only in 1998. All the castles are redolent of the past, and a potent symbol of status and achievement. 200 pages 30cm x 26cm in glorious colour and b/w. £30 NOW £10 77731 HENRI MATISSE: Rooms with a View by Shirley Neilsen Blum As Matisse moved towards the centre of European art, his style became more abstract but his vision of the domestic interior with the window as an anchor remained constant. The dark early interiors such as Studio Under the Eaves (1903) are relieved by the brightness of a view through a window, but under the influence of the Fauves his work soon exploded into vivid colour. Matisse’s decorative phase was more sombre, as in the subtle blues and greys of Goldfish and Palette of 1914, which uses the formal language of Cubism in a highly original way to create a window that is a complete abstraction. After World War I Matisse returned to Naturalism, and his interiors are now peopled with figures, for instance The Three O’Clock Sitting of 1924 where Matisse’s model, Henriette Decarrere, paints her brother before an open window. See also Chapel of the Rosary (1947-51) and The Piano Lesson (1916). The book concludes with Matisse’s stained glass designs and wall decorations for the chapel at Vence. 192pp, 98 superb full page colour reproductions of the 129 included, authoritative text, chronology. 26 x 31.8cm. $60 NOW £17.50 77738 LASTING ELEGANCE: English Country Houses 1830-1900 by Michael Hall The eclecticism of the architect Charles Barry was typical of the period. Barry made his name with Florentine Renaissance styles but when he was commissioned to design the Houses of Parliament he was equally able to turn his hand to the new fashion for Gothic. Shortly afterwards he was employed to remodel Highclere Castle and produced the magnificent Victorian pile in Elizabethan style which we know nowadays as the façade of Downton Abbey. Cardiff Castle is a riot of unrestrained Gothic fantasy as Burges indulged his knowledge of 13th century French design and coupled it with a taste for oriental plasterwork. The Arts and Crafts movement found inspiration in Tudor vernacular building and Old Place, Lindfield, was the stained glass designer C.E. Kempe’s design for his own living space. See also Philip Webb’s Art and Crafts interiors at Standen. Lavishly illustrated with 150 reproductions from Country Life. Colour. 192pp. $65 NOW £12 N K I 68629 PAINTINGS OF ALICE DALTON BAC O C K T S BROWN by April Kingsley Virtually unknown in Britain and very reminiscent of Edward Hopper, we love the paintings of the American artist Alice Dalton Brown. Combining a clapperboard white, New England style architecture, porches and verandas, a beautiful mosaic swimming pool in what seems to be the Florida Keys with lush palm trees hanging over, finely draped windows looking onto huge seascapes, this artist’s paintings genuinely look like photographs. These are timeless distillations of a near perfect world, sanctuaries for the spirit and deep-seated memories. 77 colour plates, 75 b/w. 132 large pages. £35 NOW £6 www . b i b l i o pon h i l fine e b o oart k s .books com w.savings ks Huge 75128 EDWIN LUTYENS COUNTRY HOUSES: From the Archive of Country Life by Gavin Stamp The match between Edwin Lutyens (1869-1944) and Country Life was one made in architectural heaven. Lutyens’ celebrated collaborator Gertrude Jekyll introduced him to the magazine’s then editor, Edward Hudson, in 1889. Hudson commissioned him to design the new Country Life offices in Covent Garden in 1904 and a further three country houses. An extensive and masterly introductory essay by the esteemed architectural historian Gavin Stamp, plus his commentary on the 22 featured buildings, each representative of phases of Lutyens’ career, is a grand pictorial odyssey. There are superb examples of his Surrey-vernacular style with its gables, timber and sweeping planes of tiled roof, such as Fulbrook House, early Arts and Crafts houses such as Goddards and Little Thakeham, his carefully composed Classical houses like Heathcote and his grandest country house of all, Middleton Park in Oxfordshire. 200 b/w photos, many double-page. 192pp, 10"×12", softback. £20 NOW £8 77740 LIFE: THE CLASSIC COLLECTION: Book and 25 Removable Prints by LIFE Magazine Includes 25 ready-to-frame colour and black and white images, each with a tissue overlay accompanying 144 pages of iconic photography. Here is Noel Coward, Marilyn Monroe, Muhammad Ali, the skating waiter at St. Moritz, the Eiffel Tower in snow, the daredevil photographer Margaret Bourke-White photographed atop the 61st floor gargoyle on the Chrysler Building New York where she had her studio, D-Day Omaha Beach by Robert Capa, the America’s Cup 1962 with a placid, beautiful sea in colour, a champion whippet called Ricky 1964, spacemen, soldiers, Black Power Salute 1968 to the famous image of the sailor kissing the girl in the white mini dress. These photographs are on display in a clean, over-sized format of 100 classics. All of the most famous photographers from LIFE magazine are represented. 10" x 13½”, each frameable image measures 10" x 8". $29.95 NOW £10 77751 SURREAL PEOPLE: Surrealism and Collaboration by Alexander Klar Sets out to explore the many collaborations between 15 of the Surrealists, telling the intriguing stories behind some of the 20th century’s most celebrated works of art. Its 47 colour and 32 b/w illustrations include the work and in depth analysis of the characters of Dali, Magritte, Max Ernst, Joan Miro, Man Ray, Jean Arp, Alberto Giacometti, Edward James and André Breton among many others. 96p, softback. £12.99 NOW £4.50 78418 1000 DRAWINGS OF GENIUS by Victoria Charles and Klaus H. Carl Long thought of as the neglected stepchild of painting, the art of Drawing has recently begun to enjoy a place in the sun. With major museums around the world, from the Met to the Uffizi, mounting exhibitions focussed on the art of draughtsmanship, drawing is receiving more critical and academic attention than ever before. This captivating text gives readers a sweeping analysis of the history of drawing, from the 13th - 14th century with Renaissance greats like Leonardo da Vinci and Michelangelo, Lucas Cranach, Grünewald, Dürer, Veronese and Tintoretto, Rubens, Velázquez, Poussin, Tiepolo, Degas, Rodin, to Modernist masters like M.C. Escher, Chagall, Hopper, Ernst, Pablo Picasso covering every century in detail and with masses of examples in fine quality. 6.5" x 8", 544 glossy pages, 1000 illus, colour. Chronology. ONLY £16 77860 ART NOUVEAU: Posters, Illustration and Fine Art from the Glamorous Fin de Siècle by Rosalind Ormiston and Michael Robinson The term Art Nouveau encompasses many artistic forms. It has been given different name-tags: Morris Style, Glasgow Style, Métro Style and many more. Artists, designers like Bonnard, Munch, Mackintosh, Privat-Livemont, Berthon, Grasset, de Feure, Vallotton, Serusier and Gauguin and architects did not set out purposefully to identify their work as ‘new art’ yet they adopted common traits associated with the movement, and the notion of a new art for a new and progressive age. The masterful Hokusai, Utamaro and Hiroshige inspired European artists to include many elements of Japanese design in their work. They symbolized the style in their curvilinear ‘whiplash’ lines and the references to exotic birds and foliage. A cornucopia of artistic delights. 192 pages 29.5cm x 28.5cm, bright colour. £20 NOW £8 78429 VINCENT VAN GOGH by Klaus H. Carl and Victoria Charles A handy-sized, quality softback packed with famous colour artworks, self-portraits, famous scenes and no sunflowers! Vincent van Gogh (1853-1890) is a legend who became a reference for modern art. In Holland, he partook in the Dutch realist painting movement by studying peasant characters. Anxious and depressed, he produced more than 2000 artworks, yet sold only one in his lifetime. A self-made artist, his work is known for its rough and emotional beauty and is amongst the most popular in the art market today. Softback, 4" x 5½”, 144 pages, 100 illus, colour. ONLY £3.50 77974 INTERNATIONAL ARTS AND CRAFTS by Karen Livingstone and Linda Parry A magisterial study with 320 colour plates and 40 black and white illustrations presenting a compelling reassessment of the Arts and Crafts Movement, and an invaluable visual record of an ever-popular era of design. Its pioneers included William Morris, C. R. Ashbee and Walter Crane. Their idealistic principles were first taken up in America and Europe and adapted to each country’s cultural climate. In America, Arts and Crafts became the first home-grown artistic movement and swept figures of the calibre of Frank Lloyd Wright and Gustav Stickley into its orbit. Its last great sphere of influence was Japan, from 1926 to 1945, where it flourished as the Mingei (Folk Crafts) Movement. The urban modern aesthetic counted among its leaders the potters Hamada Shoji and the Englishman Bernard Leach and their influence abroad. Published to coincide with a major exhibition at the V&A in London, this is a glamorous huge hardback, 368pp, packed with colour including a dining room designed by Gustav Klimt, earthenware, clothing, a dressing table, stained-glass doors and lamps, photogravure ‘Spring Showers - the Street Cleaner’ by Alfred Stieglitz and the warm-toned silver prints of Edward S. Curtis, church interiors and hand-woven linen hangings like Godfrey Blount’s ‘The Spies’, plus beautiful watercolours and paintings. £40 NOW £11 78032 MEMORIES OF A LOST WORLD by Charlotte Fiell and James Ryan The story of the ‘Magic Lantern’ projector stretches back 200 years, before the advent of photography. It is part of a wonderful tradition of optical projection alongside the Camera Obscura, Shadow Shows and the Magic Mirror. Charlotte Fiell has painstakingly trawled through thousands of images to collect 900 of the very best such as the Kurb Minar, Delhi 1870, Eskimo Belles from Greenland, 1900, the ships on icy waters at the Peary Expedition, 1901, Norwegian and Lapp families in traditional coloured costumes, castles, country life, Dublin in a series of Irish postcards, the Old Curiosity Shop 1880s London, dozens of London attractions, Yeomen Warders at the Tower of London 1870 relaxing, beautiful Venice, temples in Egypt, Mursi tribesman 1880s, tombs of emperors, Mount Fiji, Japanese maidens, wool sorting and sheep shearing in Australia, giant redwood trees photographed in the 1890s, waterfalls and cityscapes. Some are beautiful hand coloured images of a now-lost world. Well bound softback, 17 x 22cm, 704pp. £25 NOW £10 78422 LEONARDO DA VINCI by Klaus H. Carl and Victoria Charles In one handy-sized pocket book packed with colour examples of Madonnas, inventions, portraits including his Mona Lisa and the girl with ermine, a delightful collection with no text. Not only was Leonardo da Vinci (1453-1519) an astonishing painter, but also a scientist, anatomist, sculptor, architect, musician, engineer, inventor and more. During the Italian Renaissance, he mastered the most beautiful works of art for the Medicis in Italy and for the King of France. We are all hoping to decipher the numerous secrets of this visionary artist. Softback, 4" x 5½”. 144 pages, 100 illus. ONLY £3.50 77756 UNKNOWN HIERONYMUS BOSCH by Kurt Falk Hieronymus Bosch (1450-1516) was a visionary painter whose canvases reach heights of spiritual intensity and depths of demonic loathing. Bosch’s huge panoramic paintings The Last Judgment and The Garden of Earthly Delights are famous for their grotesque figures, impaled, damaged, or half animal, and the meaning of these enigmatic images is far from obvious. This collection of Bosch’s work starts in the early period with paintings such as The Conjurer, a beautifully designed study in charlatanism, or Christ Among the Doctors. The altarpiece of St Julia is unusual in showing the crucifixion of a woman, while John the Evangelist on Patmos depicts an ethereal saint with a devil in the shape of a scorpion at his heels wearing pince-nez spectacles. Exhibits themes that the author traces throughout his work, identifying a fivefold division in which the Ego, or “I”, moves towards spiritual selflessness. 116pp, softback, numerous high-quality reproductions. 18 x 24cm. $29.95 NOW £7.50 77682 WORLD OF J. G. BROWN by Martha Hoppin John George Brown (born 1831) was, and still is, most associated with the image of the entrepreneurial young bootblack, American children from immigrant families. He had himself emigrated from England in 1853. His street urchins make music, play card games, imitate politicians by giving speeches and art collectors by admiring objects pulled from the rubbish bins. Brown also painted portraits and landscapes, Grand Manan Island fishermen, and elderly farmers and their wives. But here it is the little dogs and little children who take centre stage in these 260 pages with over 200 illustrations, 140 in colour. Large size and published in association with Antique Collectors’ Club. $50 NOW £8 21 78089 ART MYSTERIES: Leonardo, Mona Lisa by Marco Carminati The Mona Lisa is the most famous painting in the world but who was La Gioconda and where, when and for whom was it painted? Why did Leonardo never finish or sell it? From Fontainebleau to The Louvre we are invited to interpret the Mona Lisa, the Femme Fatale or Smiling Face. Covering the 1911 theft, here are the secrets of the illustrious and misunderstood masterpiece, revealed in close-up detail in this fabulously illustrated guide. Every crack, nook and cranny is displayed and investigated forensically - the hands that speak, the bosom, the smile, with or without eyebrows. With a short life and times of Leonardo da Vinci and a superb gatefold colour double page, 80 pages. £16.95 NOW £5.75 78284 ARCHITECTURE OF LONDON by Edward Jones and Christopher Woodward From John Nash’s elegant crescents to Lubetkin’s uncompromising high-rise blocks, from Wren’s churches to the Victorian Byzantine of Westminster Cathedral, from the Roman City Hall to St. Pancras International, this guide offers a critical appraisal of London’s architecture. Updated in 2009, it has over 1000 entries illustrated with beautifully detailed colour photographs. Entries are arranged chronologically within geographical sections and are clearly pinpointed on the corresponding colour maps. We start in gorgeous Georgian Hampstead with such houses as Fenton House built in 1693 and a beautiful white stuccoed house called Admiral’s House from the mid 18th century to the Vale of Health. A superb chronological time chart shows the development of major trends and influences and there is a series of plans showing the development of the London squares from 1650 to 1900. A very heavyweight definitive guide, tall hardback of 496pp. 78056 EDWARD JERMAN: 1605-1668 The Metamorphosis of a Master Craftsman by Helen Collins Following the Great Fire of London in 1666, Edward Jerman, considered ‘The City’s most able known artist’ was invited by a committee composed of the Corporation of the City and the Mercer’s Company to make designs for the new Royal Exchange. Born into a dynasty of seven mastercraftsmen who worked in the City of London from 1520 until 1678 and spanning six reigns, Edward designed pageants to celebrate several Lord Mayor’s days, as well as the Coronation of Charles II. Born in 1605, Edward died just 63 years later, two years after the Great Fire, but in that time managed to plan and oversee many prestigious buildings including eight Livery Company halls and St. Paul’s School. This in-depth investigation into the man and his creations contains information on his career as he rises from city worker to pageant maker and through to his work at the Royal Exchange, together with that done for other City companies. It also has a chapter on the Jerman family, gleaned from the records of the Carpenters’ Company. 208pp, illus, 19 x 25cm. £42.25 NOW £9 77757 V&A PATTERN: BOX SET OF 4: Spitalfields Silks, Pop Patterns by Esmé Whittaker, Moira Thunder et al £30 NOW £9.50 78385 RICHARD COSWAY by Stephen Lloyd This absolutely beautiful small book is a tribute to the work of the Regency portrait miniaturist artist, Richard Cosway. Born in 1742, at the age of 12 he was sent to London to study under the drawing master William Shipley, and went on to win many awards. Later, he was closely associated with the Prince of Wales, later George IV, producing miniatures of his friends, family and lovers. Amongst them was a miniature portrait of Maria Fitzherbert, the Prince’s secret wife. The exquisite miniatures shown here depict the cream of society at the time, but perhaps the most appealing of all is that of Richard’s toddler daughter, Lady Paolina Angelica Cosway, in a frilled bonnet and white dress. 104pp. 6.5" square, colour illus. £19.95 NOW £5 78423 MEDIEVAL ART: Romanesque ArtGothic Art (987-1489) 2 Volumes by Victoria Charles and Klaus Carl A double volume box set in a glamorous decorated slipcase, ‘Gothic Art’ is defined by a powerful architecture of cathedrals of Northern France. Abandoning curved Roman forms, the architect started using flying buttresses and pointed arches to open cathedrals to daylight, the era incorporated new iconography celebrating the Holy Mary, a dramatic contrast to the dismal scenes of Roman times. Architecture, sculpture, painting, here is the decoration of the Stag Room at the Palace of the Popes, Avignon, 1343, beautifully illuminated parchments, scenes from the life of the Virgin or of St Sylvester, altarpieces made of tempera on panel, oils on panel with gilding such as Hans Memling’s The Shrine of St Ursula 1489 and St Mary’s Cathedral, Palma de Mallorca begun 1229, all among the many hundreds of full page photographs and examples and diagrams in this glamorous publication. The second volume is ‘Romanesque Art’. In art history, Romanesque refers to the period between the beginning of the 11th and the end of the 12th century. This most handsome volume gives hundreds of full page examples in colour of mosaics, illuminated manuscripts, enamel and copper panels, sculpted wood, pulpits and bishop’s thrones, door panels, priories and monasteries and convent churches, a horizontal plan of the Cathedral of Santiago de Compostela 1075-1128 and the Cathedral as it is today in a colour photograph, the fortified Castle of Brunswick 1173 and UNESCO World Heritage Sites among them. 400pp in total, colour, both 9½” x 11½”. Two volumes boxed. ONLY £35 74022 THE BOOK OF MIRACLES by Till-Holger Borchert and Joshua Waterman The Book of Miracles that first surfaced a few years ago and is one of the most spectacular new discoveries in the field of Renaissance art. The nearly complete surviving illustrated manuscript which was created in the Swabian Imperial Free City of Augsburg around 1550, is composed of 169 pages with large-format illustrations in gouache and watercolour depicting wondrous and often eerie celestial phenomena, constellations, conflagrations and floods as well as other catastrophes and occurrences. It deals with events ranging from the creation of the world and incidents drawn from the Old Testament, ancient tradition and medieval chronicles to those that took place in the immediate present of the book’s author. With the illustrations of the visionary Book of Revelation, it even includes the future end of the world. The surprisingly modern looking, sometimes hallucinatory illustrations and the cursory descriptions of the Book of Miracles strikingly convey a unique view of the concerns and anxieties of the 16th century, of apocalyptic thinking and eschatological expectation. The present facsimile volume reproduces the Book of Miracles in its entirety for the first time as well as a complete transcript of the text, accompany the facsimile. Clamshell box, 12.6" x 8.5", 560 pages. Text in English, French and German. From Taschen. ONLY £95 The four delightful hardbacks in the box set are Walter Crane by Esmé Whittaker, Spitalfields Silks by Moira Thunder, Pop Patterns by Oriole Cullen and Chinese Textiles by Yueh-Siang Chang. The names of the files correspond to the V&A inventory numbers of the images. Peacocks, cherubs, doves, cockatoo and pomegranate are among the images in the colour collection in the Walter Crane pattern designs. Lengths of painted silk, embroidery, robes for a temple statue in silk brocade, trellises and scrolls, fruit and flowers appear on the Chinese Textiles. Lunar rocket, furnishing fabrics, matchbox designs, Martini, and dress fabrics from the likes of Zandra Rhodes are among the pop-inspired patterns from the collections at Sanderson & Heal’s, furnishings, textiles and wallpaper items with designers of abstract motifs. Finally, Spitalfields Silks reproduces samples from pattern books of woven silk in different colourways, pencil, watercolour and body colour on paper, pen and ink designs. The CD-Rom containing the 71 jpegs of featured beautiful colour patterns. Four volumes, satin bookmark, decorated slipcase. £30 NOW £11 76009 75 YEARS OF MARVEL: From the Golden Age to the Silver Screen by Roy Thomas and Josh Baker ! With the likes of the fiery android Human Torch, vengeful sea prince Sub-Mariner, and pip-squeak-turnedparagon Captain America, in the 40s Marvel created a mythological universe grounded in a world that readers recognised as close to their own, brimming with humour and heartache. In the early 1960s came Spider Man, The Incredible Hulk, the Fantastic Four, Iron Man, the Avengers, Thor, the X-Men - the list goes on. In celebration of Marvel’s 75th anniversary, Taschen presents a magnum opus with an inside look not only at its celebrated characters, but also at the “bullpen” of architects - Stan “the Man” Lee, Jack “King” Kirby, along with a roster of greats like Steve Ditko, John Romita, John Buscema, Marie Severin and countless others. With essays by comics historian and former Marvel editor-in-chief Roy Thomas. The XL-format book includes more than 700 pages of nearly 2,000 stunning colour images including vintage comic books, one-of-akind original art. With fold-out, ribbon bookmark, and four-foot accordion-fold timeline, 11.4" x 15.6", 712 pages. Heavyweight, UK delivery only. ONLY £135 78386 SARAH RAPHAEL by William Packer Sarah Raphael was just 40 years old when she died, falling victim to pneumonia, yet in that short period she accomplished portraits, sombre narratives and vibrant abstracts with ease. A childhood trip to South America, Mexico and Jamaica that lasted several months left a deep, lasting impression, and the influence of the decorative, colourful folk art resurfaced regularly throughout her life, notably in her amazing Strip paintings, as well a series of bric-a-brac boxes she decorated for her family. Some of her darker paintings have a disturbing, virtually surreal quality. Perhaps her most stunning works are in the Strip series, consisting of hundreds of tiny squares, each painstakingly coloured and decorated, and also her beautiful Time Travel for Beginners set, with twisting perspectives, flowing forms and vibrant colour. Her father was Frederic Raphael. 11 x 9", 160pp. colour illus, drawings. £30 NOW £7 22 ORDER HOTLINE: 020 74 74 24 74 GREAT BRITAIN & THE ENVIRONMENT I like the spirit of this great London which I feel around me. Who but a coward would pass his whole life in hamlets; and for ever abandon his faculties to the eating rust of obscurity? -Charlotte Brontë 78617 ENGLAND: An Illustrated History by Henry Weisser ‘In this illustrated history I hope to clarify English history by sorting out its main strands and describing the truly important events, personalities and developments in a concise, comprehensive manner.’ History is present in customs, institutions, names, costumes, entertainment, cathedrals, castles, stately houses, inns, walls, parks, villages, graves, statues, paintings and memorials. This handy little book is a super primer. Beginning with a timeline of prehistoric England, Roman Britain, Anglo-Saxons, Norman, Medieval, constitutional developments, the Tudor dynasty, the English Civil War, through to politics in the Georgian era, society, the Industrial Revolution, Victorian achievements, world wars, empire, the Thatcher era to the next millennium. Pretty awful black and white illustrations, designed for Americans needing a potted history, but somehow really rather charming. 166pp. £9.99 NOW £4 78631 A GUIDE TO DICKENS’ LONDON by Daniel Tyler From Newgate Prison (which he visited in 1836) to Covent Garden and from his childhood home in Camden to his grave in Westminster Abbey, this delightful tome traces the influence of the places and people of London on the life and work of Charles Dickens. Arranged in eight chapters covering the slums, the affluent areas, coach houses and hotels, Dickens’ residences, legal London, the Thames and its bridges, London prisons and finally London’s churches, it features over 40 sites, locating and illustrating them as they appear in his works and demonstrating how the city’s architecture and landscape influenced Dickens’ work throughout his life. Dickens did not only feature these places in his books; he also described the places, the people and events in his correspondence, journals and diaries, and here each site is described with substantial quotations from his writings alongside photos and pen and ink sketches, both modern and contemporary. 152pp. £12 NOW £6 78596 BRONTË PARSONAGE MUSEUM by Professor Ann Sumner The Brontë Parsonage Museum is one of the great British literary shrines, the home of the famous family. The Brontë siblings moved to the Georgian parsonage with their father who was curate in the village of Haworth from 1820. Surrounded by high moorland, the three sisters Charlotte, Emily and Anne and their brother Branwell grew up together, reading widely and showing great promise even in their juvenile writing. Here they wrote their remarkable novels including Jane Eyre, Wuthering Heights and The Tenant of Wildfell Hall and here they died tragically young. Visitors began to arrive in Haworth even during Charlotte’s lifetime to see the landscape which inspired the novels. From 1895 Brontë memorabilia was on display in rented rooms. In 1927 the Church of England offered the Parsonage for sale and it was present to the Brontë Society for conversion into a museum and library. Today we can experience period recreations of the rooms where the sisters wrote, cooked and slept and examine the world famous collection of manuscripts, books and art. Here we have the official handbook covering Mr Brontë’s study, the dining room, kitchen, Mr Nicholls’ study, the servant’s room, Charlotte’s room, children’s study, Mr Brontë’s bedroom and Branwell’s studio. A Scala publication, 48 glossy page paperback, colour illus. £6.95 NOW £3.25 78728 COTSWOLDS LEISURE MAP by the Automobile Association A superbly detailed Ordnance Survey map at a scale of 2cms to one kilometre or 1¼” to one mile, all of the Tumuli, Long Barrows, farms and hotels, the Tump, wells and manors are clearly marked. The River Dikler flows north to south with Lower Swell and Stowon-the-Wold in the north, Upper Slaughter and Lower Slaughter, Cirencester, Tetbury and Cricklade all covered. The Fosse Way, Gloucestershire Way, Monarch’s Way, Macmillan Way and Heart of England Way cross this important and very beautiful area of the country. For all armchair travellers or locals. Large coloured folding map. Softback. ONLY £3.50 78729 AA STREET BY STREET KENT by the Automobile Association Quality heavyweight large softback in the familiar yellow and black livery, this is practical, clear and easy to use mapping. Navigate easily from page to page, see car parks, one way streets and petrol stations plus AA recommended pubs and hotels. Enlarged areas cover Ashford, Canterbury, Chatham, Dover, Folkestone, Gillingham, Maidstone, Margate, Ramsgate, Rochester, Royal Tunbridge Wells, Sevenoaks plus Broadstairs, Bromley, Croydon, Dartford, East Grinstead, Herne Bay, Whitstable and Woolwich. 422pp, paperback. £9.99 NOW £3.50 78294 ENGLAND IN PARTICULAR: A Celebration of the Commonplace by Sue Clifford and Angela King A thick, heavy, treasure trove of a book. The chosen topics include bee boles, dialects, warehouses, smells, libraries, fingerposts, pigeon lofts, dry stone walls, gargoyles, quicksand, sheep, windmills, topiary, accents to wrestling, dawn chorus, badgers and dew ponds. Oaks are amongst our longest-lived trees, the first seaside promenade was developed in the 1770s at Weymouth, people have ice-skated across the Fens’ waterways in winter for centuries, originally using animal bones attached to their shoes, while Cornish legend has it that the soul of King Arthur migrated into a chough. The sketches, woodcuts and drawings are charming. 512pp, b/w illus, 19 x 24cm, first edition 2006. £35 NOW £15 78302 JOURNEYS THROUGH ENGLAND IN PARTICULAR: Coasting by Sue Clifford and Angela King From Albion (an elusive old name for Britain) to Zawns (rock clefts in Cornwall) this lovely book celebrates the richness of our everyday surroundings, opening our eyes to things we might have walked past dozens of times without really seeing. This charmingly illustrated volume explores the coastline, encompassing such diverse topics as beach huts, quicksand, shingle, funicular railways, ammonites, kippers and Blackpool rock. Did you know that the British devoured around three hundred million portions of fish and chips in 1999? A captivating cornucopia of coastal comprehension . 6¾” x 5½”, 138pp, sketches. £12.99 NOW £4.50 78303 JOURNEYS THROUGH ENGLAND IN PARTICULAR: On Foot by Sue Clifford and Angela King From Alleys to Zig-Zags, the entries cover a veritable mixture of topics including beachcombing, Cornish pasties, stepping-stones, bluebells, cottages, manhole covers and terriers. At Land’s End, hedge banks that carry hardly any shrubs have been dated to the Bronze Age, ranking them amongst the world’s oldest artefacts still in use. Terriers are unique to Britain and all the breeds originate here, while the earliest sheep were shepherded in Neolithic times. 6¾” x 5½”, 154pp, sketches. £12.99 NOW £4.50 78327 SOMERSET COAST PATH by Damian Hall Starting at Bristol’s Temple Meads station, you will pass landmarks such as the Cabot Tower and the SS Great Britain before heading out underneath the Clifton Suspension Bridge and joining the coast path at Portishead with a fine view of Wales. Clevedon Pier and Burnham on Sea’s lighthouse on stilts are two fascinating sights at these small resorts, and Weston-super-Mare offers magnificent views of Steep Holm Island and Iron Age Worlebury Hill. Turning the corner past the Quantocks you make your way along the foot of Exmoor to Minehead and Porlock, where Coleridge composed “Kubla Khan” following an the opium-induced dream. Each section comes with an OS map and full route directions, together with interesting things to see. 142pp, softback, colour photos. £12.99 NOW £5 78335 YORKSHIRE WOLDS WAY by Tony Gowers and Roger Ratcliffe The Yorkshire Wolds Way meanders north from the Humber Bridge through places with wonderful names like Fridaythorpe, Nunburnholme and Thixendale, until eventually it takes the walker down the cliffs and into the old Yorkshire town of Filey. This walker’s guide includes reproductions of paintings by Hockney as well as a section-by-section Route Description with maps and detailed walking instructions. “Things to look out for” includes the grass sculpture “Time and Flow” by Chris Drury, the spectacular deserted medieval village of Wharram Percy, and a feature on “The Sykes Churches Trail”, all of them built by the Sykes family of Sledmere and several being favourites of that arbiter of architectural excellence, Nikolaus Pevsner. The city of Hull is associated with Philip Larkin and William Wilberforce, while Beverley Minster is one of England’s Gothic masterpieces. 140pp, softback, maps, colour photos, contacts. £14.99 NOW £6 77772 BRITAIN YESTERDAY AND TODAY by Janice Anderson and Edmund Swinglehurst A nostalgic and informative look at “then and now”. Some quintessentially British things have changed little compare the pictures of Victoria and Elizabeth II’s Diamond Jubilees (115 years apart) and the 100 years between the church fete pictures. We loved the contrast between Butlins at Clacton in the 1930s vs Center Parcs at Longleat. 192pp, 11½”×8¾”, colour, nostalgic images on every page. £19.99 NOW £5.50 78354 FIELD GUIDE TO THE BRITISH by Sarah Lyall In her 13 years married to an Englishman and living in London, the New York Times correspondent has learned many valuable lessons about being British. Here are Anglo-Saxon attitudes toward class, sex, alcohol, animals and, naturally, the weather, and some classic examples of British characteristics such as self-deprecation, understatement and eccentricity. Here too are the quirks and curiosities of contemporary Britain, from salad cream to Cornish pasties, binge drinking to personal hygiene and MPs who behave like naughty boys at prep school. Often revelatory and always very funny. 277pp. £14.99 NOW £5 78362 HISTORIC WALKS IN AND AROUND YORK by Brian Conduit Glossy colourful pages packed with photos, historical facts and stories, easy-to-follow maps and directions. The walks are leisurely, designed for all ages and abilities, with plenty of opportunity to enjoy the views, absorb the history and relax in one of the many cosy pubs or cafés. Enjoy the formal gardens at Harewood House, Spofforth Castle, Knaresborough, Markenfield Hall, Ripon Cathedral and the deserted medieval village of Wharram Percy. 25 walks in total including of course York Minster, the castles, museums and gardens and National Railway Museum. 180pp, paperback. £8.95 NOW £3.75 76390 FAMILY ALBUM: Edwardian Life in the Lake Counties by John Satchell In a uniquely important glimpse of life in Kendal and the Lake District during Edwardian times, this remarkable collection of almost 200 photographs, taken mainly between 1900 and 1908, ranges from genteel ladies pouring afternoon tea to the joyful return of soldiers from the Boer War. The photographer, Margaret Shaw spent the mornings nursing her aged mother, but afternoons were a round of tennis, golf and tea parties. She visited Lakeland beauty spots and seaside resorts, and attended local weddings and chapel social events. Everything was photographed. 152 paperback pages, archive photos, family tree. £12.99 NOW £3.50 76455 TOUR OF THE ENGLISH LAKES With Thomas Gray and Joseph Faringdon RA by John R. Murray In 1769 Thomas Gray made a tour of the Lake District and recorded it in his journal, thus creating the first example of modern travel writing. Eight years later the renowned watercolourist Joseph Faringdon, a fervent admirer of Gray’s Lakeland journal, followed in his footsteps, painting the sites Gray described, these being published together in one volume in 1789. Here is a series of fascinating “then and now” juxtapositions. The lakes and places featured here include Penrith, Ullswater, Keswick, Borrowdale, Derwentwater, Castlerigg, Bassenthwaite, Kendal, Grasmere, Skiddaw, Thirlmere, Rydal Water, Windermere and Ambleside. Colour photos, watercolours, engravings, old maps and manuscripts, 160pp, 8½”×11". £25 NOW £5 76476 STORY OF THE THAMES by Andrew Sargent Focuses on both the social and economic changes exemplified in the life of the river, as well as touching on fascinating episodes of national and political history. Here are the ritual deposit of metalwork in the river in the Bronze Age, the working river of the Middle Ages and post-medieval period, the development of leisure epitomised in Three Men in a Boat - the river in wartime and modern environmental conservation. 192 pages, colour and b/w illus. £16.99 NOW £2.75 76538 A PEAK DISTRICT ANTHOLOGY: A Literary Companion to Britain’s First National Park by Roly Smith Ruskin extolled its beauties, while novelists Charlotte Brontë and George Eliot used closely observed Peakland settings for some of their most vivid narratives. Topographical writers including Edward Bradbury, Thomas Tudor and James Croston enthusiastically described the delights of the Derbyshire scenery to the ever-increasing stream of Victorian visitors. This charming anthology brings together the finest writing about the Peak District through the ages. 208 pages illus in colour and b/w. £16.99 NOW £3 66042 GREEN ROADS OF ENGLAND by R. Hippisley Cox First published by Methuen in 1914, this facsimile edition has been carefully reprinted with all 24 original illustrations, eight colour maps and 87 plans. This seminal book covers all the ancient roads of England. It reveals not only the Stone Age ridge roads of southern England, but also details of the hill forts and other earthworks found along them. ‘...the Stone Circles at Avebury, Stonehenge, Knowlton and Rollright are proof that astronomy had advanced beyond the limits of savage outlook and the Sun worship of Neolithic man appears to have been a higher form of religion than demoniac Druidism. 220pp, paperback. ONLY £5 77261 GEAR GUIDE 1967: Hip-Pocket Guide to Britain’s Swinging Fashion Scene by Old House Books and Maps The hip-pocket guide to Britain’s swinging, with-it hip fashion world, first published in 1967, this pocket guide describes the lively boutiques which were springing up on Carnaby Street and King’s Road. For each shop the full address, opening hours and a full description of whether the range was ‘ready to wear’ clothes, a tailored suit, books of samples, how much a suit would cost, classical or unassertive, or as crazy as you like. You may even remember shops like I Was Lord Kitchener’s Valet, The Foale & Tuffin or Male W.1. at 38 Carnaby Street. Maps, photos. Facsimile reprint, 72pp, paperback. £5.99 NOW £2 BIBLIOPHILE BOOKS UNIT 5 DATAPOINT, 6 SOUTH CRESCENT, LONDON E16 4TL TEL: 020 74 74 24 74 Windsor and Eton On April 6th, our Annie will become President of the Windsor & Eton Royal Warrant Holders’ Association. The area is a perfect backdrop to the many events she has planned for her year promoting the high levels of service and quality of goods from all recognised “By Royal Appointment” companies (like Bibliophile). These crafts and trades are often traditional and are to be celebrated. Please wish her luck in her new role! 78518 A YEAR IN THE LIFE OF WINDSOR AND ETON by Joanna Jackson The Royal Borough of Windsor is home to both Windsor Castle, the oldest and largest inhabited castle in the world and Her Majesty’s favourite weekend home, and Eton College, perhaps the most famous school in the world, founded in 1440 and the alma mater of 19 prime ministers. Windsor Great Park, 1000 acres of woodland, lakes and gardens hosts the Carriage Driving Championships and events include the Windsor Royal Tattoo, state visits and the Windsor Horse Show. Every June Ascot Racecourse is the setting for a spectacular pageant of horses and race goers. From the Order of the Garter to spectacular hats at Ascot, from swan upping to the Changing of the Guard, nearby Virginia Water and the Magna Carta at Runnymede are all captured together with glamorous riverside shots, statues, meadows in spring flower, autumnal colours, bluebells and snowscapes in this beautiful photobook. 