BLOOMS B UR Y PU B LISHING
Transcription
BLOOMS B UR Y PU B LISHING
B l o o m s b u ry Rights Guide Frankfurt 201� Publishing Adult C O N TE N TS Fiction ������������������������������������������������������ 2 G eneral N on - F iction ������������������������������ 2 8 C urrent A ffairs ������������������������������������ 3 6 Memoir and B iograph y �������������������������� 4 2 Travel and N atu re W riting ������������������ 5 6 Smart Thin k ing �������������������������������������� 6 4 Science �������������������������������������������������� 6 8 Sigma������������������������������������������������������ 7 1 Sport ������������������������������������������������������ 7 9 I llustrated and N ovelt y ���������������������� 8 8 Cookery ������������������������������������������������ 9 5 Su bagents�������������������������������������������� 1 1 4 Bloomsbury Publishing Plc. 50 Bedford Square London WC1B 3DP Tel : +44 (0) 207 631 5600 rights@bloomsbury.com www.bloomsbury.com Joanna Everard Rights Director Scandinavia Special Interest and Cookery Tel: +44 (0) 207 631 5872 joanna.everard@bloomsbury.com Katie Smith Senior Rights Manager France, Italy, Holland, Spain, Portugal, Latin America, Brazil Tel: +44 (0) 207 631 5873 katie.smith@bloomsbury.com Vasiliki Machaira Rights Manager Asia, Germany (illustrated and special interest), Eastern Europe, Israel, Poland, Russia, Turkey, Middle East, Greece Tel: +44 (0) 207 631 5876 Vasiliki.Machaira@bloomsbury.com Maria Hammershoy Rights Manager Scandinavia, Germany (trade non illustrated) +44 (0) 207 631 5736 Maria.hammershoy@bloomsbury.com Ana Ortiz-Rosete Rights Assistant Czech Republic, Slovakia, Hungary Tel: +44 (0) 207 631 5784 Ana.ortizrosete@bloomsbury.com 1 Fiction The Private Life of Mrs Sharma Ratika Kapur A wickedly witty portrait of modern India from a distinctive, bold and original new talent Renuka Sharma is a dutiful wife, mother, and daughter-in-law holding the fort in a modest rental in Delhi while her husband tries to rack up savings in Dubai. Working as a receptionist and committed to finding a place for her family in the New Indian Dream of air-conditioned malls and high paid jobs at multi-nationals, life is going as planned until the day she strikes up a conversation with an uncommonly self possessed stranger at a metro station. Because while Mrs Sharma may espouse traditional values, India is changing all around her, and it wouldn’t be the end of the world if she came out of her shell a little, would it? With equal doses of humour and pathos, The Private Life of Mrs Sharma is a sharp-eyed examination of the clashing of tradition and modernity, from a dramatic new voice in Indian fiction. Bloomsbury Publishing PUBLICATION DATE: 03/12/15 EXTENT: 208 Ratika Kapur’s first novel, Overwinter, was longlisted for the Man Asian Literary Prize. Elle magazine’s Indian edition included Ratika in a Granta-inspired list of twenty authors under forty to look out for from South Asia. She lives in Delhi with her husband and son. ratikakapur.wordpress.com 2 Fiction The Memory Stones Caroline Brothers A compelling tale of a young woman’s disappearance in 1970s Argentina, The Memory Stones is a sweeping, epic story of a family tragedy whose consequences echo throughout generations Bloomsbury Publishing PUBLICATION DATE: 14/07/16 EXTENT: 256 Buenos Aires, 1976. A long hot summer has trapped the city in a bell jar of humidity. Everything has hardened or softened in the heat: bread grows stale before the bakers can sell it; lettuces wilt on grocers’ shelves; lovers too irritable for sex lie pearled in sweat. The garbage collectors haven’t been seen since the day of the military coup, and rubbish builds up in the street in mounds; dogs fight amongst the debris at night. In the midst of the heat the Ferrero family escape to the lush expanse of Tigre. Osvaldo, a distinguished middleaged doctor, and his wife Yolanda, gather with their daughters, sensible Julieta who lives with her husband in Miami, and the beautiful, wilful Graciela – nineteen, radiant, and madly in love with her fiancé José. It would be the last time they were all together. For on their return, the military junta starts tightening its grip on the nation, and Osvaldo is forced to flee. Exiled, he can only listen to Yolanda’s tales of the terror and anxiety that descends as friends and colleagues disappear overnight. Graciela and José go into hiding, driving Yolanda mad with worry. And then comes the day when Graciela, José and their friends are dragged from their hide-out by plain-clothes policemen, leaving Osvaldo with nothing to do but witness the slow disintegration of his family from afar. Beautifully written, carefully observed, The Memory Stones is a devastating portrait of one family’s unbearable loss, and a country’s resounding silence. Caroline Brothers was born in Australia. She has a PhD in history from University College London and has worked as a foreign correspondent in Europe and Latin America. She is a regular contributor to the International Herald Tribune and the New York Times, and is currently an Editor at the International New York Times. She is the author of War and Photography, and the novel Hinterland, published by Bloomsbury in 2012. She lives in Paris. www.carolinebrothers.com @CaroBrothers Praise for Hinterland: 'A heart-wrenching story of two young brothers on a long, hard road; a story that all of us should read' Daily Mail ‘An illuminating and timely story … a book that haunts and shames in equal measure’ Guardian ‘A moving account … Brothers’ elegant prose holds sentimentality at bay, complimenting some impressive reportage’ Financial Times Rights sold: Newton Compton (Italian), Berlin Verlag (German) 3 Fiction Everything Love Is Claire King From the author of The Night Rainbow: a poignant, mysterious and unforgettable story of love, and of the happy endings we conceive for ourselves. Baptiste Molino has devoted his life to other people’s happiness. Moored on his beloved houseboat on the edge of Toulouse, he helps his clients navigate the waters of contentment, whilst remaining careful never to make waves of his own. Unlike those who come to him for help, Baptiste is more concerned with his past than his future: particularly the mysterious circumstances of his birth and the identity of his birth mother whose only legacy to her orphaned son was a violin, a wooden statuette and a word inked into the skin of her arm. Bloomsbury Publishing PUBLICATION DATE: 14/07/16 EXTENT: 288 But Sophie, the young waitress in his local bar, believes it is time for Baptiste to raise his aspirations and rediscover passion … and she thinks she can help. She talks of striving for something more and leads him into the world on his doorstep he has long tried to avoid. However it is Baptiste’s new client who may end up being the one to change his perspective. Elegant and enigmatic, Amandine Rousseau is fast becoming a puzzle he longs to solve. As winter approaches and tensions rise on the streets of the city, Baptiste’s determination to avoid both the highs and lows of love begins to waver. And when his mother’s legacy finally reveals itself he finds himself torn between pursuing his own happiness and safeguarding that of the one he loves. Claire King’s debut novel, The Night Rainbow was published by Bloomsbury in 2013. She is also the author of numerous prize-winning short stories. Having graduated from Cambridge she now lives and works in France. www.claire-king.com @ckingwriter Praise for The Night Rainbow: ‘Quirky, elegant and sweet: I loved it!’ Joanne Harris ‘At once moving and gripping, elegant and spare, The Night Rainbow is a daring novel about a child faced with the baffling world of adult grief. Claire King nails the voice of the child narrator from the first page; Pea is a heroine you won’t forget’ Maggie O’Farrell ‘Emotional and beautifully written, you’ll be on tenterhooks throughout’ Stylist RIGHTS SOLD: Orlando (Dutch), Berlin Verlag (German), Piemme (Italian) 4 ‘An original, beguiling debut about the consequences of an imaginatively lived life’ Marie Claire Fiction The Photographer’s Wife Suzanne Joinson By the author of A Lady Cyclist’s Guide to Kashgar, an LA Times bestseller: a beautiful and gripping story of love and betrayal, set in 1920s Jerusalem and 1930s Sussex Jerusalem, 1920: in an already fractured city, eleven-year-old Prudence feels the tension rising as her architect father launches an ambitious – and wildly eccentric – plan to redesign the Holy City by importing English parks to the desert. Prue, known as the ‘little witness’, eavesdrops underneath the tables of tearooms and behind the curtains of the dance-halls of the city's elite, watching everything but rarely being watched herself. Around her, British colonials, exiled Armenians and German officials rub shoulders as they line up the pieces in a political game: a game destined to lead to disaster. Bloomsbury Publishing PUBLICATION DATE: 05/05/16 EXTENT: 320 When Prue’s father employs a British pilot, William Harrington, to take aerial photographs of the city, Prue is uncomfortably aware of the attraction that sparks between him and Eleanora, the English wife of a famous Jerusalem photographer. And, after Harrington learns that Eleanora’s husband is a nationalist, intent on removing the British, those sparks fan dangerously into a flame. Years later, in 1937, Prue is an artist living a reclusive life by the sea with her young son, when Harrington pays her a surprise visit. What he reveals unravels her world, and she must follow the threads that lead her back to secrets longago buried in Jerusalem. The Photographer’s Wife is a powerful story of betrayal: between father and daughter, between husband and wife, and between nations and people, set in the complex period between the two world wars. Suzanne Joinson is an award-winning writer of fiction and non-fiction whose work has appeared in, among other places, the New York Times, Vogue, Aeon, Lonely Planet guides and the Independent on Sunday. Her first novel, A Lady Cyclist’s Guide to Kashgar (2012), was translated into sixteen languages and was a national bestseller. She lives in Sussex. suzannejoinson.com @suzyjoinson Rights sold: Presses de la Citie (French), Shanghai Century Literature Company (Chinese simplified), Berlin (German), Intrinseca (Portuguese – Brazil), Elliot (Italian), Turbluenz (Danish), Laguna (Serbian), Nishimura Shoten (Japanese), Roca (Spanish), The House of Books (Dutch), Vigmostad and Bjorke (Norwegian) Praise for A Lady Cyclist’s Guide to Kashgar: ‘An impressive debut, its prose is lucid and deep as a mountain lake’ New York Times ‘An ambitious, accomplished debut’ Daily Mail 5 Fiction The Gun Room Georgina Harding A beautiful, powerful and utterly devastating new novel from Orange Prize-shortlisted author Georgina Harding The memory of war will stay with a man longer than anything else. Vietnam, early 1970s. Jonathan Ashe has made his way there with the dream of becoming a war photographer, and a chance encounter gives him his break. A pilot offers him a ride in a chopper, over the jungle at dawn. They see the mist clearing, the mountains and the delta, and in the distance, the smoke of a burning village. Descending into mayhem, he gets the shot that might make his career. But what he has seen is more than he can bear, and he flees. Bloomsbury Publishing PUBLICATION DATE: 21/04/16 EXTENT: 288 He drifts on to Japan, to lose himself in the vastness of Tokyo, where there are different kinds of pictures to be taken, pictures of crowds and subways and cherry blossom. And pictures of a girl with whom he is no longer lost: innumerable pictures of Kumiko, on the streets and in the rain and in the heat of the summer. But even here, in this alien city, his history will catch up with him: that photograph and his responsibility in taking it; his responsibility as a witness to war, and as a witness to other events buried far deeper in his past. The Gun Room is a powerful exploration of image and memory, and of the moral complexity and emotional consequences of the experience of war. also available Painter of Silence Shortlisted for the Orange Prize The Solitude of Thomas Cave The Spy Game 6 Georgina Harding is the author of three novels: The Solitude of Thomas Cave, The Spy Game, which was a BBC Book at Bedtime and shortlisted for an Encore Award, and, most recently, Painter of Silence, which was shortlisted for the Orange Prize for Fiction 2012. Her first book was a work of non-fiction, In Another Europe, recording a journey she made across Romania in 1988 during the worst times of the Ceausescu regime. It was followed by Tranquebar: A Season in South India, which documented the lives of the people in a small fishing village on the Coromandel coast. Georgina Harding lives in London and on a farm in the Stour Valley, Essex. Praise for Painter of Silence: ‘Conjures a tale that recalls vintage Ondaatje … At once delicate and sweeping … A novel about that passage of time, the senselessness of war, and the need to find and preserve meaning. This is a satisfying real’ Daily Mail ‘This is fiction of the most graceful kind … a quiet storm of imagery and emotions’ Independent on Sunday Fiction Show Me A Mountain Kerry Young From the Costa and Commonwealth-shortlisted author of Pao, set against the backdrop of Jamaican independence, a story of revolution and oppression, privilege and poverty, love and betrayal. Fay Wong is a woman caught between worlds. Her father is a Chinese immigrant who conjured a fortune out of nothing; her mother grew up on a plantation and now reigns over their mansion in Lady Musgrave Road, sipping Earl Grey tea in the sultry Kingston afternoons. But the Chinatown bars where her father conducts his business are out of bounds to Fay, and the airy rooms of Lady Musgrave Road are filled with her mother's dark secrets and inexplicable rages – rages against which Fay rebels as she grows from a girl into a beautiful, headstrong woman. Bloomsbury Circus PUBLICATION DATE: 30/06/16 EXTENT: 288 For hers is a country where even the smallest difference in skin colour can mark the boundary between the promise of a future and the burden of the past, and where the struggle for power is not only played out in government buildings and military camps, but also in the alleyways of Back’o’Wall, the streets of Chinatown, and the manicured lawns of the schools for Kingston’s elite. As she tries to escape the restraints of her privileged upbringing, striving for independence in a homeland that is trying to do the same, Fay’s eyes are opened to a Jamaica she was never meant to see. She encounters gangsters and revolutionaries, priests and prostitutes and witnesses great sacrifices and deep betrayals. But when her parents decide that she must marry the racketeer Yang Pao, she finds herself on a journey that may lead to sacrifices and betrayals of her own. also available Pao Kerry Young was born in Kingston Jamaica, to a Chinese father and a mother of mixed Chinese-African heritage. She moved to England in 1965 and lives in Leicestershire, where she is a reader for The Literary Consultancy, a tutor for the Arvon Foundation, and a Fellow of the Royal Literary Fund Fellowship Programme, where she is writer-in-residence at The University of Sheffield. She is also Honorary Assistant Professor in the School of English at The University of Nottingham and Honorary Creative Writing Fellow at the University of Leicester. kerryyoung.co.uk Praise for Pao: Gloria ‘A blindingly good read’ Observer ‘Captivating’ Daily Mail ‘Heart-felt, sparky and absorbing’ Guardian 7 Fiction Please Do Not Disturb Robert Glancy A gripping and beautifully observed novel of power, corruption and innocence, Please Do Not Disturb is the funny, disturbing and deeply affecting new book by the author of Terms & Conditions Charlie, a curious boy with a dangerous dictaphone habit, eavesdrops on the eccentric guests of the Mirage Hotel, as the African nation of Bwalo prepares for the annual appearance of its Glorious Leader Tafumo. Sean, an Irishman who’s given his heart (and the best part of his liver) to Bwalo, struggles to write the great African novel – if only his crazed fiancée and fierce thirst would stop distracting him. Bloomsbury Publishing PUBLICATION DATE: 16/06/16 EXTENT: 272 RIGHTS SOLD: Droemer Knaur (German) Josef, mythmaker and kingmaker, who paved the way for Tafumo’s rise to power, starts to hear the ominous rattle of skeletons in his closet. Hope, the nurse caring for the King, keeps the old man alive, maintaining the façade of the powerful ruler, as she mourns her own broken dreams. And in the countdown to the Big Day, storm clouds are gathering as petty criminal, Jack, smuggles something into Bwalo – to the Mirage Hotel – that will change the lives of all of them for ever… Robert Glancy was born in Zambia and raised in Malawi. At fourteen he moved from Africa to Edinburgh then went on to study history at Cambridge. His first novel, Terms & Conditions, was published by Bloomsbury in 2014 to critical acclaim. He has recently been awarded the Grimshaw Sargeson Fellowship in New Zealand, where he currently lives with his wife and children. Praise for Terms & Conditions: ‘Every book seems to have “funny and life-affirming” written on it but this one actually is’ Matt Haig, author of The Humans ‘It’s wonderful. Funny, poignant, simple and profound’ Gavin Extence, author of The Universe Versus Alex Woods Terms & Conditions Robert Glancy RIGHTS SOLD: Droemer Knaur (German), Host (Czech), Sindbad (Russsian) 8 Fiction The Bricks that Built the Houses Kate Tempest Award-winning poet and rapper Kate Tempest’s astonishing debut novel elevates the ordinary to the extraordinary in this multi-generational tale set in contemporary south London It gets into your bones. You don't even realise it, until you're driving through it, watching all the things you've always known and leaving them behind. Young Londoners Becky, Harry and Leon are escaping the city with a suitcase full of stolen money. Taking us back in time, and into the heart of the capital, The Bricks that Built the Houses explores a cross-section of contemporary urban life with a powerful moral and literary microscope, exposing the everyday stories that lie behind the tired faces on the morning commute, and what happens when your best intentions don’t always lead to the right decisions. Bloomsbury Circus PUBLICATION DATE: 07/04/16 EXTENT: 256 Rights sold: Casa da Palavra (Portuguese – Brazil), Meulenhof (Dutch), Payot and Rivages (French), Rowohlt (German), Frassinelli (Italian) Wise but never cynical, and driven by empathy and ethics, it leads us into the homes and hearts of ordinary people and their families and communities, giving us a unique perspective on how we live with and love each other. The Bricks that Built the Houses introduces a thrilling new literary voice. Poet, rapper, playwright and novelist Kate Tempest grew up in south-east London, where she still lives. Her epic poem, Brand New Ancients – a modernday myth set in south London – won the Ted Hughes Prize for innovation in poetry in 2013, making her the first-ever recipient under 40. Her plays include GlassHouse, Wasted and Hopelessly Devoted. Her debut solo album, Everybody Down, a narrative-led hip hop record based on The Bricks that Built the Houses, was nominated for the Mercury Music Prize 2014. Kate Tempest’s second poetry collection, Hold Your Own was published in 2014, when she was also named by the Poetry Society as a Next Generation Poet, a once-a-decade accolade. The Bricks that Built the Houses is her first novel. ‘Powerful and merciful’ Ali Smith ‘A talent that knows no bounds’ Independent ‘A powerful mix of innocence and experience’ New York Times ‘Raw. Urgent, honest and, most of all, riotously talented with words’ Bristol Post 9 FICTION: POETRY/PHOTOGRAPHIC Fiction The Hollow of the Hand PJ Harvey and Seamus Murphy The debut book by artist and writer PJ Harvey, in collaboration with filmmaker and photographer Seamus Murphy, emerges as a one-of-a-kind collection of poetry and images Between 2011 and 2014 PJ Harvey and Seamus Murphy set out on a series of journeys together to Kosovo, Afghanistan, and Washington DC. Harvey collected words, Murphy collected pictures, and together they have created an extraordinary chronicle of our life and times. The Hollow of the Hand marks the first publication of Harvey’s powerful poetry, in conversation with Murphy’s indelible images. It is a landmark project and will be published internationally in October 2015. As PJ Harvey says: Bloomsbury Circus PUBLICATION DATE: 08/10/15 EXTENT: 232 RIGHTS SOLD: Samlaget (Norwegian), Sexto piso (Spanish – World) ‘Gathering information from secondary sources felt too far removed for what I was trying to write about. I wanted to smell the air, feel the soil and meet the people of the countries I was fascinated with. Following our work on Let England Shake, my friend Seamus Murphy and I agreed to grow a project together lead by our instincts on where we should go.’ Seamus Murphy adds: ‘Polly is a writer who loves images and I am a photographer who loves words. Our relationship began a few years ago when she asked me if I would like to take some photographs and make some films for her last album Let England Shake. I was intrigued and the adventure began, now finding another form in this book. It is our look at home and the world.’ The Hollow of the Hand will be available in a hardback edition with highest quality photographic reproductions, as well as a reader’s paperback version. PJ Harvey has released eight critically acclaimed albums, been nominated for six Grammy Awards, and is the only artist to have been awarded the UK’s prestigious Mercury Prize twice (for her albums Stories from the City, Stories From The Sea and Let England Shake). In 2013, she was awarded an MBE for services to music. The Hollow of the Hand is her first published collection of poetry. Seamus Murphy has documented life and change around the world in still and moving images. He has won seven World Press Photo awards for work in Afghanistan, Sierra Leone, Gaza, Lebanon, Peru, Ireland and England. His depiction of Afghanistan and the Afghans over more than a decade was published as a book, A Darkness Visible: Afghanistan. He later made this into an award-winning film. In 2011, he created 12 Short Films for PJ Harvey’s Let England Shake. 10 FICTION: GRAPHIC NOVEL The Inflatable Woman Rachael Ball An unconventional and magical debut graphic novel about unrequited love, illness, hope, comrades and delusion Iris (or balletgirl-42 as she’s known on the internet dating circuit) is a zookeeper looking for love when she is diagnosed with breast cancer. Overnight, her life becomes populated with a carnival of daunting hospital characters. Despite the attempts of her friends – Maud, Granma Suggs, Larry the Monkey and a group of singing penguins – to comfort her, Iris's fears begin to encircle her until all she has to cling to is the attention of a lighthouse keeper called sailor_buoy_39. Bloomsbury Publishing PUBLICATION DATE: 22/10/15 EXTENT: 544 The Inflatable Woman combines magic realism with the grit of everyday life to create a poignant and surreal journey inside the human psyche. Rachael Ball is a cartoonist and a teacher. Her illustrations and cartoons have appeared in various publications including City Life, Deadline, Fanny, the Times Educational Supplement, the Radio Times, The Strumpet and Russ Kick's Graphic Canon of Childrens' Literature. The Inflatable Woman is her first graphic novel. @rachaelcartoons 11 FICTION: CRIME Fiction Tom & Lucky (and George & Cokey Flo) C. Joseph Greaves A gripping novelization of one of the most colourful – and fateful – courtroom showdowns in US history, between special prosecutor Tom Dewey and Lucky Luciano, the Mob’s ruling overlord The year is 1936. Charles “Lucky” Luciano is the most powerful gangster in America. Thomas E. Dewey is an ambitious young prosecutor hired to bring him down, and Cokey Flo Brown – grifter, heroin addict, and sometimes prostitute – is the witness who claims she can do it. Only a wily defense attorney named George Morton Levy stands between Lucky and a life behind bars, between Dewey and the New York Governor’s mansion. Bloomsbury USA PUBLICATION DATE: 03/11/15 EXTENT: 304 As the Roaring Twenties give way to the austere reality of the Great Depression, four lives, each on their own incandescent trajectory, intersect in a New York courtroom, introducing America to the violent and darkly glamorous world of organized crime and leaving the culture, laws, and politics of the nation changed forever. Based on a trove of newly discovered documents, Tom & Lucky (and George & Cokey Flo) tells the gripping true story of a seminal trial in American history; an epic clash between a crime-busting district attorney and an all-powerful mob boss; a battle for the heart and soul of a dispirited nation; a portrait of a world where corruption rules and history remembers the villains. C. Joseph Greaves is a former L.A. trial lawyer now living in Colorado. His first novel, Hard Twisted, was a finalist for the Oklahoma Book Award in Fiction and was named Best Historical Novel in the SouthWest Writers’ International Writing Contest, in which Greaves was also honoured with the grand prize Storyteller Award. Writing as Chuck Greaves, he is a Shamus Award-finalist for his Jack MacTaggart series of legal/detective mysteries. 12 FICTION: CRIME Sidney Chambers and The Dangers of Temptation James Runcie The eagerly anticipated fifth instalment in ‘The Grantchester Mysteries’ series, now a major ITV drama It’s the summer of love in late 1960s England, and Sidney Chambers, the loveable English clergyman, continues his amateur sleuthing investigations. A bewitching divorcee enlists Sidney’s help in convincing her son to leave a hippy commune; at a soirée on Grantchester Meadows during May Week celebrations a student is divested of a family heirloom; Amanda’s marriage runs into trouble; Sidney and Hildegard holiday behind the Iron Curtain; Mrs Maguire’s husband returns from the dead and an arson attack in Cambridge leads Sidney to uncover a cruel case of blackmail involving his former curate. Bloomsbury UK PUBLICATION DATE: 02/06/2016 EXTENT: 304 RIGHTS SOLD: AST (Russia); Hoffman und Campe (German); Actes Sud (French), Duomo Ediciones (Spanish), Vallardi (Italian) Charming, witty, intelligent – and filled with a strong sense of compassion – here are six new stories guaranteed to satisfy and delight this clerical detective’s many fans. James Runcie is an award-winning film-maker and the author of eight novels. Sidney Chambers and The Shadow of Death, the first in ‘The Grantchester Mysteries’ series, was published in 2012, soon followed by Sidney Chambers and The Perils of the Night, Sidney Chambers and The Problem of Evil and Sidney Chambers and The Forgiveness of Sins. In October 2014, ITV launched Grantchester, a prime-time, six-part series starring James Norton as Sidney Chambers. James Runcie lives in London and Edinburgh. ‘Perfect reading for a sunny English garden’ The Times ‘Runcie works his magic using simple sentences, archetypal characters and a sense of suspense that creates an atmosphere of delicious anticipation’ Independent also available NOW A MAJOR ITV DRAMA 13 FICTION: TV ADAPTATION Fiction Jonathan Strange and Mr Norrell Susanna Clarke A major bbc seven-part tv series, includes a new preface from susanna clarke. over 1 million copies sold. Two magicians shall appear in England. The first shall fear me; the second shall long to behold me... Bloomsbury Paperbacks PUBLICATION DATE: 09/04/15 EXTENT: 1024 RIGHTS SOLD: Agave Kiado (Hungarian), Hunan Literature and Arts Publishing (Simplified Chinese), Salamandra (World Spanish), Casa da Palavra (Portuguese), Robbert Laffont (French), Dobrovsky (Czech), Slovart (Slovak), Mag Jacek Rodek (Polish), Berlin Verlag (German), Zalozba Sanje (Slovenian), Companhia das Letras (Brazilian Portuguese) The year is 1806. England is beleaguered by the long war with Napoleon, and centuries have passed since practical magicians faded into the nation's past. But scholars of this glorious history discover that one remains: the reclusive Mr Norrell whose displays of magic send a thrill through the country. Proceeding to London, he raises a beautiful woman from the dead and summons an army of ghostly ships to terrify the French. Yet the cautious, fussy Norrell is challenged by the emergence of another magician: the brilliant novice Jonathan Strange. Young, handsome and daring, Strange is the very opposite of Norrell. So begins a dangerous battle between these two great men which overwhelms the one between England and France. And their own obsessions and secret dabblings with the dark arts are going to cause more trouble than they can imagine. Susanna Clarke lives in Cambridge with her partner, the novelist and reviewer Colin Greenland. Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell was first published in 2004 in more than thirty countries and shortlisted for the Whitbread First Novel Award and the Guardian First Book Award. It won British Book Awards Newcomer of the Year, the Hugo Award and the World Fantasy Award in 2005. The Ladies of Grace Adieu, a collection of short stories, some set in the world of Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell, was published by Bloomsbury in 2006. ‘Unquestionably the finest English novel of the fantastic written in the last seventy years. It’s funny, moving, scary, otherworldly, practical and magical’ Neil Gaiman ‘A nourishing, 19th-century-style novel that will warm readers through any number of dark and stormy nights ... Clarke makes her magical story ridiculously engrossing’ Daily Telegraph ‘This is, in both the precise and the colloquial sense, a fabulous book ... a highly original and compelling work’ Sunday Times 14 BLOOMSBURY INDIA Tanya Tania Antara Ganguli A book about being a teenager in Pakistan and India. Through letters we follow the lives of four girls, two wealthy and two poor, two Pakistani and two Indian. Two who know exactly what their future holds and two who are convinced that they will never measure up. Last night there was a snowstorm that made my window disappear. I woke up gasping at the heater. This is my first letter in three years. First letter since I left Pakistan. First letter since Nusrat. Bloomsbury Publishing PUBLICATION DATE: 22/06/16 EXTENT: 224 The first letter in Tanya Tania, a novel in letters, is from Tanya Tilati, a Pakistani student at an American university, in the winter of 1996. The letter is to Tania Ghosh, her mother’s best friend’s daughter in Bombay, India. Except this is not her first letter. Tanya and Tania wrote thirty-eight letters to each other between the summer of 1991 and January 8, 1992 when they abruptly stopped. Until now. It is 1991. Mangoes, biker shorts and liberalisation are in. Hips, boom boxes and Whitney Houston are out. Boyfriends are hurtful but necessary, school politics draw fragile lines of power. The letters reveal mysteries at home and hazards at school. In Tanya’s house, her American mother has gone from quiet to silent, turning from the house to her garden where she obsesses like a new mother over her roses and orchids. Tania is terrified her father is having an affair. She oscillates between blaming and admiring her mother who used to be a part-time employee at a small family-run firm and is now a workaholic partner in a brash multinational. But then something happens that makes these heartaches pale. In Karachi, Tanya’s brother receives a kidnapping threat. And in Bombay, the Babri Masjid in Ayodhya is attacked. Through an unlikely friendship between two girls coming of age in two countries that are coming of age, Tanya Tania makes us question identity: Indian and Pakistani, Hindu and Muslim, rich and poor, educated and uneducated. And, in the end, it makes us confront the truth of what makes us human. Antara Ganguly works in international development and is a frequent contributor to Indian and international publications on gender and education policy. She was selected to be an Asia Society Young Leader for India and Pakistani in 2014. Her first novel, The Buggles, was published in 2001. She lives in New York 15 BLOOMSBURY INDIA Half of What I Say Anil Menon Genre-crossing, polyphonic and darkly-humourous, Half of What I Say examines the importance of ficiton in a world hungry for truths and marks a striking departure for the contemporary Indian novel. Is there is any work of fiction that the world absolutely cannot do without? In fact, do we need fiction at all? Half of What I Say offers a story to answer this. Bloomsbury India PUBLICATION DATE: 15/10/15 EXTENT: 452 The anti-corruption movement in India has resulted in an important institution called the Lokshakti. Vyas, the Director of the Lokshakti’s Cultural Affairs department, is obsessed with tracking down Ajaya, an obscure banned movie by the late Durga Dhasal, an academic and popular politician killed at the hands of a Lokshakti-controlled mob. Vyas, a long-time admirer of the film-maker, had not only sent Dhasal his unpublished and eponymous novel but learns that Dhasal’s Ajaya has the same basic Ramayana-inspired theme, namely, the havoc a long separation wreaks on a loving couple. Vyas’ efforts to locate the movie leads him to the financially troubled Shabari Khargane, Dhasal’s loyal personal assistant who, unknown to Vyas, also has the sole audio copy of Dhasal narrating an alternative version of the Ramayana. The story’s other threads involve Kannagi, Dhasal’s last doctoral student, and her relationship with Sawai Gawai, the student leader protesting the Lokshakti’s abuses; the entrepreneur Anand Dixit, Kannagi’s brother-in-law, and his efforts to bring cheap, fast net access to the masses; the Bollywood actress Saya and Mir Alam Mir, the scriptwriter of Ajaya, who is protected by Saya’s love; Bilkis Ansari, Vyas’ war-traumatized friend and, finally, the strange estranged love between Vyas and his wife Tanaz Cyrusi. Shabari’s release of the movie and the audio recording and her suicide-note implicating Vyas and Tanaz result in their arrest with possibly fatal consequences. The novel explores the necessity of fiction in many ways and through many characters: The scientist Kannagi who lives a passionate life, innocent of all literature; the slow corruption of Vyas, despite all his literary erudition; Mir Alam Mir who dies defending fiction. Anil Menon’s stories have appeared in a variety of leading spec-fic magazines and antholo gies including Albedo One, Chiaroscuro, Interzone, Interfictions, Lady Churchill's Rosebud Wristlet, Sybil's Garage and Strange Horizons. His stories have been translated into Chinese, French, German, Hebrew and Romanian. His YA novel, The Beast With Nine Billion Feet (Zubaan Books, 2009) was shortlisted for the 2010 Vodafone-Crossword Children's Fiction Award and the Carl Brandon Society's Parallax Prize. Along with Vandana Singh, he edited the Breaking the Bow anthology, a collection of speculative tales, inspired by the Ramayana (Zubaan Books, 2011).He’s currently working with the curator Prem Krishnamurthy and Elizabeth Thomas of the NYC based gallery Project Projects on a 2015 exhibition Doppelgestalt, themed around one of his stories. 16 FICTION: BQFP Alhambra Tim Mackintosh-Smith From celebrated travel writer Tim Mackintosh-Smith comes an engrossing 14th century thriller in the vein of Robert Harris Terrorists are nothing new. The year is 1368 and Granada, capital of the Moors in Spain, is under threat from violent extremists. Enter Abu Abdallah, the penniless globetrotter who has had wives and concubines on three continents and is still searching for the right woman, and his West African slave Sinan, the one with the brawn, the brains, the looks – and the demons in his past. Bloomsbury Qatar Foundation Publishing PUBLICATION DATE: 24/03/16 EXTENT: 268 They arrive to find Granada's labyrinthine palace-citadel, the Alhambra, nearing its triumphant completion. But Sinan and Abu Abdallah are drawn into a darker maze, where inexplicable events and baffling mysteries lie in wait at every turn. It begins with the death of an alchemist, and threatens to ruin for ever the delicate balance of Muslim-Christian power in Spain – unless Sinan and his master can first penetrate the terrorists' cell and neutralize their horrific weapon, known only as 'the Remedy'. And over all of it hangs the fate of one of the most famous gemstones in history: the Black Prince's Ruby . . . In his fiction debut, Mackintosh-Smith dazzles with his potent mix of majestic storytelling and impeccable historical research. Tim Mackintosh-Smith is an Arabist, traveller, award-winning writer and lecturer. For almost thirty years his home has been the Yemeni capital San'a where he lives on the ruin-mound of the ancient Sabaean city, next to the donkey market. Tim presented a major BBC documentary series, Travels with a Tangerine, recounting his experiences walking in the footsteps of fourteenth century traveller Ibn Batuttah. 'Mackintosh-Smith has all the assets a travel writer needs: erudition, rather subversive good humour and a descriptive eye capable of sketching complex detail in a few telling lines' Daily Telegraph 17 Fiction: BQFP Kilimanjaro Spirit Ibrahim Nasrallah They all came knowing what they wanted from the mountain, few knew what the mountain wanted from them A group of disparate individuals, amongst whom two Palestinian adolescents who have lost their legs in Israeli bomb strikes, are preparing to summit Mount Kilimanjaro. They have nothing – and everything – in common. Hailing from Palestine, Lebanon, Egypt and America, the characters test the limits of their physical and emotional strengths to prove to themselves that they can transcend their strife-ridden histories and accomplish the unexpected. Nasrallah’s work is a page-turning, nail-biting tale of adventure, as well as ode to the resilience of the human spirit. Bloomsbury Qatar Foundation Publishing PUBLICATION DATE: 05/05/16 EXTENT: 240 Born in a refugee camp in Jordan, Ibrahim Nasrallah is a Jordanian-Palestinian poet, novelist, painter and photographer. He has won a number of awards for his works including the Jerusalem Prize for Culture and Creativity and the Sultan Bin Al Owais Prize. His 2014 trip summiting Mount Kilimanjaro was the first to include participation of an Arab author and was in support of charity work for Palestinian and Arab children in need of medical care. Nancy Roberts is a prize-winning translator with experience in the areas of modern Arabic literature, current events, Christian-Muslim relations and Islamic thought, history and law. She lives in Amman, Jordan with her husband and two daughters. 