112 very large pages. Colour. £15.99 NOW £5 78913 HISTORICAL MAP OF WINDSOR & ETON ABOUT 1860 by David Lewis A huge coloured fold out map showing Eton College, the quadrangle, St. Mary’s Chapel and the Hall to the north, South Meadow and the Brocas to the west, the Worth and cricket ground, Riverside Station, Windsor Bridge (toll), the Cobbler, the gas works, Windsor Town Centre including the Infantry Barracks, south to the Cavalry Barracks and Spital and of course the entire aerial plan of Windsor Castle, the Statue Garden, the Royal Mews and even the dwellings demolished in 1690 at the end of Park Street. On the reverse of the map is a fabulous gazetteer of historic buildings and sites like the Christopher Inn, in Eton before it was relocated in 1846, views of Windsor Castle, Windsor Bridge after its rebuilding in 1822 in woodcut illustrations and short history of the historical features referred to. Presented in a cardboard folder with introduction by David Lewis. Softback. £7.99 NOW £3.50 76750 WHITEHALL: The Street that Shaped a Nation by Colin Brown Whitehall, the hideaway of all those bowler-hatted mandarins who really run Britain, is built on top of a Tudor palace whose ruins were uncovered during the building of the present Ministry of Defence in 1939. It was here that Henry VIII had his wine cellar and kept fit on the tennis court. He would sometimes take the secret passage which survives as a route from the Cabinet Office to Downing Street. Elizabeth I’s tough resistance to foreign invaders and domestic plotters was played out in Whitehall and Charles I was executed at Inigo Jones’s newly built Banqueting House, an event witnessed by Samuel Pepys who played truant from school. In 1914 Asquith summoned Kitchener from his command of the Egyptian Army to become War Secretary. The network of tunnels under Whitehall were later developed into a nuclear bunker. 388pp, colour and b/w photos. £17.99 NOW £5 78066 FROZEN THAMES by Helen Humphreys The author has created 40 vignettes based on historical events that took place each time the River Thames froze solid, between 1142 and 1892, intended as a meditation on the nature of ice. ‘It is the coldest winter there has ever been and the ice freezes hard and fast and smooth. The watermen trade their boats for sledges and pull people across the river for the same price as when they had rowed them over. A whirly sledge twirls passengers around a stake set into the ice. Coaches are pulled by both horses and men. There are games of football and bowls, horse and donkey races.’ This description is from a 1684 vignette, while another, later, entry describes how a miller’s son is surrounded one morning by a flock of frozen birds. Period art works. 186pp, colour illus. £12.99 NOW £4.50 www.bibliophilebooks.com www s. c o m w.. b i b l i o p h i l e b o o k ks Great Britain continued 78267 EXETER AND SIDMOUTH: 1919 Popular Edition OS Map by Cassini Publishing Including Budleigh Salterton, Exmouth, Honiton, Ottery St Mary, Seaton and Teignmouth, this map was first surveyed in 1912-23 and first published 1919-26, and here has been rescaled to the traditional 1:50,000. Discover such villages as Luppitt, the bull farm near Cotleigh, Little Silver Smithy near Clyst Hydon, a weir and a mill on the River Exe, lodges and manor houses and the growing city of Exeter with the steep hillsides to the south where we find the village of Shillingford, the Exeter Canal alongside the Great Western Railway and way south to the River Teign, the Tolgate and the Salty. Colour, folded into softback. £6.99 NOW £3 76944 REMOTE BRITAIN: Landscape, People and Books by David St John Thomas David organises his book by themes such as the holistic life, wine and cheese, the Old Testament and Tess, localism, before taking us on his rather special tours to dip into time and again to the Isles of Scilly, Yorkshire, the Gower Peninsular, Tenbury Wells in Herefordshire, Bodmin Moor, hilly and flat Lincolnshire, the Wye Valley, the Lake District, remoter Essex with the Tolleshurst Knights to remoteness in London and beyond. With books mentioned and quoted. 536pp, colour photos. £18.99 NOW £5.50 ANTIQUES AND COLLECTABLES We take issue even with perfection. - Pascal Beautifully designed spiral-bound hardback book with antique maps and clocks sepia design on the cover and dedication page, the book is designed to enable collectors to keep detailed records of all their acquisitions. Each item has been allocated a two-page spread on which there is space for an image, a detailed description, price, contact details for the artist and the gallery involved as well as notes for provenance etc. about the piece. The index provides quick access to the items included and there is space for general notes and a pocket on the inside back cover for invoices, business cards etc. If no photograph is available, you may insert your own sketch and be as detailed as you like in the description of your object, materials, construction and size and where the image filename may be found on your computer, date of manufacture, gallery auction or stock, shop from which purchased, date, price, maker’s mark, contact details etc. A unique item of stationery we are proud to present. ! From Gerrit Rietveld and Alvar Aalto to Verner Panton to Eva Zeisel, from Art Nouveau to International Style, from Pop Art to Postmodernism, the phenomenon of the chair is so complex that it requires a reference work as comprehensive as this to do it full justice. They are all here: Thonet’s bentwood chairs and Hoffmann’s sittingmachines, Marcel Breuer’s Wassily chair and Ron Arad’s avant-garde armchairs or our favourite (pictured) Alessandro Mendini’s Proust’s armchair of 1978 in rainbow painted colours and cut-out decoration. The book devotes one page to each chair, displayed on its own as pure form, with biographical and historical information about the chairs and their designers. 5.5" x 7.7", 624 heavy pages, satin pagemarker. Colour illus. ONLY £9 Pattern primer The ultimate decorative resource 78723 WORLD OF ORNAMENT: A. Racinet and A. DupontAuberville edited by David Batterham “The sheer profusion of Moorish arabesques to Neoclassical stripes is inspiring.” Discover a world of decorative ideas with this compendium of history’s most elegant patterns and ornamental designs. The World of Ornament brings together the two greatest encyclopedic collections of ornament of the 19th century: Auguste Racinet’s L’Ornement polychrome Volumes I and II (1875-1888) and Auguste DupontAuberville’s L’Ornement des tissus (1877) to provide one lavish source book spanning jewellery, tile, stained glass, illuminated manuscript, textile and ceramic ornament. Encompassing classical, Egyptian, Greek, Roman, Etruscan, Asian and middle-Eastern, as well as European designs from medieval times through the 19th century, this compilation of cultures and aesthetics offers a primary reference for artists, historians, designers and patternmakers, and anyone engaged in decorative design and impact. 5.5" x 7.7", 824 pages. Text in English, French and German. New from Taschen. ONLY £13 This is the must-have book for anyone who has ‘things’, and don’t we all? We might not have a fantastic 1920s toy Marlin tinplate clockwork zeppelin with celluloid rear propellers, valued at $25,00030,000 or a vividly striped Murano Venini ‘Arado’ vase, $10,000-$15,000, but it’s still good too read about them. However, there must still be hundreds of other things depicted in this volume that many of us do have, such as 1950s wire magazine racks with atomic ball shaped feet, royal commemorative mugs, old cameras, belt buckles, children’s books, ceramics, glass ware, whistles, rock and pop memorabilia, dinky and corgi cars, Star Wars figures, toy trains and posters. Did you know that 1960s Pyrex glass kitchenware is becoming collectable now? Or that the beautiful textured Whitefriars vases of the 1960s now sell for large sums? Even 1950s Formicatopped coffee tables are sought after. All you need to make your fortune is this book together with a bit of luck when you root around a boot sale - and who knows what treasures you might have up in your loft. Note that prices are shown in dollars, but easy to convert. Up-to-date 20142015 edition, 4000 objects featured in colour. 432pp, colour illus. $27.99 NOW £8 78789 COLLECTOR’S LOGBOOK by Linda and Michael Lambert £9.99 NOW £3.75 77238 1000 CHAIRS by Charlotte and Peter Fiell 78816 MILLER’S COLLECTIBLES HANDBOOK AND PRICE GUIDE by Judith Miller and Mark Hill 77724 ENGLISH STYLE AND DECORATION: A Source Book of Original Ideas by Stafford Cliff Alongside the work of famous and familiar taste-makers, this sumptuous resource contains over 600 designs, patterns and settings in colour and black and white developed in workshops and factories throughout England. There are page after page of original sketches and printed patterns for furniture, textiles, flooring, wallpaper, glass, ceramics and household utensils, doorknobs to tableware and light fittings. Susie Cooper pattern books from the Wedgwood Museum, a folding screen from the Omega Workshops by Percy Wyndham Lewis, a theatre set by Paul Nash and designs for lampshades and wallpapers are among the full page colour plates towards the end of the book. 250 very large quality pages. Colour and b/w. $29.95 NOW £5.50 77722 DISH: 813 Colourful, Wonderful Dinner Plates by Shax Riegler Buying a dinner service is a lifestyle choice, and the world’s great artists, including Picasso and Monet, have tried their hand at creating designs. This book is organised thematically, with sections on topics such as Flora and Fauna or People and Places. The first section entitled Elegance and Tradition includes Clarice Cliff”s famous “Biarritz” design, based on medieval trenchers and featuring a circular centre in a square surround. Blue and white china is celebrated in this section, including Willow Pattern and Spode. A chapter on Colour and Form covers innovations from 18th century tortoiseshell ware to Town and Country line from New York. The Art and Craft chapter starts with 16th century majolica ware and other tin glazes such as faience and Delftware, and also includes Royal Winton’s popular chintz designs from the 1930s. Explains monograms and back stamps from Meissen to Sevres. 280pp, sumptuous colour. £25 NOW £7 77708 A CENTURY OF FINE CARRIAGE CLOCKS by Charles Terwilliger and Joseph Fanelli One hundred superb examples of highly collectable carriage clocks have been selected by Joseph Fanelli who first opened his New York clock shop in the 1960s. Each one is beautifully photographed and comes with basic information about country of origin, type of movement, style of case, signature, date, serial number and height. Much of this book is devoted to French examples and Tiffany & Co. The Grande Sonnerie alarm clock of 1880 by Leroy has a lever for different levels of chime, and unusual features are the moon phase aperture and a central seconds hand. Another clock of similar date has fewer gadgets but is decorated with an exquisite Limoges enamel dial and panels. An earlier clock by Leroy has a visible mechanism. 227pp, glossary, hundreds of colour photos, 23 x 29cm, rare 1987 publication. $59.95 NOW £11 78415 WARMAN’S WORLD WAR II COLLECTIBLES (2nd Edition) by Michael Haskew From a Women’s Army Corps Song Book to a Hitler Youth Field Cap, this book is a superb guide to collecting World War II memorabilia, accoutrements, clothing and weapons from both Allied and Axis forces. There are 3,000 entries, over a third of them illustrated in colour, and they all come with the price at the date of publication, 2010, making it easy to compare items following an adjustment in line with a 5-year price rise. Items worn in combat tend to command higher prices, though if a uniform is being purchased for a reenactment, the larger sizes are preferred. German helmets have always been sought-after, but recently the helmets of other nations have gained ground. Accoutrements include water bottles, bags, map cases, a Luftwaffe wrist compass, an RAF Oxygen Mask microphone, and U.S. Army Anti-Flak goggles. Medals are the most popular segment of militaria. 286pp, softback, glossary, 1100 colour illus. $24.99 NOW £6 71455 GUIDE TO FIRST EDITION IN CK PRICES: Eight Edition BA O C K ST by R. B. Russell Worth its weight in gold at 786 large pages, this is the completely revised and updated eight edition (2010). The volume provides a guide to the value of over 50,000 sought-after titles. Includes Jane Austen to Oscar Wilde, Eric Ambler to Minette Walters, illustrators from Aubrey Beardsley to Florence Upton and poets from Richard Alvington to Walt Whitman. Authors and artists are represented in British and American first editions, limited editions and important, collectable reprints. As featured on Radio Four’s ‘Front Row’. Lovely clear layout. £19.95 NOW £6 77462 BIOGRAPHY OF A BUILDING How Robert Sainsbury and Norman Foster Built a Great Museum by Witold Rybczynski and Norman Foster Tells the remarkable inside story of the Sainsbury Centre For The Visual Arts at the University of East Anglia. The centre was created for the Sainsburys’ private collections of paintings, drawings and sculptures. The project was Norman Foster’s first public commission as an architect. Here is the selection of Foster, the identification of the site, the design of the building and the installation of the collection are traced in fascinating detail, enlivened with quotations from the main players in the drama. 240 pages with 50 illus, 34 in colour, line drawings, plans. £19.95 NOW £5 77284 ORIENTAL RUGS: An Introduction by Gordon Redford Walker Here is a superb gazetteer of different rug types, all with high quality photos. City rugs include the Persian Tabriz, Ispahan and Nain patterns, all designed with central medallions. Tribal rugs include the brightly coloured Kazak Lambalo, with its striking three medallions in reds, greens and ivories. The beautiful Baku is a Caucasian Shirvan rug, with an overall repeated pattern in blues and turquoises, often made with goat’s hair. Advice about nuying and care. 224pp, colour photos, colour chart. £16.99 NOW £4 78359 GUIDE TO COLLECTING STUDIO POTTERY by Alistair Hawtin How do you recognise the good pieces, the pieces that will gain or hold their value, the quality from the tat? It was not until the late 1800s that a few potters began to move away from industrialised mass-produced ceramics, such as Emile Decoeur and Ernest Chaplet in France, and the three Martin brothers in Britain. However, the name invariably linked with the rise of the studio potter is Bernard Leech, arguably the most influential potter of the 20th century, setting up his pottery at St Ives in 1920. Soon, he was taking on students such as Michael Cardew and Katherine Pleydell-Bouverie. This colourfully illustrated, informative book provides short biographies of many classic studio potters, as well as advice on the types of ceramics to collect, how to start collecting, whose work to collect, collecting to a theme, and developing an eye for a good pot. Paperback, 128pp, colour photos. £16.99 NOW £5 78100 MURANO: A History of Glass by Gianfranco Toso The book is fabulously illustrated in colour with even the most ancient examples, a 14th century enamel decoration on the Aldrevandini glass, the most exquisite drinking glasses, one with lid and retorted edges, a Murano chandelier designed like the peacock, beautiful bottles with the swirling colours we know and love, vases decorated with flowers and their incredible submerged vases and metallic glass bottles. 192pp, paperback. £5.95 NOW £4 77750 STARTING TO COLLECT ANTIQUE PORCELAIN by John Sandon What should you look for and how do you spot a fake? Is it worth getting a damaged piece repaired? Beautiful colour photos show off his selected pieces at their best, and for each he provides details of specialist books that offer more detail. The “What is Available in Your Price Range?” chapter is invaluable for those starting out. Details of makers’ marks and the Chinese Dynasties. Hopefully one day you’ll dazzle Fiona Bruce and co! 192pp. $25 NOW £4.50 77749 STARTING TO COLLECT 20TH CENTURY CERAMICS by Andrew Casey With the novice collector in mind, the book includes tips on how to care for and best display a collection as well as a brief history of the trends in ceramic designs through the 20th century. Carefully selected are over 40 important ceramic manufacturers from Britain, Europe and America, each with a brief history, the designers associated with the company, and the names of important shapes and patterns. The easy-to-use format allows you to see ata-glance the main collecting tips. Here are the elaborate shapes and decoration by Royal Crown Derby to the elegant vases of Rookwood USA, classic Homemaker in the 50s, from the traditional Blue Willow pattern to the strikingly avant-garde wares of Rosenthal Germany, Royal Copenhagen, a Longwi earthenware plaque, geometric designs by Eduardo Paolozzi, Natwest piggy banks from 1984, novelty dishes, figurines, Portmeirion home wares, William Moorcroft, Susie Cooper, Clarice Cliff, Wedgwood all on display. 223 large pages, colour. $35 NOW £6 23 FICTION AND ROMANCE The Possible’s slow fuse is lit, By the Imagination. - Emily Dickinson 78598 CANADA by Richard Ford ‘First I’ll tell about the robbery our parents committed. Then about the murders, which happened later.’ It was more bad instincts and bad luck that led to Dell Parsons’ parents robbing a bank. They weren’t reckless people, but in an instant, their actions alter 15 year old Dell’s sense of normal life forever. In the days that follow he is saved before the authorities think to arrive. Driving across Montana, his life hurtles towards the unknown - a hotel in a deserted town, the violent and enigmatic Arthur Remlinger, and towards Canada, but as Dell discovers, in this new world of secrets and upheaval, he is not the only one whose past lies on the other side of the border. A novel that delineates the essential fragility and loneliness of life, the vicissitudes of fate, a masterful and profound novel. 515pp in paperback. £8.99 NOW £5 78608 DAYLIGHT GATE by Jeanette Winterson Can a severed hand speak? Good Friday 1612, Pendle Hill, Lancashire. A mysterious gathering of 13 people is interrupted by a local magistrate Roger Nowell. Is this a witches’ Sabbat? Two notorious Lancashire witches are already in Lancaster Castle awaiting trial. Why is the beautiful and wealthy Alice Nutter defending them and why is she among the group of 13 on Pendle Hill? Elsewhere a starved, abused child lurks. A Jesuit priest and a former Gunpowder plotter recently returned from France is widely rumoured to be heading for Lancashire, but who will offer him sanctuary and how quickly can he be caught? This is the reign of James I, a Protestant king with an obsession - to rid his realm of twin evils, witchcraft and Catholicism at any price. 194pp. £9.99 NOW £4.50 78676 PEGASUS DESCENDING by James Lee Burke Detective Dave Robicheaux senses a storm bearing down on his new life of contentment. 25 years ago, lost in a drunken haze in Florida, he was too far gone to save his friend and fellow Nam veteran who was murdered in cold blood for gambling debts. Now the arrival of his friend’s daughter opens a door locked long ago and the suicide of a local ‘good girl’ pulled into a vortex of power, sex and death. Who is Trish Klein passing $100 bills in local casinos? A rollercoaster deadly novel. 356pp in paperback. $16.99 NOW £5 78654 LEAVING BERLIN by Joseph Kanon From the bestselling author of ‘The Good German’ comes a riveting new novel of conflicted loyalties and dangerous deceptions in postwar East Berlin. Set in 1949, Berlin is a city still in ruins and now a political symbol about to rupture. In the West a defiant, blockaded city is barely surviving on airlifted supplies. In the East, the heady early days of political reconstruction are being undermined by the murky compromises of the Cold War. Espionage like the black market is a fact of life. German intellectuals are being lured back from exile to add credibility to the competing occupying powers. Alex Meier, a young Jewish writer, fled the Nazis for America before the war, but the politics of his youth have now put him in the cross hairs of the McCarthy witch hunts. Faced with deportation and the loss of his family, he makes a desperate plea bargain with the fledgling CIA and will earn his way back to America by acting as their agent in his native Berlin. A kidnapping misfires, an East German agent is killed, and Alex finds himself a wanted man. Alex must spy on the woman he left behind, the only woman he has ever loved. With pitch-perfect detail. US first edition March 2015. 371pp. Maps on endpapers. Remainder mark. $27 NOW £6 78652 KING’S CURSE by Philippa Gregory As an heir to the Plantagenets, Margaret Pole, the last of the Yorks, is seen by the King’s mother, the Red Queen, as a rival to the Tudor claim to the throne. She is buried in marriage to a Tudor supporter, Sir Richard Pole, Governor of Wales, and becomes guardian to Arthur, the young Prince of Wales and his beautiful bride, Katherine of Aragon. But Margaret’s destiny as cousin to the White Princess is not for a life in the shadows. Tragedy throws her into poverty, yet a royal death restores her to a place at young King Henry VIII’s court where she becomes Chief Lady-in-Waiting to Queen Katherine. There she watches the dominance of the Spanish Queen over her husband, and her tragic decline. 614 roughcut pages, tiny remainder mark. Elegant US first edition, September 2014. With family trees and map of London, 1499. $28.99 NOW £6.50 24 Fiction continued = LIMITEDHOTLINE: STOCKS WHERE020 YOU SEE ! ORDER 74THIS 74SYMBOL 24 74 77916 CHRISTMAS PARTY by Carole Matthews Louise Young is a devoted single mother whose only priority is providing for her daughter Mia. Louise has a good job in a huge international corporation and she is grateful for it. The only problem is her boss who can’t keep his hands to himself, but Louise can handle him. What she really doesn’t have time for is romance, until she meets the company’s rising star Josh Wallace. It’s the office Christmas party, she has a pretty dress to wear and she is looking forward to some champagne and fun. She is completely unaware that others around her are too busy playing dangerous games to enjoy the party, until she is pulled into those games herself. 406pp. £19.99 NOW £3.50 77915 CAKE SHOP IN THE GARDEN by Carole Matthews Looking after the cake shop, the garden and taking care of her cantankerous mother means Fay is always busy, but she accepts her responsibilities because if she doesn’t, who will? Then Danny Wilde walks into her life and makes Fay question every decision she has ever made. When a sudden tragedy strikes, Fay’s entire world is thrown off balance even further and she doesn’t know which way to turn. Love, life and family are about to collide in this wonderful story of friendship, joy, laughter and romance. 422pp. £19.99 NOW £4 77933 AGNES SOREL: Mistress of Beauty by HRH Princess Michael of Kent The Queen of Four Kingdoms is dead. Agnes Sorel, her beautiful and innocent maid of honour, soon catches the attention of the mourning court. As a trusted confidante of the deceased Queen Yolande, Agnes captivates all whom she meets, but none more so than the King of France, Charles VII. Appointed a demoiselle to his wife Queen Marie d’Anjou, Agnes discovers a burgeoning love for the King that she can no longer refuse or deny. As their relationship deepens and Agnes’s gentle influence over the King is recognised, she is viewed with suspicion by the court. 296pp. £18.99 NOW £4.75 77982 SMALL WARS by Sadie Jones Hal Treherne is a soldier on the brink of a brilliant career. Impatient to see action, his other commitment in life is to his beloved wife Clara, and when Hal is transferred to Cyprus, she and their twin daughters join him. But the island is in the heat of the emergency - the British are defending the colony against Cypriots, schoolboys and armed guerrillas alike, battling for union with Greece. Clara shares Hal’s sense of duty and honour. She knows she must settle down, make the best of things, smile, but action changes Hal. 472pp, paperback. £7.99 NOW £2 78002 JONATHAN STRANGE AND MR NORRELL by Susanna Clarke ! In 1806 the York Society of Magicians is thrown into disarray by the suggestion that they are frauds and that no-one is doing practical magic any more. But Mr Segundus has heard a prophecy that two great magicians will restore magic to England. So they journey to Hurtfew Abbey to see Mr Norrell. Mr Norrell heads for London and learns that the great politician Sir Walter Pole’s intended bride, the daughter of a rich widow, has died two days before her wedding. Distraught at the loss of income, Sir Walter summons Mr Norrell to Brunswick Square where a strange apparition with thistledown hair helps him restore the young woman to life. Meanwhile Laurence Strange’s son Jonathan is growing up in Edinburgh and surprising himself by performing magic for the benefit of his prospective inlaws. Paperback, 1006 pages, monochrome drawings. £9.99 NOW £4 78123 SHADOWS IN THE NIGHT by Jane Finnis Britannia, 91AD, a raw, frontier province lying at the northern edge of the Roman Empire. It’s 50 years since the legions invaded, but the land still simmers with tension, especially in the north. But in the Oak Tree Inn on the road to Eburacum, both Roman and Briton are welcome, until innkeeper Aurelia Marcella finds a decapitated body on the road, a crude message scrawled on his body - ‘All Romans will be killed. Get out or die’. She must face the possibility that someone she knows and trusts wants her dead. 356pp, paperback. £12.99 NOW £5 78316 PAYING GUESTS by Sarah Waters It is 1922 and London is tense. Ex-servicemen are disillusioned, the out of work and the hungry are demanding change. Widowed Mrs Wray and her daughter Frances, an unmarried woman with an interesting past, find themselves obliged to take in lodgers. The arrival of a young modern couple of the ‘clerk class’, brings unsettling things with it - gramophone music, colour, fun. It offers Frances glimpses of habits, sounds and travel and she and Lillian are drawn into an unexpected friendship. Secrets are confessed, dangerous desires admitted and the most ordinary of lives can explode into passion and drama in just one house. 566 pages. £20 NOW £5.75 78321 SCARLET THIEF by Paul Fraser Collard Jack Lark is an unforgettable new hero. Set in 1854 on the banks of the Alma River, on the Crimean Peninsular, the Redcoats are staggering to a bloody halt. The men of the King’s Royal Fusiliers are in terrible trouble, ducking and twisting as the storm of shot, shell and bullet tears through their ranks. Jack Lark has to act immediately and decisively and the life and success of the campaign depends upon it. But does he have the mettle, the officer qualities that are the life blood of the British Army? From a poor background, Lark has stolen a rank and position far above his own. 343pp, paperback. £7.99 NOW £3.75 78103 NEEDLE IN THE BLOOD by Sarah Bower January 1067. Charismatic bishop Odo of Bayeux decides to commission a wall hanging on a scale never seen before to celebrate his role in the conquest of Britain by his brother William, Duke of Normandy. His life becomes entangled with the women who embroider his hanging, especially Gytha, handmaid to the mistress of the fallen Saxon king and Odo’s sworn enemy. Against their intensions they fall passionately in love and in doing so Odo comes into conflict with his king and his God, and Gytha with Odo’s enemies who mistrust her hold over such a powerful man. Goes into the making of the Bayeux Tapestry and the many mysteries stitched into this famous embroidery. We will never look at it in the same way again. 576pp, paperback. £7.99 NOW £4 76961 SIGNATURE OF ALL THINGS by Elizabeth Gilbert From the moment Alma Whittaker steps into the world, everything about life intrigues her. Instilled with an unquenchable sense of wonder by her father, a botanical explorer and the richest man in the New World, Alma is raised in a house of luxury and curiosity. It is not long before she becomes a gifted botanist in her own right, but as she flourishes and her research takes her deeper into the mysteries of evolution, the man she comes to love draws her in the opposite direction - into the realm of the spiritual, the divine and the magical. The novel soars across the globe of 19th century London and Peru to Philadelphia, Tahiti and beyond. 582pp, paperback. £8.99 NOW £2 78072 HABITS OF THE HOUSE: Book One in the Love and Inheritance Trilogy by Fay Weldon 1899 was a time of social upheaval, war abroad and shortage of money. Tea gowns were still laced with diamonds. There are still nine courses at dinner, but bankruptcy looms for the Dilbernes. The Earl, a gambler and man-about-town must seek out a new position in government; his wife Lady Isobel’s solution is to marry off their son Arthur to a wealthy heiress. But how? At the end of the season there is only Minnie O’Brien from Chicago, rich enough, but daughter of a stockyard baron, and with a vulgar mother and a dubious past. Viscount Arthur refuses to give the matter of marriage much attention, but the servants do. A tale of restraint and desire, manners, morals, wit and sympathy and no small measure of mischief. 314pp, paperback. £12.99 NOW £4 78093 LONG LIVE THE KING by Fay Weldon 1902. London Society is in a frenzy of anticipation for the coronation of the new king, Edward VII. The Earl and Countess of Dilberne are caught up in the lavish preparations, yet Lady Isobel still has ample time to fret. Her new daughter-in-law is pregnant with a potential heir, but still completely untrained in the particular ways of the English aristocracy. Her plain yet clever daughter Rosina is threatening to elope to Australia - of all places - and her 16 year old niece Adela, tragically orphaned, has run off with a troop of fake spiritualists. 344pp, paperback. £12.99 NOW £4.75 78325 SHELL SEEKERS by Rosamunde Pilcher 77937 THE BATTLE OF THE VILLA by Rumer Godden A mother loves her children, of course she does, but sometimes she may not like them very much. In Penelope Keeling’s case, two of her three grown-up children often gave cause for dislike. When they put her under pressure to sell her most treasured possession, one of her father’s paintings, they provoke a family crisis. Learn more about your favourite author whose family’s farm was sold and the family moved to Glasgow. An enchanting account of her Cornish childhood. Facsimile reprint, 671pp in paperback. £8.99 NOW £4 78331 THIRTEENTH TALE by Diane Setterfield Angelfield House stands abandoned and forgotten. It was once the imposing home of the March family - fascinating, manipulative Isabelle, Charlie, her brutal and dangerous brother, and the wild, untamed twins, Emmeline and Adeline. Now Margaret Lea is investigating the past and the mystery of the March family starts to unravel. What has the house been hiding? What is the connection with the enigmatic writer Vida Winter? 456pp, paperback. £7.99 NOW £4 66180 COMPLETE RICHARD IN CK HANNAY STORIES BA O C K by John Buchan ST Major General Sir Richard Hannay is the fictional secret agent created by writer and diplomat John Buchan, who was himself an Intelligence officer. In Greenmantle, he undertakes a vital mission to prevent jihad in the Islamic Near East. Mr Standfast, set in the decisive months of 1917-18, is the novel in which Hannay finally falls in love. In The Three Hostages, he finds himself unravelling a kidnapping mystery with his wife’s help. In the last adventure, The Island of Sheep, he is called upon to honour an old oath. 992 paperback pages. Great value. ONLY £2 76542 BLOOD AND BEAUTY: The Borgias by Sarah Dunant ! A window into the extraordinary machinations and skulduggery of the Borgias. Here are the great paterfamilias Alexander, Falstaffian, uxorious, charming and ruthless; the sinister Master of Ceremonies, Johannes Burchardt; and the handsome, vicious Cesare, who matures marvellously from a rake decked out in the latest fashions to a savage melancholic, mired in violence and dressed in black. 529pp, paperback. £7.99 NOW £2.25 76550 DEBORAH GOES TO DOVER: The Travelling Matchmaker by M. C. Beaton Destined for Dover, Miss Hannah Pym has her matchmaking work cut out for her when she encounters the pretty, boisterous Lady Deborah Western. Encouraged by an unruly twin brother, golden haired Lady Western seems set on acting the tomboy, much to the dismay of her handsome neighbour, the Earl of Ashton. He challenges her to a horse race and the outcome is certainly unexpected, but fortunately for the handsome, green-eyed Earl, Miss Pym is on hand to make sure the gorgeous girl is introduced to some more feminine pursuits! 186pp in paperback. £6.99 NOW £2.50 76567 GRAIL KNIGHT: A Novel of Robin Hood by Angus Donald When past crimes resurface, Sir Alan Dale, loyal lieutenant of the Earl of Locksley, better known as the murderous thief Robin Hood, faces terrible vengeance at the hands of those he and his master have wronged. With his beloved wife on her deathbed, Sir Alan must seek salvation by following Robin into the lair of their enemy, the mysterious leader of a band of renegade Templars, on the trail of the most precious object in the world, the Holy Grail. The companions must find the Cup of Christ before they face certain destruction. 536pp, paperback. £6.99 NOW £2.25 76574 INVITATION TO THE WALTZ by Rosamond Lehmann On her 17th birthday, Olivia Curtis receives a diary for her innermost thoughts, a ten shilling note and a role of flame-coloured silk for her first ball dress. She anticipates the dance, the greatest and most terrifying event of her life so far, with uncertainty and excitement. For her pretty sister Kate, it is sure to be a triumph, but what will it be for shy, awkward Olivia? 232pp. £12.99 NOW £2 76812 SOUTH RIDING by Winifred Holtby Forward thinking, ambitious and determined to live life to the full, Sarah Burton is a woman of the time. Her fiancé dead in WWI, she returns to South Riding as the Head Mistress of the local school. Robert Carne stands firmly against Sarah’s modern idylls, and in Sarah’s eyes he represents everything she detests. But he is also a man tormented by the past, and despite herself, Sarah finds she is drawn to him. Paperback, 529pp. £7.99 NOW £1.50 When their mother leaves the country to be with her lover, Hugh and Caddie’s seemingly perfect life falls apart. Devastated, the children travel alone to the Villa Fiorita on Lake Garda, determined not to leave without her. On arrival they can tell Fanny and Rob are deeply in love, and their mother is happier than they have ever seen her. Will the children realise that their actions have consequences before it is too late? 284pp, paperback. £9.99 NOW £3.50 77935 THE RIVER by Rumer Godden In simple, flawless prose, a young girl’s first encounters with jealousy, sex and guilt are evoked against the sounds, people, colours and smells of India. Harriet is caught between two worlds - her older sister is no longer a playmate; her brother is still a little boy. The comforting rhythm of her Indian childhood - the colourful festivals that accompany each season and the ebb and flow of the river on its journey to the bay of Bengal - is about to be shattered. Intense, vivid and with a dark undertow. 208pp, paperback. £8.99 NOW £3.50 78003 PEACOCK SPRING by Rumer Godden Una and her younger sister Hal have been abruptly summoned to live in New Delhi by their diplomat father Sir Edward Gwithiam. From the first meeting with their new tutor and companion the beautiful Eurasian Alix Lamont, Una senses a motive to their presence. But through the pain of the months to come, the poetry and logic of India do not leave Una untouched, and it begins with a feather, a promise of something genuine and precious. Rumer Godden evokes the magic of an India she knows so well and all the bitter sweetness of loyalty and love. First published in 1975. 323pp, paperback. £8.99 NOW £3.75 78004 COROMANDEL SEA CHANGE by Rumer Godden Blaise and Mary arrive at Patna Hall, a hotel on India’s shimmering Coromandel coast to spend part of the honeymoon their. Patna Hall is as beautiful and timeless as India itself, ruled over firmly and wisely by proprietor Aunty Sanni. For Mary, it feels strangely like home. In a week that will change the young couple’s future forever, election fever grips the Southern Indian state and Mary falls under the spell of the people, the country and Krishnan, god-like candidate for the Root and Flower party. Exotic, sensuous pleasure you too are in for a sea change. 269pp in paperback. £8.99 NOW £3.50 77927 LADY AND THE UNICORN by Rumer Godden In a crumbling Calcutta mansion, with faded frescoes and a jasmine-covered garden, the Lemarchant family live, clinging to the fringes of respectability. Neither Indian nor English, they are accepted by no one. After only a day in India, Stephen Bright meets Rosa Lemarchant. In an ill-fitting dress she is awkward and shy. She couldn’t be more different from the fast ‘Eurasian’ girls he has heard stories of. Ignorant of Calcutta’s strict social codes, he falls in love with Rosa and becomes enchanted by the building in which she lives, determined to uncover its secrets. 208pp paperback. £9.99 NOW £3.50 78184 RUMER GODDEN: Set of Five Buy all five paperbacks and save even more. £46.95 NOW £15 76865 CONFUSIONS OF YOUNG MASTER TORLESS by Robert Musil A fresco of psychoanalysis, philosophy, eroticism, snobbery, sado-masochism and schoolboy humour. As the 19th century draws to an end, Young Törless is sent to a military boarding school for the sons of the nobility on the eastern outreaches of the Austro-Hungarian Empire. Far from his comfortable free-thinking bourgeois home and left to his own devices, he experiences the pains and joys and self doubts of adolescence. Confronted with desire and love and also his own cruelty, he finds himself participating in his fellow pupils’ bullying campaigns. Translation of the 1906 original, 185pp, paperback. £7.99 NOW £1.50 76875 MAKING OF HENRY by Howard Jacobson ! One day, out of the blue, Henry Nagel inherits a sumptuous apartment in St. John’s Wood. His old school friend and rival Osmond ‘Hovis’ Belkin is currently enjoying success in Hollywood; his tragic great-aunt Marghanita for whom Henry once entertained a dangerous passion; and his father Izzi, upholsterer turned illusionist is a fire-eater and origamist. Henry’s dyspeptic neighbour Lachlan wants his sympathy and his sloppy red setter Angus wants a walk. Moira, the waitress with the crooked smile and custard hair seems to want him. He might finally be falling in love. 340pp, paperback. £8.99 NOW £2.50 77059 MARSEILLE CAPER by Peter Mayle Sam had carried off a staggering feat of derring-do in the heart of Bordeaux, infiltrating the ranks of the French élite to rescue a stolen, priceless wine collection. With the question of legality, Sam thought it would be a while before he returned to France, especially with the charms of the beautiful Elena Morales to keep him in Los Angeles. But when the immensely wealthy Francis Reboul, the victim of Sam’s last heist, asks our hero to take a job in Marseille, it is impossible for Sam and Elena to resist the pleasures of that region. A competition over Marseille’s valuable waterfront grows more hotly disputed. Roughcut edges, 208pp. Remainder mark. $24 NOW £4 76974 KATHARINE THE VIRGIN WIDOW by Jean Plaidy The young Spanish widow Katherine of Aragon has become the pawn between two powerful monarchies. After less than a year as the wife of the frail Prince Arthur, the question of whether the marriage was ever consummated will decide both her fate and England’s. But whilst England and Spain dispute her dowry, in the wings awaits her unexpected escape from poverty - Henry, Arthur’s younger, more handsome brother, the future King of England. He alone has the power to restore her position, but at what sacrifice? 