18 Fiction: BQFP The Holy Sail Abdulaziz Al-Mahmoud In the name of the Cross, Portuguese fleets head to the Gulf. In the name of Allah, Arabian tribes must resist... Oblivious to the invasions, massacres and religious fanaticism that characterise the 15th century, a young girl falls in love with a noble Arabian tribal leader. But all eyes are on the Portuguese fleets in the Arabian Gulf, intent on securing the profitable spice trade. Abdulaziz Al Mahmoud weaves a tapestry of momentous historical events with stories of love, honour and nobility, while guiding us around the medieval world of Lisbon, Cairo, Jeddah and Istanbul. The Holy Sail brings to life a neglected episode of history that impacted not only the region but the world for centuries to come. Bloomsbury Qatar Foundation Publishing PUBLICATION DATE: 03/12/15 EXTENT: 448 RIGHTS SOLD: Leya/Texto (Portuguese exc. Brazil) Abdulaziz Al-Mahmoud is a Qatari engineer and journalist. He has a BA in engineering from Clarkson University in New York and an aviation and engineering diploma from the UK. He worked as editor-in-chief of Alsharq and The Peninsula newspapers as well as www.aljazeera.net. This is his second novel. Karim Traboulsi is an Arabic to English translator, educated in Beirut, New York and Portsmouth. As well as literary historical translation, Karim translates political editorials in newspapers and a wide variety of technical texts. 19 Fiction: BQFP In the Hope of Virgins Jamal Naji Set in Jordan and Syria in the aftermath of the Arab Spring, this is no ordinary coming-of age novel… In the eyes of the West, the Arab Spring is ‘over’. For Alwaleed, struggling in a society that condemns him as an illegitimate son, the ongoing political unrest offers him a chance to prove himself. On leaving university – vulnerable and uncertain – he is an easily target for the Recruiters, and eventually finds himself fighting the Syrian regime. But is he fighting for what he believes in? Set in Jordan and Syria following the Arab Spring, In the Hope of Virgins is a coming-of-age story amidst the growing power of ISIS and the crumbling of the old Arab regimes. Bloomsbury Qatar Foundation Publishing PUBLICATION DATE: 21/04/2016 EXTENT: 400 20 Jamal Naji is a Jordanian novelist and short story writer who was shortlisted for the IPAF in 2010 for his novel I’ndama Thasheekh AlDhiaab (When Wolves Got Old). He has written dozens of novels and short story collections and is widely published in the Arab World. He received the Prize of the Jordanian State 2014 for his narrative writing. Fiction: BQFP A Cloudy Day on the Western Shore Mohamed al-Mansi Qandil It’s the dawn of the 20th Century, and Britain’s glittering Empire extends far and wide, full of the dangerously seductive promise of untapped riches. At first glance, modest, stammering Howard Carter has nothing whatsoever in common with Aisha, the young Egyptian whose profile bears more than a passing resemblance to Nefertiti’s beautiful face depicted on the Pharaonic relics Howard loves so much. Bloomsbury BQFP Publication date: 28/01/16 Extent: 320 Howard’s artistic talent takes him on an expedition to try and locate Tutankhamen’s tomb in Egypt. There, amidst growing unrest between the tyrannical British rulers and the so-called ‘barbarians’, he meets Aisha – a bewildering mix of contradictions. A village girl, yet she speaks four languages; Muslim, yet with a tattoo of the cross on her arm; a stranger, yet with an achingly familiar face. As well as being a page-turning gallop through some of the most momentous occasions in recent world history, A Cloudy Day on the Western Shore explores questions of national identity and the implications of European intervention – for better or worse – in the discovery and exploration of some of the most beautiful treasures on earth today. Award-winning Egyptian novelist Mohamed Mansi Qandil was born in the Nile delta. He went to medical school, and worked as a local countryside doctor before turning his hand to literature. His first novel, Breaking of the Spirit, was inspired by events surrounding workers’ unrest in the city. His second novel, Moon over Samarqand, was inspired by a conversation with a taxi driver in Uzbekistan. He has published several novels, short story collections and children’s books, and now lives in Canada. @MansiKandil 21 fiction highlights: Original Fiction We Are Pirates When Mr Dog Bites Pig’s Foot RIGHTS SOLD: Record (Brazilian Portuguese), Pegasus (Turkish), Baldinicastoldi (Italian), Siruela (Spanish) ‘I loved Dylan Mint. He made me laugh out loud and his tenacity had me rooting for him from the first page’ Stephen Kelman ‘Spellbinding’ Independent on Sunday Daniel handler Brian Conaghan Carlos Acosta RIGHTS SOLD: Kero (French) RIGHTS SOLD: Arche Verlag (German), Argo Nakladatelsvi (Czech), Pegasus Yayinlari (Turkish), Rocco (Brazilian Portuguese), Rosinante (Danish) Life! Death! Prizes! Africa39 Vernon Downs ‘Written with a wry wit’ The Times With an introduction by Nobel Prize winner Wole Soyinka ‘Moving and edgy in just the right way. Love (or lack of) and Family (or lack of) is at the heart of this wonderfully obsessive novel.’ Gary Shteyngart, author of Super Sad True Love Story Stephen May RIGHTS SOLD: Berlin Verlag (German) 22 Edited by Ellah Wakatama Allfrey ‘Vivid, evocative, colourful and surprising ... Unusual and utterly compelling’ Mariella Frostrup Jaime Clarke fiction highlights: Original Fiction Wake Up Happy Every Day Stephen May ‘Razor-sharp wit’ Guardian Mimi The Gamal Wilderness ‘A wildly hilarious, modern film noir in fiction form’ Sunday Telegraph ‘A gritty, modern Romeo and Juliet…compelling’ Independent ‘Epic … big, bold debut’ Financial Times Lucy Ellmann Lance Weller Ciarán Collins RIGHTS SOLD: Editions Joelle Losfeld (French), Berlin Verlag (German) RIGHTS SOLD: Berlin Verlag (German), Editions Gallmeister (French), Keller Editore (Italian) fiction highlights: Literary Fiction The Hired Man Helium The Memory of Love ‘Supremely masterful’ Independent ‘A wonderfully well-woven tale that shines a light on fascinating and appalling events’ Michael Palin, Observer, Books of the Year RIGHTS SOLD: Ailantus/Boom(Dutch), Albatros (Poland), Alfaguara (Spanish), Antalog (Macedonian), Beijing Heping Yahua Cultural Communications(Simplified Chinese), Cavallo di Ferro (Italian), DVA (German), Euromedia (Czech), Grupo Editorial Paz e Terra (Brazilian Portuguese), Gyldendal Norsk (Norwegian), Ikar (Slovak), Into Publishing (Finnish), Tideme Skifter(Danish) Aminatta Forna RIGHTS SOLD: Nieuw Amsterdam (Dutch), Santillana (Spanish), Tiderne Skifter (Danish), Zala Publishing House (Slovenian) Jaspreet Singh Aminatta Forna 23 fiction highlights: Literary Fiction Clay Don’t Let Him Know Some Here Among Us ‘Instantly beautiful in its calm and wise tone’ Robert Macfarlane ‘This artful novel is a true delight’ Daily Mail ‘Heartlfelt, elegiac ... Lovingly observed’ Sunday Times ‘A believable and wonderfully written story of secrets between the generations’ The Times ‘A beautiful novel about the loss of innocnce, the ineffable passing of time and the inescapable weight of the past’ Mail on Sunday Melissa Harrison Sandip Roy RIGHTS SOLD: Les Escales (French) Like Gods and Angels David Park ‘He writes prose of gravity and grace’ Guardian ‘One of the shrewdest observes of the way we live now’ Independent 24 A Slant of Light Jeffrey Lent Peter Walker fiction highlights: Women’s Fiction From a Distance Raffaella Barker ‘Wonderful writer ... Incredible books’ David Baldacci, New York Times ‘One of the cleverest and freshest of British Novelists’ Daily Mail The Private Papers of Eastern Jewel Maureen Lindley RIGHTS SOLD: Agam (Hebrew), Alma Littera (Lithuanian), Berlin Verlag (German), Mehta Publishing House (Marathi), Neri Pozza (Italian), Oceanida (Greek), Polirom (Romanian), Profil International Limited (Croatian), Proszynski (Polish), Prozoretz (Bulgarian), Ripol (Russian), Sanskrit (Thai), Tericum (Hungarian) A Girl Like You Miss Carter’s War ‘A sweeping coming-ofage novel’ Western Mail ‘A rich and absorbing story you won’t want to put down’ Daily Express Maureen Lindley RIGHTS SOLD: Proszynski (Polish) Sheila Hancock fiction highlights: CRIME Fiction Sleeping Dogs Thomas Mogford ‘Superb series … moves Mogford’s shrewd and atmospheric Mediterranean noir into the newest and darkest of territories’ William Boyd, Guardian Summer Reading Shadow of the Rock Thomas Mogford ‘Very original … A rare and enviable talent’ William Boyd Sign of the Cross Hollow Mountain ‘Will leave the reader eagerly anticipating the next instalment’ Irish Times ‘Exciting and assured … Popular fiction at its best’ Susan Hill, Spectator, Books of the Year Thomas Mogford Thomas Mogford 25 fiction highlights: BQFP Fiction The Hidden Light of Objects Days of Ignorance Laila Aljohani Black Book of Arabia Sheikha Hend Al Qassemi ‘A medley of unbelievable and relatable vignettes’ – The Peninsula Qatar Mai Al-Nakib Winner of 2014 First Book Award from Edinburgh International Book Festival The Arch and the Butterfly Bitter Almonds Telepathy Mohammed Achaari ‘Enthralling… riveting’ – The Lady Winner of the prestigious International prize for Arabic Fiction The Arab Booker 2011 Rights Sold: Cappelen Damm (Norway) ‘A giant among Arabic fiction writers’ – Daily News, Egypt 26 Lilas Taha Amir Tag Elsir fiction highlights: Retellings One Thousand and One Nights Hanan al-Shaykh ‘Magical’ Donna Tartt, The Times RIGHTS SOLD: Actes Sud (French), Sindbad (Russian), Vulkan (Serbian) Graphic adaptations of literary Classics The Odyssey Seymour Chwast The Canterbury Tales Seymour Chwast Dante’s Divine Comedy Seymour Chwast 27 general non-fiction Building Storeys Roma Agrawal The wonders of engineering revealed – by the inspirational young female engineer behind the Shard, Western Europe’s tallest building Our cities are full of incredible engineering feats and most of us live with little idea of what we are looking at in the built environment, let alone how a new building goes up, what it is built upon or how it remains standing. In this book Roma Agrawal uncovers the astonishing science behind her profession. Each of the eight chapters will tackle a great engineering challenge – how we keep a building from falling down, or how a bridge is built to span vast distances – explaining solutions from modern times, reaching back to the Romans and other ancient cultures who developed techniques still used today. Interweaving science, history, illustrations and personal stories, Roma will offer a new window into a subject that touches our everyday lives. Bloomsbury Publishing PUBLICATION DATE: 08/06/17 EXTENT: 352 RIGHTS SOLD: Hanser Verlag (German) Roma Agrawal is a 31-year-old structural engineer who builds BIG – bridges, skyscrapers and sculptures – and is currently working on two buildings over London underground stations. Her first project was to construct a bridge across an eight-lane motorway in Newcastle; one year later, aged just 23, she began work on the Shard, with responsibility for the building’s peak and foundations. She is increasingly the public face of engineering, featuring in last year’s national advertising campaign for Marks & Spencer. Roma Agrawal shares Sir James Dyson’s belief that we need to encourage young people, particularly women, into the engineering professions. She’s a tireless advocate, lecturing to institutions, schools and universities, and increasingly appears in television documentaries, on radio and in print. Building Storeys is her first book. romatheengineer.com / @RomaTheEngineer 28 general non-fiction The Doomsday Machine Daniel Ellsberg From the legendary whistleblower who revealed the Pentagon Papers, an eyewitness exposé of the horrific dangers of America’s hidden fiftyyear-long nuclear policy that continues to this day. At the same time former presidential advisor Daniel Ellsberg famously took the top secret Pentagon Papers, he also took with him a chilling cache of top secret documents related to America's nuclear buildup in the 1960s. Here for the first time he reveals the contents of those documents, and makes clear their shocking relevance for today. Bloomsbury Press PUBLICATION DATE: 10/01/17 EXTENT: 384 The Doomsday Machine is Ellsberg's hair-raising insider's account of the most dangerous arms buildup in the history of civilization, whose legacy--and renewal under the Obama administration – threatens the very survival of humanity. It is scarcely possible to estimate the true dangers of our present nuclear policies without penetrating the secret realities of nuclear strategy of the late Eisenhower and early Kennedy years when Ellsberg had high-level access to them. No other insider has written so candidly of that long-classified history, and nothing has fundamentally changed since that era. Ellsberg’s analysis of recent research on nuclear winter shows that even a “small” nuclear exchange would cause billions of deaths by global nuclear famine. Ellsberg, in the end, offers steps we can take in this election year to avoid nuclear catastrophe. Framed as a memoir, this gripping exposé reads like a thriller, with cloak-and-dagger intrigue, placing Ellsberg back in his natural role as whistleblower. It is a real-life Dr. Strangelove story, but an ultimately hopeful-and necessary – book. In 1961, Daniel Ellsberg, a consultant to the Department of Defense and the White House, drafted Secretary Robert McNamara's plans for nuclear war. Later he leaked the Pentagon Papers to the Senate and the press. He lectures and writes on the dangers of the nuclear era and the need for whistleblowing. A Senior Fellow of the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation, Ellsberg is the author of Secrets and the subject of the Emmy Award-winning documentary The Most Dangerous Man in America. He lives in Kensington, California. 29 general non-fiction The Kaiser's Army David Stone The definitive reference to the German army under Kaiser Wilhelm II, encompassing its development, organisation, personnel, weapons and equipment, as well as its victories and defeats during World War I. In this comprehensive book, David Stone describes and analyses every aspect of the German Army as it existed under Kaiser Wilhelm II, encompassing its development and antecedents, organisation, personnel, weapons and equipment, its inherent strengths and weaknesses, and its victories and defeats as it fought on many fronts throughout World War I. Conway PUBLICATION DATE: 21/05/15 EXTENT: 512 The book deals in considerable detail with the origins and creation of the German army, examining the structure of power in German politics and wider society, and the nation's imperial ambitions, along with the ways in which the high command and general staff functioned in terms of strategy and tactical doctrine. The nature, background, recruitment, training and military experiences of the officers, NCOs and soldiers are examined, while personal and collective values relating to honour, loyalty and conscience are also analysed. There is also an evaluation of all aspects of army life such as conscription, discipline, rest and recuperation and medical treatment. In addition the army’s operations are set in context with an overview of the army at war, covering the key actions and outcomes of major campaigns from 1914 to 1918 up to the signature of the Armistice at Compiègne. For anyone seeking a definitive reference on the German Army of the period – whether scholar, historian, serving soldier or simply a general reader – this remarkable book will prove an invaluable work. David Stone is a former British army infantry officer. Much of his service was in Germany, both with and alongside soldiers of the Bundeswehr in peacetime and on operations. He became a military historian in 2002, and is the author of the authoritative works Hitler's Army: The Men, Machines and Organisation, 1939-1945 (2009) and Fighting for the Fatherland: The Story of the German Soldier from 1648 to the Present Day (2006). Richard Holmes described the latter as 'the most comprehensive and accessible account of the German soldier ever published in English'. His other titles include the acclaimed 'First Reich' (2002), Battles in Focus: Dien Bien Phu (2004), Wars of the Cold War (2004), War Summits (2005), and Twilight of the Gods (2011). He also wrote Cold War Warriors (1998) and was a consultant and co-author of World War II Chronicle (2007). 30 general non-fiction You Could Look It Up Jack Lynch An illuminating exploration of reference books through time and across cultures, from the Babylonian Code of Hammurabi to Wikipedia. “Knowledge is of two kinds,” said Samuel Johnson in 1775. “We know a subject ourselves, or we know where we can find information upon it.” Today we think of Wikipedia as the source of all information, the ultimate reference. Yet it is just the latest in a long line of aggregated knowledge – reference works that have shaped the way we’ve seen the world for centuries. Bloomsbury Press PUBLICATION DATE: 23/02/16 EXTENT: 464 You Could Look It Up chronicles the captivating stories behind these great works and their contents, and the way they have influenced each other. From The Code of Hammurabi, the earliest known compendium of laws in ancient Babylon almost two millennia before Christ to Pliny’s Natural History; from the 11th-century Domesday Book recording land holdings in England to Abraham Ortelius’s first atlas of the world; from Samuel Johnson’s A Dictionary of the English Language to The Whole Earth Catalog to Google, Jack Lynch illuminates the human stories and accomplishment behind each, as well as its enduring impact on civilization. In the process, he offers new insight into the value of knowledge. Jack Lynch is a professor of English at Rutgers University. He specializes in English literature of the eighteenth century and the history of the English language. He is the author of several books including The Lexicographer's Dilemma: The Evolution of 'Proper' English, from Shakespeare to South Park and Samuel Johnson's Insults: A Compendium of Snubs, Sneers, Slights, and Effronteries from the Eighteenth-Century Master. He lives in New Jersey. 31 general non-fiction Heart of a Lion William Stolzenburg The extraordinary saga of one wild mountain lion’s two-thousand-mile journey from the American West to the Atlantic Coast. Late one June night in 2011, a large animal collided with an SUV cruising down a Connecticut parkway. The creature appeared as something out of New England’s forgotten past. Beside the road lay a 140-pound mountain lion. Speculations ran wild, the wildest of which figured him a ghostly survivor from a bygone century when lions last roamed the eastern United States. But a more fantastic scenario of facts soon unfolded. The lion was three years old, with a DNA trail embarking from the Black Hills of South Dakota on a cross-country odyssey eventually passing within thirty miles of New York City. It was the farthest landbound trek ever recorded for a wild animal in America, by a barely weaned teenager venturing solo through hostile terrain. Bloomsbury USA PUBLICATION DATE: 12/04/16 EXTENT: 304 William Stolzenburg retraces his two-year journey – from his embattled birthplace in the Black Hills, across the Great Plains and the Mississippi River, through Midwest metropolises and remote northern forests, to his tragic finale upon Connecticut’s Gold Coast. Along the way, the lion traverses lands with people gunning for his kind, as well as those championing his cause. Heart of a Lion is a story of one heroic creature pitting instinct against towering odds, coming home to a society deeply divided over his return. It is a testament to the resilience of nature, and a test of humanity's willingness to live again beside the ultimate symbol of wildness. William Stolzenburg has written hundreds of magazine articles about the science and spirit of saving wild creatures. A 2010 Alicia Patterson Journalism Fellow, he is the author of the books Where the Wild Things Were and Rat Island. He is also the screenwriter of the documentaries Lords of Nature: Life in a Land of Great Predators, and Ocean Frontiers: The Dawn of a New Era in Ocean Stewardship. He lives in Shepherdstown, West Virginia. 