312pp, paperback. £8.99 NOW £2 77039 IN ONE PERSON by John Irving His most political novel since The Cider House Rules and A Prayer for Owen Meany, here is the unforgettable portrait of the solitariness of a bisexual man who is dedicated to making himself ‘worthwhile’. It is a compelling novel of desire, secrecy and sexual identity, a story of unfulfilled love, tormented, funny, and affecting, and an impassioned embrace of our sexual differences. Billy, the bisexual narrator and main character, tells the tragicomic story (lasting more than half a century) of his life as a ‘sexual suspect’. US first edition with deckle pages, 425pp. $28 NOW £4 IN 77895 CASUAL VACANCY by J. K. Rowling BACK C K O In the idyllic small town of Pagford, a councillor dies ST and leaves a ‘casual vacancy’ - an empty seat on the Parish Council. In the election for his successor that follows, it is clear that behind the pretty surface this is a town at war. From the smallest of elections in a sleepy British town, J. K. Rowling conjures an epic, emotional, profane, and deeply upsetting, emotional and readable. 568pp, paperback. £8.99 NOW £3.75 77371 GLASGOW COMA SCALE by Neil D. A. Stewart When Lynne offers money to a homeless man on Glasgow’s Sauchiehall Street, she is shocked to recognise Angus, her former art tutor from college. Lynne insists on inviting him to stay at her flat. Just as Angus doesn’t go out of his way to explain the reasons for his misfortune, neither is Lynne’s insistence on taking him in to her home purely altruistic. The more Lynne and Angus rely on each other, the more they hate doing so. The novel is a barbed love letter to this dysfunctional, romantic city. 213pp. £14.99 NOW £3.50 77589 RED TENT by Anita Diamant ! Her name is Dinah and in the Bible her fate is merely hinted at in a brief and violent detour within the verses of the Book of Genesis that recount the life of Jacob and his infamous dozen sons. The Red Tent is an extraordinary tale of ancient womanhood and family honour. Told in Dinah’s voice, it opens with the story of her mothers - the four wives of Jacob - each of whom embodies unique feminine traits and concludes with Dinah’s own startling and unforgettable story of betrayal, grief and love. 386pp, paperback. £6.99 NOW £2.75 www s. c o m w.. b i b l i o p h i l e b o o k ks Fiction continued 77460 BERTIE’S GUIDE TO LIFE AND MOTHERS by Alexander McCall Smith A 44 Scotland Street novel, illustrated by Iain McIntosh. It’s not that poor Bertie Pollock is wishing his life away, but having anticipated his 7th birthday for so long he is now longing to be 18. At 18 he probably won’t have a ‘genderneutral’ birthday - it probably won’t be gate-crashed by Tofu (a thug), Olive and Pansy (manipulative), and Ranald Braveheart McPherson (nervous). And at 18 he can definitely leave his eternally pushy yet endlessly smothering mother Irene. Not even Bertie could foretell that fate would bring Sister Maria-Fiore and a literary festival in Dubai. 295pp, illus. £16.99 NOW £6 77228 AND THE MOUNTAINS ECHOED by Khaled Hosseini Set in Afghanistan, 1952. Abdullah and his sister Pari live in the small village of Shadbagh. To Abdullah, Pari, as beautiful and sweet-natured as the fairy for which she was named, is everything. One day the siblings journey across the desert to Kabul with their father. They have no sense of the fate that awaits them there, for the event which unfolds will tear their lives apart sometimes a finger must be cut to save the hand. Crossing generations and continents and moving from Kabul to Paris to San Francisco, to the Greek island of Tinos. 404pp, softback. £12.99 NOW £3 77366 CRAMPTON HODNET by Barbara Pym Formidable Miss Doggett fills her life by giving tea parties for young academics and acting as watchdog for the morals of North Oxford. Anthea, her great-niece, is in love with a dashing undergraduate with political ambitions. Miss Doggett thoroughly approves. However Anthea’s father, an Oxford don, is carrying on in the most unseemly fashion with a student. They have been spotted together at the British Museum! But the only liaison Miss Doggett isn’t aware of is taking place under her very own roof - the lodger has proposed to her paid companion Miss Morrow. She wouldn’t approve of that at all. 271pp, paperback. £8.99 NOW £4.25 77385 SPRING OF KASPER MEIER by Ben Fergusson A desolate sea of rubble, there is a shortage of food, clothing and tobacco in Berlin. Kasper Meier is a German struggling to get by and his solution is to trade on the black market to feed himself and his elderly father. When a young woman, Eva, arrives at Kasper’s door seeking the whereabouts of a British pilot, he feels a reluctant sympathy for her but won’t interfere in military affairs. Who is the shadowy Frau Beckmann and what is her hold over Eva? The seemingly random killings of members of the occupying forces are connected to Kasper’s own situation but he must work out who is behind Eva’s demands and why. Apologies for sticker. 388pp. £14.99 NOW £3 77507 THE THREAD by Victoria Hislop Thessaloniki, 1917. As Dimitri Komninos is born, a devastating fire sweeps through the thriving Greek city where Christians, Jews and Muslims live side by side. Five years later, Katerina Sarafoglou’s home in Asia Minor is destroyed by the Turkish army. Losing her mother in the chaos, she flees across the sea to an unknown destination in Greece. Soon her life will become entwined with Dimitri’s and with the story of the city itself, as war, fear and persecution begin to divide its people. Fast forward 90 years to 2007. A young Anglo-Greek hears his grandparents’ life story for the first time and realises he has a decision to make. 390pp. £18.99 NOW £4 77581 LADY AND THE POET by Maeve Haran Anne is the fiery and spirited daughter of the Mores of Loseley House in Surrey, educated by her grandfather in Latin and Greek. She comes to London destined for a life at the court of Queen Elizabeth and an advantageous marriage. There she encounters John Donne, the darkly attractive young poet who is secretary to her uncle, the Lord Keeper of the Great Seal. As they are thrown together, Donne opens Anne’s eyes to a new world of wit, passion and sensuality. But John Donne is Catholic by background in an age when this is deadly dangerous. 501pp, paperback. £6.99 NOW £2.50 77583 MISTRESS OF MY FATE by Hallie Rubenhold England, 1789. Under a cloud of scandal, Henrietta Lightfoot flees her home at Melmouth Park. With little money and no worthwhile talents, the only hope of survival lies with the dashing but elusive Lord Allenham. In a desperate quest to find him, Henrietta embarks on a journey through London’s debauched and glittering underworld. With the aid of new-found skills at the card table and on the stage, will she be able to turn her life around to become mistress of her fate? 506pp, paperback. £6.99 NOW £2.75 77736 KITTY PECK AND THE MUSIC HALL MURDERS by Kate Griffin In the opium-laced streets of Limehouse in 1880, the ferocious Lady Ginger rules with ruthless efficiency. But she is not happy. Somebody is stealing her most valuable assets - her dancing girls - and that someone has to be found and made to pay. Bold, impetuous and with more brains than she cares to admit, 17 year old seamstress Kitty Peck reluctantly performs the role of bait for the kidnappers. But as her scandalous and terrifying act becomes the talk of the city, Kitty is about to go down a path of discovery. 352pp, paperback. £7.99 NOW £4 77904 CHURCHILL’S SECRET KBO by Jonathan Smith 10 Downing Street June 1953. 78 year old Sir Winston Churchill still holds the most powerful position in the land. On the brink of a major peace summit, the great man is felled by a devastating stroke. It would be many years for the world to know precisely how close Britain had come to catastrophe. With his Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden in Boston for emergency surgery, the situation becomes critical - there is no one at Britain’s helm. As Churchill lies fighting for his life, the people must believe all is well. His devoted wife Clemmie and a handful of loyal companions rally to the Prime Minister’s support in his clandestine sickroom. A superb recreation. 190pp, paperback. £8.99 NOW £3 77909 GOOD GERMAN by Joseph Kanon The classic thriller set in Berlin, 1945, loaded with emotional and ethical resonance. In the rubble of the Third Reich, Churchill, Stalin and Truman meet to map out the shape of the post-war world. The body of an American officer is found with his pockets stuffed with money. Journalist Jake Geismar returns to the city in search of one last big story to end his war, but instead he finds that another is about to begin. Explores issues around the Holocaust sensitively while still delivering a powerful thriller. 518pp in paperback. Map. £8.99 NOW £4 EROTICA Our passions are the true phoenixes; when the old one is burnt out, a new one rises from its ashes. - Johann Wolfgang von Goethe 78677 PERSONA by Susan Brown ‘Female impersonation is all about transition. I choose to emulate women who exude sex appeal, glamour and shock value. If I had been born a woman that’s who I would have been.’ Fiona is a gender illusionist who performs in clubs. If she can catch a man and bring him home, he would want her to stay dressed that way. Drag just happened. From Chicago to LA to old London town, fellas are dressing up, not just as drag queens, movie stars, Dame Edna Everage, Marilyn Monroe and Liza Minnelli, but as beauty queens and girls about town. This album of drag queens offers up both the magic and reveals the early influences of members of this community from small town Mississippi to the glittering streets of Manhattan. Ludicrous names include Polly Grip, Rude-A Lenska, Ima Mess, Urban Sprawl and Lady Bunny of Wigstock. Coco LaChine tells her story of being the one person in a crowded New York fund raising event who attracted President Clinton. 85 models photographed classy black and white for this very large Rizzoli glossy page softback. 156pp. £22 NOW £7.50 78273 7 DAYS TO AMAZING SEX by Sarah Hedley Sex and lifestyle expert Sarah Hedley will help you feel sexier and more confident in the bedroom and also see benefits in every area of your life - making you look younger and live longer, helping you reduce your weight and improve overall fitness, as a defence against illness and relief of pain, and of course boost your self esteem and reduce stress. Each of the book’s seven chapters will relate to a day in the programme making it ideal to dip into. Packed with Q&A sessions, real life case studies, and practical exercises, websites and resources including adult magazines and videos. 211pp in paperback. £12.99 NOW £3 78292 DARE by Tracey Cox Erotic secrets are laid bare by the sex expert. Fantasies offer an escape from real life into a world where there are no rules and you are entirely in charge of the show. But have you ever wondered what would happen if you turned that longed-for fantasy into a reality? From those who loved it to those who look back and laugh, here are real women’s most private, intimate thoughts and what your fantasy says about you. 293pp in paperback. £7.99 NOW £3.75 78309 THE MASSEUSE: The Body Work Trilogy by Sierra Kincade Anna never takes on a massage client without screening them first, but the pay check offered by billionaire Maxim Stein is just too good to turn down. Plus, she’s more than capable of taking care of herself, but she isn’t prepared for Maxim’s tall, dark and devastatingly handsome bodyguard, or the desperate desires he awakens in her. Alec is dangerous, mysterious and completely irresistible and won’t be refused. But as Anna falls fast for him, she begins to realise that giving herself over to a man with so many secrets may be endangering her life. A smoking hot and suspenseful novel. 340pp in paperback. £8.99 NOW £3 78341 BEAUCASTEL by Caroline Swift The grim chateau of Beaucastle casts its shadow over the lives of all the slaves who enter its portals. In its cellars and dungeons they undergo training which will forever bind them to their masters and mistresses. But for Verena and Marina, it holds a very different destiny. When they pass through the doors nothing will ever be the same again. Caroline Swift writes with an intimate knowledge of the lives of wealthy and cosmopolitan dominants and draws us into an unforgettable and erotic world. 238pp in paperback. £6.99 NOW £3 25 78347 DERRIÈRE by Julius Culdrose Julius Culdrose has spent over four decades delighting in every aspect of the female bottom - the different shapes and sizes, the possibilities of presentation, the aesthetics and uses and now reveals his explicit experiences and frank thoughts in this epic journey of bottom adoration. As kinky as fiction can get... ‘Her skin was baby pink and smooth, textured like silk, each buttock a perfect egg of girl flesh.’ Written in the early 80s and with a very contemporary, playful, adult storyline, completely besotted with the derrière. For adults only, 232pp, paperback. £8.99 NOW £3 78375 MOST BUXOM by Aishling Morgan She climbed out of the car and Daniel swallowed hard. The light dress clung to her contours, showing off the shape of her full firm breasts, a lean waist, and elegant hips, while it was so short the full length of her legs showed, long and exquisitely shapely. One thing rules Daniel’s life - voyeurism. For all the guilt it brings him, he knows the risks and is determined to give up his filthy habits, but when he finds himself as landlord to four voluptuous young female students, the opportunities for peeping are far too tempting to resist. Plenty of kinky sex. 237pp, paperback. £6.99 NOW £3 78394 TALES FROM THE LODGE by Sean O’Kane and Falconer Bridges A glimpse into the world of the super rich SM devotees who inhabit the most opulent and secretive club in the country. From Brittany comes Oliver’s account of how the lovely Marie-Hélène introduced him to the delights of mastery. From the gorgeous Lolli comes a story of schoolgirl passion which resulted in a devastating sexual awakening. Caroline recalls how her husband John started The Lodge and how she came to be one of its first servants after training by both him and Madame Stalevsky. Six highly charged adult stories. 218pp, paperback. £6.99 NOW £2.50 44509 FANNY HILL : Memoirs of a Woman of Pleasure by John Cleland Memoirs of a Woman of Pleasure, better known as Fanny Hill, is one of the most notorious texts in English literature. As recently as 1963 an unexpurgated edition was the subject of a trial, yet in the eighteenth century John Cleland’s open celebration of sexual enjoyment was a best selling novel. Fanny’s story, as she falls into prostitution and then rises to respectability, takes the form of a confession that is vividly coloured by copious and explicit physiological details of her carnal adventures. 112pp. Paperback. ONLY £2 72419 LITTLE BOOK OF PUSSY by Dian Hanson A petite version and “best of” edition of The Big Book of Pussy. Now you can follow the evolution of genital exposure with ease, through 100 years of photos with one thing in common: the exhibitionistic pleasure with which the models present their feminine pulchritude. Most of hirsute and very natural and certainly enjoying themselves in front of the camera. The triple stack is fascinating! Over 150 photos - 36 new to this book. Softback, 192 pages. ONLY £7 76015 THE ART OF PIN UP edited by Dian Hanson With a carry case for added protection, ‘The Art of Pin Up’ is a truly spectacular publication. Each chapter opens with a tipped-in colour reproduction of an original calendar or magazine cover by that artist. Deliciously erotic, clothed, semi-clad, in sheer stockings, teasingly kneeling down or cross-legged, always provocatively posed and inviting. The top 10 artists are profiled in depth include Peter Driben, Arthur ‘Art’ Frahm, William ‘Bill’ Bedcalf, Earl Moran, Zoë Mozert, George Petty IV, Alberto Vargas and others. Gil Elvgren painted 700 iconic images alone! The reproduction quality of the paintings, pastels, and preparatory sketches that follow, largely sourced from the original art, while the exquisite period calendars, vintage prints, and original model photos document the artists’ creative process. Pin up drawings, paintings and pastels of an idealised female face and figure intended for public display, was produced between 1920 and 1970, for use on calendars, magazine covers and centrefolds. Includes thumbnail bios and representative art of 85 additional artists. 11.4" x 15.6", 546 pages. Four spectacular gatefolds. Text in English, French and German. ONLY £125 76039 ART OF DOUG SNEYD: A Collection of Playboy Cartoons by Doug Sneyd Doug Sneyd’s first cartoon for Playboy was published in the September 1964 issue and since then, the magazine has carried over 450 of his distinctive works, mostly in full page colour. Being Hugh Hefner, he knows the perfect “fit” for a magazine like Playboy. The women in Sneyd’s cartoons are all undeniably drop-dead gorgeous with a particular blend of naïveté and worldliness, girl-next-door and coquettish minx. Doug served his time as a commercial artist and book and magazine illustrator and syndicated cartoonist until he got his big break. This magnificent collection features almost 300 of the very best, the vast majority printed full-page, the gorgeous scantily-clad (actually, more usually non-clad!) Sneyd girls with their men-skewering oneliners and unique charm are a real treat; highly risqué certainly, but never obscene or crass. Chronological index by gag line, 248pp, 9½”×12¼”. $39.99 NOW £6 77249 PIRELLI - THE CALENDAR 50 YEARS AND MORE by Philippe Daverio The notoriously exclusive Pirelli Calendar, featuring glamorous shots of topless, nude or semi-clad beautiful women in swimwear, was first published in 1964. It showcased the beauty of models such as Alessandra Ambrosio, Gisele Bündchen, a very young Naomi Campbell Dec 1987, Laetitia Casta, Cindy Crawford, Helena Christiensen, Penelope Cruz, Milla Jovovich, Heidi Klum, Angela Lindvall, Sophia Loren and Kate Moss. The beaches and seaside locations are as inviting as the lips, lollies, fags, curves and draped clothes. It’s a retrospective volume through the decades right up to 2015 reproducing the complete calendars, photographed by Richard Avedon, Peter Beard, Terence Donovan, Patrick Demarchelier, Nick Knight, fashion designer Karl Lagerfeld, Inez van Lamsweerde and Vinoodh Matadin, Annie Leibovitz, Peter Lindbergh, Sarah Moon, Helmut Newton, Uwe Ommer, Terry Richardson, Herb Ritts, Mario Sorrenti, Bert Stern, Mario Testino, Bruce Weber and many others. Bonus features include rarely and never-before-seen behind-the-scenes and relaxed images of the shoots, the unpublished 1963 calendar, and a selection of “censored” images deemed too risqué by the editors of the time. Colour. Lavishly produced landscape hardback with glossy quality paper, satin cloth cover, silver tooling. Herb Ritts’ 1984 calendar is packed with the most well-known models! 11.8" x 11.8", 576 pages, gatefold pp.270-276 and 477-484. ONLY £42 76809 SEX DRIVE: Fantasies in Flesh and Steel by Allen Jake Bronstein 20 classic cars and 20 anything-but-classic ways to have libidinous sex in them. Each motor vehicle comes with racy text and a feature “Auto-Erotica” box describing a steamy encounter. When the girlfriend of a Mercury 1949 Coupe owner joined him on an 11-hour road trip she little expected to find a vibrator in the glove compartment. They never made it to their destination. Featured cars include the Chevrolet Corvette, the Rolls Royce Phantom V, Ford Thunderbird and Jaguar EType. 119pp, colour photos. £12.99 NOW £1.75 76891 1970s GLAMOUR: 20th Century PinUps by Ian Penberthy The 1970s saw British glamour publishers reflecting social tastes by testing the boundaries of what was permissible. Innovations included the showing of pubic hair. The female ideal had long, straight hair, soft make up and often wore denim. Despite the occasional pair of legwarmers, the 1970s remains one of Glamour’s sexiest decades. There are dusky maidens, a riding crop and sexy jockey on page 220, knickers being pulled down, lingerie on show, strings of pearls, chains, bodices open, bras down, nipples in close up. 296 pages of colourful glamour and 300 images. Large softback. £14.99 NOW £5.50 76892 1980s GLAMOUR: 20th Century PinUps by Ian Penberthy ! Full frontal glamour 80s style with heavily eye lined sultry eyes, big hair, pubic hair, the occasional tattoo, hats, jewellery, cheeky grins, in aerobic leotards wide open, lingerie, a cheeky nurse with her elderly gentleman patient, legs akimbo across a desk, and one or two chunkier ladies towards the end. Publishers of glamour provided the public with what it wanted which by this time was more explicit photography and girls dressed in more stagy outfits and with the increasing use of fetish gear. 300 images, all in colour. Large softback, 296pp. £14.99 NOW £6 77038 HOW TO READ EROTIC ART by Flavio Febbraro and Alexandra Wetzel Tintoretto’s ‘Lady Baring Her Breast’, Giulio Romano’s ‘Rustic Banquet’, ‘A Pair of Male Lovers’ 19th century ivory Netsuke, Ingres’ ‘The Large Odalisque’, Goya’s ‘The Naked Maja’, Frangonard’s ‘The Bolt’, Hogarth’s ‘Before and After’, Velázquez’s ‘The Toilet of Venus’ (The Rokeby Venus), Caravaggio’s ‘Love Victorious’, the peacock feathers and magical elements in ‘The Spell of Love’ from 1470, here is all manner of voyeurism and eroticism in art - paintings, etchings, drawings, sculptures, woodcuts, decorations of porcelain and allegorical illustrations, Japanese woodblock prints to Iranian manuscript miniatures. 391, softback, colour. $35 NOW £7 77245 ERIC STANTON: The Dominant Wives and Other Stories by Eric Stanton Eric Stanton (1926-1999) was America’s top fetish artist who produced hundreds of graphic novels in his 50 year career. Amazonian women abound. Bound in leather, teetering on ridiculously high heels, flesh gets spanked, nipples tweaked, whips lashed against willing and unwilling flesh in these torturous erotic sequence of fantasies. These 20 stories involve much male submission, female dominance, female wrestling, facesitting, dildos, spanking, near torture, gimp masks, bondage, cruelty and S&M. This is the very best of the cult underground cartoonist’s work. Taschen publication, bookmarker, graphic colour cartoon strips from 60s and 70s Pulp Culture. 576 pages. ONLY £12 77664 MINE-HAHA OR ON THE BODILY EDUCATION OF YOUNG GIRLS by Frank Wedekind ‘Mine-Haha’ describes a unique boarding institution for girls - part idyllic refuge, part prison. The pupils are trained only in the physical arts of movement, dance and music, sometimes to perform they wear no underwear, do handstands and wear beautiful silk to dance. They are issued into an adult world for which they have been unwittingly prepared by an old woman whose own strange childhood story is focussed through the eyes of her earlier self. It is perversely erotic, freaky and antisociety. Plus two short fictional pieces ‘The Burning of Egliswyl’ and ‘The Sacrificial Lamb’. First published in German in 1903. Paperback reprint, 92pp. £8.99 NOW £4.75 26 Erotica continued ORDER HOTLINE: 020 74 74 24 74 77486 LACE by Shirley Conran Sex, glamour and bitchery to an epic degree. Which one of you bitches is my mother? 1980. In Manhattan’s most exclusive hotel, four friends come face to face with a young, mega-watt film star. She has a question for them that has brought her from the streets of Paris to the playgrounds of the rich and famous, and it has almost destroyed her. Explores the feelings and emotional aspects of sexual encounters, relationships, love and friendship. Reprinted from the 1982 original. Paperback, 751pp. £7.99 NOW £2 77988 WOMEN ON TOP by Nancy Friday Masturbation is thrilling in itself, a release from tension, a sweet sedative before sleep, a beauty treatment that leaves us glowing, our smile more mysterious. A guru to a generation of feminists, Nancy Friday is a clever and compassionate woman who reveals that women possess erotic imaginations. She looks at how today’s generation of women have responded to changes brought about by feminism. Explicit, iconoclastic, often shocking, these erotic daydreams - angry, lustful, tender and dark - blow apart old taboos. 533pp, paperback. £9.99 NOW £4.50 78182 WRITERS BETWEEN THE COVERS: The Scandalous Romantic Lives by Shannon McKenna Schmidt and Joni Rendon Subtitled “The scandalous romantic lives of legendary literary Casanovas, Coquettes and Cads”, this highoctane dash through the salacious and bizarre sexual exploits of literary men and women leaves not much to the imagination, but there are also poignant moments in which real love and devotion break through in spite of everything. T.S. Eliot’s extraordinary relationship with his first wife Vivienne included her affair with Bertrand Russell during their disastrous honeymoon. More famously, Miller was married to Marilyn Monroe, and the opening chapter tells the fascinating story of their torrid relationship. The American wit Dorothy Parker divorced her husband only to remarry him three years later. Karen Blixen’s love for Denys Hatton Finch was memorably brought to life by Streep and Redford in the film Out of Africa. 286pp, paperback,. $15 NOW £5.75 FOOD AND DRINK We should look for someone to eat and drink with before looking for something to eat and drink. - Epicurus 78791 COMPLETE WINE SELECTOR by Katherine Cole ‘If you’re overpaying for wine, or tasting the same release week after week, you’re cheating yourself. Imagine paying twice the usual price for a music download that just isn’t that sweet.’ If you’re unsure which wine to choose, or which wine goes best with which meal, then help is at hand within the covers of this informative and colourful book. The first section introduces the wine styles, arranging them into ten kinds, embracing such grades as crisp, lean whites; rich, full bodied whites; sparkling whites and rosés; light refreshing reds; rich, fullbodied reds, and fortified. Each style is fully described, with a guide to the names to look for, price range (American) and length of time the wine should be drunk after the vintage. There are pictures of assorted bottles labelled ‘Cracking the Code’ explaining bottle shape, label details etc., as well as masterclasses on the various wines, their production and what to look for when you buy. The section ‘Tools of the Trade’ shows you the various types of wine glass, corkscrews, decanters and wine cradles available. This chapter also looks at wine storage in the home, opening and decanting, and winemaking. The author says that ‘unless you have thousands of bottles of wine in a cellar don’t waste your time on wine-cataloguing software. Instead, check out online wine-speciality stores for simple single-bottle tags. You can write on these with an extraordinary device. It’s called a pen.’! Excellent, informative book explaining all you need to know about wine. Paperback, 10"x7.5", 256pp, colour illus. $24.95 NOW £7.50 78486 CAKE LOVER’S RECIPE NOTEBOOK by Jane Brocket A glamorous hardback folder (wipeable) featuring a Black Forest gateau on a delicate floral background, this large spiral bound journal has tabs for navigation. Each of the following sections Cake-Tin Cakes, Everyday Cakes, Little Cakes, Posh Cakes, Fancies and Frivolities and Celebration Cakes offers two mouth-watering recipes to get you started followed by prettily patterned blank pages for you to write out your own recipes, notes, ideas and experiments. Make a note of the delectable treats you have seen on TV, eaten in cafés or baked for friends. 160 large pages. £24.99 NOW £4.75 76785 GROCERY GARDENING by Jean Ann Van Krevelen The main part of the book gives details on cultivating herbs, fruit and vegetables, and each plant comes with several delicious recipes. Basil can be used in a delicious Sorbet, a Margherita Pizza and “Not just another pesto”, while Dill and Fennel flavour a Lemon-Dill Tartar Sauce and Fennel Hollandaise. Fruit recipes include Blue Cheese Baked Apples, Blueberry Ginger Muffins, Watermelon Popsicles and Mascarpone Crostata with Strawberries and Apples. 255pp, softback, colour photos. ONLY £2.50 78498 FRENCH KITCHEN: Classic Recipes for Home Cooks by Serge Dansereau In this beautifully photographed and designed cook book from leading chef Serge Dansereau, you will find 230 classic French recipes combining expert French techniques with wonderful produce. Whether Cassoulet or Clafoutis, buttery Brioche, Roast Peaches for breakfast through to Chicken Confit with mushrooms and bacon for dinner, and a slice of Chocolate and Raspberry Tart to finish up, there is also a chapter on cooking for kids, lazy brunches, Saturday family lunches, birthday parties, dinner with friends, supper picnics, barbecues or delicious high teas. Glossy colour photos, simple to follow recipes for Beef Bourguignonne, Homemade Potato Purée, Pan Roasted Lamb, Loin of Venison, Grilled Squid with Merguez Sausages and hundreds more with serving numbers and variations for each. £25 NOW £7.50 76615 MATTER OF TASTE: A History of Wine Drinking in Britain by Jon Hurley Hurley brings his 30 plus years’ experience of wine and the wine trade to bear on the development of our national palate, not always noted for its sophistication in matters of winemaking. Full of wit and anecdote, we learn about the wine list at the Coronation of George VI, the minefield of French wine legislation, the explosion in the popularity of Hock in the 1970s and the immense number of shameful frauds and outrages perpetrated upon the traditionally naive British wine market. From Romans officials plying British tribal leaders with amphorae of rosso to icy screw-top Pinot Grigio. 256pp. TABLE DÉCOR Elegant Entertaining £16.99 NOW £1 77530 EPICURE’S ALMANACK: Eating and Drinking in Regency London The Original 1815 Guidebook by Ralph Rylance and Janet Ing Freeman When it was published in 1815, this book was the first British ‘good food guide’. Working alone and on foot, the author visited and described some 650 establishments, ranging from City chophouses and ancient coaching inns, to London’s first Indian restaurant, humble tripe-shops and oyster rooms, dockyard taverns and village pubs. He concluded his tour with a comprehensive account of London’s markets. Annual updates were promised but never appeared. Provides a commentary on the original book and its author. 313 softback pages, plans, maps and contemporary documents, list of survivors. £17.99 NOW £4 77643 BOOK OF TUSCAN CUISINE by Giulia Poggiali Sink your teeth into Rosemary Bread, sip a Livorno Punch, make alcoholic Florentine Alkermes or sugary Cinnamon Sticks, a sponge cake made with ricotta cheese, a Wine Grape Cake, Chestnut Flour Cake, Ugly but Good Meringues. Black Risotto, Crêpes, Mussels and Clams, Sausage and Cheese, Fried Sage, Chicken Livers on Toast, in a book packed with snacks, first courses, dips, sauces, mains and desserts. Many are classic ancient Tuscan recipes, good winter dishes dressed with ‘olio novo’ served with fresh-ground pepper for a real taste of Italy. Large softback, colour illus, map of Tuscan wines. £10.95 NOW £4 77962 BAKING MAGIC by Kate Shirazi Try perfectly pink Beetroot Muffins, Spice Maple and Pecan Munchies, Choccy Cake made with Beetroot, light and spongy Spicy Fruitcakes, Black Halloween Cupcakes, Very Fanciful Fondants, cupcakes with mascarpone and fruit, Banana Cupcakes with cream cheese frosting, Ginger and Lemon Cupcakes, all with low-fat to high-fat clear instructions in the recipes. With a note on wheat and gluten, oven tips and storage. Thyme and Cheese Biscuits, Sesame Crackers, Bananas-A-Go-Go Cookies, Super Food Berry Biscuits, Shortbread, Tiramisu Bars, Macaroons, Argentinean Alfajores, Gingerbread and more. Colour photos. 288pp. £14.99 NOW £5 78513 VODKA DISTILLED by Tony Abou-Ganim Is your favourite Smirnoff No.21, Tito’s Handmade Vodka from Texas, Effen, Vietnamese Kai, Vermont Gold or the delicious bison grass flavoured Zubrowka? If you have a love of vodka, here is the full history, definition, anatomy, how to drink it and enjoy its taste and tasteability from an expert. The book analyses the characteristics of 58 featured vodkas explaining how traditional-style vodkas, those produced in Eastern Europe, differ from those made in the West. There are 28 top vodka drink recipes tailored to show off these different vodkas to their best effect including The Wizard with yellow Chartreuse, a classic Martini, the Hurly Burly with Cointreau and cranberry juice, the Flame of Love with La Ina Fino sherry, the Black Boot made with Russian vodka and more. Beautifully illustrated in colour. Websites and ingredients. 208pp. £15 NOW £4.50 He whose face is inflamed with anger shows that the Evil Spirit burns within him. - The Zohar 79022 HAVANA MOB by T. J. English 78664 MAROC PAPER PLACEMAT PAD: 48 Place Mats by Pepin van Roojen Intricate Moroccan tile patterns in three, four or five colours, almost Escher-like in their repeating geometric patterns decorate these paper mats. They are designed to be used as disposable yet elegant placemats for picnics or outdoor eating, but also could be used for giftwrapping, paper crafts, art or framing materials. The outsize softback contains 48 sheets, eight each of six designs, measuring 16½” x 11¾” (42x30cm) which separate neatly from the perforated edge. £18.98 NOW £7.50 Gangsters, gamblers, showgirls and revolutionaries in 1950s Cuba evokes a time when the Cuban people laboured under a violently repressive regime. Mob-financed revelry in Havana never stopped. Tourists from around the world flooded in to gamble, go to the race track, see an elaborate floor show at the Tropicana, hear some of the hottest music around and perhaps partake in the kinky sexual activities that flourished on the fringe of the most colourful and exciting nightlife scene of the 20th century. But it was a deadly serious business, led by Meyer Lansky and Lucky Luciano, and with the full compliance of President Batista. The Mob set out to create a financial empire that would rival the ‘glory days’ of Prohibition in the US. But behind the scenes, Fidel Castro was building opposition to what he portrayed as the debauchery and corruption of capitalism - the result was revolution. The book captures a unique and exotic chapter in modern history with first hand accounts of those who are actually there. 400pp, photos. £17.99 NOW £8.50 78361 HILLIKER CURSE - MY PURSUIT OF WOMEN: A Memoir by James Ellroy £20 NOW £3.50 76818 WHERE SHALL WE GO FOR DINNER? by Tamasin Day-Lewis This delightful memoir incorporates not only recipes but also memories of encounters with the world’s literary figures that Tamasin met through her father, the poet laureate Cecil Day-Lewis. They meet Julia Roberts on Broadway and then join her for brunch with champagne. In Venice they moor at the city’s Michelin-starred Hotel Metropole and enjoy a wonderful Bigoli dish from a chef who is described as “an acrobat of flavours”. In Lyon, the pair are faced with a heart-rending choice between Lobster with Calf’s Head or Parmentier of Beef. Tamasin finds alternative recipes to Christmas fare are available in Seafood Spaghetti and Tunisian Orange Cake. 288pp. TRUE CRIME 78653 LACE PAPER PLACEMAT PADS: 48 Place Mats by Pepin van Roojen Based on photos of actual doilies and beautiful lace table linen with tulips or paisley effect designs here are eight each of six designs measuring about 16½” x 11¾” (42x30cm) which separate neatly from the perforated edges of this huge softback. Elegant and disposable for picnics or outdoor eating, they could also be used for giftwrapping, paper crafts, art and framing materials. With black or white backgrounds and rather sepia effect, the texture of the lace is what makes it so attractive, particularly at this large size. £18.98 NOW £7.50 77972 FRENCH GENERAL PARTY PAPERIE: Dinner Party Décor by Ayako Akazawa Inspired by vintage French textiles, the borders are beautiful floral designs in pale grey, red, black and contrasting with the white space on these 12 invitations, 12 envelopes, 12 place cards and 12 menu cards. It is an elegant ensemble of dinner party décor to bring a special flourish and elegance to your dinner table. Could also be used for any party or gathering. Please join us... Place, Date, Time; Our Menu, and blank place cards which could be used for any suitable occasion. And all can be popped in the beautifully decorated envelopes. £10.99 NOW £2.95 78497 FRENCH GENERAL CORRESPONDENCE CARDS by Kaari Meng design French dinner 20 flat Inspired by vintage French fabrics in cool shades of pink, olive, blue and red flowers and in one case a striped pattern, these classic palettes look beautiful on these flat oversized cards, a bit like a postcard, together with thick quality envelopes decorated in a pale vintage fabric with blank space for the address on the front and mock stamp decoration. Perfect for thank-yous, invitations and correspondence. Boxed import. cards and 20 Envelopes. £10.99 NOW £4.25 78076 HOME DISTILLER’S HANDBOOK by Matthew Teacher Make your own whisky and Bourbon blends, infused spirits and cordials and maybe even create your own signature blend. Try Smoked Bacon Bourbon, October Apple Liqueur, Horseradish Vodka, Silver Kiwi Strawberry Tequila, Cucumber Gin, Cherry Whisky, Blueberry Bourbon, Jalapeño and Lime Vodka, Spiced Pumpkin Vodka or a Strawberry Rosemary Cordial. 50 recipes, no equipment required, step-by-step we are taken through the process of creating unique and delicious alcoholic infusions, cordials and crèmes. Fabulous quotations, big colourful photographs and graphics. Small paperback, 144pp. £9.99 NOW £4 78170 ICES AND ICE CREAMS by Agnes Marshall Marshall’s Book of Ices was published in 1883 and this compilation collects her most mouthwatering recipes for the modern cook to try. Ice cream was often served semi-frozen as ice preserved from the winter freeze was an expensive commodity and its temperature had to be maintained with lashings of salt. Cream ices include Blackcurrant, Brown Bread, Gooseberry, Kirsch, Chocolate, Maraschino and Walnut. Water ices can be made with fruit syrups, jams or fruit purees, or mixed with wine or spirits to create a sorbet, and variations include Mousses, soufflés and dressed ices. 122pp, glossary. £9.99 NOW £4.75 Born in Los Angeles in 1948, Ellroy is the author of The Black Dahlia, The Big Nowhere, LA Confidential and White Jazz known as the LA Quartet. Ugly, beautiful, reprehensible and moving, this is a hard book to forget. The year was 1958. Jean Hilliker has divorced her fastbuck hustler husband and resurrected her maiden name. Her son James was 10 years old. He hated and lusted for his mother and “summoned her dead”. She was murdered three months later. Ellroy unsparingly describes his shattered childhood, his delinquent teens, his writing life, love affairs and marriages, nervous breakdown and the beginning of a relationship with an extraordinary woman who may just be the long-sought Her. 203pp. £16.99 NOW £3 78008 ART OF BETRAYAL: The Secret History of MI6 by Gordon Corera A former MI6 officer, one of the few to have risen to become ‘C’ or Chief of the Service, takes pleasure in recounting a story with a playful twinkle in his eye. James Bond, John Le Carré’s novels, his tale illustrates how fact and fiction have commingled. The story centres on Britain’s overseas intelligence service MI6, but some characters find their homes in its sister service, the domestic security agency MI5, the CIA, and its deadly rival, the KGB. The grand dramas of the Cold War, the rise and fall of the Berlin Wall, the Cuban Missile Crisis, the September 2001 attacks and the Iraq War are the backdrops for the human stories of our selected spies. At the heart of the book lie the personal accounts. Remainder mark. 481pp in paperback, photos. $18.95 NOW £5 77170 DID SHE KILL HIM? A Victorian Tale of Deception Adultery and Arsenic by Kate Colquhoun The details of this account, and all italicised speech, are taken from primary records, court transcripts and Florence Maybrick’s own emotionally charged memoir. During the summer of 1889, the young Southern belle stood trial in Liverpool for the alleged arsenic poisoning of her much older husband, cotton merchant James Maybrick. James was widely believed to be addicted to a number of poisons. Did he have a hand in his own death? His sickroom contained a bottle of meat juice that appeared to have been tampered with, but did it contain arsenic and was there enough to kill a man? Shortly before James’ death, had Florence been conducting an affair? It forced the public to question whether a well-bred lady could harbour such ill-will towards her husband. 419 pages, archive photos. £18.99 NOW £4 76927 WHITE SHOTGUN: The Sicilian Mafia in their Own Words by Attilio Bolzoni An anthology of interviews, court proceedings and transcripts of phone taps of Mafia bosses and foot soldiers. Attilio Bolzoni has been the chief crime correspondent for La Repubblica for many years and has reported upon all aspects of the Mafia and Camorra and associated criminal trials. The voices he has brought together here are from the past 50 years of the Sicilian Mafia, yet they could easily be from a different world. More than just words, Mafia language is an exercise in intelligence, power, threat and honour. 473pp paperback. £12.99 NOW £3 78324 THE SHARPER YOUR KNIFE, THE LESS YOU CRY by Kathleen Flinn Sub-titled ‘Love, Laughter and Tears at the World’s Most Famous Cooking School’ here is a vibrant portrait of Le Cordon Bleu in Paris. In 2003, Kathleen Flinn, a 36 year old American living in London, returned from holiday to find that her corporate job had been terminated. She cleared out her savings and moved to Paris to pursue a dream, a diploma at the famed Le Cordon Bleu Cooking School. A unique insider look amid battles with demanding chefs and competitive classmates and her ‘wretchedly inadequate’ French. 286pp with index of recipes, paperback. £12.99 NOW £4 www s. c o m w.. b i b l i o p h i l e b o o k ks WAR MEMOIRS Ten soldiers wisely led will beat a hundred without a head. - Euripides 78594 BOXER’S STORY: Fighting for my Life in the Nazi Camps by Nathan Shapow Nathan Shapow was a member of the Zionist youth movement Beitar in the thirties, and boxed for the sporting organisation Maccabi. When the Nazis occupied his home town of Riga, the Jews were corralled into a Ghetto. Nathan’s fitness kept him alive when the Ghetto police selected the able-bodied men for slave labour, but his mother and brother were deported and he never saw them again. He was later reunited with his father who got away to Israel. Seeing an old girlfriend being deported with her young brother, he impulsively claimed the brother as his own and kept Osha with him throughout the war, saving his life. Nathan became an accomplished food-thief who narrowly escaped death for pilfering on several occasions. His good looks incurred the hatred of Obersturmfu?hrer Hoffman, who one day ordered Nathan to return to his cell. Nathan knew he was going to be killed but overpowered the SS man, grabbing his gun and battering him to death with a stool. Two innocent Jews were hanged for the murder the next day and Shapow reveals that he has never told anyone about the incident until now. He also tells the story of his friendship with the Ghetto Guard Rudi Harr who saved him on several occasions and was casually killed when the whole Ghetto was deported to the Kaiserwald concentration camp. A gripping read. 246pp, photos. £16.99 NOW £5 78431 BICKERSTETH DIARIES 1914-1918 edited by John Bickersteth An imaginatively-edited version of 11 volumes of more than 3,000 pages of diaries of the original work. Ella Bickersteth began to put it together for her six sons because one of them was in Australia at the outbreak of WWI. By the spring of 1915, four of her boys were on active service. We are presented with a vivid mixture of English social, military and family history with graphic accounts of firing squads, trench warfare, narrow escapes, a sensitive chaplain ministers to dying men, long periods of inactivity, sadness at a brother’s death bringing a family more united, and the way an imaginative padre sets about his priestly work at the Front. Interwoven are reflections on church and state politics, theological musings, matter-of-fact detail about a busy vicar’s wife. Third edition, also rare, a 1998 publication of 332 pages with maps. £25 NOW £8 78443 KAISER’S RELUCTANT CONSCRIPT by Dominik Richert As a conscript from Alsace, Dominik Richert realised from the outset of WWI that his family would be at or near the front line. He was a reluctant soldier and his thoughtful memoir gives a lively picture of major events from the rare perspective of an ordinary German soldier. In 1914 he was involved in fighting on the French border and then moved to Northern France where he was in combat with Indian troops. In 1915 he was sent to the East and took part in the Battle for Mount Zwinin in the Carpathians and the subsequent invasions of the western parts of the Ukraine and of Eastern Poland. In 1917 he took part in the capture of Riga before returning to the Western Front in 1918 where he saw German tanks in action at the Battle of Villers-Brettoneux. No longer believing in the war, he subsequently crossed No Man’s Land and surrendered to the French, becoming a ‘deserteur alsacienne’. The books ends with his return home early in 1919. He and his wife were deported to do forced labour in Germany in 1943. He survived. 272pp, photos and map. £19.99 NOW £9 76469 LAND GIRLS: Women’s Voices from the Wartime Farm by Joan Mant Drawing on the reminiscences of over 300 ‘Land Girls’, as well as her own experiences, the author brings to life the story of farms during the Second World War. Wages were at subsistence levels and, in most cases, living conditions were Spartan. Those who had volunteered expecting a bucolic life of jolly hay-making were quickly pitch-forked into reality. Eating raw potatoes, keeping clean by bathing in milk sterilisers, and starting work at 4 a.m. were common conditions. Accidents, sometimes fatal, added to the hazards endured. Yet throughout these moving accounts of their lives runs a common thread of humour, camaraderie and pride. 183 pages, photos in colour and sepia. £16.99 NOW £4 77677 THIS MAN’S ARMY: A War in Fifty-Odd Sonnets by John Allan Wyeth We herald the reappearance of this long lost, valuable piece of American historical literature. First published in 1928, it represents the beginning of a promising literary career of John Allan Wyeth (1894-1981), a Princetoneducated French interpreter in the American Expeditionary Force’s Thirty-Third Division. It is an autobiographical account of his service in France and Belgium from 1917 to 1919, detailing his duties as interpreter, messenger and occasionally sentry while travelling town by town towards the German Hindenburg line. He never doubts the eventual American victory yet is keenly aware of the brutality of combat. 60 page paperback reprint. Glossary. £18.95 NOW £5 78276 ABDUCTING A GENERAL by Patrick Leigh Fermor Amazingly, the author and his accomplice, Billy Moss, both attached to Britain’s Special Operations Executive (SOE) and dressed as German military police, succeeded in smuggling the kidnapped General Kreipe though twenty-two German checkpoints, pulling him below the window level, with a dagger at his throat and hands clamped over his mouth whenever Germans were nearby. This audacious real life adventure took place in Crete in 1944, in the hope that the moral damage inflicted on the Germans by the loss of their General would be traumatic. The last checkpoint had been the worst as there were a large number of German soldiers as well as the sentries, but then they were waved through. This exciting read, in addition to the kidnap account, contains nine War Reports submitted at the time by the author together with a guide to the abduction route, enabling the modern visitor to Crete to relive the experience. 206pp, b/w illus. £20 NOW £8 76470 LIVING ON THE HOME FRONT by Megan Westley Megan Westley decided to spend a year “living on the Home Front”, throwing herself into wartime cooking and rationing levels and espousing the mottos of “Dig for Victory” and “Make Do and Mend”, sacrificing TV and modern electrical appliances, even recreating an air raid! She divides the book into six chapters to cover the war’s six year span and divides up her 12 month Home Front experience into the six chapters to compare and contrast her experiences with what was actually happening during the war itself. Authentic wartime recipes and mending and making. 100 b/w photos. 224pp. £20 NOW £3.50 77156 MEMOIRS OF A BRITISH AGENT by R.H. Bruce Lockhart ! An immediate classic on publication in 1934, this book is both a unique eyewitness account of Revolutionary Russia. Bruce Lockhart was Acting Consul General in Moscow when the first revolution broke out in 1917. Sent home because of an affair with a married woman, he returned to Russia the following year as Head of the British Mission to the Bolsheviks. His graphic first-hand description of the Moscow of 1918, frequent encounters with Lenin, Trotsky and the other architects of the Revolution, his experiences as a prisoner in the famous Loubianka Prison all combine as a fascinating picture of one man present at history in the making. 355pp, paperback, photos. £14.99 NOW £3.75 77193 HOW BRITAIN KEPT CALM AND CARRIED ON: Real-Life Stories from the Home Front edited by Anton Rippon There are tales from men, women and children from all walks of life, from the Blitz to the Home Guard, from blackouts to unexploded bombs and from Bermondsey to Burma. Our favourite is the description of the author’s Gran when the Luftwaffe bombed Spalding Liberal Club, a few yards from where she lived. No-one had built an air-raid shelter so, when the bombing started, the whole family crammed themselves under the grand piano which took up most of the dining-room. All except old Gran. She refused to indulge in such an indignity and sat in her usual chair, defying Hitler to do his worst. 223 pages, line drawings. £14.99 NOW £4 77463 BLITZ KIDS: The Children’s War Against Hitler by Sean Longden Thousands of children in World War II made key contributions to the war effort. In an act of extraordinary heroism 16-year old canteen assistant Tommy Brown rescued code books from a sinking submarine that helped to break the Enigma code. On the Home Front, 16-year old Peter Richards delivered the telegrams that brought news of a death, and the grief and courage of parents receiving the terrible piece of paper is vividly described. Anne Paton’s father was chief engineer on the construction of the Mulberry Harbours used for the invasion, and when Anne noticed that the au pair was eavesdropping on every phone conversation, she took action. 541pp, photos. £20 NOW £6 77645 CAPTAIN CONAN by Roger Vercel Facsimile reprint of the 1935 original translation of the novel. The book follows the exploits of a French Commando unit attacking Bulgarian outposts along the Romanian border. The unit is led by the 23 year old Captain Conan, a haberdasher’s son, who finds his calling as a fearless killer ready to crawl through barbed wire and slit the throats of his enemies on midnight raids. Conan is loyal only to his men, as all notions of patriotism are lost in the place of the fraternity and brutality needed for survival and success. News of the Armistice is slow to reach the Bulgarian front, and when it comes it changes little. Conan’s soldiers have become murderers, thieves and rapists, and Conan himself is charged with injuring his lover’s husband, a Romanian major. Conan leaves Bucharest when the French are called to combat Lenin and Trotsky’s guerrilla forces along the Ukrainian border. Maps, 296pp, paperback. Remainder mark. £18.95 NOW £5 77991 BOMB GIRLS by Jacky Hyams Rarely spoken about before, here are the intimate and personal stories of an unforgettable group of women. They worked round the clock often exposed to toxic, lethal chemicals. A factory accident could mean blindness, loss of limbs or worse. Frequently their male bosses were coarse and unsympathetic. Cheerfully ignoring the dangers and the exhaustion, bombing, rationing and separation, these women clocked in daily to work in the vast munitions factories, helping to make the explosives, bullets, shells, bombs and war machines that would ensure victory. 214pp, paperback, photos. £7.99 NOW £4 77676 THE SOMME INCLUDING ALSO THE COWARD by A. D. Gristwood First published in London in 1927. Heavily autobiographical and much influenced by H. G. Wells, the tales of World War I combat of a reluctant infantryman in the London Rifle Brigade are rife with acts of unheroic self-preservation, fear, bitterness and hopelessness. The Somme centres on a futile attack in 1916 on the Western Front. The uncourageous behaviour of wounded protagonist Tom Everitt both in and out of combat reflects Gristwood’s assessment of the weak mettle of British forces. In The Coward, a soldier commits an act of self-mutilation to escape combat duty, an offence punishable by death. With discovered information about Gristwood. 189pp, paperback. £18.95 NOW £5 77683 ZERO HOUR by George Grabenhorst An autobiographical novel of World War One experiences in the German ranks, the novel equates duty with camaraderie, and is experienced here through the keen eyes of Hans Volkenborn. Grabenhorst recalls specifics of battlefield action on the Western Front with a visceral language that still resonates today. Of particular historical importance are accounts of combat in the Ypres campaign in 1917 and the futile clashes in the woods of Avelui in Northern France the following summer as German hopes for victory faded. The novel’s greatest distinction lies with the vivid description of shellshock, in this case the result of being briefly buried alive by a mortar explosion. The condition ultimately engulfs Volkenborn’s ailing psyche and leaves him tormented, isolated and blinded at the war’s end. First published in 1928. Apologies for printing error on page 216. Facsimile reprint, paperback, 306pp. £18.95 NOW £5 78068 GERMANS WE TRUSTED by Pamela Howe Taylor Introduced by Douglas Hurd, this inspiring story of 36 friendships between British citizens and German prisoners of war focuses on one of the lesser known aspects of wartime life. A year after VE Day there were still 400,000 German POWs in Britain, and friendship and trust often grew up across the barrier of official enmity. The story starts in Skipton in north Yorkshire, where Earle Walls decided to take a job in Germany overseeing the clearing of waterways. Picking up a hitchhiker against regulations on a German road, he found to his astonishment that the man had a son in a POW camp near his home town. The young man went to visit Earle’s family on Sunday afternoons and the friendship lasted 40 years. Johannes Baumann, an accomplished church musician, was in the same camp and was allowed to play in the Skipton churches. One member of the congregation said, “Ba gum, lad, thou’s played afore!” 208pp, paperback, photos in b/w and colour. £13.50 NOW £5 78231 UNDER THE QUEEN’S COLOURS: Voices From the Forces 19522012 by Penny Legg Talking to anyone who has served in the Armed Forces will bring forth a series of anecdotes and recollections, some thoughtful, others hilarious. This collection of reminiscences from the 1950s onwards contains a cornucopia of delights, including those from a soldier in the Australian Army serving in Malaya who, together with his mate, was dumped near an airstrip to await a helicopter. Then came the helicopter ride, and when one noticed a poisonous snake had sneaked aboard they quickly sobered up. Another anecdote, from a man recalling his National Service, tells how he managed to wangle his way into the navy. ‘All the nice girls love a sailor’. Took me months to realise it wasn’t the nice girls we wanted.’ Candid stories from male and female service personnel demonstrate just how much we owe our soldiers, sailors and airmen. 272pp, colour and b/w illus. £18.99 NOW £6 76833 WOMAN AT THE FRONT: Memoirs of an ATS Girl by Sylvia Wild Here is the story of a young South Londoner working for the Senior Royal Engineer Officers who were initially developing the D-day plans concerning ports, docks, harbours and railways as part of Operation Overlord, followed by the reinstatement of these services throughout Northern France into Belgium and finally into Germany. It was a predominantly male environment and this memoir offers a fascinating insight into Sylvia's world. 126pp, paperback, illus. £12.99 NOW £3 78296 FORCE BENEDICT by Eric Carter If Murmansk fell it could have altered the whole outcome of the war. It was the only USSR post not under Nazi occupation, and so in 1941 Winston Churchill sanctioned a secret mission, code-named Force Benedict. One of the surviving members is Eric Carter. The first part of the journey to Murmansk was more like a cruise; a steward brought the team morning tea, the food was plentiful and there were even improvised concerts. The Russians were impressed at the speed the British engineering party worked to assemble the planes; in just nine days 15 crated Hurricanes were erected and ready for flying by Eric and the team. The team’s mission was to protect Murmansk, to pit their Hurricanes against the Messerschmitts. As Eric watched, the tracer and incendiary hit the plane, and white glycol poured from the aircraft, followed by black smoke. The pilot dropped from the plane, canopy billowing. If the German did make it alive it was likely he would be taken as a prisoner of war by the Russians. Details the secret mission in Murmansk, the largest city north of the Arctic Circle. Previously unseen photos and documents. 306pp. £20 NOW £6 27 MODERN HISTORY AND CURRENT AFFAIRS Political necessities sometimes turn out to be political mistakes. - Bernard Shaw 78841 WHITE HOUSE DIARY by Jimmy Carter Each day during his presidency of the United States of America, Jimmy Carter made several entries in a private diary. He wrote unvarnished assessments of cabinet members, congressmen and foreign leaders and narrated the progress of secret negotiations such as those that led to the Camp David Accords. He records his thoughts, impressions, delights and frustrations. When his four year term came to an end in early 1981, the diary amounted to more than 5000 pages. This extraordinary document has never been made public, until now. Bibliophile has acquired the US first edition in glamorous hardback, 2010. By selecting the most illuminating and relevant entries, Jimmy Carter provides an astonishingly intimate view of his presidency, day by day. We see his forceful advocacy for sustainable energy, nuclear containment, human rights and peace in the Middle East and witness his interactions with Ted Kennedy, Henry Kissinger, Joe Biden, Anwar Sadat and Menachem Begin. We get inside the story of his so-called ‘malaise speech’, his bruising battle for the 1980 Democratic nomination and his relentless efforts to resolve the Iranian Hostage Crisis. Remarkably we also get his retrospective comments more than 30 years after the fact with the annotations and candid reflections added for this edition. 572pp, many photos. $30 NOW £8 78928 LAST EMPIRE: The Final Days of the Soviet Union by Serhii Plokhy On Christmas Day 1991, Mikhail Gorbachev resigned as President of the Soviet Union. By the next day, the USSR was officially no more and the USA had emerged as the world’s sole superpower. Here is a page-turning account of the preceding five months drama filled with failed coups d’états and political intrigue. Plokhy shattered the established myths of 1991 and argues that contrary to the triumphalist Western narrative, George W. Bush desperately wanted to preserve the Soviet Union and keep Gorbachev in power, and that it was Ukraine and not the US that played the key role in the collapse of the Soviet Union. The consequences are still being felt in Crimea, Russia, the US and Europe today and will help anyone seeking to make sense of current international politics. 489pp, eight pages of photos plus map of the Cold War rivalry c.1980. £25 NOW £8 77640 BELARUS: The Last European Dictatorship by Andrew Wilson The first book in English to explore Belarus’s complicated road to nationhood and to examine in detail its politics and economics since 1991. Wilson focuses particular attention on Aliaksandr Lukashenka’s surprising longevity as President despite human rights abuses and involvement in yet another rigged election in December 2010. He looks at Belarusian history as a series of false starts in the medieval and pre-modern periods, and at the many rival versions of Belarusian identity, culminating in the Soviet Belarusian Project and the establishment of the current borders of Belarus during WWII. He looks at the on-off relationship with Russia, its simultaneous attempts to play a game of balance in the no-man’s-and between Russia and the West, and how, paradoxically, Belarus is at last becoming a true nation under the rule of Europe’s ‘last dictator’. 304pp, illus and maps. £20 NOW £5 78162 COAL: A HUMAN HISTORY by Barbara Freese In the 21st century coal is regarded as a threat to the environment, but this superb history shows how it changed the world in the 19th century and laid the basis for the civilized comforts we now take for granted. As one writer put it: “With Coal, we have light, strength, power, wealth and civilization; without Coal we have darkness, weakness, poverty and barbarism.” This book starts in Britain which for centuries led the world in coal production and during the Industrial Revolution became the most powerful force on the planet. It then moves to the United States, where coal was central to the taming of the wilderness and cities like Pittsburgh, described by Antony Trollope as the blackest place he had ever seen, were permanently shrouded in dense smoke. The book ends in China, where coal was described by Marco Polo in the 14th century as “a sort of black stone”. The author describes the impact of climate change legislation on the industry and on politics. 304pp, paperback. £9.99 NOW £4.75 58089 BRITISH SHIPBUILDING AND THE STATE SINCE 1918 by Lewis Johnman and Hugh Murphy This book is the first to provide an industry analysis of the period, blending the records of central government with those of the Shipbuilding Employers’ Federation and the Shipbuilding Conference, as well as records from individual yards, technical societies and the trade press. All abbreviations are explained at the outset such as RMSP for Royal Mail Steam Packet Limited. With list of templates and 40 tables. 306pp in large softback. $27.95 NOW £1.75 28 Modern History continued 78368 LEISURE IN POSTWAR BRITAIN by Stuart Hylton Are we having fun yet? This is the question that the author asks in each chapter as he looks at some of the ways in which post-war Britain spends its leisure time, and also the ways in which the powers-that-be try to thwart it. Comics, for instance. American comics first appeared in Britain in 1947 and were completely different to our more innocent ones. With looks at leisure topics such as Holidays (which are not for fun, ‘The useful purpose they serve is to reconcile you to the fact that the rest of your life is not really as bad as you imagine it to be’), Food, Motoring, Television and Bad Fun, this is a nostalgic, wry account of the British character and our success, or lack of it, at having fun. Paperback. 158pp, photos, £16.99 NOW £5 78177 RETURN FROM THE NATIVES: How Margaret Mead Won the Second World War and Lost the Cold War by Peter Mandler Margaret Mead is one of the biggest names in 20th century cultural anthropology, a pioneer whose fieldwork in Samoa was hugely influential, though her emphasis on nurture rather than nature has been challenged. From the 1930s to the 1950s Mead worked on problems of international relations, in the first place trying to prevent the outbreak of World War II and then studying how to defeat the Germans and Japanese. After the war the task was to come to terms with the Russians and the Chinese as the Cold War began. At the beginning of this period conflicts were assumed to be between nations, but by the time of Mead’s death in 1978 the dividing lines were drawn differently, focusing on equality of the sexes and between majority and minority ethnic groups. This study of Mead’s role in World War II and the Cold War has implications for the involvement of social scientists with the U.S. Government and its policy, particularly in Vietnam. Mead’s relations with her three husbands and with her lover Ruth Benedict also impacted on her thinking. 366pp, photos. £30 NOW £6 78180 STREET FIGHTING YEARS: An Autobiography of the 60s by Tariq Ali Tariq Ali is a writer and filmmaker who revisits his formative years as a young radical in this new edition of his 60s memoirs. His story moves between London, Paris and Berlin, Vietnam and Bolivia, encountering along the way Malcolm X, Bertrand Russell, Marlon Brando, John Lennon, Yoko Ono, Henry Kissinger and Mick Jagger. A new introduction has been added as well as an interview with John Lennon and Yoko Ono. ‘In the sense that this book is a critique of the efforts of the Western political system it is uncomplimentary to many who held the reins of power in this period...The assertion that Kim Il Sung liquidated political refugees is defamatory of Sung if he is still living... The critique of Cuba prior to the Revolution is defamatory of Batista... , Peter Carter-Ruck. Read on at your peril! Tariq Ali’s passion and vim made him the symbol of the spirit of ’68. 403pp, paperback, 24 pages of photos. £12.99 NOW £5 78290 BORDERLAND: A Journey Through the History of Ukraine by Anna Reid Fully updated and highly acclaimed on Radio 4. Centre of the first great Slav civilisation in the 10th century, then divided between warring neighbours for a millennium, Ukraine finally won independence with the collapse of the Soviet Union. Threatened by Moscow, misunderstood in the West, Ukraine hangs once more in the balance. Speaking to pro-democracy activists and pro-Russia militiamen, peasants and miners, survivors of Hitler’s Holocaust and Stalin’s famine, Anna Reid combines history and travel writing to unpick the history of this bloody and complex borderland. 341pp, paperback, photos. £10.99 NOW £5.50 78369 LITTLE BOOK OF THE 1960s by Dee Gordon Britain may have lost almost all of the Empire by the 1960s, but we had gained mini-skirts, boutiques, discos, the Beatles, the Stones, the Notting Hill Carnival, mods and rockers knocking merry hell out of each other at the seaside and unprecedented conflict between the generations. “Swinging London” encapsulated much of all this, being memorably described in May 1966 by the New York Times as “the new Sodom and Gomorrah”, which seems a little harsh! Southend-on-Sea based author Dee Gordon was there and yes, she can remember it! Her book is nostalgia with a difference, based as it is on quirky facts and surprising data from the 1960s, with a discerning eye for the bizarre, frivolous and funny. Arranged under 11 chapters such as Music and Musicians, Fashion and Style, Food and Drink, Science and Technology and Travel and Transport, the sights, sounds, lifestyle - in fact the whole 1960s experience can be relived through its pages, but be warned, a sense of humour is essential. Groovy stuff in 192pp, b/w illus. £9.99 NOW £3.50 76840 BRIGHT YOUNG THINGS: Life in the Roaring Twenties by Alison Maloney Readers can step into a time of hot jazz and even hotter all-night dance halls, as the author shares the gossip in a scintillating celebration of a truly iconic decade. Read all about high society’s scandalous exploits, fresh new fashions, the Charleston dance craze, costume parties, talking movies and, of course, the feisty flapper. Take, for instance, the reputation of the American actress Tallulah Bankhead. She aroused the interest of MI5, who suspected her of seducing schoolboys! 192 pages, bespoke illus and list of websites. £9.99 NOW £4 ORDER HOTLINE: 020 74 74 24 74 76824 LIFE IN 1940s LONDON by Mike Hutton The war gave birth to a heady brew of bravery, fear, stoicism, cowardice and a vast increase in crime - all set to a background of popular music from the likes of Vera Lynn and Glenn Miller. Thousands of lower income Londoners sheltered from the bombs each night on the platforms of the underground, and came out in the morning to find their homes gone, while the privileged few enjoyed the relative comfort of the capital’s poshest hotels. After the war, servicemen returned home as strangers, often to resentful wives. A royal wedding and the 1948 Olympics cheered up the public, but they still had to cope with the continuing grinding austerity of post-war rationing and food shortages. Then, too, the first influx of West Indian immigrants caused anger. Difficult times realistically described. 220 pages, archive photos. £20 NOW £3.50 78484 BANG! A HISTORY OF BRITAIN IN THE 1980s by Graham Stewart The paradox of the 80s is simply put. Some Britons rioted and went on protest marches while others hung patriotic bunting and bought shares in British Telecom. Margaret Thatcher’s Downing Street tenure (1979-1990) almost perfectly framed the 1980s as if it were her own. The book encompasses politics, economics, the arts and society. Here is the Falklands War, the miners’ strike, a re-escalation of troubles in Northern Ireland, the Brighton bombing of the entire Cabinet, also mass privatisation of state-owned industries and the deregulation of financial markets, a cultural ferment, the emergence of house music and the growth of alternative comedy. An illuminating reminder of a decade that sowed the seeds of modern Britain. 544 paperback pages, colour and b/w photos. £12.99 NOW £4.75 77365 CHINESE WHISPERS by Ben Chu Chinese people don’t care about political freedom, so why is the country’s Internet exploding with anti-regime dissent? China will one day rule the world, so why do the country’s political leaders feel so insecure? Perhaps it is time to stop engaging in a centuries-old game of Chinese Whispers in which the facts have become more distorted in the telling. Ben Chu examines the myths and forces us to question everything we thought about China in his surprising and provocative insight into China today. 280pp, paperback. £8.99 NOW £3 76224 MAFIA STATE: How One Reporter Became an Enemy of The Brutal New Russia by Luke Harding Soon after the start of Luke Harding’s posting as The Guardian’s man in Moscow, an article criticising Putin appeared in the paper under Harding’s name. Harding was summoned for interrogation by the F.S.B. His four years of being treated as an enemy of Russia had begun. When Harding attends the funeral of the murdered dissident lawyer Markelov he meets Natasha Estemirova, head of the human rights group in Grozny. Harding keeps up the mockery of Moscow in The Guardian. Harding trawls the documents for material, finally discovering damning evidence about Litvinenko and the F.S.B.’s intimidating home visits. Finally he is expelled, but not before he has shaken up the Russian propaganda machine. 310pp, colour photos. £20 NOW £4 76509 KEEPING UP WITH THE GERMANS: A History of Anglo-German Encounters by Philip Oltermann This unusual book interweaves memoir and history to look at eight historical encounters between English and German people from the last 200 years. Helmut Kohl tries to explain German cuisine to Margaret Thatcher, Theodor Adorno clashes with A. J. Ayer over jazz, the Mini plays catch-up with the Volkswagen Beetle, Dada artist Kurt Schwitters rediscovers German Romanticism in the Lake District and Joe Strummer has an unlikely brush with the Baader-Meinhof gang. 268 softback pages. 76908 FAREWELL THE TRUMPETS: An Imperial Retreat by Jan Morris The Pax Britannica trilogy by acclaimed historian Jan Morris published between 1968 and 1978 remains to this day the definitive examination of the British Empire from Queen Victoria’s accession in 1837 to 1965. In 1897 the Empire and Britain’s position in the world order appeared unassailable, with many recent gains in Africa, the last unconquered continent. Germany was also busy in Africa, and it had not escaped Britain’s notice that the arms it was stockpiling seemed a little excessive for adventures up the Nile. India and other overseas “possessions” took back their independence, leaving the Commonwealth as a reminder of what had been. Jan Morris chronicles the end of empire in incredible detail. Paperback, 572pp. £12.99 NOW £3.50 76903 DICTATOR’S HANDBOOK Why Bad Behaviour is Almost Always Good Politics by Bruce Bueno de Mesquita and Alastair Smith Whether that coalition is a cabal of five generals, a group of 50 tribal chiefs or 50 million voters, the techniques of persuasion and coercion are the same. Why do leaders who destroy their countries hold power for so long? Why do autocracies have such disastrous economic policies? Why are resource-rich nations often home to deprived populations? Why do “natural disasters” hit poorer nations harder? Why do terrible leaders collect so much in foreign aid? A profoundly necessary portrait of politics and power. 319pp. £18.99 NOW £2.50 77121 COUTURE OR TRADE: An Early Pictorial Record of the London College of Fashion by Helen Reynolds Until the end of the 19th century, London’s fashion industry had produced luxurious hand-made clothing for women of the leisured classes. At that time, however, the West End was suffering from a shortage of skilled employees, and trade was being lost to Paris. The response to this challenge was the founding in 1906 of women’s trade schools, with a needle-trade curriculum devised in close co-operation with leading dressmakers and the exclusive London stores. The London School of Fashion had its origin in three of those schools, in Barrett Street, Shoreditch and Clapham respectively. A vivid insight into the training of the girls, life in the workrooms, the fashion industry’s evolution and, of course, its social history. 124 pages, archive photos. £14.99 NOW £4 77638 ARAFAT AND THE DREAM OF PALESTINE by Bassam Abu Sharif Bassam Abu Sharif was one of the world’s most notorious and dangerous terrorists of the 1960s and 70s, acting as ‘Minister of Propaganda’ for the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP) and as a recruiter for terrorists like Carlos the Jackal. Then in 1972, a bomb was placed in a book sent to him, leaving him half blind, deaf in one ear, and almost fingerless. He aligned himself with Yasser Arafat, eventually becoming one of his closest advisors. In his book he takes us behind the scenes of all the major events in the Middle East during the last 30 years, from the secret caves in the West Bank where Arafat hid on his way to Jerusalem in 1967, to the Peace Negotiations in Oslo in 1993. 260pp. £17.99 NOW £3 76558 FRACTURED TIMES: Culture and Society in the Twentieth Century by Eric Hobsbawm The last book from one of our foremost modern-day thinkers. From communism and extreme nationalism to Dadaism and the emergence of information technology, Hobsbawm explores the lives of forgotten greats, analyses the relationship between art and totalitarianism, and dissects phenomena as diverse as surrealism, the emancipation of women, the American cowboy, Al Qaeda to Frank Zappa. 319 pages. £25 NOW £3.50 ENTERTAINMENT If it be true that good wine needs no bush, ’tis true that a good play needs no epilogue. - William Shakespeare, As You Like It £12.99 NOW £2 76614 MAN WITHOUT A FACE: The Unlikely Rise of Vladimir Putin by Masha Gessen Chapter headings give a flavour: ‘The Autobiography of a Thug’, ‘Once A Spy’, ‘Insatiable Greed’. Having served as Deputy Mayor of St. Petersburg, a brief stint as Director of the Secret Police, the ‘faceless’ creature who Boris Yeltsin and his cronies thought they could mould, in 1999, Vladimir Putin was chosen by the unpopular President. Russia and an infatuated West were determined to see him in the progressive leader role of their dreams, even though with ruthless efficiency Putin dismantled the country’s media, wrested control and wealth from a burgeoning business class, and decimated the fragile mechanisms of democracy. Political rivals and critics have been driven into exile or to the grave. 314pp. $27.95 NOW £5 77458 ARAB UPRISING: The People Want the Fall of the Regime by Jeremy Bowen The desperate act of a young Tunisian man in October 2010 would be the touch-paper that united people in anger and frustration, sparked a series of extraordinary events that was to change the lives of millions. Bowen examines how the unforeseen but highly infectious rebellion shook the Middle East and unseated its dictators, whilst also lifting the lid on the brutal police states, tribal loyalty, the influence of social media and the part played by foreign help. These revolutions are put into in their political context, giving insight into the broader history of the Middle East. 339 pages, colour photos. £20 NOW £5.50 79042 DISNEY MUPPETS CHARACTER ENCYCLOPEDIA by Craig Shemin Afghan Hound, Animal, Baskerville, Behemoth, Bobby Benson’s Baby Band, Bobo, Camilla, Dr Teeth, Fazoobs, the Flying Zucchini Brothers, Fufu, Fozzy Bear, Gladys the Cafeteria Lady, Kermit the Frog, Mad Monty, Miss Piggy, Penguins, Mr Poodle Pants, Sam Eagle, Pigs in Space, the Swedish Chef, Waldorf, to Zoot, plus Muppet food, theatre, backstage, take the best seat in the house. Play the music, light the lights, and meet all the Muppets from the TV series and movies in a book packed with stills, close-ups, fact boxes, sick humour, wild mayhem, digging for dirt in this alien nation which has enchanted us all for many years. Take your seats. 200 colourful pages. £9.99 NOW £5 76584 MUMMY’S BOY: My Autobiography by Larry Lamb A hugely entertaining memoir which tells captivating tales of making it as an actor, breaking out from smalltown life in Essex, finding himself a new life starring on Broadway, in Hollywood, in leading roles in Eastenders and Gavin & Stacey. 16 pages of colour and sepia photos and short little anecdotal chapters with headings like Escape from College, Coming Home for Christmas, After Germany and Bluebell to Broadway. 