32 non-fiction highlights In Manchuria A Village Called Wasteland and the Transformation of Rural China Michael Meyer RIGHTS SOLD: Gusa Press (Complex Chinese), Shanghai Translation Publishing House (Chinese Simplified) The Kennedy Half-Century Larry J. Sabato ‘In The Kennedy Half-Century, Larry Sabato not only sheds new light on the assassination, but, and more importantly, masterfully explains the enduring legacy of Kennedy and his 1,000 days in office’ John Grisham Mecca Ziauddin Sardar ‘A major achievement ... Hugely enjoyable’ William Dalrymple RIGHTS SOLD: Payot et Rivages (French), Czarne (Polish); Arab Network for Research & Publishing (Arab); Nesil Publishing (Turkish), Linkius Publishing (Complex CHinese) On the Trail of Genghis Khan Tim Cope ‘Weaving acute observation, honest introspection, and a sense of history, Cope crafts a marvelously perceptive travelogue of an audacious odyssey’ Booklist RIGHTS SOLD: Piper/Malik (German); Jagiellonian University Press (Polish) Owning the Earth The Searchers ‘An extremely important book’ Sunday Telegraph ‘A gracefully presented narrative … A thoroughly researched, clearly written account of an obsessive search through the tangled borderland of fact and fiction, legend and myth’ Kirkus Reviews (starred review) Andro Linklater RIGHTS SOLD: Wuhan Enlightenment Compilation and Translation Company (Simplified Chinese) Glenn Frankel RIGHTS SOLD: Shinchosha (Japanese) 33 non-fiction highlights Return of a King William Dalrymple Shortlisted for the Samuel Johnson Prize, 2013 RIGHTS SOLD: Adelphi (Italian),Buchet-Chastel (French), Wydawnictwo(Polish), Social Sciences Academics Press (Simplified Chinese), Menla Publishing House (Marathian) Story of a Death Foretold Pinochet, the CIA and the Coup against Salvador Allende, 11 September 1973 How the Beatles Rocked the Kremlin Lesley Woodhead RIGHTS SOLD: Guangxi Fine Arts Publishing (Chinese) Oscar Guardiola-Rivera ‘Fascinating … Commendable for [its] originality and research’ Washington Post Meeting the Enemy Furies What? RIGHTS SOLD: Hoffmann und Campe (German) RIGHTS SOLD: Critica (Spanish), WBG Wissenschaftliche Buchgesellschaft (German) RIGHTS SOLD: Hoffman und Campe (German), Butik Yayincilik (Turkish), Exmo (Russian), Random House Korea (Korean) Richard van Emden 34 Lauro Matines Mark Kurlansky non-fiction highlights Glorious Misadventures Owen Matthews ‘A thrilling story of swashbuckling adventure’ Simon Sebag Montefiore RIGHTS SOLD: Les Editions Noir Sur Blanc (French), EXMO Publishers (Russian) Tips from Widows Jan Robinson ‘A wonderful, beautiful little book’ Joanna Lumley Gallipoli The Dardanelles Disaster in Soldiers’ Words and Photographs Tommy’s War The Western Front in Soldiers’ Words and Photographs Richard van Emden and Stephen Chambers Richard van Emden Dreamland Kidnap in Crete Sam Quinones ‘Riveting ... Pictures like these offer an intimate understanding’ Daily Telegraph The True Story of the Abduction of a Nazi General Rick Stroud ‘Rollicking ... The fullest, most fluent record of the kidnap yet’ William Dalrymple RIGHTS SOLD: Medium Media (Polish) 35 current affairs Jihad Academy Nicolas Hénin A powerful, contrarian analysis of ISIS and the roots of terrorism in the Middle East, by a journalist held captive by ISIS for 10 months. In June 2013, French journalist Nicolas Hénin was captured by ISIS. He spent 10 months in captivity, much of it with James Foley, the first prisoner beheaded, and with others who suffered the same fate. He was released after intense negotiations between the French government and ISIS. While he acknowledges he could have made much more money writing a memoir of his experience, as a journalist with a Masters in the history of international relations, he knew his greater contribution would come in presenting his perspective on how and why the West misunderstands Islamic State and the causes and purpose of jihadi terrorism – and the devastating effect of this ignorance in the region. Bloomsbury India PUBLICATION DATE: 05/11/15 EXTENT: 150 RIGHTS AVAILABLE: World excluding French (Fayard) Hénin sees Islamic State as having arisen out of injustice and a lack of hope, not out of a desire to attack the West. Indeed, its real victims are civilians in the region, the millions who have been killed or displaced. And yet the West sees ISIS as a security issue, the embodiment of evil that needs to be confronted and destroyed – thereby becoming ISIS’s greatest recruitment agent. Hénin asserts that while ISIS has done terrible things, it is nothing new: Groups have practiced political violence on civilians for millennia, ISIS is just the latest to do so. Keeping ISIS in perspective is crucial; until we understand that civilians in the region, rather than our own, and a viable society in the region are our priorities, we will never win the battle. Jihad Academy is a fresh and powerful assessment by a writer with the perspective of a historian, the passion of a journalist committed to the welfare of the region, and the credibility of someone who has looked terrorists in the eye. Nicolas Hénin has spent most of his career as a freelance journalist covering events in Iraq and Syria. From the fall of Baghdad to the capture of Raqqa, he has witnessed the events leading to the rise of Islamic State. He lives in Paris with his family, and travels frequently in the Middle East. 36 current affairs Gangster Warlords Ioan Grillo From the author of El Narco, the shocking story of the men at the heads of cartels throughout Latin America: what drives them, what sustains their power, and how they might be brought down. In a ranch south of Texas, the man known as The Executioner dumps five hundred body parts in metal barrels. In Brazil’s biggest city, a mysterious prisoner orders hit-men to gun down forty-one police officers and prison guards in two days. In southern Mexico, a meth maker is venerated as a saint while enforcing Old Testament justice on his enemies. Bloomsbury Press PUBLICATION DATE: 19/01/16 EXTENT: 384 RIGHTS SOLD: Penguin Random House Mexico (Spanish – World) A new kind of criminal kingpin has arisen: part CEO, part terrorist, and part rock star, unleashing guerrilla attacks, strong-arming governments, and taking over much of the world’s trade in narcotics, guns, and humans. What they do affects you now – from the gas in your car, to the gold in your jewelry, to the tens of thousands of Latin Americans calling for refugee status in the U.S. Gangster Warlords is the first definitive account of the crime wars now wracking Central and South America and the Caribbean, regions largely abandoned by the U.S. after the Cold War. Author of the critically acclaimed El Narco, Ioan Grillo has covered Latin America since 2001 and gained access to every level of the cartel chain of command in what he calls the new battlefields of the Americas. Moving between militia-controlled ghettos and the halls of top policy-makers, Grillo provides a disturbing new understanding of a war that has spiraled out of control – one that people across the political spectrum need to confront now. Ioan Grillo has reported on Latin America since 2001 for international media including TIME magazine, Reuters, CNN, the Associated Press, PBS NewsHour, the Houston Chronicle, CBC, and the Sunday Telegraph. His first book, El Narco: Inside Mexico's Criminal Insurgency, was translated into five languages and was a finalist for the Los Angeles Times Book Prize. A native of England, Grillo lives in Mexico City. Also Available El Narco Ioan Grillo RIGHTS SOLD: De Agostini (Italian), Modernista (Swedish), Remi (Polish), Urano (Spanish), Meta (French), Gendaikika (Japanese) 37 current affairs The Fate of Gender Frank Browning A deeply reported, provocative, and path-breaking look at the fastchanging global landscape of gender today, from the bestselling author of The Culture of Desire. Bloomsbury USA PUBLICATION DATE: 07/06/16 EXTENT: 304 Browning takes us into human gender geographies around the world, from gender-neutral kindergartens in Chicago and Oslo to femminielli weather casters in Naples, from conservative Catholics in Paris fearful of God and Nature to transsexual Mormon parents in Utah. Along the way he elucidates the neuroscience that distinguishes male and female biology, shows us how all parents' brains change during the first weeks of parenthood, and finally how men's and women's responses to age differ worldwide based not on biology but on their earlier life habits. Starting with Simone de Beauvoir's world-famous observation that one is not born a woman but instead becomes a woman, Browning goes on to show equally that no one is born a man but learns how to perform as a man, and that there is no fixed way of being masculine or feminine. Increasingly, the categories of “male” and “female” and even “gay” and “straight” seem old-fashioned and reductive. Just visible on the horizon is a world of gender and sexual fluidity that will remake our world in fundamental ways. Linking science to culture and behavior, he challenges the traditional division of Nature vs. Nurture in everything from plant science to sexual expression, arguing in the end that life consists of an endless waltz between these two ancient notions. Former NPR science reporter Frank Browning grew up on an apple farm in Kentucky and now lives in Paris. His books include The American Way of Crime (with John Gerassi), The Culture of Desire, A Queer Geography, Apples: The Story of the Fruit of Temptation, and The Monk & the Skeptic. He writes on art and culture for the Huffington Post and has contributed to the Washington Post Magazine, Mother Jones, Playboy, Salon, and other publications. 38 current affairs Ethical Carnivore Louise Gray If you had to look an animal in the eye and kill it yourself, could you still eat it? This is the story of one woman's quest to find out what it really means to kill and eat animals. Louise Gray's first kill is a disaster. She injures a rabbit and thinks it has died in agony. But the experience teaches her a lesson and, when she subsequently finds the rabbit, she vows to do its death justice by finding out what it really means to kill and eat animals. Bloomsbury Natural History PUBLICATION DATE: 11/08/16 EXTENT: 288 Many people claim to care about the meat they eat, but do they really know how the animal died? The Ethical Carnivore addresses this difficult yet universal question through a personal and emotional quest. Taking the current fashion for ‘ethical meat’ to its logical conclusion, journalist Louise Gray vows to reconnect with her food by only eating animals she has killed herself over the course of nearly two years. Starting small, Louise shoots and traps game such as hare and squirrels, and learns how to skin and cook them in the traditional way. Louise considers killing game birds as part of organised shoots, and whether it can be justified. Louise also visits slaughterhouses and finds out how animals are killed and processed, and the effect it has on the people who do it on our behalf. The biggest animal Louise kills is a stag, in a chapter about blood lust, the question of masculinity and whether we are really meant to hunt and kill. Louise goes wildfowling in the Orkneys to shoot a goose for Christmas dinner and, at the end of her quest, she reflects on how the rabbit she first shot taught her to appreciate all the meat she eats by facing up to the death of animals and to look deeply at her own morals and values. Louise Gray is former Environment Correspondent at The Daily Telegraph, where she covered annual UN talks on climate change, travelled to Paraguay to investigate GM crops and got more than one scoop on recycling. Since leaving the newspaper at the end of 2013 she has written freelance for The Sunday Times, Guardian, Country Life and Spectator, and has also appeared on BBC Radio 4 and LBC. Through her blog she has built up a sizeable readership worldwide, and is fast becoming the go-to person for environmental matters, a subject that grows and grows. 39 current affairs The Health Gap: The Challenge of an Unequal World Michael Marmot One of the world’s leading doctors and public intellectuals reveals social injustice to be the greatest threat to health in the world, and explains how socio-economic status directly affects health There are dramatic differences in health between countries and within countries. But this is not a simple matter of rich and poor. A poor man in Glasgow is rich compared to the average Indian, but the Glaswegian’s life expectancy is 8 years shorter. The Indian is dying of infectious disease linked to his poverty; the Glaswegian of violent death, suicide, heart disease linked to a rich country’s version of disadvantage. In all countries, people at relative social disadvantage suffer health disadvantage, dramatically so. Within countries, the higher the social status of individuals the better is their health. Bloomsbury Publishing PUBLICATION DATE: 10/09/15 EXTENT: 400 These health inequalities defy usual explanations. Conventional approaches to improving health have emphasised access to technical solutions – improved medical care, sanitation, and control of disease vectors; or behaviours – smoking, drinking – obesity, linked to diabetes, heart disease and cancer. These approaches only go so far. Creating the conditions for people to lead flourishing lives, and thus empowering individuals and communities, is key to reduction of health inequalities. In addition to the scale of material success, your position in the social hierarchy also directly affects your health, the higher you are on the social scale, the longer you will live and the better your health will be. As people change rank, so their health risk changes. What makes these health inequalities unjust is that evidence from round the world shows we know what to do to make them smaller. This new evidence is compelling. It has the potential to change radically the way we think about health, and indeed society. Born in England and educated in Australia, Sir Michael Marmot is Professor of Epidemiology and Public Health at UCL. He will take up the Lown visiting professorship at Harvard in 2015 and Presidency of the World Medical Association. He chaired the WHO Commission on Social Determinants of Health (2005-8), his recommendations have been adopted by the World Health Assembly and taken up by many countries and the British Government appointed him to conduct a review of social determinants and health inequalities. The Marmot Review and its recommendations are now being implemented in three-quarters of local authorities in England. He lives in North London. @MichaelMarmot 40 current affairs highlights Farmageddon The God Argument Unspeakable Things ‘A wake-up call to the perils of industrial agriculture’ Observer RIGHTS SOLD: madibooks (Korean), Loxodonta (Danish), McMillan d.o.o. (Serbian) Laurie Penny The Emperor Far Away The Impulse Society Philip Lymbery with Isabel Oakeshott A. C. Grayling Sex, Lies and Revolution RIGHTS SOLD: Nautilus (German) Ordfront (Swedish) RIGHTS SOLD: Nikkei BP (Japanese) AND Publishing (Complex Chinese) Illumatio Lukasz (Polish), Nutrimenti (Italian), Garamond (Czech Republic) Blood Ransom Stories from the front line in the war against Somali piracy John Boyle RIGHTS SOLD: Medium Media (Polish) Travels at the Edge of China David Eimer ‘Fascinating ... A side of China that’s rarely examined’ Daily Telegraph RIGHTS SOLD: Hakusisha (Japanese), Gusa Press (Complex Chinese), Uniwesytet Jagiellonski (Polish) America in the Age of Instant Gratification Paul Roberts RIGHTS SOLD: China Citic Press (Simplified Chinese), Minumsa (Korean), Diamond Inc (Japanese), Commonwealth Publishing Co (Complex Chinese) 41 MEMOIR AND BIOGRAPHY Quentin Blake: In the Theatre of the Imagination Ghislaine Kenyon A visual biography and intimate portrait of Quentin Blake, the muchloved illustrator and artistic genius of our age. Quentin Blake is one of the foremost illustrators of the twentieth century. Best known for his collaboration with Roald Dahl on books such as The Giraffe and the Pelly and Me, The Twits, and Matilda, he is cherished by young and old alike. Still, his work has not attained “fine art” status. How does Blake’s background in education inform his work? And what is the relationship between the work he makes and the life he leads? Distinguished curator Ghislaine Kenyon spent a great deal of time with Blake and in this biography, she provides profound insight into an extraordinary man and his remarkable body of work. Bloomsbury Continuum PUBLICATION DATE: 10/05/16 EXTENT: 256 A shared enthusiasm for education brought Kenyon and Blake together. Kenyon staged a jointly curated exhibition, Tell Me A Picture, during Blake’s tenure as Children’s Laureate (1999–2001). She followed Blake during the years he continued to work “off the page,” producing work for hospitals in Angers and Paris and staging major exhibitions around the world. Kenyon shows that Blake’s life informs his illustrations and his artwork, in turn, informs his life—a life which is extremely private, mysterious, and full of complexities and ambiguities. Kenyon has produced not merely a biography but a critical view of the artist’s work. This book is a fitting tribute to Quentin Blake’s journey and to his great artistic legacy. Ghislaine Kenyon worked formerly as Deputy Head of Education at the National Gallery and then Head of Learning at Somerset House. She has curated several exhibitions, including Tell Me a Picture in 2000 with Quentin Blake. 