350pp in paperback. £7.99 NOW £2 BIBLIOPHILE BOOKS UNIT 5 DATAPOINT, 6 SOUTH CRESCENT, LONDON E16 4TL TEL: 020 74 74 24 74 78250 A FUNNY WAY TO MAKE A LIVING! by Bill Pertwee Bill Pertwee’s remarkably varied career has included over a thousand radio broadcasts including cult classics Beyond Our Ken and Round the Horne, TV appearances and theatre appearances in the West End including the recordbreaking Run For Your Wife. Born in Amsterdam in 1926, Bill has farmed, helped build Spitfire planes, acted as a baggage boy on the 1946 Indian cricket tour of England, and worked as a window cleaner. In 1954 he offered Beryl Reid some comedy material and ended up on stage in her revue. He rubbed shoulders with great names like Kenneth Williams, Spike Milligan, Ken Horne, Michael Denison, Dulcie Gray, Derek Nimmo, Donald Sinden and has played cricket with Colin Cowdrey and Bill Edrich. He played the excitable Chief Air Raid Warden Hodges for the full nine year run of Dad’s Army. Humorous and entertaining, 240pp, softback, photos. £10.99 NOW £3.50 78251 STARS IN BATTLEDRESS: The Story of Service Entertainers in World War II by Bill Pertwee This entertaining book contains memories of dozens of household names who began or furthered their entertainment careers during the war, complete with anecdotes from Bill Pertwee. Amongst the many artists featured are Harry Secombe, Kenneth Connor, Spike Milligan, Charlie Chester, Frankie Howerd, Janet Brown, Jon Pertwee and Reg Varney. Bryan Forbes was recovering from pneumonia in Anglesey when he received a telegram telling him to report immediately to a War Office department. He had been selected to join the Army Theatre Unit, where informality was the order of the day. Paperback. 232pp. Photos. £7.99 NOW £3.50 76610 FULL SERVICE by Scotty Bowers and Lionel Friedberg ‘His startling memoir includes great figures like Spencer Tracy and Katherine Hepburn. Scotty doesn’t lie - the stars sometimes do - and he knows everybody.’ - Gore Vidal. An unknown Hollywood legend, at a time when sex outside marriage was taboo, Scotty Bowers built up a reputation as the guy who would discretely fix you up with the person of your dreams. He developed a long term friendship with Katherine Hepburn and set her up with young women that she wanted to sleep with. He bedded Vivienne Leigh while her husband Laurence Olivier was out of town, and when Edith Piaf played the Mocambo Club in LA, Scotty had sex with her almost every night. Vincent Price, the Duke and Duchess of Windsor, Cary Grant, Cole Porter, Rock Hudson, Charles Laughton are among the list he ‘fixed’. 286 pages packed with salacious detail, studio gossip, the vice squad, royal affairs and more. $25 NOW £5.50 76776 DORIS DAY: All-American Girl: Book and Six Prints by Helen Akitt More than half Day’s films achieved a Top 10 box office ranking, but Day’s career suffered when she rejected the Mrs Robinson role in The Graduate. She suddenly found herself at the centre of a different kind of media attention when her husband died and she discovered that he and his business partner had left her with huge debts. In later life Day has continued to a receive awards and has released old recordings of never-issued tracks devoting herself in private life to animal welfare. Full filmography. Six 8" x 10" prints, four in colour. 64pp, softback, photos. ONLY £4 77248 TASCHEN’S FAVORITE TV SHOWS: The Top Shows of the Last 25 Years by Jürgen Müller ! Downton Abbey, The Simpsons, Seinfeld, The X-Files, Buffy, Ally McBeal, The Sopranos, The West Wing, CSI, Six Feet Under, Band of Brothers, 24, Lost, Desperate Housewives, Damages, House of Cards and more all covered and pictured in colour. In the last decade, shows like Breaking Bad, Borgen and Mad Men have toppled cinema from its leading position in the popular culture universe and ushered in a whole new level of small screen excellence and appreciation. With ambition to tear down the barriers around commercial television, networks such as HBO, AMC, and ABC have launched a new era of cinematic narrative, while cable TV networks, DVDs, and the Internet have brought about new, flexible ways of watching and engaging. Alongside a wealth of stills, this overview of the TV revolution presents the most important and successful series of the last 25 years, from David Lynch’s groundbreaking masterpiece Twin Peaks to current highlights like Game of Thrones, Girls and House of Cards. Find all of the facts about creators, authors and actors, influences and backgrounds, sequels and spinoffs. New from Taschen, 13" x 9.9", 744 pages. ONLY £38 77990 BENEDICT CUMBERBATCH: The Biography by Justin Lewis A 2014 publication about the talented young actor and star of the ‘Sherlock’ series and The Imitation Game film. Benedict Cumberbatch has played detective and monster, barrister and scientist, politician and painter, comic and spy. Still only in his 30s, he is excelling in theatre, television, radio and cinema with a string of starring and supporting roles from Stephen Hawking to William Pitt the Younger to Frankenstein and most recently Sherlock Holmes. His biographer traces his career from his early promise in Harrow school plays, Sir Tom Stoppard’s adaptation of Parade’s End on TV and to feature films. Colour photos, 278pp. £17.99 NOW £4.75 www.bibliophilebooks.com Entertainment continued 77541 JOHN GIELGUD: Matinee Idol to Movie Star by Jonathan Croall Within British theatre John Gielgud stood centre stage. A matinée idol in his 20s, he was acclaimed as the greatest classical actor of the 20th century and the supreme interpreter of Shakespeare. But he was also hugely influential as a director, an actor-manager, and a nurturer of young talent. From his ground-breaking Hamlet at the age of 26, to his later flowering in plays by Pinter, Storey, Bond and Bennett, the book offers a reassessment of his complex relationship with his great rival Laurence Olivier. Chronicled too are his appearances on Broadway, including the record-breaking runs of Hamlet and his one-man Shakespeare production, Ages of Man. Like many other gay men John Gielgud had to live a double life, at least outside the theatre. As well as many frank letters to his lovers, the book includes the first full and accurate account of his arrest and its aftermath. 720 pages, archive photos, chronology. £30 NOW £6 77639 AVA GARDNER: The Secret Conversations by Peter Evans and Ava Gardner Born poor in rural North Carolina, Ava Gardner was given a Hollywood tryout thanks to a stunning photo of her displayed in a shop window. Not long after arriving in Hollywood, she caught the eye of Mickey Rooney, a womaniser so notorious that even his mother warned Gardner about him. They married, but the marriage lasted only a year. She then married band leader and clarinettist Artie Shaw, but that marriage too lasted only about a year. She carried on a passionate affair with Howard Hughes but didn’t love him she said. The third marriage was a tempestuous one to Frank Sinatra. The star of ‘Showboat’, ‘The Barefoot Contessa’ and ‘On The Beach’ backed out and halted the publication of this book. 292pp, photos. $26 NOW £6.50 77793 TREASURES OF NOEL COWARD: Book and DVD by Barry Day Barry Day is the world’s foremost authority on Coward. Here, he amasses facsimile reproductions of unpublished photos from the Noël Coward archive, handwritten letters, lyrics, song sheets and more. Here, recounted in words, photographs and personal memorabilia, is how the boy from the London suburbs conquered the world with his wit, charm and - as he himself modestly put it star quality. To begin with, the sobriquet ‘The Master’ was said slightly tongue-in-cheek, and Noël accepted it benignly in that spirit. No one in the 20th century achieved so much in so many different aspects of the arts. Here he is in all his glory. 63 pages 29cm by 25cm with padded covers, colour and b/w photographs, in a strong slip-case, plus 21 removable facsimile documents from Coward’s personal collection including a telegram to Cairo, handwritten letters, colour sketches of costumes, theatre handbills, prayer card, lyrics and song sheets plus a fantastic colour 27" wide x 19" high Brief Encounter (David Lean) film poster and FREE DVD featuring previously unreleased home movie footage of him and his friends, songs, and an interview with David Frost. £35 NOW £12 CHILDREN’S I think we dream so we don’t have to be apart for so long. If we’re in each other’s dreams, we can be together all the time. - A.A. Milne, Winnie-the-Pooh 78778 THE ABOMINABLES by Eva Ibbotson ‘Before J. K. Rowling, there was Eva Ibbotson’ - The Telegraph. The Newcastle writer died in 2010 and from this beloved author came this one last charming novel. When a gentle family of yetis is forced out of their Himalayan paradise by tourism, it is the beginning of an unforgettable road trip adventure. Across Asia and Europe they travel in search of a new home. They find themselves performing a mountain rescue in the Alps and interrupting a bullfight in Spain, before making their way to an ancestral estate in England where they believe they have discovered their new paradise. What they have actually found is the playground of big-game hunters who have their sights on the most exotic prey of them all - the Abominable Snowmen. With unforgettable characters and thoughtful messages about animal cruelty, these haunting pen and ink illustrations are by Fiona Robinson. Young Con and Ellen take these educated and civilised yetis across Europe to Lady Agatha’s home in England. Utterly charming beautifully made hardback. Tiny remainder mark. Ages 8-11. 260pp. £10.99 NOW £6 79010 DINOSAURS LOVE UNDERPANTS: Book and Toy by Claire Freedman and Ben Cort Look out! These dinosaurs are after your underpants! Wage your own very Mighty Pants War with this hilarious book and toy set. The Pantastic dinosaur toy measures 6" tall, is blue stripy, has a cheeky grin, and, inevitably, Stone Age Y-front bright green underpants on! With CE safety tag on the toy, and the mini hardback book is a bold picture book thriller. Suit ages 2-5. £12.99 NOW £6 ww i b l i o pfr hom i l e ball ook st. cBib o mliophile! w.. bYEAR ks HAPPY w NEW a from at Bibliophile! 78807 HEAP HOUSE by Edward Carey ‘Heap House torques and tempers our memories of Dickensian London into a singularly jaunty and creepy tale of agreeable misfits.’ Young Clod is an Iremonger who lives at Heap House, his family’s mansion at the centre of the Heaps, a vast sea of lost and discarded items which has been known to swallow people alive. An odd family, each the owner of a Birth Object they must keep with them at all times, Clod’s gift and his curse is that he can hear all of the objects of Heap House whispering. A storm is brewing and many objects are showing strange signs of life. Clod is on the cusp of being married off unhappily to his cousin when he meets the plucky orphan servant Lucy Pennant with whose help he begins to uncover the dark secrets of his family’s empire. The first instalment of a trilogy which can be read alone with 26 artful atmospheric fantastical illustrations of the animal-loving Tummis with his pet seagull and more. Ages 10 and up. 405pp. Remainder mark. £16.99 NOW £4.50 79048 PRECIOUS AND THE MYSTERY OF THE MISSING LION by Alexander McCall Smith A companion to code 79047 Precious and the Mystery of Meerkat Hill (see front cover), a lion is on the loose. Precious Ramotswe is on holiday, staying with her auntie Bee at a safari camp deep in the Botswana countryside. She is excited when a new lion arrives, the actor-lion called Teddy with his own film crew. But when the fourlegged movie star goes missing, the camp is thrown into confusion. Can the young detective and her resourceful new friend Khumo solve the mystery? The search plunges the two young sleuths deep into the jungle where they dodge hippos and crocs and need all the bravery and cleverness they can muster to catch their prize. With charming red, black and white silhouette illustrations. 90 pages. Suit ages ten to adult. £9.99 NOW £4 77573 ANGUS RIDES THE GOODS TRAIN by Alan Durant and Chris Riddell When the goods train, laden with milk and honey and rice, speeds away across land and sea, Angus is full of excitement as he stands beside the driver. But why can’t they stop for those who are hungry and thirsty and need their help? Angus gave honey to the caged bears. He poured water on the roots of the withering trees. When Angus arrived home to his bed, the goods train was empty and Angus was full of joy. Ages 5-8. Big colour softback. £6.99 NOW £2 78088 LEGEND OF LUKE: A Tale of Redwall by Brian Jacques Joined by Trimp the Hedgehog, Dinny Foremole and Gonff, the ever-mischievous Prince of Mousethieves, Martin, embarks on a perilous journey to the Northland shore, where Luke, his father, abandoned him as a child. There within the carcass of a great red ship he finally uncovers what he has been searching for - the true story of the evil pirates Stoat, Vilu Deskar, and the valiant warrior who pursued him relentlessly over the high seas. 374pp, paperback. 78104 NICOLA BAYLEY’S BOOK OF NURSERY RHYMES by Nicola Bayley A classic from 1975 here reissued from the renowned illustrator of The Mousehole Cat. Who Killed Cock Robin?, Mary, Mary Quite Contrary, Old Mother Hubbard, Rub-A-Dub-Dub, Three Men In A Tub, As I Was Going To St Ives I Met A Man With Seven Wives, The Queen of Hearts She Made Some Tarts All On A Summer’s Day, Simple Simon Met a Pieman, There Was An Old Woman Who Lived In A Shoe are among the classic nursery rhymes included. A whole set of seven Monday’s Child Is Fair of Face etc. adorns a double page spread. Very large softback. Colour. £6.99 NOW £3.75 77409 ALICE IN WONDERLAND: Disney Classic by Lewis Carroll and Parragon A modern retelling of this classic with most appealing Disney artworks in big cold colour, this board book even has Alice featured on the cover in a splendid cut-out with twinkly stars. Join her on her adventures with the grinning Cheshire Cat, the Mad Hatter and the ferocious Queen of Hearts in this all-time classic adventure. 70pp, colour. £9.99 NOW £3.50 77237 GRUFFALO WRITING BOX by Julia Donaldson and Axel Scheffler Decorated in the inimitable style, this lovely stationery writing set is a postcard sized box, 2" deep with bright orange satin tie, and a cheeky Gruffalo image inside! ‘I’m the scariest creature in this wood’ says the little mouse. The set comprises 15 sheets of writing paper, 15 envelopes, a pencil, and paw print Gruffalo envelope seals. All colour co-ordinated, this would make a lovely gift for girls and boys and a useful little box after the stationery has been used up. ONLY £4.50 77100 STORIES OF CHILDREN FROM DICKENS retold by Mary Angela Dickens A beautiful facsimile edition containing shortened versions of some of the most famous stories created by Charles Dickens and written by his granddaughter featuring memorable child characters including Tiny Tim, Jenny Wren, Smike, Little Nell, David Copperfield and Oliver Twist. Includes exceptional colour plates and woodcut illustrations by Harold Copping with the text wrapped around them, and all evoking the Victorian hardships, misery and moments of joy. 104pp with an introduction by Percy Fitzgerald. £9.99 NOW £3 76494 HIS SHOES WERE FAR TOO TIGHT by Edward Lear Come inside this book and find poetry to feed your mind, a place to see the world anew, let your imagination stretch and cast a boundless net to catch a trove of laughter just for you. Daniel Pinkwater and Calef Brown have teamed up to champion the value of ridiculousness in Lear’s fresh and joyful poems. Huge pages, colour illus including a charming one of Mr Edward Lear himself (plus cat!) £10.99 NOW £2.25 76492 GIANT BOOK OF GIANTS: With Poster by Saviour Pirotta $8.99 NOW £2.50 77429 WINNIE THE POOH: Disney Classic by A. A. Milne, E. H. Shepard and Parragon 3D giant poster, taller than you are, folded into the inside front cover. Watch it pop up complete with ear wax, toadstools, grub in his belly button, axe, bats for companions, a coin pouch, stubble and warts on his face and earrings in his pointy ears. There are two sturdy eyelets on the poster for secure fastening. Clamber up the beanstalk with Jack, sail the Seven Seas with Sinbad, meet the Curious Giantess. Pull the tabs and lift the flaps to find hidden treasures in the book. 4+, colour. £9.99 NOW £3 77497 POSTMAN PAT THE MOVIE: Book and Toy by John Cunliffe This annual celebrates 20 years of the wonderful Horrible Histories books. Deary’s dry gallows humour with his trademark rats running riot, alongside awful Egyptians, rotten Romans, and terrible Tudors, plagues, pestilence and natural disasters galore. Beginning with the ancient Egyptian (plenty of fun with mummies and funny pharaohs), via the Greeks and Romans right the way up to the Great War. Foul facts, gory stories, queasy quizzes. Ages 7+. 62pp, 9¼”×12", colour. Reduced. Winnie the Pooh’s Easter and Winnie the Pooh’s Christmas are two stories, retold by Bruce Talkington in the inimitable Disney style. Big bright white pages with borders, the illustrations are one per page of Eeyore, Tigger, Pooh, Piglet, Rabbit, Owl and all the friends as they chase the rolling egg downhill and up, and rush through streams and muddy spaces to deliver the Easter Egg to Christopher Robin. Christmas is ablaze with light and colour and merry dancing, glass balls and tinsel. 68 big pages, colour, cutaway front cover. Postman Pat in his smart blue uniform and cap (he of the little black cat fame) stars in his own book of the film Postman Pat The Movie. He becomes a pop star in the celebrity spotlight in this exciting storybook when he enters the TV show ‘You’re the One’ in the village hall. Follow the story and best of all enjoy the 6" high felt cuddly toy of Pat himself to play with. Box set. £12.99 NOW £4.50 77504 SPONGEBOB SQUAREPANTS: STICKER SCENES by Nickelodeon Use your Sponge-tastic stickers to create scenes of undersea silliness - a face of fun, jellyfish fields or a Squidward’s gallery. Plankton has pinched Mermaid Man’s shrink ray, but he has gone a bit over the top and started shrinking everything in sight! Finish the scene by putting the little troublemaker in the picture. Over 70 colourful stickers, 12 page softback, and the stickers could be used on any kind of craft project, bedroom decoration or school project. Ages 4-8. £3.99 NOW £2.25 73833 TIMMY TIME POCKET LIBRARY: Six Mini Books by Aardman Timmy the Artist, Timmy’s Hiccup Cure, Timmy Steals the Show, Timmy Wants the Beret, Snapshot Timmy and Timmy Plays Football are the titles of these six eight page board books to share. In bold colour and from the Shaun the Sheep creators, watch little Timmy the sheep and friends in their adventures. Suit ages 2+. £4.99 NOW £2.25 $19.95 NOW £3.50 74426 HORRIBLE HISTORIES ANNUAL 2014 by Terry Deary and Martin Brown £7.99 NOW £2.50 73728 THE BEATRIX POTTER COLLECTION: Volume One by Beatrix Potter All of your favourite Beatrix Potter stories are available in two volumes. Volume one contains The Tale of Peter Rabbit, The Tale of Squirrel Nutkin, The Tailor of Gloucester, The Tale of Benjamin Bunny, The Tale of Two Bad Mice, The Tale of the Pie and the Patty Pan, The Tale of Mr Jeremy Fisher, The Story of A Fierce Bad Rabbit, The Story of Miss Moppet, The Tale of Tom Kitten, The Tale of Jemima Puddle-Duck, The Tale of Pigling Bland and Appley Dapply’s Nursery Rhymes. 412 page paperback, illus. ONLY £2 73729 THE BEATRIX POTTER COLLECTION: Volume Two by Beatrix Potter Volume two contains The Tale of Mrs Tiggy-Winkle, The Tale of Samuel Whiskers or The Roly-Poly Pudding, The Tale of the Flopsy Bunnies, The Tale of Ginger and Pickles, The Tale of Mrs Tittlemouse, The Tale of Timmy Tiptoes, The Tale of Mr Tod, The Tale of Johnny Town-Mouse, The Tale of Little Pig Robinson and Cecily Parsley’s Nursery Rhymes. 430 page paperback, illus. ONLY £2 29 73240 THE SILVER DONKEY by Sonya Hartnett IN CK BA O C K ST During WWI, two French girls, Marcelle and Coco, discover an English deserter hiding in the countryside, shell-shocked and psychologically blind. The girls help him to plan his journey home back to his brother, John. They bring him food and he in turn tells them a series of moralistic stories, all made up except for one, the story of his brother finding a silver donkey when digging in the garden. He gives Coco the silver donkey, and its luck and inspiration continue. Linen-bound, pencil/charcoal drawings. First US edition 2006. 266pp. $15.99 NOW £2 78172 LITTLE HOUSE ON THE PRAIRIE by Laura Ingalls Wilder The second, original book by the actual Laura Ingalls whose family settled on the sun-kissed prairie stretches in America. The prairie stretches out around the Ingalls family, smiling its welcome after their long, hard journey across America. But looks can be deceiving and they soon find that they must share the land with wild bears and Indians. Is there room for everyone? ‘In Dixie land I’ll take my stand, and live and die in Dixie!’ Beautiful woodcut illus. 209pp, paperback, ages 8+. £5.99 NOW £2.50 23961 PETER PAN AND PETER PAN IN KENSINGTON GARDENS by J.M. Barrie The magical Peter Pan comes to the night nursery of the Darling children, Wendy, John and Michael. He teaches them to fly, then takes them through the sky to NeverNever Land, where they find Red Indians, wolves, Mermaids and... Pirates. The leader of the pirates is the sinister Captain Hook. His hand was bitten off by a crocodile. Illus by Arthur Rackham. 272pp, paperback. ONLY £2 78527 OXFORD TREASURY OF FAIRY TALES by Gerladine McCaughrean and Sophy Williams Escape into a world of knights and princesses, wicked witches and talking frogs. All the best known favourites are here including Sleeping Beauty, Hansel and Gretel, Cinderella, Snow White and Rapunzel together with much less known tales like The Dancing Princesses, The Three Gifts of the North Wind, The Old Lady Next Door, The Thirteenth Child, Tamlin, The Frog at the Well and Cap-of-Rushes. With beautiful calligraphy, border decorations and specially commissioned beautiful artwork. 240pp, large softback. £10.99 NOW £4.50 78502 THE LITTLE PRINCE: A Graphic Novel by Joann Sfar Adapted from the classic book by Antoine de SaintExupéry, and translated from the French by the awardwinning Sarah Ardizzone, Sfar brilliantly and beautifully captures this tale for a whole new generation of readers in this graphic novel, six cartoon sequence images per page. A little prince from a tiny planet with only three volcanoes and a rose one day sets off in search of new friends and new places. He travels far away and sees many remarkable things, yet only when he talks with a wise fox does he realise what is most important to him, and where he truly belongs. 110pp large colour softback. £9.99 NOW £3 78499 GEORGE AND THE KNIGHT by Sue McMillan and Ellie Jenkins Long ago, when the tallest oaks were nothing more than tiny acorns, brave dragons roamed a distant land. Fearsome and mighty, George was different, George was kind and gentle. He was banished from the mountain and told never to return. This is when Alric, the blacksmith’s son, spotted him. Urged to show him, George opened his mouth and sent a scorching fire onto a nearby log which burst into hot flames. Then arrived Badwick, the selfish, cruel knight and slithering, eyepiercing, bloodthirsty, ruthless, dragon-hunter. Ages 6 and up. Colour. £9.99 NOW £3.75 78490 A COLOURFUL WISH by Noel Grammont and Gillian Tyler One spring morning the rays of the warm sun tickled the whiskers of a sleepy rabbit called Pipkin. His tummy growled. Some bright orange carrots would do nicely he said to himself. Painting eggs, being helped by the old gentleman artist and his grandchildren, when they found the little works of art they laughed and clapped their hands with excitement. Perhaps this is how the tradition of egg painting began. Ages 4 and up. Colour. £9.99 NOW £3.25 78487 CALVIN CAN’T FLY by Jennifer Berne The story of a Bookworm Birdie, Calvin the little starling. Born under the eaves of an old barn with his three brothers, four sisters and 67,432 cousins, Calvin may be one of many, but he is certainly different from the rest. While the other little starlings learn to swoop and hover and fly figure of eights, Calvin buries his beak in books. In the library his mind soars, taking him places his wings never could. Farmyard scenes and the wonderful library built inside a big tree trunk are beautifully illus in colour. Large softback. Ages 3 and up. £5.99 NOW £2.75 78087 LABYRINTH OF DREAMING BOOKS by Walter Moers It is 200 years since the destruction of Bookholm, the City of Dreaming Books. Optimus Yarnspinner who witnessed the disaster has since become Zamonia’s greatest writer and is resting on his laurels at Lindworm Castle. Spoilt by his success he one day receives a disturbing message that lures him back to the rebuilt literary metropolis where he is reunited with old friends but also introduced to the mysterious Biblionauts, the warring Puppetists, and the city’s latest craze, the Invisible Theatre. Yarnspinner strays even deeper into the Labyrinth of Dreaming Books and an irresistible maelstrom of events. Ages 8-12. Fabulously illus. 430pp, large paperback. £14.99 NOW £4.50 30 Children’s continued 77971 FLY AWAY HOME by Christine Nostlinger Life for Cristal has been upside down for a long time and she can’t even remember things before the war began, before potatoes for every meal and bombs raining down from the sky, before being forced to shelter in the dark, damp cellars. Then one day, Cristal’s home is turned into a pile of rubble and dust five metres high. But a chance offer saves her family. They move to the safety of a wealthy suburb, camping out amongst the chandeliers and family portraits of someone else’s house. That is until the dreaded Russians roll into Vienna and move in too. Ages 9+. With test questions, 249pp. £5.99 NOW £2 78031 LOST WORLDS by John Howe Atlantis, Troy, Shambhala and Avalon. Eminent Tolkien illustrator John Howe delves into the secrets of history from the Garden of Eden, Babylon, Thebes, Knossos, Asgard, Persepolis, Teotihuacán, Rapa Nui, Camelot, Faerie and Hollow Earth and more, which are all given a magical treatment. Colour artwork. Large hardback, 96pp. Ages 9 to adult. £16.99 NOW £6 78057 EMIL AND THE THREE TWINS by Erich Kastner Emil Tischbein is a schoolboy from Neustadt on his first visit to Berlin without so much as a penny in his pocket. The Three Byrons are acrobats and do their stuff in music halls. The sons’ names are Mackie and Jackie who are twins. Emil and the detectives are on holiday by the seaside when they meet the three Byrons. When they discover that Byron Senior is planning to abandon poor Jackie, they are determined to come to the rescue, but not before they have been cast away on a desert island. A vintage classic in illustrated paperback with quiz, the original unabridged text. £5.99 NOW £3.25 77742 MAISY’S SNUGGLE BOOK by Lucy Cousins For little babies aged one to three, bedtime snuggles, cuddles and stories will be extra fun with this bright red soft felt story book. Maisy is a little white mouse with pink ears and nose, stripy green pyjamas and a little pet panda teddy. Watch Eddy the big grey elephant read her a story as she closes her eyes to sleep. Wipe clean fabric story book with special stitching. £9.99 NOW £5 77961 A PATCH OF BLACK by Rachel Rooney and Deborah Allwright This charming tale with a lullaby feel has magical full page colour illustrations with a friendly tiger, dragon, cuddly toys, teeny-weeny ants on the ends of branches, petals, monkeys and even animated spoons striding towards a feast of jellies and cakes! From a magical wish-granting cloak to a hammock rocked by jungle animal friends, there’s nothing that a patch of night-time sky can’t become, and certainly no need to be afraid of the dark. A beautiful bedtime storybook. £11.99 NOW £3 77723 DREAM DAYS by Kenneth Grahame By the perennially popular author of ‘The Wind in the Willows’, here are eight short stories published under the title ‘Dream Days’ in 1898. For Charlotte, Edward, Harold, Selina and the unnamed narrator, days pass in a whirl of adventures, travelling through hidden lands, building bonfires, sailing raging torrents in homemade barks and mediating with dragons. The hero of ‘The Reluctant Dragon’ comes to rely on the Boy to mediate his cause and avoid humiliation of apparent cowardice. Ages 7+. 130pp, paperback. £8.99 NOW £3 77594 THREE LITTLE PIGS retold by Nina Filipek £4.99 NOW £1.25 77585 MY BABY SISTER by Emma Chichester Clark An adorable big glossy picture book in the Humber and Plum series. Humber finds it quite a shock when Mummy comes home with a new baby sister. ‘She’s not staying,’ she tells all the relatives, but before she sends her back, he thinks he just might try to get to know her a little better. Engaging, funny, poignant, full of joy and tantrums. Large softback, colour. Ages 2-5. ! In a timeless collection of some of the most beloved classics such as Dorothy, Heidi, Lorna Doone and Black Beauty here reinterpreted with charming new illustrations. With authors ranging from Lewis Carroll and Charles Kingsley to Charlotte Brontë and George Eliot, even the youngest child will love to hear the stories read aloud, while older children will enjoy reading the tales for themselves. Most of the stories here are extracts, which will encourage readers to seek out the books for themselves. With an introduction to the book and its characters, as well as a short biography of the author. 512 softback pages in glowing colour. £14.99 NOW £5.75 77582 LOVE SPLAT by Rob Scotton It’s Valentine’s Day and Splat has a special card for a certain someone in his class. Her name is Kitten and Splay likes her even more than fish fingers and ice cream. But she doesn’t seem to like him at all. Then there’s Splats rival, Spike, who also likes Kitten. Will Splat’s heartfelt card win her paw in the end? Black and white cats, bright red umbrella, hearts galore this is a beautifully made big glossy picture book. Ages 4 to 94. Softback. £5.99 NOW £1.50 77577 GOLDILOCKS AND THE THREE BEARS retold by Nina Filipek With exclusive stickers and activities, dedication pages and glossy colour illustrations, the ever-popular tale begins ‘Once upon a time there were three little bears Daddy Bear, Mummy Bear and Baby Bear. One morning, Mummy Bear made some porridge for breakfast.’ The stickers include buzzing bees, butterflies and owls as well as the characters from the story, 20 stickers and caption in a small round badge style sticker to wear. Suit ages 3-5. 78675 PATTERNS: Charles Rennie Mackintosh 10 Notecards designed by Marshall Perin After creating a handful of masterpieces in his native Glasgow, Charles Rennie Mackintosh (Scottish, 1868-1928) settled in London where he began creating designs for fine fabrics, many of which he sold to Foxton’s and Sefton’s, at the time England’s two leading textile producers. Having proved himself a master of modern buildings enriched with curves, organic geometry and repeated motifs, he applied those visual themes to two dimensional designs. These Art Nouveau cards are adapted from his Wave Pattern - Purple and Black 1916-20 and Wave Pattern Green, Black and Pink fabric designs. Five each of two designs, quality large blank notecards with white envelopes. In folding wallet. ONLY £4.50 78615 FOUR TOTEMS: 16 Blank Notecards by Gina Bostian and Vancouver Art Gallery £4.99 NOW £1.50 MISCELLANY Quality Stationery & Gift Ideas 78580 1950s ABSTRACT GIFT AND CREATIVE PAPER: 12 Large Sheets by Pepin van Roojen and Antonia Edwards A handsome folio of 12 different quality gift wrapping papers, perforated for easy removal that unfolds to 19½ x 27½” (50x70cm). Use them for gift wrapping, craft projects, decorative items or artworks. The imaginative textile patterns of the 1950s, liberated from wartime restrictions, influenced by abstract art movements are the inspiration for this colourful set of 12 distinct abstract patterns in various colours, geometric shapes, cracked effects, all very appealing and multipurpose. Softback 13.6" x 9.8". £9.99 NOW £5 78585 ANIMAL PRINT GIFT WRAP: 12 Large Sheets by Pepin van Roojen and Fenke van Eijk Get a little wild with this folio containing 12 distinct sheets that unfolds to 19½ x 27½” (50x70cm) perforated for easy removal from the large softback, 13.6" x 9.8". Snake skins, leopard skins, big cats, a green one based on the turtle, panther, even aardvark, they are scaly but all very beautiful in their natural patterning, based on the beautifully camouflaged leopards, desert snakes, zebras and other animals. Use them for gift wrapping of course or craft projects, décor or artworks. With an introduction describing the sources of the designs. £9.99 NOW £5 78727 200 PAGE A5 SPIRAL NOTEBOOK by Grafix Black laminate cover with three dividers in pink, blue and yellow and 200 pages of quality writing paper, 70gsm, the paper is lined and there are cutaways in the front cover with a plain sheet beneath to organise your work into headers. Exceptional value for money. A5 size. ONLY £3 78726 200 PAGE A4 SPIRAL NOTEBOOK by Grafix Black laminate cover with three dividers in pink, blue and yellow and 200 pages of quality lined writing paper. A4 size. Huff, puff and try to blow the houses down with this beautiful short retelling in 25 pages of the ever-popular story, newly illustrated in colour. At the end there is a Can You Remember? and Did You Spot?, True or False and Search the Puzzle set of questions. 34 colour stickers. Ages 2-4. Dedication page. £5.99 NOW £1.50 77414 CLASSIC STORIES FOR GIRLS by Miles Kelly and Fiona Waters ORDER HOTLINE: 020 74 74 24 74 ONLY £5 78587 AT PLAY: 20 Animal Blank Notecards by Sierra Club Three giant pandas tumble together, all black and white fur balls, two baby orangutans, legs outspread lie on their backs, staring straight up at the camera with their human-like faces, two little fox cubs tumble in the grass and a cheetah is smothered by her young fluffy cub in the last of the four adorable colour designs. Five each of these four designs, quality blank notecards 20 with white envelopes. Boxed. $15.95 NOW £6 78817 MUSICAL NOTES: 18 Assorted Greetings Cards by Susie Ghahnemani The Owl and the Pussycat sing you a birthday song, a long beaked little birdie is ‘playing our song’ on the vinyl record deck, and a pair of squirrels tinkle the ivories on an old stand up piano. There are three charming images, six of each design with white envelopes in these stylised, modern, fun small blank note cards for many occasions; drop a thank you note, congratulations, send Happy Birthday wishes etc. All decorated with musical notes and quality colour, they will make you sing out loud. With matching white envelopes. $14.95 NOW £4 Well before her encounter with the famous Canadian Group of Seven, Canadian artist Emily Carr (18711945) had studied in San Francisco, London and Paris before returning to her home in British Columbia in 1912. There she embarked on an ambitious project to record the twilight of the coastal First Nations peoples, communities that had nearly vanished along the northern Pacific coast. During a six week stay she focused on the monumental wooden totem poles the natives had carved, many of them erected after 1860. About 250 Haida people were then living in Skidegate on Graham Island, where a Christian mission had been established. The four oil paintings reproduced for these notecards are testament to her artistic skill. Subtle use of colour, Native American mythology, two of the totem poles have stunning eagles atop. Elegant tall blank notecards with 16 white envelopes, four each of four designs. Boxed. $15.95 NOW £6 78621 BOOKMARK FLEXIBLE MAGNIFIER: 2x by Thinking Gifts A thin, flexible and very lightweight bookmark engraved with fine ridges like a Fresnel lens, simply lift it away from hardto-read text to see the words getting larger and more visible. 2½” x 7¼” (64x190mm), it’s a bookmarker that tucks away almost anywhere. The vinyl storage sleeve provided keeps the magnifier in pristine condition without scratches. Ideal for directories, newspapers, craftwork etc. A companion to code 77726 the Page Style Flexible Magnifier. £8.42 NOW £4 78656 LIFE OF THE BUDDHA: 16 Notecards by Gina Bostian and the British Library The images in this notecard set are from one of two magnificent Burmese concertina-fold manuscripts collected by Orientalist Henry Burney. In the first image, the Bodhisattva accepts the offering of a bowl of rice-milk. Deep blue sky contrasts with the burnt-orange terrain, and unicorns float in the stream. The second image is the Buddha preaching his first sermon, in another Prince Siddhattha Gotama displays his skills in archery with the court in a pagoda palace beneath, and another the Prince crosses a river with one leap of his horse and dismounts on a bank of silvery sand. The onlookers can’t look, but the fish and crabs in the river can. Beautifully detailed and colourful, very tall elegant blank notecards with 20 white envelopes. Four each of four designs, boxed. $15.95 NOW £6 78784 BINTH LITTLE NOTES: 18 Assorted Greetings Cards by Binth Attractive box set of six each of three jolly, modern designs with red, black, pale blue and olive green flowers, abstract designs with the words HAPPY!, HELLO! and HOORAY! The assorted greetings cards come with white envelopes and are suitable for dropping a note to friends and loved ones along these themes, just saying hello or congratulating someone. £10.99 NOW £4 75533 SCRAP BOOK: Coloured Pages by W. F. Graham Alongside our bestseller which we have stocked for over 25 years code 27592, we are proud to present a 24 page colour version of the same scrap book measuring 8½” x 12". The better paper quality pages are turquoise blue, yellow and pink. Ideal for all scrapbooking, preserving postcards, photographs, letters etc. ONLY £1.50 77726 FLEXIBLE MAGNIFIER PAGE SIZE by Thinking Gifts In a handy protective wallet this nearly A4 sized 7½” x 10¼” flexible sheet weighs nothing. It is ideal for laying over your needle crafts and handy work, scrapbooking, newspapers, home computing, map reading, books anything you need to bring a little closer to avoid eye strain. It would also make a thoughtful gift for those who are a little short sighted. Wipe clean and nonbreakable. ONLY £4 77995 PAPER ROSE SPIRIT FINE ART COLLECTION JOURNAL by Sue Waddicor and Paper Rose The painter and designer Sue Waddicor is fascinated with pattern and colour combinations and uses collage as her main technique, always using and element of gold as a highlight. Here we have beautiful collaged koi carp, huge dragonfly with blue body, flowers and motifs and many elements outlined in a rather Art Deco or Gustav Klimt style. The spiral bound notebook or journal has approximately 60 lined pages and measures 8½” x 12". Strong board cover and very useful for jotting notes, beginning your first novel, poem or song or writing very long shopping lists! ONLY £3.75 77996 ANTIQUE MAP SHOPPING PLANNER by Robert Frederick Ltd With Great Britain at the centre, Iceland to the north, France and the tip of Spain, the image is of an antique European map, printed in colour on the front of the board mounting with a silver gel pen. It has a magnetic strip to pop onto your fridge or use the hole at the top to pin it on your corkboard or elsewhere. On to the board is mounted a lined tall shopping planner with tear out sheets for all your shopping and To Do lists. A companion to the Antique Map Notes Memo Block code 77997. 9" tall. ONLY £3.50 77997 ANTIQUE MAP MEMO BLOCK by Robert Frederick Ltd Approximately 4" square the antique map of Europe extends from Portugal in the west to Moldavia in the east and decorates the padded cover of this square block stationery item. The pages are decorated with the same map very faintly on the otherwise blank pages for all your notes, scribbles, To Do lists, poetry, notes for your novel or simply to leave by the telephone. A companion to code 77996. ONLY £3 78062 FRANK LLOYD WRIGHT ADDRESS BOOK by Pomegranate Sturdy spiral bound hardback with lovely clear A-Z tabs and space for six entries per page, name, address, email, home and work phone numbers, fax and mobile numbers. Opposite is a full page glorious colour photograph of a Frank Lloyd Wright design, for example his art-glass such as the Sumac Window 1902 or a whole house like the Susan Lawrence Dana House of the same year or a glamorous interior with folding Frank Lloyd Wright designed colourful windows inside the Avery Coonley House of 1907. A glamorous design which would make an ideal gift. $19.95 NOW £4.50 78064 FRANK LLOYD WRIGHT MOUSEPAD: SAGUARO FORMS by Pomegranate Your computer mouse will love to skid across this brightly coloured, wipe cleanable, slightly padded vinyl mouse mat which measures 7¾ x 9¼”. The rainbow colours chosen for the design is the Saguaro Forms and Cactus Flowers from a lighted glass mural designed by Frank Lloyd Wright (1867-1959) who was inspired by the Arizona Desert. 28 x 16cm. ONLY £3 78063 WATERLILIES FRANK LLOYD WRIGHT MAGNETIC NOTEPAD by Pomegranate The art glass screen of 1895 was the vision of Frank Lloyd Wright (18671959). With its three water lilies in bright white, the geometric design is in greys, pinks and predominantly purple and adorns the front cover and the right hand column of each lined page of these 70 lined sheets on a rather smart shopping list or jotter pad. It has a self adhesive magnet to easily stick on your fridge and tear-off perforated pages. 10cm wide x 22cm tall. Softback. ONLY £3 78065 BILTMORE PANELS FRANK LLOYD WRIGHT: Playing Cards Two Decks by Pomegranate The pattern on these cards began as a 1934 sketch the architect Frank Lloyd Wright (1867-1959) labelled ‘Machine Age Screen’. In 1973, architects used that image to design wall panels at a hotel in Phoenix, Arizona. Bold, geometric and colourful with lime green, orange, blue and purple, here is a set of two full decks of 52 playing cards with the two designs on the reverse. Boxed. $13.95 NOW £4 78526 FRANK LLOYD WRIGHT COLLECTION: Set of Four Buy this beautiful collection and save even more. ONLY £13 72193 LADIES’ GOLD WATCH AND BRACELET by Pier Carlos D’Alessio A stunningly beautiful gold coloured metal chain link design with nine Swarovski crystals inset into the bar links and a very clever removable link to shorten the watch strap. With a simple clock face and PCA, the designer’s logo, on the face, it comes with a matching bracelet with 12 Swarovski crystals inset. Please wind up using the crown button when wearing for the first time. Batteries included. In black presentation box, this was manufactured for Reader’s Digest (sadly now defunct). Would make a very stylish gift or treat for yourself. Bracelet and watch set, each approx. 8" in length. ONLY £15 www s. c o m w.. b i b l i o p h i l e b o o k ks 72195 MAGNIFYING GOLD NECKLACE SWAROVSKI CRYSTAL by Art de France Presented in a silver gift box with silver foil bow and with Certificate of Warranty and Authenticity, this unique item of jewellery is antiallergenic and 24 carat gold-plated. With six curves in a flower shape setting is a good quality magnifying glass (1" diameter) to wear around your neck with four amber Swarovski crystals linking it to a gold plated rope chain. Ideal to use in those awkward moments when you need to see the small print or would make a stylish gift. Chain length 26" or 66cms. Depending on where you place the glass, we reckon approx 3 times magnification. £79.95 NOW £6 78465 HANDS STAND: Duck Egg Blue by That Company Called If The Hands Stand is designed to hug all books, kindles and tablets. Its gentle, spring-loaded mitts will hold on tightly, freeing up your hands for all kinds of other useful things like holding your coffee mug! In duck egg blue, it folds away neatly after use, making it ideal for use at home, on the train, a plane or in the office. 21cm high, lightweight 3.5oz, stylish. ONLY £12 27592 SCRAP BOOK Shiny red laminate cover; 16 pages of recycled grey paper. 8½” x 12", great value. Ideal for photographs, cuttings, pressed flowers, artistic doodles etc. ONLY £1 61516 BIBLIOPHILE SQUIGGLE PEN by A. Squigley In Bibliophile blue, this is the latest in our own collectable company designs with a quick reminder for our book hotline printed on. It has a super squeezy black rubber grip, ideal for older hands, and an attractive metal ‘squiggle’ clip. Black ink. One happy customer said “Bought some of these pens last year & they keep going walkies. I think my visitors like them too. I love the soft grip. I have arthritis & the soft grip makes these pens a joy to hold. I have bought other types, but keep coming back to these. Worth every penny,a great buy.” ONLY £1 76920 NON DATED DIARY: ELEGANT PINK by Spank Publishing ! With beautifully decorated, embossed cover, a rather classical French wallpaper style design, we have a rose pink and black or a mint blue and black (code 76919) design from which to choose. The diary can be used for any year, and laid flat to show Monday to Sunday across each double page spread. In addition there is space for personal details, birthdays and anniversaries and numbers/addresses and finally some lined blank pages for your notes at the back and a very useful wallet on the inside back cover. Please ignore the ‘forward’ planners since they are 2012-15. ONLY £2.25 EARLY LEARNING Why, sometimes I’ve believed as many as six impossible things before breakfast. - Lewis Carroll, Alice in Wonderland 78837 WE’RE GOING TO THE FARMERS’ MARKET by Stefan Page To market, to market, we are on our way. So many groceries to find, on this warm sunny day! Eggs, milk and cheese, veggies and fruits big and small, pack your shopping bag with healthy goodies from the Farmers’ Market. Suit ages 3-5, colour board book and perfect to team up with our shopping bag and activity box set code 78812. £4.99 NOW £3.75 78932 YOUNG SAILOR by Basil Mosenthal These days you may well get the chance to sail in a yacht or boat, join family and friends, a sailing school or a ‘flotilla’ fleet for sailing holidays in the Mediterranean. Find out all about sailing the boat, steering it, returning to harbour, using a dinghy, tying knots and learning to recognise the flags that boats fly in this super cool big picture book. Learn about the weather, tides, test yourself with the quiz at the end, find your way along a tidal stream, all about lighthouses and buoys and follow the tips for a safe and pleasant hobby and trip of a lifetime. Suit ages nine to adult. 36 page very large softback, colour, illus and photos. £10.99 NOW £4 78792 CREATIVE CRAFTS FOR KIDS by The Craft Library Bursting with ideas, everyone with youngsters need this book take my word for it! It will prove a blessing to mums, grans and teachers time and time again. Whenever you hear, ‘I’m bored’, just get this out and children will be galvanised into action! Girls will love to make seed bracelets, necklaces and hair slides using painted melon or pumpkin seeds, while boys will enjoy creating scary giant insects from paper and pipe cleaners. Have fun in the kitchen making fudge, bat biscuits, Noah’s ark cookies, coconut ice or shortbread spirals. Create fantastic glitter masks, Halloween masks, and beautiful crowns. Or how about letting your children make bird feeders, candle holders, painted plant pots, lip balm, novelty soaps or beeswax candles? All perfect gifts that children will enjoy giving to friends and relations, and made extra-special by the fact that they can proudly say that they made each present themselves. Every project has a suggested age range; even two-year-olds are catered for, while some are more suited to ten-year-olds (but, of course, great for adults to make as well). This colourful book will provide loads of inspiration, and is perfect for keeping children. 256pp, colour illus and templates. $14.99 NOW £3.50 78117 ROALD DAHL’S SCRUMDIDDLYUMPTIOUS STICKER BOOK illustrated by Quentin Blake Welcome to Mr Willy Wonka’s Chocolate Factory and recall the fantastic moments when Charlie meets Mr Wonka. Can you find the stickers to match the pictures of Mr Wonka and the lucky Golden Ticket winners? With short stories including Mr Fox and the Three Farmers, James and the Giant Peach Mystery, use the stickers of Silkworm and Glow Worm, James Henry Trotter, Lady Bug and draw one of your friends in the portrait boxes provided. Enjoy the famous excerpts once again and use your dozens of colourful stickers. Large softback. Small remainder mark. $6.99 NOW £3 78390 SPOOKY STREET by Colin and Jacqui Hawkins Follow the werewolf as he leads the way down Spooky Street, calling in to see Old Mother Hubble the witch (looking up a recipe for toad in the hole), or see the Blods in Gory Grange with a mummy in the bath and a snake in the loo. Visit the creepy corner shop, or maybe the skeleton family where bony hands will grasp and clasp and hold you tight forever. Then you reach the Werewolf’s house. Finally you turn the last page - and aaargh! 12" x 8.50", colour, flaps and pop-ups. £9.99 NOW £4 77327 A HISTORY OF BRITAIN: Book III The Tudors 1485-1603 New Edition by E. H. Carter and R. A. F. Mears First released in 1937, this widely admired and successful series, here revised and updated by historian David Evans. Set in a context of related events in the rest of the world, and incorporating the arts, religion and social changes, this informative volume considers in turn how the Renaissance deeply influenced learning and education, art and architecture, clarifying how science was transformed and inventions made, how geography was differently understood and exploration revolutionised and, most vitally, how religion altered fundamentally. 169 pages, b/w illus and maps. Ages 10 to adult. £10 NOW £2 77154 JASON AND THE ARGONAUTS: Myths and Legends by Neil Smith The voyage of Jason and the Argonauts and their hunt for the Golden Fleece is one of the most enduringly popular of all the Ancient Greek heroic myths. Accepting the quest in order to regain his kingdom, Jason assembled a crew of legendary heroes including Heracles, Orpheus, Atlanta and the twins Castor and Polydeuces. With his band of warriors and demi-gods, Jason sets sail and faces numerous challenges from the Harpies, the Clashing Rocks, the Sirens, Talos the bronze giant, the Sleepless Dragon that guarded the fleece and of course, the fickle will of the Gods of Olympus. Ages 10 to adult. 80 page paperback, colour. £10.99 NOW £3 77467 FASHION MODEL COOL CREATIONS: Book and CD Rom by Rennie Brown Get the look with this fab fashion folder, complete with a place to save your fashion models and outfits you have designed. Find photos of your favourite celebrity styles and collect fabrics or patterns in magazines that you like. Chelsea is wearing a boho babe style, Beth an urban style, Scarlett punk glam with black leggings, and Kimberly city chic. For all seasons with sections on beauty, hair, shoes, jewellery, there are four locations for the fashion shoot. Fashion quiz, ages 8+. Large colour softback. £4.99 NOW £2 78485 THE BIRTHDAY PARTY by Helen Oxenbury A series of three delightful picture books describing memorable moments of childhood that parents and children will recognise and love - the set includes The Dancing Class, Eating Out and The Birthday Party. I chose John’s birthday present on my own. ‘Can’t I try them out, Mum?’ ‘No’, said Mum, ‘we bought them for John.’ Putting on a party frock and a blue ribbon in her hair, the little girl eats cake, John shouts, he left her present on the floor, games, balloons, running about and jumping, this is a tender story for ages 2 and up. Colour illus. £4.99 NOW £2.50 78494 EATING OUT by Helen Oxenbury Mum said, ‘I’m too tired to cook.’ Dad said, ‘I’ll take you out for supper.’ The family go out, a high chair is provided, going to the toilet, accidents and the comfort of getting home all bring back wonderful childhood memories. Ages 2 and up. Colour illus. £4.99 NOW £2.50 78493 THE DANCING CLASS by Helen Oxenbury Mum said I should go to dancing classes. ‘We’ll take these tights. She’ll soon grow into them.’ The bemused little girl is tiny compared with the huge tights mummy is holding up. Hair grips, ballet shoes, children tumbling, the old lady at the piano, the draughty church hall, tears and tantrums, you will gallop all the way home remembering such delightful childhood moments. For ages 2 and up. Colour illus. £4.99 NOW £2.50 78852 HELEN OXENBURY: Set of Three by Helen Oxenbury Buy all three and save even more. £14.97 NOW £5 Early Learning 31 77598 REALLY WOOLLY BEDTIME TREASURY by Bonnie Rickner Jensen Here are the stories of David and Goliath, The Ten Commandments, Joseph, Abraham, Creation, Daniel, Jonah, Jesus is born, Jesus welcomes the children, The Good Samaritan, The Cross and The Tomb plus verses, prayers and promises. With rhyming text and take away thoughts, and Really Woolly art with cuddly lambs, bunnies, tortoise, ducks and birds, we can grab a cosy blanket and snuggle up close. Colour illus, padded cover. £10.99 NOW £4 78512 TREASURE ISLAND by Robert Louis Stevenson An Easy Reader classic with dedication page ‘this book belongs to’ featuring stories chosen from beloved children’s novels, retold in a simple style and beautifully illustrated. Children can develop their reading skills while enjoying Stevenson’s classic take of villainous buccaneers and a young boy who had the adventure of a lifetime. Jim Hawkins, off on an expedition to search for treasure, overhears pirate Long John Silver’s evil plan. Jim is in more danger than he had bargained for. Four to six lines of text per page. Colour, sturdy 184 pages. $12.95 NOW £3.50 78054 DINOSAUR TATTOO BOOK by Caroline Rowlands Packed with mighty, prehistoric monsters, find out fearsome facts and test your dino knowledge with cool quizzes and fun puzzles. The fantastic colour artwork show you the whopping wings of the high flying Quetzalcoatlus which is actually a prehistoric lizard and about the same size as a small plane or the oddest looking dinosaur ever with a strange crest on the top of its head, the Parasaurolophus. There are 24 fearsome dinosaur tattoos to wear with attitude. Ages 5 to adult. 32 page large softback. £5.99 NOW £3 78069 GOSSIE & FRIENDS STICKER FUN by Olivier Dunrea Gossie is a small, yellow gosling who loves to wear bright red boots. Now draw a picture of your own favourite shoes in the big white space provided on the page of the book. Circle all the items in the picture of Gertie, mouse and gosling friends which are coloured blue. Peedie is a small, yellow Gosling who sometimes forgets things. Help him find his red hat. Gideon loves to play but help him through his maze to find his little friend Ollie. Number the scenes in the right order to see how Ollie hatches. Join the friends on their activities in page after page of creative and entertaining matching, counting, colouring and drawing activities. Plus 50 teeny colour stickers. Softback. $4.99 NOW £2 78516 WITCH AND THE DOG: A Lesson in Manners by Sue McMillan and Owen Davey Good manners don’t cost a penny, but they do help people get along. Daphne is an enchanting witch. Thanks to her politeness and excellent manners she is often asked to work her magic, taming tearaways, transforming troublesome teens and making awful animals into perfect pets. She takes on any challenge, even Harry, a dog who arrived with no manners at all. Table manners, learning to share, never cheating or being a sore loser, good manners can even take you to Buckingham Palace! Ages five and up. Colour illus, softback. £6.99 NOW £2.50 44604 PAINT WITH WATER There are six colours (green, red, yellow, aubergine, blue and orange) on a pallet across the top of each page. All youngsters need do is wet the brush, choose a colour and begin to paint the black and white outline large drawing beneath. There are traditional scenes with children, food, flowers and animals, eight per book, beautifully designed so each is detachable and could be framed. Large softback. Ages 3+. ONLY £1.25 74779 USBORNE CHILDREN’S SONGBOOK illustrated by Stephen Cartwright 17 well known songs such as This Old Man, My Bonnie Lies Over the Ocean, Michael Finnegan, Home on the Range, Cockles and Mussels and The Big Ship Sailed on the Illy Ally-o with music specially arranged for young children’s voices. All the songs have easy accompaniments for piano or keyboard and indications for simple guitar chords. Colour illus. Large softback. £4.99 NOW £1.75 76496 HOW IT WORKS: Plane by Nicholas Harris Dogs guard grazing animals, pull sleds, help the police catch criminals, rescue injured people, and help the blind, disabled and ill. And what do they expect from us from all this loyalty and unselfishness? Nothing special. Several of the most popular breeds are described by their characteristics like strong hunting instincts, gentle and clever, beloved pets for centuries. Fun ideas and fab facts. Ages 7+. £10.99 NOW £2 77584 MUSIC AND SOUNDS: Book, Game and Wooden Maraca by Globe Publishing From the minute we are born we love the sound of our own voice and teeny tots aged 36 months to 6 years will love shaking their own maraca provided in this fun activity kit. The lovely 64 page book is full of colourful pictures about all manner of noises from the buzz of the bee and the wail of the ambulance, to the moo of the cow. The bright red wooden maraca enclosed with the kit is decorated with musical notes. The game is a matching game with 24 cards to remember their location and turn over to find a matching pair. CE safety mark. £9.99 NOW £4 77586 MY HOME: Book and Puzzle and 5 Wooden Figures by Globe Publishing Traditional meets modern presentation with mummy, daddy, son and daughter and little doggie being represented in five high quality wooden family figures to use on the box as your own doll’s house. The puzzle has 16 chunky pieces to create a neighbourhood representing home and the vicinity. There is a great 64 page book all about the houses and uses of each room in the house. Ages 3-5. 420 x 438mm when finished. Box set. ONLY £4 77608 JESUS AND ME: Bible Storybook by Stephen Elkins The angels said Jesus was the son of God. John the Baptist said Jesus was the lamb of God. Where was Jesus baptised? How does Jesus want us to live? Where is Jesus now? Find out about the region of Israel, Jerusalem in AD30 and read all the Bible stories which refer to specific events that happened when Jesus was walking on the earth. It is a book for you and children to enjoy together, blessed by His presence. Ages 6+. Maps and appealing colour illus. 138pp, remainder mark. $14.99 NOW £4 HOBBIES Somebody just back of you while you are fishing is as bad as someone looking over your shoulder while you write a letter to your girl. - Ernest Hemingway 78708 WORLD CLASS PUZZLES by Erwin Brecher 150 riddles, paradoxes and brain teasers from around the world to improve your lateral thinking and keep your grey matter fit. The collection has been selected to concentrate on material that requires a great deal of inspirational thinking but a minimum of mathematical expertise, catering in part to the many puzzle fans who have an inborn aversion to all things mathematical! These are exercises to enjoy and you will be rewarded with a profound sense of achievement with every puzzle you crack. Here are general puzzles, fallacies and paradoxes, visuo-spatial tests and it includes the Monte Carlo Racing Rally Riddle, the British Prison Paradox and the Swiss Smugglers’ puzzle. With solutions, 160pp in paperback. £6.99 NOW £3 77415 CONCISE GUIDE TO WATERCOLOURS by Jennifer Sanderson Line, shape, form, space, texture, value and colour, the book is to help you feel confident when using watercolours, a vibrant and flexible medium. Experiment with different painting tools from sponges and twigs, different paper and different techniques to create a work of art you will be proud to hang on a wall. Subjects range from landscapes, waterscapes, portraits, animals, townscapes, still life and there are even templates to photocopy and reuse. 128 page paperback. £7.99 NOW £2.75 ! How does an aeroplane lift off and then stay in the air? What does the pilot have to do to control its speed and direction? How does a jet engine work, and in what ways is it different from, say, a car engine? The book tells you in clear and concise language about the first planes that ever flew (for just 12 seconds), how the various parts of the engine work together and how it actually flies, as well as what it feels like to be at the controls. 15 strong pages 30 cm x 21.5cm, dazzling colour illus, 20 flaps to open. $12.99 NOW £2.50 77604 CREEPY GLOWING MAGIC CRAFT BOX by Jenny Siklos and SpiceBox A creepy and very realistic looking cockroach, two ridiculously realistic looking eyeballs, a magic wand, a glow-in-the-dark finger chopper, a mummy trick, foam bogies, a trick card set, four haunted cards, a small rubber band and two optical illusion cards are included. Alongside in the pack is a creepy magic tricks and glowin-the dark illusions handbook teaching the techniques every frightening magician should know. Ages 8+. $19.99 NOW £5 77529 DOGGY WHYS by Lila Prap 59849 COUNTRYSIDE COLOURING BOOKS: Set of Four Mountains and Moors by Henrike Petzl The four titles are ‘Mountains and Moors’, ‘Forests and Fields’, ‘Rivers and Reeds’ and ‘Sea and Sand to Colour’. In ‘Forests and Fields’, for example, there is a poppy field in Northamptonshire, Buttermere, Lake District, Ribblehead in snow with a steam train pulling into the station and Clun Castle, Shropshire. Each of these four large colouring books has a rather excellent watercolour painting in colour on the left hand side of each double page spread. On the right, an outline only copy of the same artwork is ready for you to work on. Each picture is 11½” x 9". Softbacks. ONLY £3.50 77418 TEST YOUR IQ: Mind Trainer by Nathan Haselbauer Includes general IQ tests to get you started, verbal IQ tests to assess your vocabulary skills, logic IQ tests to really push your brain to the limits, mathematical IQ 32 Hobbies continued ORDER HOTLINE: 020 74 74 24 74 tests to quiz your knowledge of numbers and a test of Exceptional Intelligence for the advanced braniacs. 400 questions, 12 tests, answers. 208pp in paperback. £4.99 NOW £1.75 77001 THE BRIDESMAID: 500 Art Piece Jigsaw Puzzle by John Everett Millais The model for this painting, a Miss McDowell, is seen acting out a popular superstition of the day - the bridesmaid. If she passes a piece of the wedding cake nine times through the bridal ring, will see a vision of her own future love. She is wearing orange blossom, a symbol of purity. Painted in 1851, John Everett Millais (1829-1896) was one of the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood and this richly decorated famous image of the blue eyed, titian-haired beauty is ever popular. Use the box top as your visual reference when putting together this 500 piece quality jigsaw puzzle. Boxed. The puzzle size measures 18" x 24" when complete. $16.95 NOW £5 77745 SCRABBLE SCORE AND TILE TRACKER ! The tear-out, easy-to-use score sheets include board grids printed with triple and double letter and word score squares, lists of all the letter tiles used in a game, rack sheets with rating, overtime penalty and final score boxes and record pages for tracking up to four players per game. Store the score sheets as permanent archives or study them to plan future winning strategies. Key word lists. 144pp, paperback, diagrams. $4.95 NOW £2.50 24415 ANIMAL COLOURING BOOKS: Set of Four A unique concept. Four large softback books, each containing eight hand-coloured drawings of wildlife scenes. Whales, lions, a crocodile; the squirrel and the fox; rabbit, kittens and hamster; and farm animals, the sheep dog, the hen and goats. The right hand side is the black and white drawing for you to colour: the left side is the original, many of which could easily be framed. With helpful colouring hints. Distributed through Bibliophile by special arrangement with the publisher. Per set of four ONLY £3.50 24416 NATURE COLOURING BOOKS: Set of Four This set of four outsize (11½”× 9") softbacks includes animals to colour, birds to colour, flowers to colour and countryside to colour. Each depicts a beautiful colour drawing on the left hand side and the black and white equivalent on the right for you to colour yourself, including two beautiful butterflies on lilac flowers, a harbour with boats and an owl in woodland. Per set of four ONLY £3.50 71302 DISCOVERING FRIENDLY AND FRATERNAL SOCIETIES: Their Badges and Regalia by Victoria Solt Dennis Aprons and medals sometimes turn up in car boot sales or are found in an attic or shop selling bygones. Many of these objects are decorated with arcane symbols and their inscriptions such as Guardians, Past Arch or even more cryptically PCR or KON. So what are these things, who wore them and what do they mean? Although often grouped under the misleading umbrella title of Masonic, these objects represent a vast range of friendly and fraternal orders to savings societies. 160pp in paperback, colour photos. £10.99 NOW £2.50 AUDIO - BOOKS ON CD 76836 CANTERBURY TALES CD: Extracts from the General Prologue by Geoffrey Chaucer Extracts from Geoffrey Chaucer’s General Prologue and Tales are read in Middle English by Trevor Eaton from the Canterbury Tales. Includes Sir Thopas, Canon’s Yeoman’s Tale, The Knight’s, Miller’s, Reeve’s and Shipman’s Tales, grouped under Love, Marriage and Adultery, plus The Nun’s Priest’s Tale, The Wife of Bath’s Prologue and Tale, Merchant’s and Franklin’s, Pardoner’s and Summoner’s and ending with The Pilgrims. 71 minutes 32 on CD. ONLY £5.50 76914 A HIGH WIND IN JAMAICA: Six CDs by Richard Hughes RSC actor Michael Maloney narrates this classic tale on six CDs, running time seven hours of the unabridged text plus an exclusive interview. Set in the 19th century against a backdrop of island life and the vast surrounding seas, the novel is a gripping story of the Bas-Thornton children, whose parents send them back to England following a hurricane. Having set sail, the children quickly fall into the hands of pirates. The supposed innocents are not only the victims of amoral behaviour, but sometimes the perpetrators. First published in 1929. Six audio CDs. £21.99 NOW £5 69647 THE GREAT WAR: An Evocation in Music and Drama CD by Pearl Includes It's A Long Way to Tipperary, Pack Up Your Troubles, and Take Me Back to Dear Old Blighty/ Another Little Drink (actually recorded in 1930). All other recordings from 1912 to 1918. Now on audio CD, playing time 71 minutes 30 seconds. There is 'unofficial' as well as 'official' music, some excellent dramatic sketches, the earthy testament of a young British Sergeant. 24 pieces, ending with Land of Hope and Glory. ONLY £3.50 HEALTH & BEAUTY In a disordered mind, as in a disordered body, soundness of health is impossible. - Cicero 79031 HAND BOOK OF PERFUME by Tobias Pehle and Sylvia Jonas Varieties, origins, production and selection, we enter the heady world of scents and the history of perfume, the components of fragrance and how they are created, scent families, fragrances for men and women, the psychology of scent and advice. Spray bottles deliver the scent in a very fine mist, so that you can perceive it as soon as they are sprayed. Perfumes without an atomiser which are dabbed on by the drop, require a little more development time. As a rule, the lighter scent substances in the top note are released in the first ten minutes before the middle (or heart) note and base note reveal themselves. After about an hour, a good perfume will have developed its full bouquet. You can smell quality. A good scent contains fixatives that cause the heavy notes, like resin, balsams or animal substances, to hold on as tightly as possible through the lighter accords like bergamot, orange, or green leaf. This ensures an ideal interplay between the ingredients. Now with famous names, beautiful packaging, and shops like Jo Malone, the allure is greater than ever. 296pp, glossy colour pages and padded cover. £9.99 NOW £4.50 78297 GOOD GUT HEALING by Kathryn Marsden This easy to read, plain-speaking guide to bowel and digestive disorders is not only packed with excellent practical advice, it also, unlike many self-help books, contains a lavish supply of humour. The author suggests hundreds of natural ways to ease symptoms of various gut ailments, and even helpfully indicates the important bits to read in each chapter if you are pushed for time. Subjects covered include acid reflux, food allergies, hiatus hernia, constipation, diarrhoea, candida, IBS and ulcers. It also includes plenty of information on fibre, stress, digestion, probiotics and diet. Just what the doctor ordered! 340pp. £14.99 NOW £7 76595 TAKE CARE, SON: The Story of My Dad and His Dementia by Tony Husband When Tony’s father Ron started to forget things like names, dates and appointments, it took a while to realise that it was the first sign of the illness that gradually took him away from his beloved family. Emotional, honest and painful, Tony’s loving cartoon strip account of the illness is presented in full page colour cartoons with text about life at the golf club, the pub, walking Lossie the dog (in pyjama bottoms) and the words of both Tony and his dear father. 60 page paperback. £7.99 NOW £3 76859 AMORTALITY: The Pleasures and Perils of Living Agelessly by Catherine Mayer The author coined ‘amortality’ to describe the phenomenon of living agelessly. As she follows this social epidemic through generations and across continents, she reveals its profound impact on society, our careers, our families and ourselves. Overturns longheld assumptions about getting old. 296 paperback pages with 10 Questions Towards A Diagnosis. £12.99 NOW £2 77960 DROP A DRESS SIZE: Good Housekeeping by Anita Bean Clever food swaps and tiny, easy changes could make big, lasting results to help you lose weight, keep it off and change your life. With tips for guilt-free barbecuing, party-proofing your diet, easy ways to burn 100 calories like weeding the garden, turning up the music and dancing round the room, a guide to good trainers for your feet, low-sweat workouts, ten reasons to be active, 25 minute mini workouts and more. 144 large pages, colour. £12.99 NOW £4.75 78314 OPTIMUM NUTRITION COOKBOOK by Patrick Holford and Judy Ridgway 200 recipes which are not only very good for you but also taste delicious. Garlic and yoghurt are well known for their disease-fighting properties, and fish is good against heart disease. The ultimate power breakfast begins with a mix of four or five fruits, yoghurt and seeds. Healthy light meals include Beetroot and Smoked Herring, an easily made Brunch Rösti, Devilled Tomatoes on Polenta Squares and Provençal Vegetables with Goat’s Cheese Dressing. Typical main courses are Duck Slivers with Orange Beansprouts and Chinese Egg Noodles, Pot-Roasted Guinea Fowl and Thai-Baked Fish. Puddings are mainly compotes and fools. 222pp, softback, colour photos. £15.99 NOW £5 77913 B IS FOR BREAST CANCER by Christine Hamill An honest and frank account of the emotional and physical impact of a cancer diagnosis, by turns funny, sad, angry and ultimately optimistic. In an A-Z way it covers anger, bras, crying, chemotherapy, grief, mastectomy, questions, unsung heroes, recovery and resources include dozens of useful organisations and websites. 225pp in paperback. £12.99 NOW £3 78935 PRETTY AND ORGANISED: Go Clutter Free by Jane Hughes HOW TO… Sober or blotto, this is your motto: keep muddling through. - P. G. Wodehouse, A Damsel In Distress 78780 BACK TO SCHOOL FOR GROWN-UPS by Stephen Evans and Ian Whitelaw Have you ever wished you could remember some of those fascinating facts and essential information that you were taught at school and then promptly forgot? If so, help is at hand, at least with subjects such as history, geography, art, science, sport, literature and mathematics. Arranged as though it was a school timetable, with twenty topics each day and a test for you to take at the end of every day, this should help improve your general knowledge. Topics, such as ‘When does a solid become a liquid?’, ‘Why do animals migrate?’ or ‘Who painted the Mona Lisa?’ are dealt with in depth, and although the book has a slight American bias the majority of it is still pertinent to British readers. We were fascinated to learn why soccer balls are round, why poems don’t have to rhyme and how the discovery of DNA came about. This one certainly deserves a gold star for merit. 256pp, colour and b/w illus, sketches. $18.99 NOW £5 76572 HOW TO DRAW CARTOONS AND CARICATURES by Mark Linley Choosing a good victim you spot outdoors, Prince Charles’s famous ears, different ways to depict hair, adding a face to a hairstyle, nose, eyes and brows, here is a step-by-step guide to cartooning, spotting characters and making up conversations. First of all capture the character of your ‘victim’, use swift strokes to exaggerate the features to make a comical caricature. Illus paperback, 256pp. £6.99 NOW £3 HOME ENTERTAINMENT Great Value CDs & DVDs 78657 LITERARY LOVE AFFAIR: British Library CD read by Natalie Thomas and Benjamin O’Mahony An anthology of poems, letters and extracts from classic novels by Jane Austen, Elizabeth Barrett Browning, Robert Browning, Lord Byron, Lord Alfred Douglas, George Eliot, Thomas Hardy, John Keats, Lady Caroline Lamb, D. H. Lawrence, Christopher Marlowe, Walter Raleigh, Shakespeare, Shelley, Mary Shelley and Oscar Wilde. Duration 74 minutes on audio CD. £10 NOW £5 78589 BEST OF BRITTEN CD by Benjamin Britten The outstanding English composer Benjamin Britten won a significant international reputation and his compositions appeal to all ages from the delightful Simple Most of us have accrued clutter in our homes, but often it’s essential clutter or sentimental clutter that we don’t want to part with. You can make it look good, tidy and part of your décor quite easily with the help of this book which is brimming with ideas. Divided into eight chapters, one for each type of room, not forgetting outdoors, it covers a host of possibilities. Suggestions include colourful cotton tidy bags in your hallway to tidy away scarves, gloves and hats; fabric-covered storage tubs for the living room to hold TV remotes or a few books and odds and ends; beautiful garment bags for keeping special occasion outfits dust free in the bedroom; a meal planner clipboard for the kitchen with shopping lists, recipes and coloured markers to show the week’s meals - so many ideas. One favourite is the charming toy storage cart on wheels, perfect for a child’s bedroom or even as a holder for those bits and bobs such as craft items that you may want to trundle from room to room. Paperback. 144pp, colour illus, templates. $19.95 NOW £6.50 77938 IMPROVE YOUR HANDWRITING: Teach Yourself by Rosemary Sassoon and Gunnlaugur se Briem Our practical and informative book uses self-diagnosis to identify problems and provides masses of practical exercises for improving your script. In a digital age where writing by hand remains a vital skill, here is everything from retaining bad habits to the difficulties that left-handers face and problems caused by medical conditions. The way you write mirrors your mood and character. Experiment with a style that suits you best. With examples from master writers of the past like Palatino in 1540 and dozens of real handwriting examples. 174pp, paperback. £9.99 NOW £5 78025 BAKING SODA: IN House and Home CK BA O C K by Diane and T S Jon Sutherland et al Bicarb or bicarbonate of soda is a wonder product - deodorant, toothpaste, exfoliant, antiseptic, cleaning agent leaving your kitchen grease free and shining and chemical free at the same time, a shampoo, for your pets, to clean out a paddling or swimming pool, relieve insect bites or shaving rash, remove blood stains and other stains from your laundry, wine or ink from your carpet and any number of health care needs. Plus entertain the kids, use for cooking some delicious recipes included like carrot cake and easy chocolate cake, make mini rockets, inflate balloons, look after your vehicles, free your lawn from mould, use as a greenhouse fungicide or to clean your birdbath, baking soda is so safe to use that you can also ingest it. It is a compound that occurs naturally as sedimentary mineral deposits and that’s why we can add it to coffee, use in the mouth for thrush, for cold sores, conditioning your hair, to clean your hairbrush, a dry skin bath additive, to sprinkle on your sofa before vacuuming off to freshen it up and hundreds more uses. Truly this is a wonder powder! Add to your shopping list now. 256pp with quality colour photos. £8.99 NOW £5 78077 HOW TO BECOME AN INTELLECTUAL by Nick Kolakowski There are much easier ways to convince your friends that you are a high-powered brainiac with Parisian tastes who has seen absolutely everything. Try placing a few prestigious books on your shelves in a prominent position. Know the names of a few designers, and refuse to be ashamed of your vehicle: an intellectual does not need an Alfa-Romeo. Your computer is important, but spellchecks make a lot of mistakes: always back up using your own eyes. Choose a favourite philosopher, and find out just enough about their theories to dash off a couple of impressive verdicts. Cultivate rivalries with other intellectuals, but lose a debate graciously. 