42 MEMOIR AND BIOGRAPHY The Lost Detective: Becoming Dahiell Hammet Nathan Ward A fascinating portrait of the overlooked Dashiell Hammett – from his years as a Pinkerton detective to becoming the author of arguably the most iconic detective novels of the twentieth century. Bloomsbury USA PUBLICATION DATE: 15/09/15 EXTENT: 240 Before he became a household name in America as perhaps our greatest hardboiled crime writer, before his attachment to Lillian Hellman and blacklisting during the McCarthy era, and his subsequent downward spiral, Dashiell Hammett led a life of action. Born in 1894 into a poor Maryland family, Hammett left school at fourteen and held several jobs before joining the Pinkerton National Detective Agency as an operative in 1915 and, with time off in 1918 to serve at the end of World War I, he remained with the agency until 1922, participating alike in the banal and dramatic action of an operative. The tuberculosis he contracted during the war forced him to leave the Pinkertons – but it may well have prompted one of America’s most acclaimed writing careers. While Hammett’s life on center stage has been well-documented, the question of how he got there has not. That largely overlooked phase is the subject of Nathan Ward’s enthralling The Lost Detective. Hammett’s childhood, his life in San Francisco, and especially his experience as a detective deeply informed his writing and his characters, from the nameless Continental Op, hero of his stories and early novels, to Sam Spade and Nick Charles. The success of his many stories in the pulp magazine Black Mask following his departure from the Pinkertons led him to novels; he would write five between 1929 and 1934, two of them (The Maltese Falcon and The Thin Man) now American classics. Though he inspired generations of writers, from Chandler to Connelly and all in between, after The Thin Man he never finished another book, a painful silence for his devoted readers; and his popular image has long been shaped by the remembrance of Hellman, who knew him after his literary reputation had been made. Based on original research across the country, The Lost Detective is the first book to illuminate Hammett’s transformation from real detective to great American detective writer, throwing brilliant new light on one of America’s most celebrated and remembered novelists and his world. Nathan Ward is the author of Dark Harbor: The War for the New York Waterfront. He was an editor at American Heritage, and he has written for the New York Times and other publications. He lives in Brooklyn, New York. 43 MEMOIR AND BIOGRAPHY The Fall of the House of Wilde Emer O'Sullivan A fascinating insight into the Wilde family’s double fall from grace Oscar Wilde owed his most outstanding characteristics – his precocious intellectualism, his nimble-wittedness, his flamboyance, his hedonism, his recklessness, his pride, his sense of superiority, his liberal sexual values – to his parents. Bloomsbury Publishing PUBLICATION DATE: 02/06/16 EXTENT: 464 Oscar was the son of Sir William Wilde, one of the most eminent Victorian men of his generation. Acutely conscious of injustices in the social order, Sir William laid the foundations for the Celtic cultural renaissance in the belief that culture would establish a common ground between the privileged and the poor, Protestant and Catholic. But he was also a philanderer. When Sir William stood accused of sexually assaulting a young female patient, the scandal and trial sent shock waves through Dublin society. Oscar’s mother, Lady Jane Wilde, rose to public prominence as a political journalist, advocating in 1848 a rebellion against colonialism. Proud, involved and challenging, she became a salon hostess and opened the Wilde home at No 1 Merrion Square to the public. Known as the most scintillating and stirring hostess of her day, she passed on her infectious delight in the art of living to Oscar, who imbibed it greedily. After the Sir William's public disgrace and death in 1876, Jane moved her family to London where Oscar burst upon the London scene and at once set upon the task of inventing himself. America started the legend, and in no time his face was one of the most photographed on both sides of the Atlantic. The one role he failed to triumph in was that of the Victorian husband, as his wife, Constance, was to discover. For beneath the swelling forehead was a self-destructive itch. A lifelong devourer of public attention, Oscar never knew when the party was over. Ultimately, his trial heralded the death of decadence and also of Oscar Wilde. It deprived him irrecoverably of the power to be loved and to write, which for him were intimately linked. The Wilde family was one of the most dazzling Anglo-Irish families in Victorian Ireland. But their enlightened questioning of the governing order, fuelled the rise of Irish nationalism and their newfound belief in Irishness, ended by toppling the Protestant ruling classes and the Wilde family in particular. The Fall of the House of Wilde is a remarkable and perceptive account, not only of one of the most prominent writers of the late nineteenth century, but also of his remarkable family and social context. Emer O’Sullivan graduated from Trinity College, Dublin, and has completed an MA in Life Writing and a PhD in Virginia Woolf’s literature at UEA, where she also lectured in English Literature. This is her first book. She lives in London. 44 MEMOIR AND BIOGRAPHY Mario Vargas Llosa: A Life Gerald Martin The first comprehensive biography of the brilliant author of Conversation in the Cathedral, Aunt Julia and the Script-Writer and The Feast of the Goat, who ran for the presidency of Peru in 1990 and in 2010 won a Nobel Prize for Literature Mario Vargas Llosa is one of the world’s great writers of the past fifty years. He is almost unique among Latin American novelists in the sense that he is on the right of the political spectrum: ideologically his views are liberal in political terms and neo-liberal in economic terms. This undoubtedly connects in part to the fact that he is not in any meaningful sense a ‘magical realist’ writer (as so many Latin American novelists of his generation are) but, rather, a classical ‘realist’ in the tradition of Balzac, Flaubert and – rather more surprisingly – Faulkner. Bloomsbury UK PUBLICATION DATE: 31/08/2017 EXTENT: 384 RIGHTS SOLD: Random House Penguin (Spanish World) Suhrkamp (German) The fabled ‘Boom’ of the Latin American novel in the 1960s centred on four writers: Julio Cortázar of Argentina, Carlos Fuentes of Mexico, Gabriel García Márquez of Colombia, and Mario Vargas Llosa of Peru. Vargas Llosa was the youngest of these writers by more than a decade and he was also a prodigy: he had published three major best-selling novels by the age of thirty, all of them critically acclaimed. Had he stopped writing then he would still today be one of the greatest novelists in Latin American history. Like García Márquez, Vargas Llosa was profoundly committed to politics. The two men met in the 1960s and even though it was known that they had come to disagree sharply about the Cuban Revolution (1959), the most important event in Latin America since the Mexican Revolution of 1910, it came as a great surprise – indeed, a sensation – when Vargas Llosa publicly felled García Márquez with a right hook at a movie premiere in Mexico City in 1976. Following that event, still the subject of unceasing press speculation to the present day, the two men have never spoken again. Handsome, elegant and debonair, Vargas Llosa is the most polite and considerate of men at a personal level; yet he has alienated many of his friends and colleagues over the course of a long career. However, no one meeting him for the first time without knowing who he was would dream that this gentleman could be the author of several genuinely shocking books. Gerald Martin knows the man and the work well and will bring the same meticulous research, scrupulous attention to detail and narrative verve to bear on a life that holds equal fascination with that of his fellow Nobel Prize winner Gabriel García Márquez. Gerald Martin is Professor of Modern Languages at the University of Pittsburgh and president of the International Institute of Ibero-American Literature. Publications include Gabriel Garcia Marques: A Life, Journeys Through the Labyrinth and a critical edition of Miguel Angel Asturias’s Hombres de maíz. Rights sold in 20 languages 45 MEMOIR AND BIOGRAPHY Monet: and His Water Lilies Ross King We have all seen—live, in photographs, on postcards—some of Claude Monet’s legendary water lily paintings. They are in museums all over the world, and are among the most admired paintings of our time. Yet nobody knows the extraordinarily dramatic story behind their creation. Telling that story is the brilliant historian, Ross King’s, new project—and in the process, he presents a compelling and original portrait of perhaps the most beloved artist in history. Bloomsbury US PUBLICATION DATE: 13/09/2016 EXTENT: 384 RIGHTS SOLD: De Bezige Bij (Dutch), Record (Brazilian Portuguese), Rizzoli (Italian), Random House (Canadian) As World War I exploded within hearing distance of his house at Giverny, Monet was facing his own personal crucible. In 1911, his adored wife, Alice, had died, plunging him into deep mourning at age 71. A year later he began going blind. Then, his eldest son, Jean, fell ill and died of syphilis, and his other son was sent to the front to fight for France. Within months, a violent storm destroyed much of the garden that had been his inspiration for some 20 years. At the same time, his reputation was under attack, as a new generation of artists, led by Pablo Picasso and Henri Matisse, were dazzling the art world and expressing disgust with Impressionism. Against all this, fighting his own self doubt, depression, and age, Monet found the wherewithal to construct a massive new studio, 70 feet long and 50 feet high, to accommodate the gigantic canvases that would, he hoped, revive him. Using letters, memoirs, and other sources not employed by other biographers, and focusing on this remarkable period in the artist’s life, Ross King reveals a more complex, more human, more intimate Claude Monet than has ever been portrayed, and firmly places his water lily project among the greatest achievements in the history of art. Ross King is the highly praised author of Brunelleschi’s Dome, Michelangelo and the Pope’s Ceiling, The Judgment of Paris, Machiavelli: Philosopher of Power, and two novels, Ex Libris and Domino. He lives just outside Oxford. Leonardo and the Last Supper RIGHTS SOLD: De Bezige Bij (Dutch) Record (Brazilian Portuguese), Random House (German), Rizzoli (Italian), Semicolon (Korean), Park (Hungarian), Kinneret (Hebrew) Dogan Kitap (Turkish) Noirsur Blanc (Polish) 46 MEMOIR AND BIOGRAPHY The Life of Lucian Freud William Feaver A complete and unique biography of the artist Lucian Freud, grandson of Sigmund, documented by his close friend William Feaver. Lucian Freud is one of the most important artists of the twentieth-century. Hailed as the ‘best living realist painter’ in his life time, his work was exhibited by Peggy Guggenheim at the age of just sixteen, is in museum collections all over the world and fetches huge prices at auction. Bloomsbury Publishing PUBLICATION DATE: 05/10/17 EXTENT: 320 RIGHTS SOLD: Albatros (Polish), Atlas Contact (Dutch) Born in Berlin in 1922 to Jewish parents, the grandson of Sigmund Freud, Lucian’s family moved to England in 1933 to escape the rise of Nazism. Enrolling in the Central School of Art, he spent most of his time avoiding academic instruction and funded both his studies and misadventures in London’s Soho with gold he stole from his father’s stash. Freud knew Picasso, the Woolfs, Stephen Spender, George Orwell, Henry Moore, spent a sojourn on Goldeneye with Ian Fleming and was a great friend and gambling partner of Francis Bacon. His love life was eventful and he fathered fourteen known children. The subjects of his portraits include David Hockney, Jerry Hall, Kate Moss and the Queen. Drawing on a huge volume of tapes and notes of innumerable conversations, plus the memories of close friends now dead, The Life of Lucian Freud will be the definitive, inspiring and indispensable biography of a life like no other. William Feaver, former art critic at the Observer, was a long-time friend of Freud, and curated exhibitions of his work at the Tate and Museo Correr in Venice. He had unprecedented access to Freud, from the start of their friendship in the 1970s. 47 MEMOIR AND BIOGRAPHY The Chief Engineer: Washington Roebling, the Man who Built the Brooklyn Bridge Erica Wagner An unparalleled biography of one of the most important figures in American civil engineering history – Washington Roebling, builder of the Brooklyn Bridge. His father conceived of the Brooklyn Bridge, but it was Washington Roebling who built it after his father’s tragic death. The iconic feat of human engineering has stood for more than 130 years and is as much a part of New York as the Statue of Liberty or the Empire State Building. Yet, as recognizable as the bridge is, its builder is too often forgotten. Bloomsbury Publishing PUBLICATION DATE: 02/02/17 EXTENT: 320 Now, forty years after the publication of The Great Bridge by David McCullough, Erica Wagner has written a brilliant chronicle of one of America’s most distinguished engineers and interesting people. Meticulously researched, revealing archival material only recently uncovered at Rutgers University, including Washington Roebling’s own memoir that was previously thought to be lost to history, Wagner relates the history of the bridge and its first family for a new generation of readers. Roebling’s experience as an engineer building bridges for the Union Army during the Civil War has never before been documented, and played a central role in the bridge linking Brooklyn and Manhattan. The Chief Engineer is an engaging portrait of a brilliant and driven man, and of his era. Erica Wagner is an American writer and literary critic. She is the former literary editor of The Times (UK), and has previously been a judge for the Man Booker Prize in 2002 and 2014. She lives in London, and is the author of Ariel’s Gift: Ted Hughes, Sylvia Plath, and the Story of Birthday Letters (Norton, 2002) and the short story collection Gravity (Granta, 1997). 48 MEMOIR AND BIOGRAPHY Empire of Imagination Michael Witwer Here, for the first time, is a comprehensive biography of geek and gaming culture's mythic icon, Gary Gygax, and the complete story behind his invention of Dungeons and Dragons. The life story of Gary Gygax, godfather of all fantasy adventure games, has been told only in bits and pieces. Michael Witwer has written a dynamic, dramatized biography of Gygax from his childhood in Lake Geneva, Wisconsin to his untimely death in 2008. Bloomsbury USA PUBLICATION DATE: 06/10/15 EXTENT: 320 RIGHTS SOLD: Casa da Palavra (Portuguese – Brazil) Gygax’s magnum opus, Dungeons & Dragons, would explode in popularity throughout the 1970s and ’80s and irreversibly alter the world of gaming. D&D is the best-known, best-selling role-playing game of all time, and it boasts an elite class of alumni – Stephen Colbert, Robin Williams, and Junot Diaz all have spoken openly about their experience with the game as teenagers, and some credit it as the workshop where their nascent imaginations were fostered. Gygax’s involvement in the industry lasted long after his dramatic and involuntary departure from D&D’s parent company, TSR, and his footprint can be seen in the genre he is largely responsible for creating. But as Witwer shows, perhaps the most compelling facet of his life and work was his unwavering commitment to the power of creativity in the face of myriad sources of adversity, whether cultural, economic, or personal. Through his creation of the role-playing genre, Gygax gave two generations of gamers the tools to invent characters and entire worlds in their minds. Told in narrative-driven and dramatic fashion, Witwer has written an engaging chronicle of the life and legacy of this emperor of the imagination. Michael Witwer is a lifelong gamer and gaming enthusiast. He holds degrees from Northwestern University and the University of Chicago, where this book first emerged as the subject of his master’s thesis. He is also a film and theater actor and marketing professional, and is the brother of actor Sam Witwer, who originally introduced him to Dungeons & Dragons. He lives in Chicago, Illinois, with his wife and two children. 49 MEMOIR AND BIOGRAPHY A Guest at the Shooters’ Banquet Rita Gabis In prose as beautiful as it is powerful, Rita Gabis follows the trail of her grandfather’s collaboration with the Nazis – a trail riddled with secrets, slaughter, mystery, and discovery. Rita Gabis comes from a family of Eastern European Jews and Lithuanian Catholics. She was close to her Catholic grandfather as a child and knew one version of his past: prior to immigration he had fought the Russians, whose brutal occupation of Lithuania destroyed thousands of lives before Hitler’s army swept in. Bloomsbury USA PUBLICATION DATE: 08/09/15 EXTENT: 464 Five years ago, Gabis discovered an unthinkable dimension to her family story: from 1941 to 1943, her grandfather had been the chief of security police under the Gestapo in the Lithuanian town of Svencionys, near the killing field of Poligon, where eight thousand Jews were murdered over three days in the fall of 1941. In 1942, the local Polish population was also hunted down. Gabis felt compelled to find out the complicated truth of who her grandfather was and what he had done. Built around dramatic interviews in four countries, filled with original scholarship, and mesmerizing in its lyricism, A Guest at the Shooters’ Banquet is a history and family memoir like no other, documenting “the holocaust by bullets” with a remarkable quest as Gabis returns again and again to the country of her grandfather’s birth to learn all she can about the man she thought she knew. Rita Gabis is an award-winning poet and prose writer. Her grants and fellowships include a New York Foundation for the Arts Award for creative nonfiction and residencies at Yaddo and the Fine Arts Work Center in Provincetown, Massachusetts. She is the author of the poetry collection The Wild Field (Alice James Books). Her work has appeared in Harvard Review, Poetry, and elsewhere. She lives and teaches in New York City. 50 MEMOIR AND BIOGRAPHY No Way But Gentlenesse Richard Hines From Richard Hines, the inspiration for Billy Casper in the classic novel A Kestrel for a Knave, comes the real-life story of one boy and his kestrel set against the backdrop of a crumbling mining community ‘There is no way but gentlenesse to redeeme a Hawke’ Edmund Bert, 1619 In 1968, Penguin published a novel about a young boy’s relationship with a kestrel. Made into a film by Ken Loach and set as a GCSE key text, A Kestrel for a Knave has since become a classic, widely read across the UK by schoolchildren and adults alike. What few people know, though, is that the author, Barry Hines, took his inspiration from his younger brother, Richard. Bloomsbury Publishing PUBLICATION DATE: 10/03/16 EXTENT: 320 Barry and Richard both grew up in Hoyland Common, a South Yorkshire mining village, and they share memories of spoil heaps and coal dust, listening out for klaxons at the end of mine shifts and whispered details of accidents. But after the 11+ exams, their paths diverged dramatically. While Barry passed and was sent to grammar school, with the belief that university would follow, Richard failed and was left without much hope of academic achievement. Crushed by a system that had swiftly and permanently branded him a knave, Richard was adrift. Until one morning, walking in the grounds of a ruined medieval manor, he came across kestrels nesting in the walls. Instantly captivated but without a working-class role model to learn from, he sought whatever ancient texts the local library could offer on the subject of falconry, and improvised by buying dog leads for tresses and getting fatty meats from his local butcher for food. And it was in bringing up and training of kestrels that Richard discovered a purpose again. No Way But Gentlenesse is a moving tale of cultures lost to time and the true tale of one boy’s attempt to find salvation in the natural world. Richard Hines was raised in Hoyland Common, a village in South Yorkshire. After leaving school, he became a documentary filmmaker, starting his own production company and working for the BBC and Channel 4, before becoming a lecturer at Sheffield Hallam University. He lives in South Sheffield and frequently walks on the Derbyshire moors, from where he can see the ruins of Tankersley Hall. 