240pp, paperback. £9.99 NOW £3.75 Symphony composed for a school orchestra and ‘The Young Person’s Guide to the Orchestra’ written for an educational film, to the haunting ‘Serenade for Tenor, Horn and Strings’ and the intense anti-war statement of his ‘War Requiem’. They all appear among the 15 tracks. Also includes Four Sea interludes, Gloriana and Hymn to St. Cecilia. Total playing time 79 minutes 21 seconds on this Naxos audio CD. £12.99 NOW £6 73438 GREAT RIVER JOURNEYS OF THE WORLD: Four DVDs by Reader’s Digest Romantic Rivers is the first DVD directed by Alain Dayan in the footsteps of the Dutch and Flemish masters travelling deep into the heart of eternal Russia to stop at Moscow’s Red Square. We navigate the beautiful Danube from Vienna to Budapest and finally admire Melk Abbey, a masterpiece of Austrian Baroque architecture. We meander along the sun-drenched Douro to the majestic cities of the Italian Renaissance from the River Po. We visit Cremona and its Bell Tower, Mantua with frescoes by Mantegna and then to Venice. We set sail from Paris to Honsleur along the magnificent Seine. We head for the Americas and navigate the St Lawrence in the company of whales, meet the Warao Indians in the Orinoco delta and sail to discover the highest waterfall in the world. Our cruise of a lifetime ends in the holy waters of the Nile. 4 DVD set. ONLY £12 78618 ETERNAL CD by Thomas Tallis Tallis (1505-1585) began his career as organist at the Benedictine Priory at Dover then at Waltham Abbey until the dissolution of the monasteries in 1540. He was then organist at Canterbury Cathedral and in 1543 became a Gentleman of the Chapel Royal, a position he retained until his death. He wrote a quantity of Latin church music and contributed to the reformed English liturgy and one of his most remarkable achievements is the 40-voiced Spem in alium. This superb collection of 14 tracks begins with ‘With All Our Heart’, ‘Mass for Four Voices - ‘Sanctus’, ‘Lamentations’, ‘In Nomine’, ‘Spem in alium’ and a solfing song among them. £12.99 NOW £6 78865 MOZART: Piano Sonatas KV311-330-331 CD by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart With Clara Würtz on piano, this recording was made in the summer of 1998 and features over 56 minutes worth of beautiful piano sonatas - allegros, rondeau and menuetto by Mozart (1756-1791). Digitally remastered CD at a bargain price. ONLY £5 www s. c o m w.. b i b l i o p h i l e b o o k ks CLOSE-UP NATURE I wonder who it was defined man as a rational animal. It was the most premature definition ever given. Man is many things, but he is not rational. - Oscar Wilde, The Picture of Dorian Gray 78478 ROMANTIC LANGUAGE OF FLOWERS by Gill Davies and Gill Saunders The first section of the book draws upon the ‘Book of Memory’, by artist Fanny Robinson (1802-1872). These delicate watercolours of flowers symbolise heartache and heartease. Pansies, snowdrops, primrose and wild strawberry, flowering quince, apple blossom and daffodil, honeysuckle, daisy, mock orange and rosebuds, fuchsia cascading in an extravagant spray over sweet creamy roses, its meaning is confiding love and good taste. Accompanied by fun facts such as that there are now over 7,000 fuchsia varieties. Hawthorn and periwinkle, holly, mistletoe and Christmas rose, bluebells and lily-ofthe-valley, the second section discovers more about flowers’ romantic associations and their complex code. 128pp, gorgeous colour illus. £9.99 NOW £3 78479 100 YEARS OF WEATHER: 20th Century in Pictures edited by Andy Stansfield Rainfall has been recorded on a daily basis since 1766 and provides the longest continuous set of weather data in the world. These pictures from The Press Association image archives include Henley Regatta bathed in sunshine in 1907, the very wet 1908 London Olympics, the Richmond Horse Show 1910, Margaret and David Lloyd George camping on a Welsh mountain, 1913, bathing at Margate, the London Opera House, London buses in the fog, poor children, a lone policeman in a snowy Trafalgar Square, storm damage, dancing girls, floods in Norfolk and Canvey Island, snowballs, overturned cars, weather forecasters in the 70s and 80s including Michael Fish, a Highland cow buried in snow 2007, Wimbledon to a thick carpet of autumn leaves and more. 300 fascinating images in both colour and b/w. 300 pages, softback. £14.99 NOW £3 78138 WILDLIFE WALKS: Great Days Out at Over 500 Nature Reserves by Malcolm Tait Britain has 2,500 nature reserves managed by the Wildlife Trust, and this is their guide to 500 of the best. The book is divided into regions, with around 20 reserves with their opening times, access and facilities, directions and parking. For each venue there is a suggested walk with a map, and also a short programme for a 30-minute visit. Local attractions in the area are described, some of them quite off-beat; for instance, near Earl’s Hill in Shropshire, Hignett’s bakery in Pontesbury offers whinberry pies baked with fruit picked on the nearby Stiperstones. 450pp, softback, beautiful colour photos, maps, diagrams. £12.99 NOW £4.75 78301 HUMAN AGE: The World Shaped by Us by Diane Ackerman “Many of nature’s doors have shivered open - human genome, stem cells, other earth-like planets”. We humans are redefining our perception of the world around us and the world inside us, asking questions about what it means to be human. In spite of the threat of climate change and the challenge of devising safer ways to feed and fuel our civilisation, Ackerman is optimistic. She considers the implication of medical changes to the human body, including carbon blade legs, silicon retinas and computer screens worn over the eye. The magnolia tree in her garden provides a mini-history of our relationship with vegetation, from the tree’s origin millions of years ago, its survival through ice ages, its popularity as an Aztec icon and finally its eventual migration to Europe in the 18th century. Ackerman’s name for this civilisation is Anthropocene, with humans far more dominant than at any other time in history but with a responsibility to develop new forms of partnership with the planet. 344pp. £20 NOW £5 77620 DEADLY ANIMALS by Gordon Grice Sub-titled ‘Savage Encounters Between Man and Beast’ here you will witness the world’s most bizarre and terrifying encounters. Learn what it is like to hear your skull crack in a grizzly bear’s jaws, have a hyena drag you from a tent at night by your face or lose a fight to a pair of white tip sharks. The author treats his subject with deadly wit and humour including his personal encounters with black widow spiders and a mouse that defecated in his strawberry pie. 382pp illus, paperback. £8.99 NOW £2.50 77412 BIRDS AND BUTTERFLIES: Book and CD by Nancy Rosin ! The bonus CD included provides copyright-free images for all personal computers and Macs of artwork for scrapbooks and fabric-transfer crafts. There are hundreds of high quality vintage images ranging in size from small detailed borders to large page-filling elements of birds, butterflies, from greetings cards and invitations, humming bird bicycle advert, a sonnet to My Valentine, hymns, notecards, decorative Victorian messages, postcards to lovers, Cupid’s message, botanical illustrations, a glorious peacock. Framed prints, themes for a scrapbook. Large softback, 57pp. $14.95 NOW £4 on Nature 78934 HUMAN BODY CLOSE UP by John Clancy Over 300 cutting edge anatomical images beautifully depict the complexity of our cells, tissues and organs and how our body parts and systems grow together. Using the very latest microscope technology, witness exceptional views of the body from spectacular scans inside the brain revealing connections of our 100 billion neurons, umbilical cord vessels, sperm and the reproductive system, the digestive and urinary system, the nervous and endocrine systems as you look inside the pancreas firstly at magnification 2,100 and then at 21,000 a spectacular array of red dots, white circles, a green ocean with some sort of purple algae on top. Controlling the heart are the Purkinje fibres, modified muscle tissue that has developed to carry electrical impulses. The images use fluorescent dyes to show how the fibres contain both nerve tissue in green and muscle proteins in red. They are seen at magnification 8,500 and 1,200. Motor nerve endings, nerve synapses, cells, the retina and all parts of the eye, fighting infections and disease with white blood cells, hair follicles, skeletal muscles to the cell’s power house, mitochondria. Truly dramatic, breathtaking microscopic detailed images, bold colour on black pages and with clear text in white in this rather glamorous art cum science book. 320pp. $29.95 NOW £8.50 78799 BOUNCING BUGS: Fly by David Hawcock and Lee Montgomery To make your fly, fold back the covers of the book until they meet and thread the elastic string through the loop and hang up. All flies have six legs, two wings and two balancers, two large eyes and hooklike claws. See the top view of their colours, shapes, furry, hairy, underwater, in dung, on dead animals, in flight, stealing food from spiders as you lift the flaps and peep through the holes. The finale is a superb green bottle pop-up. Colour. Ages three to adult. $10.99 NOW £4 78178 SEEDS OF HOPE by Jane Goodall and Gail Hudson Long before she began her work with chimpanzees, Jane Goodall had a passion for the natural world. Her story takes us from England to her home-away-from-home in Tanzania, Africa, deep inside the forests of the Gombe National Park. She explores our dependence on the plant kingdom as food, as medicine for our bodies and psyches, and as helpers in the task of healing the harm we have inflicted on the natural world. She introduces her heroes - botanists and naturalists, who risk their lives to rescue endangered plants and forests. Jane gives us hope for the future including transforming the massively fertilised grass lawns into sanctuaries for native plants and wildlife or organic food gardens. 370 large pages, well illus plus colour photos. £21.99 NOW £6 77075 THE POPPY: A Cultural History from Ancient Egypt to Flanders Fields to Afghanistan by Nicholas Saunders The poppy became associated with Flanders Fields in 1915 when a young army doctor, John McRae, found himself improvising a burial service for a close friend. The corn poppy is a different plant from the bigger, pinkcoloured opium poppy, and this fascinating book traces the history of both varieties. From the 7th to the 13th centuries, Egypt was the centre of poppy-growing, with processed opium being traded to Europe, India and China. The mid-century Opium Wars in China saw the British Empire officially trafficking opium. The author describes in fascinating detail the tortuous process by which the Remembrance poppy was adopted by the British Legion, and the story finally ends in modern Afghanistan. 301pp, colour illus. £20 NOW £8 77411 BBC SPRINGWATCH: BRITISH WILDLIFE by Stephen Moss et al This book of the BBC TV series is divided into five sections, covering birds, mammals, insects, reptiles, amphibians and fish, and concluding with plants and flowers. The short section on mammals includes the dormouse, mole, whale and polecat. Spiders often have a bad press, but the belief that the daddy long-legs has a venomous bite is an urban myth, and while an imported tarantula may be deadly, it does not survive long in the British climate. Britain is home to more than 50 native varieties of orchid, among them the Lady’s Slipper which was so sought after that it almost became extinct, but work is now in hand to reintroduce it. 255pp, superb colour photos. £20 NOW £4.50 77622 ENCOUNTERS WITH ANIMALS by Gerald Durrell 2012 paperback re-issue of the 1958 classic. Gerald Durrell’s accounts of the animals he encountered on his travels were some of the first widely shared descriptions of the world’s most extraordinary species. Moving from the West Coast of Africa to the northern tip of South America and elsewhere, he observes the courtships, wars and characters of a variety of creatures from birds of paradise to ants and anteaters, snakes to human beings. ‘Not all animals are as good as the hedgehog at looking after their babies.’ All with his trademark charm and humour. 163pp illus, paperback. £8.99 NOW £2.50 77737 LAST LIONS by Dereck and Beverly Joubert Follows the lives of several prides of lions on the river island of Duba in Botswana’s Okavango Delta. In the 1950s, there were 500,000; today only 45,000 remain. At this rate, they will be gone in just 25 years. The main predator is Silver Eye, so called because one of her eyes is damaged and skinned over. The Jouberts watch her in action, and also see a young female defending her two cubs against the killer with a ferocious barrage of blows. The two males on the island are killed by buffalo and a new male moves in, nicknamed “Skimmer”. 176pp, softback, over 100 wonderful colour photos. £18.99 NOW £4 77970 EARTHQUAKE: Nature and Culture by Andrew Robinson With 93 illustrations, 48 in colour, and written by a highly experienced science writer, journalist and scholar, here is a superb popular science book. Los Angeles and Tokyo, Istanbul and Beijing, Lima and Cairo are among the more than 60 large cities at definite risk from an earthquake. Devastating earthquakes have also hit Athens, Bucharest, Lisbon, Madrid, Rome and Naples over the past three centuries. Even London experienced a shock in 1884. The Haiti earthquake of 2010 took some ¼ million lives. Colour photos, map, mono plates, 208pp, paperback. £14.95 NOW £4 78030 LOST FISH: Anthologies of the Work of Comte de Lacepede by Elizabeth Kolbert A beautiful book about magnificent sealife creatures like the Balistes Vetula with its iridescent yellow fish scales and blue fins and sharp teeth, the hammer head of the Sphyrna Zygaena, the almost rainbow colours of the Scarus Ghobban and Frenatus or the Coryphaena Huppurus on page 98-9. With apt quotations from Jacques Cousteau, Albert Einstein to Frank Lloyd Wright. The book shows hundreds of fish, now lost to us, as carefully drawn in the 18th and 19th centuries by scientists. Writers such as Rousseau and Audubon expounded on the beauties of nature, while naturalists like Linnaeus, Buffon and his successor, the Comte de Lacépède struggled to catalogue the world around them. Nearly 200 antique illustrations in glowing colour record the wonders of the deep, paired with Lacépède’s introductory musings on man’s relationship to the marine. 232pp, 9¼” x 12". £40 NOW £14 78042 BIRDS IN A CAGE by Derek Niemann At Warburg, Germany in 1941, four British PoWs formed a bird watching society, and embarked on obsessive quest behind barbed wire and also drew in some of their German guards. The book follows the stories of the four young men, prisoners of war in WW2, who overcame hunger, hardship, fear and stultifying boredom to bring purpose to their lives behind barbed wire. In the words of one, birds ‘occupied hundreds and hundreds of hours during which, in spirit, I was not confined.’ Peter Conder became Director of the RSPB. George Waterston established Fair Isle as a bird observatory. John Buxton wrote The Redstart, one of the most acclaimed and lyrical natural history books of the 20th century and John Barrett was author of the century’s most popular seashore guide. An inspirational, untold story of the most bizarre and enriching episodes in the history of British environmentalism. 312pp in illustrated paperback. 33 HISTORICAL BIOGRAPHY Life is a tragedy wherein we sit as spectators for a while and then act out our part in it. - Swift 77646 CHARLES DICKENS: The Making of A Literary Giant by Christopher Hibbert Here is the Chronicle reporter rising to triumphant novelist. This lively and insightful biography of the literary giant details the crucial years that formed Dickens the writer and Dickens the man and how he transferred the smallest fragments of his experience into his fiction. Hibbert throws a clear light on the creative process and sources of literary imagination. 321pp, paperback, sketches by Boz. £12.99 NOW £4.50 76449 THOMAS WYATT: The Heart’s Forest by Susan Brigden Born in Allington, Kent, in 1503, Thomas Wyatt would grow into a handsome and physically strong young man, over six feet tall and first entered the service of Henry VIII aged just 12 years. Rising rapidly in favour, he accompanied Sir John Russell to Rome to petition Pope Clement VII to annul the King’s marriage to Katherine of Aragon, leaving him free to marry Anne Boleyn. While in Rome he was captured by the army of Charles V, but managed to find favour with the Emperor, which was ended promptly when the Pope called for a crusade against Henry VIII and set the Inquisition against Wyatt. One of six accused of adultery with Anne Boleyn - and possibly the only one who actually did so - he was imprisoned in the Tower in 1536 and witnessed not only the execution of the Queen but his five co-accused. He escaped on account of his friendship with Henry’s chief legal adviser Thomas Cromwell. It was for his poetry however that Wyatt was respected, nay revered, at court. Considered the first modern voice in English poetry, his poetry held a mirror to the capricious world of court. He died riding to Cornwall at the King’s behest in 1542. Brigden’s life of Wyatt is an unconventional one, being an evocation of its subject among his friends and enemies at courts in England, Italy, France and Spain, or alone in contemplative retreat. Aiming to show Wyatt in all his diversity, parrying faith, poetry and politics in early Reformation England and attuned to his dissonant voice and paradoxical inwardness, this biography is a remarkable analysis of the poet, diplomat and lover at the heart of Henry VIII’s court. 16 pages of colour plates, b/w illus, 714pp. £30 NOW £7.50 78336 100 GREAT BRITS: A Rhyming History from Bede to Beckham by James Muirden £8.99 NOW £6 78459 OVERLOADED ARK by Gerald Durrell Director and owner of Jersey Zoo, Gerald Durrell was internationally famous for his amusing books about collecting wild animals. Here is his first, which remains his funniest book, which describes an expedition to the remote territory of the Cameroons in West Africa before independence. You can feel his bush-shirt sticking to his back as he bags a monitor, smokes out a Pangolin or scaly anteater, celebrates the capture of a rare Angwantibo or small lemur, goes bird liming for Giant Kingfishers on the warm, milky waters of Lake Soden. Paperback, 222pp, line art, reprinted from the 1953 original. £8.99 NOW £4 76861 BIRDING WITH BILL ODDIE by Bill Oddie This practical guide from the birdman himself, published by the RSPB, has an impressive centrepiece of notes from a year’s birding on Oddie’s local patch, Hampstead Heath. The total number of species recorded in 1995 was 116. Lapwings, a woodlark, a Montagu’s Harrier, whitethroats, blackcaps, flycatchers, chiffchaffs - the list is pure poetry. Oddie starts with the basics, advising on binoculars, telescopes and bird clubs, followed by a field guide explaining the essentials of identifying a bird. 224pp, softback, colour photos. £12.99 NOW £2.50 76881 SHARK THAT WALKS ON LAND by Michael Bright From the Kraken to Jaws, sharks exert a special fascination and have achieved some remarkable exploits. Sharks have even been known to swim up the Amazon and Zambezi, attacking hippos and crocodiles. Sharks can detect electrical activity in their prey’s muscles, but there are few instances of taking human prey whole. Deep-dwelling creatures include the Vampire Squid have eyes an inch across, making them the world’s largest eyes for the size of the body, while on the bed of California’s Monterey Bay are two newly-recorded species of marine worms. 285pp, drawings. £12.99 NOW £3 76947 WORLD UNTIL YESTERDAY by Jared Diamond Drawing on his own field work as well as evidence from Inuit, Amazonian Indians and other cultures, Diamond explores how tribal peoples approach essential human problems from child rearing to old age, conflict resolution to health, and discovers that we have much to learn from traditional ways of life. He unearths remarkable findings - from the reasons why modern afflictions like diabetes, obesity and hypertension are largely nonexistent in tribal societies - to the surprising cognitive benefits of multilingualism. 498 pages, paperback, photos, some colour. £13.99 NOW £3.50 In 2002 the BBC conducted a poll to find the 100 greatest Brits and James Muirden has used this as the basis for his book, keeping about half of them. Oliver Cromwell, Samuel Johnson, Charles Darwin, Anita Roddick and Winston Churchill are included. An entertaining take on British history, enlivened by Merrily Harpur’s drawings. 264 pages. £9.99 NOW £3.50 76831 VICTORIAN ELLIOTS IN PEACE AND WAR by John Evans Sub-titled Lord and Lady Minto, their Family and Household between 1816 and 1901. Set in Roxburghshire in Scotland and the fashionable Eaton Square in London is told principally by the Earl and Countess of Minto, their five sons, a diplomat, an MP, a soldier, a sailor and a lawyer and the daughters’ governess. Four of the five daughters made ‘appropriate’ marriages. The action takes place in Britain and across the world, in such places as Brazil and Uruguay, Morocco, China, Cape Province, Russia, Corfu, the Crimea, Bulgaria, Prussia, Italy, Sicily and the Vatican. It includes colourful descriptions of crises and revolutions, as well as the consequences of the fortunate marriage made by one of the Elliot daughters to a future British Prime Minister. 351 pages. Maps, plans and sketches. £25 NOW £4.50 76856 THOMAS BECKET: Warrior, Priest, Rebel, Victim by John Guy The story of Thomas Becket is the story of an enigma. This tall and handsome offspring of a Norman draper’s merchant rose, within the space of 35 years, to become the most powerful man in the kingdom, second only to Henry II himself as his chancellor then as Archbishop of Canterbury in 1162. He led 700 knights into battle, brokered peace between nations, held the ear of the Pope and brought one of the strongest rulers in Christendom to his knees. Within three years of his bloody assassination in Canterbury Cathedral at the age of 50, he was a saint whose cult had spread the length and breadth of Europe. At once a peacemaker and a ruthless manipulator, a lover of hunting and fine clothes yet with a reputation for asceticism, a dilettante who later found the capacity for rigorous hard work but who remained deeply insecure about his background. 422 pages, colour and b/w. £25 NOW £5 34 Historical Biography continued 76822 ENGLAND’S QUEENS: The Biography by Elizabeth Norton From the early queens of England, both real and mythical, such as Boudicca, Etheldreda, Guinevere and Cordelia and then right up to Elizabeth II, this splendid biography impressively details each individual monarch. Nearly 80 women have sat on the throne of England, either as queen regnant or queen consort. The birth of an heir was also a route to power, as instanced by Eleanor of Aquitaine, who became the most powerful woman in Europe during the reigns of her sons. Queens like Isabella of France and Catherine Howard, fatally, took lovers as a form of escape. The unhappy Sophia Dorothea of Celle was imprisoned for over 30 years by her husband George I when her affair was discovered, and her lover was murdered. 354 pages, colour and b/w illus and genealogical tables. £16.99 NOW £3.50 76870 HERETIC QUEEN: Queen Elizabeth I and the Wars of Religion by Susan Ronald Queen Elizabeth I was a political prisoner for most of her young life. She knew that the English people wanted something between Catholicism and Calvinism and set herself to provide it. Under her adviser William Cecil she consolidated her position legally but refused all Cecil’s efforts to persuade her to marry, so that her virginity began to symbolise her even-handedness on matters of religion. Her first love Robert Dudley was always in the background, and Elizabeth maintained an aloof public façade. Meanwhile the government systematically stripped parish churches of the accoutrements of Catholicism such as chalices and images. In the 1580s, when Jesuit infiltration was perceived as a threat, Elizabeth’s right hand man was Francis Walsingham, and his exploits as spymaster and torturer make fascinating reading. 350pp. £27.99 NOW £4 76872 LETTERS FROM AMERICA by Alexis de Tocqueville For the first time here are the complete translated correspondence of Tocqueville on his first journey to America in 1831. The comments on American fine arts are rife with comic snobbery - American theatre is ‘frightful’, its actors ‘detestable’, its music ‘simply barbaric’. There there’s the clothing - ‘of various colours, all loud.’ And there is also reflective wisdom about ‘the happiest people’ and their materialist mode, about Indians and slaves. 284pp, paperback. £16.99 NOW £2.50 77641 BEN JONSON: A Life by Ian Donaldson A lovely heavyweight publication with colour plates and many other illustrations. A close friend of William Shakespeare and his most famous rival, poet, scholar, playwright and principal masque-writer to the early Stuart court, provocateur and felon, Ben Jonson was a complex and volatile character. He was ‘almost at the gallows’ for killing a fellow actor after a quarrel, supped with the Gunpowder conspirators on the eve of their planned coup at Westminster, walked to Scotland and back in order to see the country of his forbears and it would seem, to fulfil a wager, and mixed with the most learned thinkers of his day. Donaldson reveals his mysterious and fractured life. 533 pages in softback. £14.99 NOW £5.50 77663 MASTERS OF MYSTERY by Christopher Sandford Sub-titled ‘The Strange Friendship of Arthur Conan Doyle and Harry Houdini’, this is an amazing true story of how two men searched for the afterlife. The famous magician Harry Houdini and Sir Arthur Conan Doyle who created Sherlock Holmes both used their work to access the supernatural. Set against a colourful cast of vaudeville mentalists, tabletappers, furniture-levitators and slate-writers, this sometimes macabre often comic tale is a fascinating look at two icons and their pursuit of magic and the ‘living’ afterlife. Chapters include Parallel Lives, Metamorphosis and Double Exposure. 281pp in paperback. $17 NOW £4.50 77667 JOHN DONNE: Poetic Lives by Nicholas Robins Although the Dean of St. Paul’s Cathedral at his death, much of John Donne’s early poetry was satiric and surprisingly bawdy, written largely for private amusement. Nicholas Robins here presents an accomplished and concise biography of the life and career of Donne, charting his progress from an impoverished young writer to one of the most senior churchmen in the country. Born to a Catholic family of martyrs and exiles, Donne fought in the war against Spain, converted to Anglicanism and was appointed to a diplomatic position of some authority. But in marrying young Anne More without her father’s permission, he all but brought his own ruination. 144pp in paperback. £7.99 NOW £3 77674 SAMUEL JOHNSON: A Personal History by Christopher Hibbert The master biographer Christopher Hibbert’s account of Samuel Johnson’s life was, and remains, a delightfully readable introduction since it was first published in 1971. Nine years after the publication of Johnson’s famous Dictionary, here was the titan of literary London holed up in a dirty set of rooms, evidently in penury. What did he think of women? How exactly should we define his politics? Did he really loathe the Scots? What possessed him to make such an unlikely marriage? We see intimate glimpses into Johnson’s time as a schoolboy, his eccentricities as an undergraduate at Oxford, his struggle as a poor writer in London, and his slow rise to legendary figure with a court of admirers and a steady stream of visitors. 364pp, paperback. £12.99 NOW £5 77735 KING’S MISTRESS by Claudia Gold ! Sub-titled ‘The True and Scandalous Story of the Woman Who Stole the Heart of George I’, Ehrengard Melusine von der Schulenburg was England’s first Georgian queen in all but name, and possibly the secret ORDER HOTLINE: 020 74 74 24 74 CHRISTMAS REDUCTIONS 78788 LITTLE HANDS CREATIVE STICKER PLAY: Christmas by Steph Clarkson Decorate the snowy scene with fir trees, penguins and snowballs and meet Santa, Mrs Claus, Felicity the Christmas fairy, Ronnie the reindeer and Stanley the snowman. 1,000 reusable coloured stickers. They are bright and beautiful and provide hours of play for hands of all ages developing dexterity and hand to eye coordination. Added fun for little ones is a true or false quiz and things to do. 64 page very large softback. $9.99 NOW £3 78682 A ROUND OF STORIES BY THE CHRISTMAS FIRE by Charles Dickens One of Dickens’s earliest collections for the Christmas season here are tales of romance, theft, justice, heartwarming reunions and ghost stories. The voices in this round include servants and employers, host and charwoman, mother and nursemaid and some surprising ruminations on topics as diverse as disability and interracial love. Published in its entirety for the first time since 1952 with a foreword by D. J. Taylor. 136pp in paperback. £7.99 NOW £4 73454 CHRISTMAS CARD AND TAG: Set of Four by Reader’s Digest The four designs are a beautiful poinsettia, a close up of a Christmas pud with holly and brandy sauce oozing over it, Christmas baubles and a beautifully packaged gift. The cards themselves are 5" x 7" and are good quality, blank inside for your own message, four white envelopes, four pieces of red string and matching gift tags one of each design to match the cards. ONLY £2.50 77602 CHRISTMAS POP-UP CARDS: Eight Christmas Cards illustrated by Louise Gardner The big jolly red Santa says Merry Christmas, his golden buckle shining, his big happy face inviting us to join him and his elves and little white mouse and reindeer at the window in a big pop-up scene as you open this rather special large Christmas card. A second design is a Christmas tree, little white mice and happy bunny collecting presents. The third design has a happy Rudolph and inside four reindeers pull Santa and one elf on a sled across snowy rooftops. The fourth design is of a jolly snowman with metallic red stripes on his scarf and a carrot nose. Inside the big pop up card he leaps forward. Eight fun, beautifully made pop-up cards with strong white envelopes, 5¾ x 7½”, boxed. 75539 GIANT CHRISTMAS COLOURING BOOK by W. F. Graham A festive book of line art which could be traced and used for craft purposes or simply coloured in by little ones. Christmas trees and baubles, St. Nicklaus, children sleighing, a duck skating, a jack-in-the-box surrounded by presents, a reindeer on his sleigh, snowy houses, snowmen, angels and happy children, holly and gifts. Every one’s a cracker! 8" x 12", softback. ONLY £2.25 78380 PERFECT CHRISTMAS by Rose Henniker Heaton SQUIRREL AWAY FOR 2016! In a nostalgic look at Christmas in those easy days before the Second World War, the author describes food, games, guests, house-parties, decorations and family reunions. It is practical, useful and instructive. 152 pages, illus, recipes and menus. £4.95 NOW £2.50 78249 A CHRISTMAS CAROL & DICKENS’ LONDON by Charles Dickens A must-have version, with its beautiful illustrations by artists such as Arthur Rackham and John Leech. Dickens brought Scrooge, Tiny Tim, Bob Crachit, Old Fezziwig and, of course, the Christmas Spirits, to life. There is also a short biography of Charles Dickens and some superb old photos. There’s certainly no ‘Bah, Humbug!’ about this delightful book. Paperback. 11½ x 8", 64pp. £4.99 NOW £2 77601 CHRISTMAS IS HERE by the King James Bible, illustrated by Lauren Castillo A book for every family as a reminder of the true meaning of the Christmas season and what it has meant to families since the birth of Jesus. As each Christmas comes we look forward to gifts and decorations, but perhaps we should take a moment to consider where Christmas began and what it truly means to be with family and friends, celebrate firsts, embrace old customs and start new traditions. For little tots aged three and up, this big picture storybook has only a few lines from the King James Bible on some of the big double page colour artworks. And, lo, the angel of the Lord came upon them… Merry Christmas everyone. 26cm square. $12.99 NOW £5 78366 JUST THE RIGHT CHRISTMAS WORDS by Judith Wibberley The best Christmas present is love and these loving words will bring just the right seasonal cheer and festive fun to family and friends at Christmastime. From poetic verses to heart warming sentiments here are over 450 messages and motifs to celebrate the Christmas season. The 100 fun, copyright-free motifs may be scanned from the book for paper craft projects and personalised cards. 192pp in illustrated softback. £14.95 NOW £6 £9.99 NOW £4 wife of George I. Her nickname amongst the English who loathed her and found her scrawny was The Maypole. She condoned incest, willingly sharing George’s affection and bed with his half sister Sophia Charlotte. Melusine charmed George away from his wife, the beautiful and tempestuous Sophia Dorothea of Celle, and bound him to her until his death. Her gentle nature and good sense helped keep his notoriously dysfunctional family from tearing itself apart. We see her astonishing rise from minor courtier to the ranks of the most powerful woman in Europe, her love of music that saw her mixing with everyone from Handel to the flamboyant theatrical impresario John James Heidegger. Family trees, 314pp. 78283 AGINCOURT: My Family, the Battle, and the Fight for France by Ranulph Fiennes £20 NOW £6 77759 THE WAGNER CLAN by Jonathan Carr The Wagner family has been at the very centre of German history for over 150 years, most controversially through their association with Hitler and the Third Reich. Their remarkable story, in which music and politics are linked, mirrors the triumphs and catastrophes of the whole nation. This paperback edition includes details of how the new director of the Wagner-run Bayreuth Music Festival was chosen, bringing the story right up to date. The true extent of their association with the Nazis is soberly delivered in this splendidly readable saga of greed, jealousy, plotting and scrapping in and around the ill-named family seat Wahnfried, which roughly translates as ‘Peace from Delusion’. 411pp in paperback with photos and family tree. £12.99 NOW £7 78433 CONSTANTINE THE GREAT: Warlord of Rome by Elizabeth James Best known for being the first Christian Emperor and for moving the seat of Imperial rule to ‘New Rome’ (Constantinople), Constantine the Great is a titanic figure in Roman and indeed world history. He won victories over external ‘barbarian’ armies as well as defeating the armies of his own rivals in civil war. Elizabeth James sets the scene with a discussion of the nature of the Roman Army as it emerged from the Third Century Crisis, describing the make up of armies, their weapons and tactics and the impact of Constantine’s policies and reforms. She examines each of his campaigns and battles including the British campaign which led to his proclamation as Emperor at York and shows that he deserves to be remembered as a great general as well as a great emperor. 171pp, three maps and 16 illus. £19.99 NOW £9 78011 BRIEF HISTORY OF CLEOPATRA by M. J. Trow Sub-titled ‘Last Pharaoh of Egypt’, the real Cleopatra was perhaps the reincarnation of the goddess Isis, fabled beauty, seductress and whore. Descended from a general of Alexander the Great who had conquered the Nile as part of Macedonian lands, Cleopatra was destined to be the last Pharaoh who challenged a mighty empire, but in doing so destroyed her own. She bore a child to Julius Caesar and her relationship with Mark Antony is one of the greatest love stories of all time. The pair are said to be entombed together, but their final resting place has never been found. Trow draws on archaeological finds and fresh reinterpretations of ancient texts. 262pp, paperback. $13.95 NOW £3.75 £20 NOW £6.50 SCIENCE FICTION “The Guide says there is an art to flying”, said Ford, “or rather a knack. The knack lies in learning how to throw yourself at the ground and miss.” - Douglas Adams, Life, the Universe and Everything 78795 DOCTOR WHO: Prisoner of the Daleks by Trevor Baxendale The Daleks are advancing, their empire constantly expanding. The battles rage on across countless solar systems and the Doctor finds himself stranded on board a starship near the frontline with a group of ruthless bounty hunters. Earth Command will pay these hunters for every Dalek they kill, every eye stalk they bring back as proof. With the Doctor’s help, the bounty hunters achieve the ultimate prize - a Dalek prisoner, intact, powerless and ready for interrogation. But with the Daleks, nothing is what it seems and no one is safe. Before long the tables will be turned and how will the Doctor survive when he becomes a prisoner of the Daleks? The story featured David Tennant in the TV series. 238pp in paperback. BIBLIOPHILE BOOKS UNIT 5 DATAPOINT, 6 SOUTH CRESCENT, LONDON E16 4TL TEL: 020 74 74 24 74 Millions of twinkling stars filled the sky as Clara and her father walked joyfully through the snow. Crunch, crunch, crunch, went their boots. Angels stand watch over glittering sky lambs. The gleaming angel boy Sylvester hitches the moon horses to a magnificent gold and silver sleigh they head into a shower of moon dust spray to the gates of the magical garden and to the River of Life. A beautiful fairytale originally written c1860 in German, now translated. Colourful illus. Ages 3 and up. £9.99 NOW £3.75 77866 GREAT CHRISTMAS CRISIS by Kim Norman Big, shiny embossed raised figures make this big colourful story book extra special. Santa and his Elfin crew are exhausted from working too fast to wrap Christmas presents. That night over tea Santa told Mrs Claus ‘The North Pole’s in trouble, I must find the cause.’ Rickety bicycles, sinking toy boats, games systems ready but missing remotes... Finally the dolls were dressed properly, kick balls bounced higher, cars stayed on track with not a single flat tyre. They were ready to fly! 10" square. $14.95 NOW £4.50 78034 A CHRISTMAS CAROL by Charles Dickens, illustrated by P. J. Lynch Almost in the style of Arthur Rackham, these spooky and sometimes gleeful artworks by Kate Greenway medal winner P. J. Lynch will be much enjoyed by children aged 6-96. First published in 1843, A Christmas Carol tells the story of Ebenezer Scrooge, a mean old skinflint who hates everyone. On a Christmas Eve as cold as his heart, he receives three ghostly visits - the spirits of Christmases Past, Present and Yet To Come. Gorgeous colour illus, 160pp, large softback. £9.99 NOW £6 78161 CHRISTMAS STORY IN MEDIEVAL AND RENAISSANCE MANUSCRIPTS by Karl Kup The Spencer Collection in New York Public Library is a superb archive of illustrated manuscripts and in this elegant book 55 of the best are selected to illustrate the Christmas story. On each double spread there is a manuscript reproduced in black and white accompanied by a full and informative commentary. The story starts with the Old Testament prophets, with Isaiah’s prophetic sacrifice appearing beneath a charming Nativity scene in the 14th century De La Twyere Psalter from Yorkshire. Among the Nativities there is one from 12th century Bavaria in which the animals peer over the side of the manger with Mary at a distance. The Magi are illustrated in the same Psalter crowding round the child with their gifts, while the same scene in a French vernacular Book of Hours shows the Kings keeping a reverent and courtly distance. No page numbers, softback, 55 illus. ONLY £6 Fiennes is a world-famous arctic explorer who is also the oldest Briton to reach the summit of Everest. He is has some illustrious ancestors, being descended from Count Eustace of Boulogne, William the Conqueror’s Second in Command at the Battle of Hastings. William de Saye, another Norman ancestor, was granted land in William’s redistribution after the battle. 350 years later in another monumental clash between the British and the French, Fiennes had ancestors on both sides at the Battle of Agincourt. He traces the story of his family between these two game-changing conflicts and in the process gives the reader a completely new angle into the military, political and social life of the medieval period. The siege of Acre by Richard the Lionheart saw the deaths of three knights of the Fiennes clan: Sir Ingelram Fiennes and his cousins Tougebrand and John, whose heart was buried in Finsbury Square, London. The daughter of the Black Prince married into another branch of the Fiennes dynasty, the Mortimer family. Finally we join the four Fiennes men in a barn on the night before Agincourt and follow their progress through the battle. 326pp, drawings, colour photos. £7.99 NOW £4 78509 SYLVESTER AND THE NEW YEAR by Eduard Mörike 75600 SALVAGE by Robert Edric 100 years in the future in the far north of England, the Gulf Stream has ceased and the climate is in turmoil. Civil servant Quinn has been appointed to conduct an audit on a remote area of land designated for a brand new model town. Soon he is immersed in a quagmire of corruption. Winston, a disillusioned journalist turned alcoholic with a gallery of photos which show dangerous levels of water below the site, and Pollard, the local man of God whose faith is for sale. But it is Anna, Quinn’s some-time girlfriend in charge of filling the dead cattle pits who faces the deepest abyss of all. An alltoo-plausible Orwellian vision. 