51 MEMOIR AND BIOGRAPHY highlights The Disinherited Robert Sackville-West ‘Immaculately written ... A fascinating picture of a forgotten underside of English aristocratic and public life’ Lucy Lethbridge, Observer Pope Francis Paul Vallely RIGHTS SOLD: ShunjuSha (Japanese), Larousse (French), WBG (German), Wydawnictwom (Polish) 52 Beloved Strangers Maria Chaudhuri ‘Moving, lyrical and curious – this memoir effortlessly captures the disorientating feeling of growing up in a world that misunderstands you’ Red Margaret Thatcher Jonathan Aitken RIGHTS SOLD: Beijing Alpha/Books Co (Simplified Chinese) MOB Rule Hannah Evans ‘Gives an insight into the challenges, drama and fun of raising boys’ Mother & Baby Claude LéviStrauss Patrick Wilcken RIGHTS SOLD: Sindbad (Russian), Beijinh Taofen Book (Simplified Chinese) RIGHTS SOLD: Acropolis (Complex Chinese), Atlas Contact (Dutch), Beijing Guangban New Century Culture (Simplified Chinese), Everrich Holdings (Korean),Grupo Saggiatore (Italian), Objetiva (Brazilian Portuguese) Ansel Adams Philip Larkin Mary Street Alinder James Booth A Biography Life, Art and Love ‘Superb ... A satisfying and believably complex picture’ Spectator MEMOIR AND BIOGRAPHY highlights Cairo Ahdaf Soueif “Soueif is a political analyst and commentator of the best kind’ London Review of Books RIGHTS SOLD: Alhambra Forlag (Swedish), Donzelli (Italian) , Knopf (US), Metaixmio (Greek) Let Me Tell You a Story: A Memoir of a Wartime Childhood Renata Calverley RIGHTS SOLD: Ediciones Rialp (Spanish), Gummerus (Finnish), Weltbild Polska (Polish) Gabriel Garcia Marquez Gerald Martin Revised postscript now available RIGHTS SOLD: Am Oved (Hebrew), Arab Scientific Publishers (Lebanon Arabic), Bertelsmann Media (Polish), Dom Quixote (Portuguese), Ediouro (Brazilian Portuguese), Editura Litera International (Romanian), Euromedia (Czech), Grasset (French), Iwanami Shoten (Japanese), Kultur Yayinari is Turk (Turkish), Linking (Complex Chinese), Magveto (Hungarian), Meulenhoff (Dutch), Mikri Arktos Publishing House (Greek), Mondadori (Italian), Penguin Random House (Spain), Sandorf (Croatian), China Citic Press (Simplified Chinese), Slovo (Russian), TIMY Partners (Slovak), Uniscorp (Bulgarian) Genius At Play The Curious Mathematical Mind of John Horton Conway Siobhan Roberts 53 MUsic highlights Mr Mojo: A Biography of Jim Morrison Dylan Jones 54 A Prince Among Stones Respect Yourself ‘This book is far more than a footnote to the Rolling Stones; it is an elegantly written account of how two cultures came together’ Lynn Barber, Sunday Times ‘A masterful storyteller, music historian Gordon artfully chronicles the rise and fall of one of America’s greatest music studios, situating the story of Stax within the cultural history of the 1960s in the South ... Gordon deftly narrates the stories of the many musicians who called Stax home’ Publishers Weekly Prince Rupert Lowerstein Robert Gordon TRAVEL AND NATURE WRITING When the Last Lion Roars: How the king of the beasts was brought to the brink Sara Evans The story of a continent losing its most charismatic predator at unprecedented speed. There are no lions left north of the Sahara and their range in southern Africa has shrunk considerably. Two sub species have already gone. With numbers down to just 20,000, many experts believe, that without effective conservation plans in place, Africa’s remaining lions will be wiped out by the mid half of this century. Bloomsbury Natural History Publication date: 20/10/16 Extent: 320 Sara Evans considers the cultural significance of the Lion over thousands of years as well as its historic rise and fall as a global species. She also explores the many, and often complex, reasons that explain why numbers have plummeted so catastrophically in recent decades. As humans are the lion’s only predator, she asks what is being done to reverse, or at least stem this haemorrhage? By interweaving vivid personal encounters with Africa’s last lions – from Kenya in the northeast to Botswana in the south – visits to breeding projects in the west and their protectors all over the continent, she hopes to answer this question as well as turn the spotlight on the plight of Africa’s most iconic and mesmerising animals. The narrative also includes photographs, illustrations and maps as well as insights from experts in the field. Sara Evans is an award-winning writer and photojournalist, specialising in travel and wildlife. Newspapers and magazines that have featured her work include: Telegraph, Sunday Telegraph, Independent on Sunday, The Mail on Sunday, The Australian Sydney Morning Herald, The Age, Boston Globe, Lonely Planet Travel Magazine, BBC Wildlife Magazine, Africa Geographic Countryside, and Wildlife magazine. She won the 2005 Independent on Sunday and Bradt Travel Writing competition and has been shortlisted in a number of BBC writing competitions and been a panelist at Bradt travel-writing seminars. 55 TRAVEL AND NATURE WRITING The Most Perfect Thing: Inside (and Outside) a Bird’s Egg Tim Birkhead From the author of Bird Sense and The Wisdom of Birds, a revealing and enthralling book about the extraordinary creation that is a bird’s egg Which end of an egg is laid first, the blunt end or the pointed end? How are eggs of different shapes made, and why are they the shape they are? When does the shell of an egg harden? Why do some eggs contain two yolks? How are the colours and patterns of an eggshell created, and why do they vary? These are just some of the questions Tim Birkhead answers in his fascinating new book. Bloomsbury Publishing PUBLICATION DATE: 07/04/16 EXTENT: 288 A Bird’s Egg places current scientific knowledge within an historical context and takes the reader on a captivating journey from the creation and fertilisation of eggs, to their development and eventual hatching. Birkhead begins by focusing on the stunning guillemot eggs, each of which is curiously pointed, and so variable in pattern and colour that no two are the same, but then broadens his subject matter to the eggs of hens, cuckoos and many other birds to explain the science of these miraculous constructions, and to reveal many weird and wonderful facts along the way. Tim Birkhead is a professor at the University of Sheffield where he teaches animal behaviour and the history of science. He is a Fellow of the Royal Society of London and his research has taken him all over the world in the quest to understand the lives of birds. He has written for the Independent, New Scientist, BBC Wildlife. Among his other books are Promiscuity, Great Auk Islands, The Cambridge Encyclopaedia of Birds which won the McColvin medal, The Red Canary which won the Consul Cremer Prize, The Wisdom of Birds and Bird Sense. He is married with three children and lives in Sheffield. The Red Canary Tim Birkhead 56 Bird Sense The Wisdom of Birds RIGHTS SOLD: Bezige Bij (Dutch), Forest of Imagination (Korean), Buchet-Chastel (French), Destino (Spanish), Galaktyka (Polish), Kawade Shobo Shinsha (Japanese), OWL Publishing Ltd (Taiwanese), The Commercial Press (Chinese), XO Books (The Commercial Press) RIGHTS SOLD: Bezige Bij (Dutch), Forest of Imagination (Korean), Readme.fi (Finnish), Greystone/ Douglas (Canada), The Commercial Press (Simplified Chinese), Libros del Jata (Spanish – Spain only) Tim Birkhead Tim Birkhead TRAVEL AND NATURE WRITING Herring Tales Donald S. Murray A lighthearted and informative narrative about the history of herring and our love affair with the silver darlings. Scots like to smoke or salt them. The Dutch love them raw. Swedes look on with relish as they open bulging, foul-smelling cans to find them curdling within. Jamaicans prefer them with a dash of chilli pepper. Germans and the English enjoy their taste best when accompanied by pickle's bite and brine. Throughout the long centuries men have fished around their coastlines and beyond, the herring has done much to shape both human taste and history. Men have co-operated and come into conflict over its shoals, setting out in boats to catch them, straying, too, from their home ports to bring full nets to shore. Women have also often been at the centre of the industry, gutting and salting the catch when the annual harvest had taken place, knitting, too, the garments fishermen wore to protect them from the ocean's chill. Bloomsbury Natural History PUBLICATION DATE: 10/09/15 EXTENT: 272 Following a journey from the western edge of Norway to the east of England, from Shetland and the Outer Hebrides to the fishing ports of the Baltic coast of Germany and the Netherlands, culminating in a visit to Iceland's Herring Era Museum, Donald S. Murray has stitched together tales of the fish that was of central importance to the lives of our ancestors, noting how both it - and those involved in their capture – were celebrated in the art, literature, craft, music and folklore of life in northern Europe. Blending together politics, science, history, religious and commercial life, Donald contemplates, too, the possibility of restoring the silver darlings of legend to these shores. Donald S. Murray comes from Ness at the northern tip of the Isle of Lewis and now lives in close proximity to 'the Ness' at the southern end of Shetland. His poetry and prose is often about islands and the wildlife on and around them. The Gannet features strongly in his prose accounts, The Guga Hunters and Praising The Guga, books inspired by the men who hunt the guga (or young Gannets) each year on Sulasgeir, which is off the north-east coast of Lewis. Gannets also feature in his wonderfully eclectic collection of prose and poems, The Guga Stone; Lies, Legends And Lunacies Of St Kinda, illustrated by his friend and collaborator, Doug Robertson. The Guga Stone was shortlisted as one of The Guardian's nature books of the year in 2013. 57 TRAVEL AND NATURE WRITING Magic Bustard Nigel Redman A hippie birder's journey through 70s Western Asia, packed with drugs, casual sex and scarce endemic plovers The hippie trail – a gentle, hallucinogen-powered bus-bound trundle through western Asia from Istanbul to Kathmandu – came into being in the early 1970s. Back then this was an intrepid trip into the almost completely unknown, through places that are largely off-limits to travellers today, such as Iran and Afghanistan, that broadened already-mellowed minds to a backdrop of The Who, Jethro Tull and Pink Floyd. The birds of this region were similarly largely unknown, but all this was to change following an epic trip in 1978 by a band of birding hippies, which heralded the beginning of large-scale bird trips to Asia and beyond. Nigel Redman, a young, bored accountant with a lifelong passion for birds, decided to jack it all in and head off on this adventure to birding nirvana. Bloomsbury Natural History PUBLICATION DATE: 28/07/16 EXTENT: 288 Magic Bustard is the story of that ground-breaking trip, comparing the habitats, people, places and birds of the 1970s with current observations as Nigel revisits old haunts along the trail, from the famous ‘Pudding Shop’ where the journey began right across to the final destination and gateway to the world of Himalayan endemics, Kathmandu in Nepal. Part-travelogue, part-memoir, the book delivers a commentary on the incredible changes that have been wrought on the region and its birds in the 40 years since that first trip, with bizarre ground jays, sensational sandgrouse, bounteous buntings, and yes, even a magic bustard or two on the way. Of appeal to birders, hippies, ex-hippies, and above all people who enjoy a good travel yarn, Magic Bustard is both an enjoyable testament to the awakening of the possibilities of travel in the postwar era, and a fun travelogue packed with drugs, casual sex and scarce endemic plovers. Groovy. Nigel Redman has been an active birder since the mid 1960s. A publisher by profession, he also works as a bird tour leader. He is a former chairman of the Oriental Bird Club, has served on the councils of the British Ornithologists’ Union, the Ornithological Society of the Middle East and the African Bird Club, and has been a member of the editorial board of British Birds since 1998. Nigel is also co-author of Where to Watch Birds in Britain and senior author of Birds of the Horn of Africa. His latest book, Magic Bustard, is based on a life-changing overland trip to Asia, following the legendary hippie trail to Kathmandu. 58 TRAVEL AND NATURE WRITING On a Wing and a Prayer Sarah Woods Trying to encounter a harpy eagle in the wild, Sarah Woods trekked through the world’s densest jungles, falling under the spell of Latin America’s extraordinary wildlife and making some heart-wrenching discoveries about herself along the way. As a young child, Sarah Woods imagined going on epic voyages to exotic, illusory lands filled with bizarre creatures, intoxicating rhythms, vibrant colours and other-worldly forests. As soon as she was old enough she packed a bag and set off to see the world for real, leaving friends and family behind to fulfil her childhood dreams. Bloomsbury Natural History PUBLICATION DATE: 05/05/16 EXTENT: 272 To journey solo through Central and South America was perhaps the ultimate challenge. Leaving the tourist traps behind, Sarah ventured into the wilderness, experiencing disease-ridden swamps, shark-infested waters and dense tracts of primary rainforest that are home to jaguars, anacondas and tusk-gnashing peccaries. One animal, though, is truly emblematic of these forests – the awe-inspiring harpy eagle. But to see it you have to be prepared for serious hardship… Facing gruelling, energy-sapping jungle conditions and constant challenges that saw her question the deepest and most intimate aspects of her life, Sarah’s intrepid travels on the trail of iconic wildlife took her through some of the toughest terrain imaginable, and led to encounters with extraordinary indigenous people of the forest, with whom she experienced kindnesses and cultures beyond her wildest dreams. This book tells the incredible story of one woman’s adventure into the heart of the rainforest. Sarah Woods has been travelling nonstop for two decades, circumnavigating the globe in several directions along the way. She has scaled volcanoes, navigated windswept deserts and spent time with indigenous tribes in riverside thatched settlements. Now UK-based, Sarah works for Europe’s largest wildlife conservation charity, the RSPB. She is a regular contributor to travel magazines, travel and documentary programmes and BBC radio. Sarah has won awards for her books, TV broadcasting and travel writing. She is author of the Bradt Travel Guides to Panama and Colombia. 59 TRAVEL AND NATURE WRITING One Wild Song Paul Heiney After his son committed suicide aged only 23, television presenter Paul Heiney decided to set sail on a voyage to Cape Horn to connect with his son's ‘voice’. Not only a hugely challenging experience physically, this turned out to be an emotional journey of much more importance. When Countrywise presenter Paul Heiney’s son Nicholas committed suicide aged 23, Paul and his wife, Times columnist Libby Purves, were rocked to the core. Nicholas had been a highly gifted promising young man, albeit he had struggled to keep his head above water at times as severe depression slowly dragged him down over many years. Adlard Coles PUBLICATION DATE: 09/04/15 EXTENT: 240 Nicholas was a keen sailor, with several of his posthumously-published writings having a nautical theme. To try to reconnect with this happier memory of his son, Paul decides to set out – alone – on a voyage he would have liked them to have embarked upon together. Cape Horn is the sailor’s Everest. One of the most remote and bleak parts of the world, it takes courage, physical strength and mental fortitude to face its tempestuous seas, violent winds and barren landscape. During the voyage Paul finds a peace of mind and a way to face the future without his son. Poignant, moving, funny, thought provoking and beautifully written, Paul’s account of setting his own course through seemingly insurmountable grief makes for a powerful story. Injected with humour, perceptiveness and philosophy, recounting his highs, lows, frustrations and triumphs, the honesty and openness of Paul's story makes this very personal account a universal tale. Paul Heiney has been a TV and radio broadcaster for over 30 years, starting on Radio 1 before working on Radio 4's Today programme. He was a presenter on That's Life! from 1978 until 1982, and more recently has presented Watchdog on BBC 1. He currently presents the ITV primetime show Countrywise. He wrote a weekly column for The Times for 7 years about working 40 acres traditionally with Suffolk Punch horses. He has written over a dozen books, both fiction and non-fiction. His popular science book, Can Cows Walk Downstairs?, has been a bestseller in 15 languages. 