348pp. £16.99 NOW 75p 77003 BRIEF GUIDE TO STAR TREK by Brian Robb It is hard to believe that the first episode of Star Trek aired in 1966. It has had a phenomenal cultural impact. J. J. Abrams’s reinvented ‘Star Trek’ movie grossed 385 million dollars worldwide. Here is the transition from the first series and its 25 years of mythology that have grown up with one generation to the next and casting the new Captain of the Enterprise named Jean-Luc Picard who would be a more intellectual, older figure than Kirk had been. On the list was the balding British Shakespearian actor, Patrick Stewart. A fascinating history of the show. 288pp, paperback. $13.95 NOW £4 77012 CLOUD ATLAS by David Mitchell Knitting together science fiction, political thriller and historical pastiche with musical virtuosity and linguistic flair, Mitchell’s book is a meditation and an entertainment. He has a gift for creating fully realised worlds with a varied cast of characters in a most believable way. 514pp, paperback. Remainder mark. $15 NOW £3 78017 MARTIAN WAR by Kevin J. Anderson Millions thrilled to H. G. Wells’ brilliant account of the Martian invasion. But what if that account proved not to be fiction? What if he sought to warn us of impending doom? In the wake of the first Martian assault, H. G. Wells has united with scientists T. E. Huxley and Dr Moreau, astronomer Percival Lowell and Hawley Griffin, the Invisible Man. They seek a weapon that will stem the tide of the invasion, though their paths may take them from the streets of London to the treacherous sands of the Sahara, and then to the Moon itself! 342pp, paperback, remainder mark. £7.99 NOW £3.50 78023 TEHANU: Earthsea Cycle by Ursula K. Le Guin With millions of copies sold worldwide, the Earthsea Cycle has earned a treasured place on the shelves of fantasy lovers of all ages. Years ago the young priestess Tenar and powerful wizard Ged helped each other in a time of darkness and danger. Together they shared an adventure like no other. Tenar has since embraced the simple pleasures of an ordinary life, while Ged mourns the powers lost to him through no choice of his own. Now the two must join forces again and help another in need - the physically, emotionally scarred child whose own destiny has yet to be revealed. Thrilling, wise and beautiful fantasy fiction. 277pp in paperback. Ages 12 and up. $8.99 NOW £2.50 www.bibliophilebooks.com s. c o m w.. b i b l i o p h i l e b o o k ks www CLEARANCE SALE cont. from p18 54981 THE COMPLETE WORKS OF WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE This volume is a reprint of the Shakespeare Head Press edition, and it presents all the plays in chronological order in which they were written. Includes Shakespeare’s Sonnets, as well as his longer poems ‘Venus and Adonis’ and ‘The Rape of Lucrece’. Coloured edges with matching endpapers and headbands. Deluxe binding in cloth, gold tooling and inset colour plate on front cover. 1280 pages. ONLY £10 75429 TEAPOT BOOK by Steve Woodhead Covers the theory, design and practical aspects in depth, using a step-by-step approach to show the throwing of spouts, bodies, handles and lids. Profiles some 25 potters from around the world, showcasing their work. Images of teapot design from makers worldwide, some 75 in all, demonstrate throwing, hand building, moulding, casting and so on. 218 pages 28cm x 23cm, colour, suppliers. £30 NOW £8 75442 CASTLES OF SCOTLAND: Places and History by Christina Gambaro and Anna Galliani From the first defensive towers in bare stone to the stately homes of the 19th century, through ancient buildings, narrow spiral staircases, imposing halls, splendid libraries. Eilean Donan Castle and by contrast, Drummond Castle which still retains all the features of a 17th century Scottish Renaissance castle. 136 pages 30.5cm x 25cm, colour, fold-out triple spreads, map. ONLY £9 75788 GREAT NOVELS AND SHORT STORIES OF SOMERSET MAUGHAM by Somerset Maugham The Moon and Sixpence, The Magician, Liza of Lambeth are the three novels plus five short stories The Pool, Rain, Macintosh, The Fall of Edward Bernard and Red are combined into a huge omnibus hardback, well bound and 665pp. From London to Hong Kong, from Paris to Pago in this collection of masterfully crafted tales. $30 NOW £10 64072 WORDS OF MERCURY by Patrick Leigh Fermor Whether he is drawing portraits in Vienna or sketching Byron’s slippers in Missolonghi, watching a voodoo ceremony in Haiti or a snake festival in Italy, the Leigh Fermor touch is unmistakable. Here is evocative writings are drawn together in book form, as never seen before. 274 page paperback. £9.99 NOW £5 73307 IMPRIMATUR by Rita Monaldi and Francesco Sorti PSYCHOLOGY AND SOCIOLOGY Don’t despair, not even over the fact that you don’t despair. - Kafka 78291 CONSTRUCTIVE WALLOWING: How to Beat Bad Feelings by Letting Yourself Have Them by Tina Gilbertson Thinking positively is one of the mantras of our age, but sometimes you simply can not manage to do it. Tina Gilbertson has an alternative therapy. Invite your bad feelings in, greet them, let them happen, wallow - and then let them go. Hailed by therapists as well as by individuals struggling against stress and depression, this book opens new ways of getting to know what might be best for you. You need to escape from the tyranny of negative expectation, and actively letting it flow through you is a way of leaving it behind. It was Roosevelt who said, “The only thing we have to fear is fear itself”, and with this book you look fear in the eye and stare it down. The author uses case-histories. 252pp, paperback. £10.99 NOW £4 77973 HELPING ELDERLY RELATIVES by Jill Eckersley By 2033 almost 25% of the British population is predicted to be over the age of 65, and 5% will be over 85. Topics include what the problems might be, mental distress in later life such as anxiety and depression, the rise in problem drinking, mental disorders including schizophrenia, bipolar disorder and personality disorder, dementia, when and how to offer help, living options such as sheltered housing and care homes, beating social isolation and loneliness, further help and benefits, if the relationship breaks down and care for the carer. Useful addresses, 100 page paperback. £8.99 NOW £3.50 77978 PRICE OF ALTRUISM: George Price by Oren Harman Our book tells for the first time the moving story of the American eccentric genius George Price, a gifted 11th September 1683, and Rome is a city on a knife-edge. polymath. It was in tackling Darwin’s great mystery Atto Melani is a spy in the service of the Sun King, Louis where he finally made his most dramatic discovery. XIV. He enlists the help of a fellow detainee, a young Ultimately a homeless recluse, he had caught a glimpse serving boy, and together they discover a network of of a deep and scary truth about humanity. From the tunnels beneath the city. Their discoveries included a deadly Beagle in the southern seas to the court of the Russian enmity between Louis XIV and Pope Innocent XI. A Tzar to the chambers of London’s Royal Society, from captivating thriller, 568pp. £16.99 NOW £5.50 World War One trenches to Vietnam demonstrations, (use extra sheet if required). Marxist manifestoes to Nazi heresy, we meet sneaky I enclose a cheque/postal order payable to BIBLIOPHILE BOOKS for amoebas and Russian anarchists, sentry gazelles or please charge my Credit, Debit or : £ and tyrannical despots, Amex card no. brain imaging, game theory, the Bomb, the Manhattan Project and the Holy Bible. Price’s tragic Valid from: Expiry Date: Issue No. (Switch only) suicide in a squatter’s flat provides the ultimate Cardholder’s name contemplation on the as it appears on card. possibility of genuine benevolence. 451pp, illus. * The card security code is a three-digit £20 NOW £6 Card Security Code* number printed at the end of the signature strip on the reverse of the card. American Express cards have a four-digit number printed on the front of the card. 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(£9.50) £6 plus £3.50 Eire Daily collection. 3-7 day service - No 72 hour service available (£8.00) TOTAL £ Tick here to join our mailing list for a FREE catalogue Please return this coupon with your name and address to: Bibliophile Books, Unit 5 Datapoint, South Crescent London E16 4TL Order Tel: 0207 474 2474 e-mail: customercare@bibliophilebooks.com Additional Free Bibliophile Catalogues for distribution. (Please state qty.) C338 35 77410 ASK GRAHAM by Graham Norton 77903 JOY OF SIN by Simon Laham £7.99 NOW £2.50 77656 HOW EVERYONE BECAME DEPRESSED by Edward Shorter £8.99 NOW £2.75 77923 FULL CATASTROPHE LIVING by Jon Kabat-Zinn Graham Norton is best known as a TV presenter and his warm demeanour and dry wit has endeared him to the nation. He is also the agony uncle to the readers of the Daily Telegraph and scores of people write hoping his wise words will ease their worries or at least point them in the right direction. Each perfectly-pitched response includes just the right mixture of sound advice, humour and occasionally, reprimand. We’re all fascinated by each other’s lives. Dip in at your leisure. Paperback, 250pp. Sub-titled ‘The Rise and Fall of the Nervous Breakdown’. How did everyone become depressed? In his provocative book, Edward Shorter describes how in the 19th century patients considered ‘nervous’ when they lost control were having a ‘nervous breakdown’. The result has been a scientific disaster, leading to the misdiagnosis and inappropriate treatments with ‘antidepressants’ given to millions of patients. The trend is sure to continue. Urging that the diagnosis of depression be re-thought, the book turns a dramatic page in the understanding of psychiatric symptoms that are common and looks at diagnosis, its flawed heritage and future. 256pp. £19.99 NOW £5.50 78122 SEIZE THE DAY: How the Dying Teach Us to Live by Marie de Hennezel Just before Princess Diana’s untimely death, the author of this moving volume had made an appointment with her to visit the Lighthouse, where Diana regularly went to sit with young patients dying of HIV-AIDS. Entrusted by the French government with the mission to raise palliative-care awareness, Marie is an esteemed psychologist and psychotherapist, and is the author of two ministerial reports about caring for those with terminal illnesses. Her encounters with people at the end of their lives have given her a unique perspective on what life and death really mean. She is confident that talking about and facing up to death can actually help us to lead fuller lives. An inspirational 189 pages. £12.99 NOW £3 78136 WARMTH OF THE HEART PREVENTS YOUR BODY FROM RUSTING by Marie de Hennezel Clinical psychologist Marie de Hennezel uses her comforting and eloquent words to examine the art of growing old, how to avoid depression, how to stay happy, to enjoy a fulfilling love life and maintain energy in our hearts. The heart she refers to is that inexplicable, incomprehensible force which keeps the human being alive and which Spinoza christened conatus - primordial energy or vital endeavour. It is this heart that can help us push on through our fears and bear us up amid the worst ordeals of old age. A tremendously thoughtful and engaging read. 274pp in paperback. £8.99 NOW £4.25 77967 CONVERSATIONS: 66 Reasons to Start Talking by Olivia Fane Where does conversation go to when you have been with the same partner for a long time? ‘Even though we were out of practice, the art of conversation was a skill we soon picked up again with a relish I would not have thought possible.’ This brilliant book encourages us all to think anew and provides the starting points for 66 conversations to be had with a partner, friend, stranger or simply with ourselves. With stimulating short discussions on happiness, vanity, infidelity, education and more. 261pp. £15.99 NOW £4.50 OUR GUARANTEE Warehouse open to visitors All books supplied on approval (except overseas). We will gladly accept the return, at your expense, within two weeks of receipt of any you do not wish to keep. Should there be anything wrong with your order, please let us know within 7 days and we will rectify this. Please report any mistakes in your order in the same time period, enclosing packing note. You will receive a credit or cash refund as you prefer. Please do not return the books unless we request you to do so. Why are Bibliophile’s books so cheap? In many cases, our mint condition books are publisher overstocks, exactly as originally published. Choosing the number to print has never been an exact science and Bibliophile culls backlists and offers to reduce stocks for publishers. Buying in bulk discount is how we can pass on savings to our customers. The published prices quoted are the last price at which the publishers were selling the titles when we bought our stock. In some cases, books may contain earlier prices. All are hardbacks unless paperback is specified. Where roughcut pages are mentioned in the description this is often called deckle edged (rough and irregular) and is quite popular in the USA. YOUR DELIVERIES The speed of delivery depends on a number of factors, some of which are outside our control, such as the varying time the our carriers take to deliver. So, please be patient. The warehouse staff are very keen and strive valiantly to achieve a quick turn-around of orders - but sometimes we do need our full 28 days. We have local couriers who operate between 07.30am and 9pm to provide deliveries at a more convenient time. If your courier has called and you are not at home, you simply call the telephone number left on the “Sorry I missed you” card to arrange a re-delivery directly with Yodel’s courier at a mutually agreeable time. They will also try a neighbour, if you’re not at home. From gluttony to greed, envy to lust, even the deadliest sins can make you successful and happy. Anger for instance can breed perseverance, sloth hopefulness, greed happiness and envy can actually bolster our selfesteem. Employing modern psychological science together with historical anecdote, Laham eloquently demonstrates why the greedy are happy, the slothful are clever, the gluttonous are social butterflies and how anger can make you a fearsome negotiator. 242pp, paperback. The Mindfulness classic now revised and updated. How to cope with stress, pain and illness using mindfulness meditation, this is an accessible, effective antidote to anxiety, panic and other stress-related disorders. The book is a manual for developing your personal meditation practice. It provides easy-to-follow meditation techniques, a detailed eight week practice schedule, and dozens of success stories. Covers medical symptoms, physical and emotional pain, anxiety and panic, time pressures, relationships, work and events in the outside world. 652pp in large paperback, diagrams. £24 NOW £9.50 78312 ON BECOMING A PERSON by Carl Rogers The aim of the book is to find the path to personal growth and harmonious maturity. How can one person help another? What is creativity and how can it be fostered? Contemporary psychology derives largely from the experimental laboratory or from Freudian theory. There are rebels, of whom the author counted himself as one, along with Gordon Allport, Abraham Maslow and Rollo May who feel that psychology and psychiatry should be aiming higher, and be more concerned with growth and potentiality in man. Successful development will make us less open to suggestion and control. 420pp in facsimile reprinted paperback from the 1967 original classic work. £12.99 NOW £5 SPORT Golf is so popular simply because it is the best game in the world at which to be bad. - A. A. Milne 78020 PRACTICAL FISHING KNOTS by Mark Sosin and Lefty Kreh For fly fishing, trolling, baitcasting and spinning in fresh or salt water, here is how to tie over 50 knots. Field & Stream Magazine called the first edition of this essential book ‘The long time bible of knots and knot tying.’ New lines and leaders, new knots and nomenclature have required a completely new book. This is the fully rewritten and freshly illustrated successor for those who need a strong hitch and a handy knot, fisherman or not! 140pp in paperback. $12.95 NOW £3 78234 FOOTBALL GROUNDS THEN AND NOW by Aerofilms This intriguing, unusual book for fans of the ‘beautiful game’ comprises aerial photographs of dozens of famous pitches. Before and after aerial shots let you see the difference; you can take in much more detail when you see the whole thing at once from the air. Tottenham Hotspur, Southampton, Manchester United, Crystal Palace, Swansea, QPR, Norwich City, Hereford United, and many more, all in then-and-now bird’s eye view photos courtesy of Aerofilms. Detailed descriptions of each ground. Paperback, 192pp, colour and b/w photos. £14.99 NOW £4.75 77450 TRUE LINKS: An Illustrated Guide to the Glories of the World’s 246 Links Courses by George Peper and Malcolm Campbell YOURORDERS We endeavour to provide a 5 day turnaround of orders from our small, expert Team. Our picking of multiple titles and careful packaging is a timeconsuming and precise business. Please be patient during busy times. Please send orders to Bibliophile Ltd., Unit 5 Datapoint Business Centre, 6 South Crescent, London E16 4TL Queries and orders by telephone should be to 020 74 74 24 74. PLEASE ALLOW UP TO 28 DAYS FOR DELIVERY (UK ONLY) POSTAGE AND PACKING CHARGES We have always charged less for postage than the actual cost to us. We have a flat rate agreement with our carriers for every parcel, no matter how big or small. We charge £3.50 per order to UK customers. FOR CREDIT CARD HOLDERS ONLY FAX-A-BARGAIN Fax orders are welcome. If you fax us an order not using our order form PLEASE MAKE SURE THAT YOU INCLUDE YOUR CUSTOMER NUMBER. OUR FAX NUMBER IS 020-74748589. OVERSEAS CUSTOMERS We regret we can not accept payment with Canadian or Republic of Ireland Postal Orders, Electron or Solo cards. There are over 30,000 golf courses in the world, many of which call themselves links. Links courses are the golfer’s ultimate challenge, presenting obstacles and conditions that a parkland course can never offer and the British Isles - and Scotland, the home of golf, in particular leads the way with almost 90% of the world’s true links courses. Which country comes second? That would be our almost exact global opposite, New Zealand’s South Island, which has a very similar climate to ours and offers eight true links. The authors’ 50-odd personal choices such as Carnoustie, Turnberry, Royal Liverpool, Nairn, Muirfield, Royal Porthcawl, Ballybunion and Lahinch, among many others follow a whole chapter on “The Crucible”, St Andrews Old Course, the links upon which the game was born and been played for 600 years. We then move overseas to the most northerly, Norway’s Lofoten, located above the Arctic Circle to other European courses and those in the US and Old Tom Morris of the Royal and Ancient. 11¼” square, many full and double-page spreads capture the majesty of these exposed, rugged and beautiful courses. 308pp. $40 NOW £16 76564 GOLDEN RULES OF BRIDGE by Paul Mendelson Whether you play social rubber bridge or Chicago, club teams events or duplicate pairs, these tips and techniques will transform both your results and your enjoyment of the game. Understand the logical reasoning behind the most common bids, leads and plays, develop winning understandings with your regular partner or group of players. 247pp, paperback, examples. £9.99 NOW £2.50 36 Order Form on page 35 ORDER HOTLINE: 020 74 74 24 74 79025 HOLY BIBLE WITH ILLUSTRATIONS FROM THE VATICAN LIBRARY by Turner Publishing RELIGION AND PHILOSOPHY Wise men speak because they have something to say; fools because they have to say something. - Plato 78804 HANDBOOK OF ANGELS AND FALLEN ANGELS by Dr Robert Curran Cherubim and Seraphim, the archangels including Azrael and Gabriel, fallen angels like Lucifer, Asmodeus, Beelzebub, and Shax, here too are angels on earth, guardian angels, Tobit and the Angel, The Poison Pot and modern tales. Angels are ‘spiritual beings’ that have appeared throughout the centuries in many religions around the world. Our handbook is an essential guide to angels and demons and more importantly, how to spot them. Are they loving, winged messengers of Heaven, peaceful caring beings spreading love, or are they mighty warriors to be feared? The opening page has a beautiful stained glass window illustration which when opened reveals the contents of this special padded cover book with elastic fastener. Fantastical illustrations in colour on every one of the 80 pages and with glossary. $14.99 NOW £4.50 78690 TEN POPES WHO SHOOK THE WORLD by Eamon Duffy The Bishops of Rome have been Christianity’s most powerful figures for nearly 2,000 years, but their influence has extended far beyond the purely spiritual and still does today. Popes have played a central role in European history and also that of the wider world, shouldering the spiritual burden of their office and also contending with - and often causing - the cultural and political crises of their times. The papacy is an institution that matters a great deal whether one likes it or not, as this 262-strong succession of popes, the world’s most ancient dynasty, exercises a quasi-monarchic role, touching the consciences and influencing the opinions of nearly a fifth of the human race. In 2007 Eamon Duffy, Cambridge professor of history of Christianity, broadcast a series of ten shows on BBC Radio 4 on the ten most influential popes in history and now readers can also enjoy Duffy’s superb portraits of these ten exceptional men. Not surprisingly we start with St Peter, the Rock upon whom the Catholic Church was founded, then follow Leo the Great (440-461), Gregory the Great (590-604), Gregory VII (1073-1085), Innocent III (1198-1216), Paul III (1534-1549), Pius IX (1846-1878), Pius XII (who landed the world’s toughest job when he was elected on the eve of WWII), his successor John XXIII (1958-1963) and finally the much-loved John-Paul II (1978-2005), the first non-Italian pope in 450 years and once a formidable goalkeeper who played for both Catholic and Jewish teams before WWII. With his prodigious knowledge and obvious love of his subject, Duffy shows how these men shaped their own worlds and in the process helped to create ours. Photos and artworks, 151pp. £14.99 NOW £6.50 78050 BUDDHA: Images In Art by Michael Jordan Each stance of the Buddha that an artist displays, whether seated, standing, walking or reclining, reflects some aspect or incident of Gautama (Shakyamuni) Buddha’s life.’ Writer and broadcaster Michael Jordan tells the story of Buddha’s life, as well as describing glorious artworks that have been created over the centuries depicting the holy man, explaining the religious significance and symbolism in common themes such as poses, hairstyles and positioning of hands. From the emergence of the baby Gautama Siddharta, later to become the Buddha, from the thigh of his mother Queen Maya, through to his death by a small stream at Kusinagara near the Nepalese border, this beautiful book is packed with photographs of statues and other artworks. Paperback, 320pp, colour illus. £16.99 NOW £6.50 77730 GOSPEL OF JUDAS: CRITICAL EDITION edited by Kasser, Wurst, Meyer, Gaudard There is only one ancient reference to the Gospel of Judas, by the Church Father Irenaeus in 180 A.D., hidden for 1600 years in a cave in Egypt. When the Gospel surfaced in modern times as part of the Codex Tchacos, discovered in the region of Al Minya around 1978, there was great excitement, tempered by caution. Years spent in a safe deposit box caused decomposition and disintegration until eventually Frieda Tchacos acquired it for the Swiss Maecenas foundation. Scholars have painstakingly reconstructed the damaged manuscript, written in Sahidic, a form of Coptic, and it is translated here into English alongside a transcription and photograph of each original fragment. Each of the books in the Codex has an introduction in both English and French. Apart from The Gospel of Judas, the Tchacos manuscript also includes The Letter of Peter to Philip, a book simply called James, with the same text as the Nag Hammadi Second Revelation of James, and the seriously damaged Book of Allogenes. The content of the Gospel of Judas concerns Judas’s visions of the Published by Bibliophile Ltd., Based on one of the supreme masterpieces of 15th century art and bookmaking, this spectacular volume presents The Holy Scriptures reproduced from a one-of-akind handcrafted world treasure completed by a Florentine book dealer in 1478, the text having taken the scribe Ugo Comminelli of Mézières four years to write by hand. The numerous illuminations gracing the original parchment papers of the Urbino Bible were hand painted by such masters as Domenico and Davide Ghirlandaio. The present volume makes use of all the major illustrations from that bible and includes countless other artistic details such as decorative borders, column dividers, and illuminated and historiated initial capitals. This extraordinary family heirloom Bible also draws illustrations from 30 additional manuscript volumes in the cosmos and ends with his betrayal of Jesus. 378pp, colour facsimiles of the original papyrus pages, codicological and historical introductions, parallel texts, extensive index. For all New Testament scholars. £25 NOW £7.50 77088 SECRET LANGUAGE OF CHURCHES AND CATHEDRALS by Richard Stemp Subtitled ‘Decoding the Sacred Symbolism of Christianity’s Holy Buildings’, here a lecturer at the National Gallery takes us from basilicas through Byzantine, Romanesque, Gothic and beyond. Why is there a pelican on the lectern and ornate foliage on the pillars? This special and richly adorned book restores the lost spiritual meaning of these fine and fascinating buildings. The book has three parts - from walls to ceilings, with a theme by theme guide identifying significant figures, scenes, stories, animals, flowers and the use of numbers, letters and patterns in paintings, carvings and sculpture. The final part is a historical decoder, tracing the evolution of styles and the layers of meaning. 30 x 24cm with many plans and layouts including Salisbury Cathedral and Durham Cathedral, the Tree of Jesse from St Michael’s Hildeshein, Germany, the ecclesiastical calendar, the Ghent altarpiece and much more. 225pp, colour photos. $35 NOW £11 77712 ANCIENT ISRAEL: The Former Prophets by Robert Alter An award-winning translation of the Hebrew Bible of the Books of the Former Prophets Joshua, Judges, Samuel and Kings. Samson, the vigilante superhero of Judges, slaughters thousands of Philistines with the jawbone of a donkey. David, the Machiavellian Prince of Samuel and Kings, is one of the great literary figures of antiquity. A scattering of contentious desert tribes joined by faith in a special covenant with God, Israel emerges through bloody massacres of Canaanite populations recounted in Joshua and the anarchic violence of Judges. David dies bitterly isolated in his court, surrounded by enemies. His successor Solomon maintains national unity through his legendary wisdom, wealth and grand public vision, but after his death Israel succumbs to internal discord and foreign conquest. Near its end, the saga of Ancient Israel returns to the supernatural. 852pp with Bible references and map. £25 NOW £6 78061 FONT OF LIFE: Ambrose, Augustine and the Mystery of Baptism by Garry Wills In the year 387, a man who was to become a major figure in the history of Christianity, St Augustine, was baptised by the Bishop of Milan who as St Ambrose would become one of the most important Church Fathers. Ambrose touched the ears and noses of the people to be baptised to open their awareness before they were required to renounce the devil, and they then descended into the baptismal pool before emerging and being given a white garment. Ambrose’s teaching to Augustine included ways in which Old Testament figures were forerunners of characters from the Christian story, something Augustine would develop in his writings. This fascinating book follows the careers of Augustine and Ambrose. 194pp, photos. ONLY £5 76491 STORY OF THE BIBLE: The Fascinating History of its Writing, Translation and Effect on Civilisation by Larry Stone This is a hands-on Bible history, and bound into the text are 10 envelopes containing facsimiles of different Bible manuscripts, starting with the Great Isaiah Dead Sea Scroll, written in the first century B.C. Other facsimiles include an illuminated page from The Morgan Crusader’s Bible, described as one of the most beautiful Gothic manuscripts in existence, together with illuminated Celtic initial pages from the Lindisfarne Gospels and the Book of Kells. Printing revolutionised the Bible’s availability, and a facsimile from the Gutenberg Bible, of which there are 48 still in existence, shows the text printed in movable type with illustrations added by hand, making every one unique. Luther’s and Erasmus’s Bibles are reproduced, and other translations include the 17th century translation into Algonquin. 96pp, large format with enclosures, colour illus, timeline. £21.99 NOW £9.50 Vatican Library featuring painters such as Pietro Perugino and Bernardino Pinturicchio. By commissioning special formulations of metallic-gold ink and applying them to the printed pages in detailed hand-silhouetted from the original gold, Turner Publishing in this first edition has created a modern bible with all the special qualities of an historic facsimile. 700 full colour illustrations, 1312 pages, satin bookmarker, maroon watermarked silk binding, gilt-edged pages, matching silk bound slipcase and colour wrapper, this is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to buy the most beautiful family heirloom bible we have ever seen. With masterpieces of Renaissance art with the modern text of the Bible most widely accepted by all religious denominations, the New Standard Revised Version. Super heavyweight, 10½” x 14½”. Only UK delivery. Note our copy had some tiny glue problem in opening first pages. No returns. $599.99 NOW £150 78173 LIVING IN THE FACE OF DEATH: The Tibetan Tradition by Glenn Mullin This book incorporates writings from nine writers on the tradition of death and dying, including several Dalai Lamas and the author of the famous Tibetan Book of the Dead. It introduces the concepts of karma and reincarnation and also samsara, the world of cyclic existence. When the body dies the mind enters the bardo, or state between death and rebirth, taking with it the karmic instincts it has generated during life, and these, whether positive or negative, will determine what kind of rebirth the spirit will receive in one of Buddhism’s six realms. Each moment’s consciousness is said to derive from the previous moment, and Buddhists are in training for death at every moment of their lives. Includes the Longevity Yogas and the Yoga of Consciousness Transference. 238pp, paperback. $16.95 NOW £5.50 77732 HOLY BLOOD, HOLY GRAIL by Michael Baigent, Richard Leigh, Henry Lincoln This new edition of the book that created a sensation in 1982. The authors originally started their research with the mystery of Father Berenger Sauniere, the late 19th century priest of Rennes le Chateau who, following a renovation of his ancient church dedicated to Mary Magdalene, suddenly became fabulously wealthy. Speculation has focused on two parchments discovered in the most ancient part of the church, thought to contain some esoteric secret. The village had links with the Cathars and Albigensian crusade, as well as being a Visigoth bastion ruled by the Merovingian King Dagobert II. Going back even earlier, there was the treasure of the temple of Jerusalem, pillaged by the Visigoth Alaric. The legends of secret treasure led the authors to the Grail story, King Arthur, and the German myths of the Nibelung. Their search leads them to the possibility that Jesus was married to Mary Magdalene and that their descendants are alive today. 511pp, colour illus. $35 NOW £9 78176 PURITY OF DESIRE: 100 Poems of Rumi translated by Daniel Ladinsky A book capturing the beauty, intimacy and musicality of Jalaluddin Rumi, the Persian poet born 1207 who fled the invasion of the Mongol armies of Genghis Khan. Rumi and his family settled in Turkey where his father was a scholar and mystic. Later, Rumi succeeded his father in leading a Dervish college (divinity school) and his life was transformed in 1244 when he met Shams who became Rumi’s beloved companion and doorway to God. Ladinsky explores 100 of his poems and the nuances of desire and compelling wisdom of one of Islam’s most revered artistic and religious voices. ‘Be like the cat, so alive after the mouse, never wondering or questioning why, when there is really only God, only God... touching our paws.’ Softback, 118pp. £11.99 NOW £5 78179 SILENCE: A Christian History by Diarmaid MacCulloch ! In his thoughtful book, MacCulloch takes us on a guided tour of the role of silence in Christian history and tradition. He considers Jesus’ strategic use of silence, the lessons of the first mystics in Syria, and the long arc of monastic tradition. Plus silence in Protestant and evangelical circles and more sinister institutional forms of silence within the Catholic Church. In a deeply personal final chapter he brings a message of optimism. 338pp in paperback. Tiny remainder mark. £17 NOW £5 77753 TEMPLARS AND THE SHROUD OF CHRIST by Barbara Frale The Turin Shroud is one of the most controversial relics of the Catholic church. This swathe of fabric is claimed to be imprinted with the image of the face of Jesus Christ and, for a long time, was kept in the central treasury of the Knights Templar. The Templars considered the shroud to be a powerful antidote against the proliferation of heresies. This compelling book tracks them from their inception as warrior-monks protecting religious pilgrims, following the Shroud’s pathway through the Middle Ages, a Vatican historian has gone back in time, to the dawn of the Christian era, to provide a new perspective on this much disputed object. 296pp. 78285 ART OF HAPPINESS: A Handbook for Living by H. H. Dalai Lama and Howard Cutler One of the world’s great spiritual leaders offers his practical wisdom and advice on how we can overcome everyday human problems and achieve lasting happiness. Written for a Western audience, it combines his Eastern spiritual tradition with Dr Howard C. Cutler’s Western perspective. They apply the principals of Tibetan Buddhism to everyday problems and reveal how one can find balance and complete mental and spiritual freedom. Deal with anger and hatred, anxiety and self esteem, bring about change and reflect on living a more spiritual life. 269pp in paperback. £9.99 NOW £5 30323 HOLY QUR’AN by Abdullah Yusuf Ali The Holy Qu’ran (also known as The Koran) is the sacred book of Islam. It is the word of God whose truth was revealed to the Prophet Muhammad through the angel Gabriel over a period of 23 years. The first full compilation was by Abu Bakar, the first Caliph, and it was then recompiled in the original dialect by the third Caliph Uthman, after the best reciters had fallen in battle. Muslims believe that the truths of the Qur’an are fully and authentically revealed only in the original classical Arabic. This translation, by Abdullah Yusuf Ali, is considered to be the most faithful rendering available in English. 562pp. Paperback. ONLY £4 77179 IN THE SHADOW OF THE SWORD by Tom Holland Does the Qur’an really date from the Prophet’s lifetime? Where did he actually live? The author focuses particularly on the struggles of late antiquity, including the Christian revolution of the Emperor Constantine and its reversal by Justinian, with the result that Constantinople was flattened and looted by thugs. Justinian’s savage response and rebuilding of Constantinople achieved temporary stability, but the world seemed to be in apocalypse and the arrival of Muhammad and his followers and Islam on the scene promised a new way forward. 574pp, paperback, timeline, colour reproductions. £12.99 NOW £4.75 78356 FOUR GOSPELS by A. N. Wilson, Nick Cave, Blake Morrison et al The Bible has supreme status as a work of myth and poetry. Encouraging the reading of the Bible as literature rather than doctrine, the four central gospels are presented here in the beauty of the Authorised King James Version, with four fresh, modern introductions. The revelatory essays by A. N. Wilson, Nick Cave, Richard Holloway and Blake Morrison were commissioned for the groundbreaking Pocket Canons series. They offer piercing, moving and highly personal responses to the most influential stories of the last 2000 years - the life of Christ. 313pp, paperback. £8.99 NOW £3.50 77229 ON HEAVEN AND EARTH: Pope Francis on Faith, Family and the Church in the 21st Century by Jorge Mario Bergoglio and Abraham Skorka Jorge Mario Bergoglio is better known, since 13th March 2013, as Pope Francis, the 266th leader of the 1.2 billion-strong Roman Catholic Church, and Rabbi Abraham Skorka, like Pope Francis also born in Buenos Aires, is a world-respected scholar of Talmudic and Biblical research, as well as a biophysicist. For years Cardinal Bergoglio (as he then was) and Rabbi Skorka sought to build bridges between Catholicism and Judaism and the world at large. This book brings together a compelling series of dialogues where both men talk about God, fundamentalism, atheism, abortion, euthanasia, same-sex marriage, science, communism vs. capitalism, the Holocaust, the Arab-Israeli conflict, education and plenty more. 236pp. £14.99 NOW £6 77389 TOWARDS THE TRUE KINSHIP OF FAITHS by His Holiness The Dalai Lama Through his five decades of experience, His Holiness the Dalai Lama has advocated the view that every religion in the world has similar ideas of love, the same goal of benefitting humanity through spiritual practice. This book is a spiritual classic by a great sage of our times and he looks at how the world’s religions can come together. He shows how in our globalised world, nations, cultures and individuals of all faiths can turn to compassion as a guiding principle for living a good life. 188pp, paperback. £8.99 NOW £2.50 77465 CELEBRATION OF DISCIPLINE: The Path to Spiritual Growth by Richard Foster This timeless classic has been praised by many as the most important contemporary book on Christian spirituality. It explores the ‘classic disciplines’ of the Christian faith - the inward disciplines of meditation, prayer, fasting and study. The outward disciplines of simplicity, solitude, submission and service are described alongside the corporate disciplines of confession, worship, guidance and celebration. Reprint of the 1980 original, paperback, 282pp. £8.99 NOW £3.50 77714 BHAGAVAD GITA AS A LIVING EXPERIENCE by Wilfried Huchzermeyer and Jutta Zimmermann Bhagavad Gita or ‘Song of the Lord’ is considered the most important work of ancient Sanskrit literature. Part of the great epic poem the Mahabharata, it tells the story of Arjuna, a great warrior and prince, who on the eve of battle experiences doubt and fear at the fighting to come. His charioteer however is none other than Lord Krishna, who not only strengthens his heart for battle but explains to him the many paths of yoga, before revealing himself in all his glory as God incarnate. Includes a transliteration of the Sanskrit text, a mini anthology of Western responses to it. 120pp, paperback, Indian line art. £10.99 NOW £3.50 $24.95 NOW £6 Unit 5 Datapoint Business Centre, 6 South Crescent, London E16 4TL is a Registered Trade Mark This newspaper is printed on recyclable paper. Proprietor: Annie Quigley