60 TRAVEL AND NATURE WRITING The Naked Shore Tom Blass An incredible history of the North Sea that stretches from an ancient past to the uncertain future Like the Celtic and Nordic gods of the countries surrounding it, the North Sea has battered and bewildered, produced and provided, damaged and destroyed in equal measure. Its inclement weather and perilous tides have made it a playground and a proving ground, a nursery and a grave, an object of veneration and a mighty adversary. A sea like no other, it has shaped our modern world and yet remained the same ancient beast known to the earliest inhabitants of its shores. Bloomsbury Publishing PUBLICATION DATE: 14/01/16 EXTENT: 320 In The Naked Shore, journalist Tom Blass trawls the bottom and skims the waves of the North Sea, searching for all that glistens, enraptures, enrages, and appalls. He sets out to meet the men and women who have devoted their lives to uncovering its secrets, from marine biologists studying the North Sea’s submerged landscapes to the world’s leading expert on Doggerland. Travelling by tram, ferry, and twelve-seater aircraft around the eclectic borderlands, Blass interviews local fishermen, ornithologists, and bombdisposal experts, capturing the wild, war-torn history of the North Sea, as well as the ways in which humanity has ecologically transformed it through overfishing and the race for energy. The Naked Shore scatters light into the sea’s cold and murky depths, exploring its wonders and its relationship with humanity—from drug gangs to the Schleswig-Holstein question to the sea’s new role as a headline-grabbing environmental battleground. Tom Blass is a journalist who has travelled widely in search of stories. Tom studied social anthropology and, more recently, political geography at university and is the director of a small consultancy which advises on international boundaries and borders. tomblass.com 61 TRAVEL AND NATURE WRITING A Rose for Morville Katherine Swift A rich, personal history of the rose in England by the bestselling author of The Morville Hours - for Nigel Slater ‘the most beautiful book I have read in years' The rose is a garden favourite and, more than any other flower, permeates literature, art and religion. In A Rose for Morville, Katherine Swift weaves yet another thread into this complex web of symbolism. Taking as a starting point the five indigenous wild English roses, Swift sets out to discover how each species has been shaped by climate, geology and environment. Bloomsbury Publishing PUBLICATION DATE: 09/03/17 EXTENT: 320 The book takes place over the course of a year, in which Katherine makes a series of journeys, biographical and geographical, on foot and in time, out from the garden, to find each rose in its native habitat, each time returning to the garden at Morville and finding it changed both by the seasons and by what has been learned on the journey. Woven into this narrative is the history of the rose in England - in literature, art, music and folk lore - and the history of a book, the Roman de la Rose, written in French in the thirteenth century - a story of love, lust and possession which serves as a metaphor for our relationship with the natural world. A Rose for Morville is a book about roses, love and longing, about a garden, and about the environmental crisis which faces the twenty-first century. It is a love letter to the husband from whom she separated in 2002, and to the landscapes and wild roses of her adopted county of Shropshire. It is about mothers and daughters, medieval poetry and the varieties of love. It is about learning to garden in a new age. Katherine Swift lives at The Dower House, Morville Hall in Shropshire. She worked as a rare book librarian in Oxford and Dublin before becoming a full-time gardener and writer in 1988. She was for four years gardening columnist of The Times, and has written widely in the gardening press, including an acclaimed series on the gardens and landscapes of Orkney for Hortus. She is the author of The Morville Hours, a Sunday Times bestseller. also available The Morville Hours 62 The Morville Year TRAVEL AND NATURE WRITING Highlights Darjeeling The Colourful History and Precarious Fate of the World’s Greatest Tea Jeff Koehler Cuckoo Kaleidoscope City Cheating by Nature A Year in Varanasi Nick Davies Piers Moore Ede ‘Amazing detective story by one of the country’s greatest field naturalists’ Sir David Attenborough ‘Affectionate and inquiring at the same time’ Daily Telegraph RIGHTS SOLD: Chijin Shokan (Japanese), Atlas Contact (Dutch) 63 Smart Thinking Soccermatics Mathematical Adventures in the Beautiful Game David Sumpter Football and mathematics – together, much more than a game Football – the most mathematical of sports – is riddled with numbers, patterns and shapes. How to make sense of them? The answer lies in mathematical modelling, an applied science with applications in a host of biological systems. More than a Game brings the two together in a thrilling, mind-bending synthesis. Bloomsbury Sigma PUBLICATION DATE: 05/05/16 EXTENT: 288 RIGHTS SOLD: Ariel (Spanish – World) Benevento (German) Volante (Swedish) What’s the similarity between an ant colony and Total Football, Dutch style? How is the Barcelona midfield linked geometrically? And how can we relate the mechanics of a Mexican Wave to the singing of cicadas in an Australian valley? Welcome to the world of mathematical modelling, expressed brilliantly by David Sumpter through the prism of football. Football – more than a game, and packed with game theory. David Sumpter is professor of applied mathematics at the University of Uppsala, Sweden, where he runs the Collective Behaviour Research Group. Originally from London, he studied his PhD in Mathematics at Manchester and has held academic research positions at both Oxford and Cambridge before heading to Sweden, where he lives with his wife and two children. In his spare time, he trains a successful 9-year old boys’ football team, Upsala IF 2005. An incomplete list of the applied maths research projects on which David has worked include pigeons flying in pairs over Oxford; clapping undergraduate students in the north of England; the traffic of Cuban leaf-cutter ants; fish swimming between coral in the Great Barrier Reef; swarms of locusts traveling across the Sahara; disease-spread in Ugandan villages; the gaze of London commuters; dancing honey bees from Sydney; and the tubular structures built by Japanese slime moulds. His research has appeared in Science, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, and Proceedings of the Royal Society, among many others. David is a Liverpool supporter. @djsumpter / collective-behavior.com 64 Smart Thinking Buddhist Economics Clair Brown An economist at the University of California at Berkeley, and a practicing Buddhist, Clair Brown saw something very wrong with the GDP. She felt stifled by the classical economic model she was required to teach in her Econ 1 course, a model which made no room for some of our world’s most pressing concerns: climate change, environmental degradation, and wealth inequality. Classical economics, which holds that more is always better, has led us to focus on the wrong values and to pay attention to the wrong measurements. It gauges performance by national output; quality of life by average income; and the health of the market by how much people are shopping. Bloomsbury Press PUBLICATION DATE: 21/02/17 EXTENT: 224 Drawing upon the work of E.F. Schumacher, author of Small Is Beautiful: Economics as if People Mattered, as well as capability and ecological economists, Brown went in search of a different kind of economic system based not on the values of individualism and materialism, but rather on interconnectedness and compassion. The science of economics—in curricula, in theory, and in practice—can and should be a force for good. Buddhist Economics issues a powerful challenge to the prevailing economic system, and makes a heartening and truly groundbreaking case for bringing humanity back into “the dismal science.” Dr. Clair Brown is Professor of Economics and Director of the Center for Work, Technology, and Society at the University of California, Berkeley. Prof Brown is a past Director of the Institute of Industrial Relations (IIR, now IRLE) at UCB, and Chair of the Committee on Education Policy of the Academic Senate. Clair has published research on many aspects of the labor market, including high-tech workers, labor market institutions, firm employment systems and performance, the standard of living, wage determination, and unemployment. 65 Smart Thinking The Great Acceleration Robert Colvile A revelatory account of how our society is speeding up and why we should embrace the acceleration, The Great Acceleration is a fascinating insight into the science and promise of the modern world from a brilliant new writer Instant messaging. Superfast broadband. High-frequency trading. The world is, undeniably, accelerating. In this magisterial study or modern living, Robert Colvile examines how and why this great acceleration of change is happening, why it’s unlikely we’ll be able to slow down – and why this may be no bad thing. Bloomsbury Publishing PUBLICATION DATE: 07/04/16 EXTENT: 320 It’s a book peppered with slogans from this new world’s heavy hitters: Reid Hoffman, the inventor of LinkedIn: ‘If you’re not embarrassed by your first version, you waited too long to ship it’; ‘Carry on failing until you succeed’; Jeff Bezos, ‘Amazon isn’t happening to the book business, the future is happening to the book business’; ‘You jump off a cliff and you assemble an aeroplane on the way down’ is from Mark Zuckerberg; ‘Move fast and break things’ is another of his. This is a book that zips along but whose words will make you slow down and think. Comparing the development of cities and villages, advanced economies and underdeveloped countries, Colvile explores the opportunities that this faster communication and operation could bring and how we must adapt ourselves to cope with the constant need to disrupt and fracture ourselves to survive. The Great Acceleration is a vertiginous read, incredibly fast itself, and incredibly smart. Robert Colvile has been a columnist, leader writer and comment editor with the Daily Telegraph. Among his many duties, he was supervising the paper’s Science and Digital Life pages, serving as comment editor of the Sunday Telegraph while still in his twenties, and producing a host of editorials, features, reviews and opinion pieces. He went on to be news director at BuzzFeed UK. He has a Masters degree from Cambridge in International Relations, is a regular pundit on Sky News, a Research Fellow at the Centre for Policy Studies (a leading British think-tank) and author of an influential report on how the internet is transforming British politics, which was praised by Chancellor George Osborne among others. @rcolvile 66 Smart Thinking Highlights A More Beautiful Question Warren Berger RIGHTS SOLD: Cheers Media LLC(Simplified Chinese), Domain Publishing Company (Complex Chinese), Popuri Publishers (Russian), Berlin Verlag (German), Book 21 Publishing Group (Korean), Diamond Inc (Japanese), Aleph (Brazilian Portuguese), Amber (Polish) Finding the Space to Lead Janice Marturano RIGHTS SOLD: Arbor Verlag (German), Bulkwang Publishing Co. (Korean), Beijing Huazhang Graphics & Information (Simplified Chinese), De Boeck Supérieur (French); Martin Fontes (Brazilian Portuguese); Øivind Arneberg (Norwegian) 67 science Light Bruce Watson Delving into mythology, religion, philosophy, painting, and science, Light captures the wonder and awe of humanity’s study of light across three millennia of discovery. Light begins at Stonehenge, where crowds cheer a solstice sunrise. After sampling myths explaining First Light, the story moves on to early philosophers’ queries, then through the centuries, from Buddhist temples to Biblical scripture, when light was the soul of the divine. Bloomsbury USA PUBLICATION DATE: 02/02/16 EXTENT: 304 Battling darkness and despair, Gothic architects crafted radiant cathedrals while Dante dreamed a “heaven of pure light.” Later, following Leonardo’s advice, Renaissance artists learned to capture light on canvas. During the Scientific Revolution, Galileo gathered light in his telescope, Descartes measured the rainbow, and Newton used prisms to solidify the science of optics. But even after Newton, light was an enigma. Particle or wave? Did it flow through an invisible “ether”? Through the age of Edison and into the age of lasers, Light reveals how light sparked new wonders – relativity, quantum electrodynamics, fiber optics, and more. Although lasers now perform everyday miracles, light retains its eternal allure. “For the rest of my life,” Einstein said, “I will reflect on what light is.” Light explores and celebrates such curiosity. Bruce Watson is a frequent contributor to Smithsonian magazine, writing on topics ranging from eels to pi to profiles of artists and writers. His work has also appeared in the Wall Street Journal, the Washington Post, Los Angeles Times, and other publications. Watson is the author of four books, including Bread and Roses, Sacco and Vanzetti (nominated for an Edgar Award), and Freedom Summer. He lives in western Massachusetts. 68 science highlights The Universal Sense Beasts RIGHTS SOLD: Kashiwashobo (Japanese), HGV (Hungarian) RIGHTS SOLD: Baronet (Czech); Sondo (Italian) The Great Disruption The Fate of the Species Survival of the Beautiful RIGHTS SOLD: Apicuri (Brazilian Portuguese), Mauritsgroen (Dutch) RIGHTS SOLD: Kawade Shobo Shinsha (Japanese) RIGHTS SOLD: Kungree Press Co. (Korean) Seth r. Horowitz Paul Gilding Jeffrey Moussaieff Masson Fred Guterl Storms of My Grandchildren James Hansen RIGHTS SOLD: Nikkei BP(Japanese), Editora Senac (Portuguese – Brazil), Aulbiente (Italian), Post Six Telecommunications (Chinese Simplified), PTS Publications (Malaysian) David Rothenberg 69 science highlights Don’t Even Think About It The Attacking Ocean Last Ape Standing RIGHTS SOLD: Mizibooks (Korean) RIGHTS SOLD: Ariel (Spanish), Emamama (Korean), Seidosha (Japanese) Spectrums The Intimate Bond A New History of Life RIGHTS SOLD: Bloomsbury Germany (German), Foksal (Polish), Kinokuniya (Japanese) Brian Fagan Why Our Brains Are Wired to Ignore Climate Change Brian Fagan George Marshall David Blatner 70 How Animals Shaped Human History RIGHTS SOLD: Kawadeshobo-Shinsha Publishing (Japanese) Chip Walter The Radical New Discoveries about the Origins and Evolution of Life on Earth Peter Ward & Joe Kirschvink RIGHTS SOLD: DVA (German), Kachi (Korean), Kawade Shobo Shinsha (Japanese), The Commercial Press (Simplified Chinese) sigma Sigma is Bloomsbury’s new science imprint which launched in 2014. Targeted squarely at the popular science market, it represents a series of brilliantly written ‘good reads’, backed up by serious science, with readability being key. The broad subject area is the natural sciences, from evolution, psychology and paleontology to astronomy, toxicology, medicine and weather sciences, with plenty of technology and a serious spoonful of the history of science for good measure. Sigma authors include some of the best and brightest talents in science communication today, including marine biologist Helen Scales, conspiracy psychologist Rob Brotherton, stem-cell researcher Helen Pilcher, astrophysicist Elizabeth Tasker and dinosaur expert David Hone. Big Data Timandra Harkness What is Big Data, and why should you care? This book tells you everything you need to know (and plenty of stuff you don't) From the first tally, scratched on a wolf bone over 30,000 years ago, to the Large Hadron Collider, which produces 40 million megabytes of data per second, data is big, and getting bigger. It can help us do things faster and more efficiently than ever before. It has made possible scientific and social achievements that would have been impossible just a few years ago. But being too dazzled by the scale, the speed and the geeky jargon can lead us astray. It’s big, but it’s not always clever. Bloomsbury Sigma PUBLICATION DATE: 02/06/16 EXTENT: 288 Timandra Harkness cuts through the hype to put data science into its reallife context. Stories, locations and people, plenty of jokes and personal asides bring to life what is essentially a human science, demystifying Big Data, telling us where it comes from and what it can do for us. The book then asks the awkward questions – what can't it do? What are the unspoken assumptions underlying its methods? Are we being bamboozled by its size, its speed and its shiny technology? Nobody needs a degree in computer science to grasp what Big Data is all about, what it can do for us – and what it can't. This book asks you to decide – are you a data point, or a human being? Timandra Harkness is a writer, comedian and broadcaster who has been performing on scientific, mathematical and statistical topics since the latter days of the 20th Century. In 2010 she co-wrote and performed the hit Your Days Are Numbered: The Maths of Death, with stand-up mathematician Matt Parker, which was a smash hit at the Edinburgh Fringe before touring the rest of the UK and Australia. Science comedy since then includes her current solo show, Brainsex. She is a regular on BBC Radio, often presenting science documentaries, and she has been the presenter of four series of The Human Zoo on BBC Radio 4. Timandra is the only comedian to have had articles published in both Men's Health and the Journal of the Royal Statistical Society. timandraharkness.com / @TimandraHarknes 71 sigma A is for Arsenic Kathryn Harkup Fourteen novels. Fourteen poisons. Just because it's fiction doesn’t mean its all made-up ... Agatha Christie’s detailed plotting is what makes her books so compelling. Christie used poison to kill her characters more often than any other murder method, with the poison itself being a central part of the novel, and her choice of deadly substances was far from random; the chemical and physiological characteristics of each poison provide vital clues to discovery of the murderer. With gunshots or stabbings the cause of death is obvious, but not so with poisons. How is it that some compounds prove so deadly, and in such tiny amounts? Bloomsbury Sigma PUBLICATION DATE: 10/09/15 EXTENT: 320 RIGHTS SOLD: Iwanami Shoten (Japanese), J. C. Lattes (French) Christie demonstrated her extensive chemical knowledge (much of it gleaned from her working in a chemists during both world wars) in many of her novels, but this is rarely appreciated by the reader. A is for Arsenic celebrates the use of science in Christie’s work. Written by Christie fan and research chemist Kathryn Harkup, each chapter takes a different novel and investigates the poison (or poisons) the murderer used. A is for Arsenic looks at why certain chemicals kill, how they interact with the body, and the feasibility of obtaining, administering and detecting these poisons, both at the time the novel was written and today. This book is published as part of the 125th anniversary celebration of Christie's birth. Fourteen novels. Fourteen poisons. Just because its fiction doesn’t mean its all made-up ... Kathryn Harkup is a chemist and author. Kathryn completed a doctorate on her favourite chemicals, phosphines, and went on to further postdoctoral research before realising that talking, writing and demonstrating science appealed a bit more than hours slaving over a hot fume-hood. For six years she ran the outreach in engineering, computing, physics and maths at the University of Surrey, which involved writing talks on science topics that would appeal to bored teenagers (anything disgusting or dangerous was usually the most popular). Kathryn is now a freelance science communicator delivering talks and workshops on the quirky side of science. 72 sigma Suspicious Minds Rob Brotherton The psychology of our belief in conspiracy theories We’re all conspiracy theorists. Some of us just hide it better than others. Conspiracy theorists do not wear tin-foil hats (for the most part). They are not just a few kooks lurking on the paranoid fringes of society with bizarre ideas about shape-shifting reptilian aliens running society in secret. They walk among us. They are us. Everyone loves a good conspiracy. The plots of countless Hollywood blockbusters, bestselling books, and beloved TV shows revolve around conspiratorial shenanigans. And surprising numbers of people believe that the kinds of vast, insidious conspiracies that Mulder and Scully routinely unearthed in The X-Files are happening right now in the real world. Yet conspiracy theories are not a recent invention. And they are not always a harmless curiosity. Bloomsbury Sigma PUBLICATION DATE: 19/11/15 EXTENT: 304 RIGHTS SOLD: Faces Publications Taiwan (Complex Chinese) In Suspicious Minds, Rob Brotherton explores the history and consequences of conspiracism, and delves into the research that offers insights into why so many of us are drawn to implausible, unproven and unproveable conspiracy theories. These resonate with some of our brain’s built-in quirks and foibles, and tap into some of our deepest desires, fears, and assumptions about the world. But conspiracy theories are by no means unique in eliciting our brain’s biases. From our love of heroic underdogs to our tendency to see a hidden hand behind ambiguous events, the same mental quirks that make conspiracy theories appealing constantly shape how we think about the world. The fascinating and often surprising psychology of conspiracy theories tells us a lot – not just about why we are drawn to theories about sinister schemes, but about how our minds are wired and, indeed, why we believe anything at all. Conspiracy theories are not some psychological aberration – they’re a predictable product of how brains work. This book will tell you why, and what this means. Of course, just because your brain’s biased doesn’t always mean you’re wrong. Sometimes conspiracies are real. Sometimes, paranoia is prudent. Rob Brotherton is an academic psychologist and science writer who likes to walk on the weird side of psychology. Rob completed a doctoral degree on the psychology of conspiracy theories, and taught classes on why people believe weird stuff and science communication as a member of the Anomalistic Psychology Research Unit at Goldsmiths, University of London. He now lives in New York City. Rob writes about conspiracy theories on his website ConspiracyPsychology.com. 73 sigma Death on Earth Adventures in Evolution and Mortality Jules Howard A ground-breaking exploration of death and its role in evolution As you read these words Planet Earth teems with trillions of life-forms, each going about their own business; eating, reproducing, thriving … Yet the life of almost every single entity draws nearer and nearer to certain death. Why? Why is death such a universal companion to life on Earth? Why haven’t animals evolved to break free of its shackles? Bloomsbury Sigma PUBLICATION DATE: 10/03/16 EXTENT: 288 In this ground-breaking exploration of death, Jules Howard attempts to shed evolutionary light on this, one of our biggest and most unshakeable taboos. Encountering some of the world’s oldest animals, and meeting the scientists attempting to unravel their mysteries, Jules also comes face-to-face with evolution’s outliers; the animals that may one day avoid death altogether. Written in his familiar engaging and humorous style, Jules’s journey inevitably ends with our own fate: can we ever become immortal? And even if we could, would we really want to? Jules Howard is a zoologist, writer, blogger and broadcaster. He writes on a host of topics relating to zoology and wildlife conservation, and appears regularly in BBC Wildlife Magazine and on radio and TV, including on BBC’s The One Show, Nature and The Living World as well as BBC Breakfast and Radio 4’s Today programme. Jules also runs a social enterprise that has brought almost 100,000 young people closer to the natural world. Death on Earth is his second book, following Sex on Earth (Bloomsbury, 2014). Also available Sex on Earth A Celebration of Animal Reproduction Jules Howard RIGHTS SOLD: Blackie Books (Spanish); The Commercial Press (Simplified Chinese); Kadakawa Corporation (Japanese); Puriwa Ipari (Korean) 74 sigma Sorting the Beef from the Bull Richard Evershed & Nicola Temple The story of food fraud forensics. Horsemeat in our burgers, melamine in our infant’s milk, artificial colours in our fish and fruit … as our urban lifestyle takes us further and further away from our food sources, there are increasing opportunities for dishonesty, duplicity and profit-making short-cuts. Food adulteration, motivated by money, is an issue that has spanned the globe throughout human history. Whether it’s a matter of making a good quality oil stretch a bit further by adding a little extra ‘something’ or labelling a food falsely to appeal to current consumer trends – it’s all food fraud, and it costs the food industry billions of dollars each year. The price to consumers may be even higher, with some paying for these crimes with their health and, in some cases, their lives. So how do we sort the beef from the bull (or horse, as the case may be)? Bloomsbury Sigma PUBLICATION DATE: 25/02/16 EXTENT: 288 This book explains the scientific tools and techniques that revealed the century’s biggest food fraud scams. It looks in detail at the biggest scams in recent times; drawing on the lead author’s extensive experience at the forefront of the fight against these fraudsters, it goes on to explore the arms-race between scientists and adulterers as better techniques for detection spur more creative and sophisticated means of adulteration. Finally, it looks at the up-and-coming techniques and devices that will help the industry and consumers fight food fraud in the future. Engagingly written by Richard Evershed and Nicola Temple, this book lifts the lid on the forensics involved, and brings the full story of a fascinating and underreported applied science to light. Richard Evershed FRS is Professor of Biogeochemistry at the University of Bristol. His thirty-year career has seen tremendous changes in the world of analytical chemistry. Initially, Evershed’s work focused on chromatographic and mass spectrometry studies, especially in archaeology, an area he continues to research; the methodologies he pioneered have been used in several other areas, notably in detecting food fraud, where his team developed methods for detecting the highly lucrative but dangerous and illegal adulteration of vegetable oil. His methods have even been used in tandem with the Metropolitan Police to help in murder investigations. Nicola Temple is a biologist, conservationist and science writer. Her writing has taken her from the precipices of volcanoes in Ethiopia to the banks of salmon streams in Canada's temperate rainforest. Based in Bristol, Nicola works with universities, research councils and individuals to develop engaging science stories on how research has an impact beyond the closeted world of academia. nicolatemple.com / @nicolatemple 75 sigma Breaking the Chains of Gravity Amy Shira Teitel The incredible story of spaceflight before the establishment of NASA. NASA’s history is a familiar story, one that typically peaks with Neil Armstrong taking his small step on the Moon in 1969. But America’s space agency wasn’t created in a vacuum. It was assembled from pre-existing parts, drawing together some of the best minds the non-Soviet world had to offer. Bloomsbury Sigma PUBLICATION DATE: 22/10/15 EXTENT: 304 In the 1930s, rockets were all the rage in Germany, the focus both of scientists hoping to fly into space and of the German armed forces, looking to circumvent the restrictions of the Treaty of Versailles. One of the key figures in this period was Wernher von Braun, an engineer who designed the rockets that became the devastating V-2. As the war came to its chaotic conclusion, von Braun escaped from the ruins of Nazi Germany, and was taken to America where he began developing missiles for the US Army. Meanwhile, the US Air Force was looking ahead to a time when men would fly in space, and test pilots like Neil Armstrong were flying cutting-edge, rocket-powered aircraft in the thin upper atmosphere. Breaking the Chains of Gravity tells the story of America’s nascent space program, its scientific advances, its personalities and the rivalries it caused between the various arms of the US military. At this point getting a man in space became a national imperative, leading to the creation of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, otherwise known as NASA. Amy Shira Teitel is a lifelong space-history nerd who has turned her schoolgirl fascination with the Apollo missions into a career researching the minutiae of spaceflight’s history. Amy started writing for the public with her blog, Vintage Space. She has also written for a number of other online and print publications including Discovery News Space, Al-Jazeera, The Guardian and Universe Today. She runs a thriving YouTube channel (also called Vintage Space), and has appeared on the Discovery channel, the Military channel, SyFy, and the Science channel, and she is a host on DNews, Discovery Channel’s online daily news show. Amy was also an embedded journalist on the New Horizons team, bringing the excitement of humanity’s first mission to Pluto to the space-loving public. @astVintageSpace 76 sigma The Tyrannosaur Chronicles David Hone The tyrannosaurs - how they lived, bred, fed and died. Tyrannosaurus is by some margin the most famous dinosaur in the world, adored by children and adults alike, and it is often the only one that many people can name. An impressive beast, it topped 10 tons, was more than 15m long, and had the largest head and most powerful bite of any land animal, ever. Despite the hype, Tyrannosaurus and its relatives (the tyrannosaurs) are fascinating animals, and perhaps the best-studied of all dinosaur groups. They started small, just a couple of metres long, and over the course of 70 million years evolved into the giant meat-slicing bone-crushers that the world is now familiar with. Bloomsbury Sigma PUBLICATION DATE: 07/04/16 EXTENT: 288 The Tyrannosaur Chronicles tracks the rise of these dinosaurs, and presents the latest research into their biology, showing off more than just their impressive statistics – tyrannosaurs had feathers, may have hunted in groups, and fought and even ate each other. This entertaining book presents the science behind this research, and tells the evolutionary story of the group though their anatomy, ecology and behaviour, exploring how they came to be the dominant terrestrial predators of the Mesozoic and, in more recent times, one of the great icons of biology. David Hone is rapidly becoming the ‘face’ of dinosaur research. Based at QMW in London, where he is Lecturer in Ecology, he has published more than 50 academic papers on dinosaur biology and behaviour, with a particular interest in the tyrannosaurs, while his fieldwork has included a spell working on the famous feathered dinosaur deposits of China. He writes a regular blog for the Guardian, Lost Worlds (http://www.theguardian.com/science/lost-worlds), a major source of dino-info for the general public. David includes among his writing credits the BBC’s Walking with Dinosaurs. He has appeared on the Discovery Channel, BBC Radio 5Live and RTE, acted as consultant for National Geographic documentaries, and written articles for New Scientist, The Times, The Independent, The Telegraph, The New York Times, and many others. 77 sigma highlights p53 Spirals in Time Sue Armstrong Helen Scales The Gene That Cracked the Cancer Code The Secret Life and Curious Afterlife of Seashells RIGHTS SOLD: Chongqing Publishing House (Simplified Chinese); Cheomnetworks (Korean) Chilled Atoms Under the Floorboards Tom Jackson Chris Woodford How Refrigeration Changed the World and Might Do So Again The Surprising Science Hidden in Your Home RIGHTS SOLD: Mann – Ivanov – Ferber (Russian), Hoffmann und Campe (German), Publicat (Polish), Cite Publishing (Complex Chinese), Chemical Industry Press (Simplified Chinese) 78 sport The Last Warriors: Arsenal, United and the End of an Era Rob Smyth The full story of the furious and sensational rivalry between Arsenal and Manchester United from 1996 to 2005 The rivalry between Arsenal and Manchester United in the late 1990s and early 2000s was the greatest in English football history. It is the only time two teams have completely dominated the league for a decade. It was a mixture of the epic and the pathetic, with glorious football, hateful confrontations and even a pizza fight. Bloomsbury Sport PUBLICATION DATE: 08/09/16 EXTENT: 304 Like all great rivalries, this was a study in contrasts: north versus south, British and Irish versus French. Both regularly tried to claim the moral high ground, often at the same time. The rivalry centred on four people: the managers, Arsène Wenger and Sir Alex Ferguson, and the hard men, Patrick Vieira and Roy Keane, who regularly came together like nitroglycerin and gunpowder. Over time those involved have developed the mutual respect of boxers embracing after the final bell. They played when football was a mixture of silk and steel, artistry and aggro, and know such a feud could no longer happen because of the sanitisation of the game. Their rivalry was not just the greatest of its kind in English football; it was also the last. Rob Smyth is a specialist in modern sport history who has written about football for the Guardian, Sports Illustrated, ESPN, FourFourTwo, Yahoo, Manchester United, ITV, Intelligent Life, GQ and Virgin Media. He is co-author of Danish Dynamite, one of the Observer’s Sports Books of the Year 2014, and was highly commended at the 2010 Sports Journalists’ Association awards. 79 sport The Captain Myth: The rise of the Ryder Cup’s leading man Richard Gillis A fresh look at one of international sport’s highest-profile tournaments – and what role the captains really play in Ryder Cup success The War on the Shore, the Battle of Brookline, the Miracle of Medinah: the Ryder Cup is golf’s – and arguably one of international sport’s – most intense, highprofile tournaments. Two teams tussle through 28 matches over three days for no prize money but enormous national pride. And purportedly in charge of those two teams are the captains, whose reputations are shaped forever by their players’ results out on the course. Bloomsbury Sport PUBLICATION DATE: 25/08/16 EXTENT: 320 Justin Rose’s unlikely 35-foot on the 17th green at Medinah Country Club set up Europe’s triumph – and one of modern sport’s most remarkable turnarounds – in the 2012 Ryder Cup. It also established Davis Love II as ‘a bad captain’ and saw José María Olazábal feted for a series of leadership masterstrokes. In reality, neither captain had much to do with that putt being sunk. Yet the pressure remains on the captains to lead their team to victory. As each Cup passes, more theories are put forward about how to win. Some of these combine traditional golfing nous with cutting-edge sports psychology. Others are red herrings that have led captains down any number of blind alleys. So what can a captain do to win the Ryder Cup? Using exclusive interviews and saturation reporting, Gillis shows how strategy has evolved since the very first match in 1927, exploring the enduring and often surprising role played by some of the game’s greatest stars including Walter Hagen, Arnold Palmer, Jack Nicklaus, Tony Jacklin, Seve Ballesteros and Paul Azinger. The Captain Myth uses golf’s greatest event to examine some fundamental questions about leadership, teams and motivation. Richard Gillis is an award-winning journalist working for several of the world’s leading newspaper and publishing groups. Formerly editor of SportBusiness International magazine, he then became Cricket Correspondent of the Irish Times covering Ireland’s remarkable 2007 ICC Cricket World Cup campaign in the Caribbean, where his reporting on the untimely death of Pakistan coach Bob Woolmer led the global news agenda. He now lives in London, where he is a columnist and feature interviewer for the Irish Times and writes about sport, business and the media for the Wall Street Journal, alongside media and communications consultancy work. 80 sport The Ageless Body: How To Hold Back The Years To Achieve A Better Body Peta Bee & Sarah Schenker From the co-authors of the bestsellers Fast Exercise and The Fast Diet Recipe Book, the truth about how to hold back the years, what exercise will keep you looking young and how to avoid gym-face. Discover the new goals and new rules that are the route to a healthier, better looking and better functioning body. For life. Bloomsbury Sport PUBLICATION DATE: 07/01/16 EXTENT: 256 From Gwen Stefani and Cameron Diaz to Jennifer Aniston and Naomi Watts, a new breed of 40 and 50 plus women are redefining not just what an ageless body looks like, but what’s entailed in achieving it. A dramatic shift in body expectations in the last few years means that, despite being plagued by a slowing metabolism and a naturally-occurring loss of muscle mass, pre- and post-menopausal women can realistically aim for the healthy, well-functioning body they crave as well as a physique that looks good with a flat stomach and sculpted arms. Peta Bee and Dr Sarah Schenker are the living embodiment of this new breed of woman: both in their forties with children, both with hectic careers and social lives. And both with the same bodies they had in their 30s. What matters, they have discovered through self-experimentation and trawling the scientific literature, is how you go about holding back the years. And the rules - for both exercise and diet - have changed. Peta Bee is a health and fitness journalist who writes for The Times, Sunday Times and Irish Examiner as well as numerous other publications. With degrees in sports science and nutrition, Peta likes to probe the evidence behind latest fads and trends and her work has won her numerous awards including the Medical Journalists Association’s Freelance of the Year (twice). She has appeared widely on television and radio and is the author of seven books, including Fast Exercise, the 2014 best-seller co-written with Dr Michael Mosley, and The Ice Diet. Dr Sarah Schenker is a registered dietitian and nutritionist with a PhD in Nutrition and an Accreditation in Sports Dietetics. She is a member of the British Dietetic Association, The Nutrition Society and The Association for Nutrition. Sarah is co-author of the best-selling Fast Diet Recipe Book and regularly contributes to newspapers and magazines including the Daily Mail, Top Sante, Reveal and Glamour as well as shows including This Morning, Watchdog and BBC Radio. Sarah has also worked as a nutrition adviser to several Premiership football clubs. 81 sport The End of the Road: Festina and the Tour that Almost Killed Cycling Alasdair Fotheringham The first detailed account of the Festina affair, which ripped apart the 1998 Tour de France and irrevocably changed cycling Bloomsbury Sport PUBLICATION DATE: 05/05/16 EXTENT: 320 The Tour de France is always one of the sporting calendar’s most spectacular and dramatic events. But the 1998 Tour provided drama like no other. As the opening stages in Ireland unfolded, the Festina team’s soigneur Willy Voet was arrested on the French–Belgian border with a car-load of drugs. Raid after police raid followed, with arrest after arrest hammering the Tour. In protest, there were riders’ strikes and go-slows, with several squads withdrawing en masse andone expelled. By the time the Tour reached Paris, just 96 of the 189 starters remained. And of those 189 starters, more than a quarter were later reported to have doped. The 1998 ‘Tour de Farce’s’ status as one of the most scandalstruck sporting events in history was confirmed. Voet’s arrest was just the beginning of sport’s biggest mass doping controversy – what became known as the Festina affair. It all but destroyed professional cycling as the credibility of the entire sport was called into question and the cycling family began to split apart. And yet, ironically, the 1998 Tour was also one of the best races in years. The End of the Road is the first English-language book to provide in-depth analysis and a colourful evocation of the tumultuous events during the 1998 Tour. Alasdair Fotheringham uncovers, step by step, how the world’s biggest bike race sank into a nightmarish series of scandals that left the sport on its knees. He explores its long-term consequences – and what, if any, lessons were learned. Alasdair Fotheringham is a freelance journalist based in Spain. He has covered 22 Tours de France and 20 Tours of Spain, as well as numerous other major races. The Independent and the Independent on Sunday’s correspondent on Spain and cycling, he is also a regular contributor to a number of leading cycling magazines and websites. The Eagle of Toledo, his biography of Spain’s first Tour de France winner, Federico Martin Bahamontes, was published in 2012, and Reckless: The Life and Times of Luis Ocaña was published in 2014. 82 sport Zeitnot: An Odyssey through Chess (and Life) Stephen Moss A doomed-to-fail attempt to become a grandmaster offers a wry take on both chess and midlife identity Chess has been played for more than 1,500 years; it is played in every country and by an estimated 10% of the world’s population. Stephen Moss sets out to master its mysteries, and unlock the secret of its enduring appeal. What, he asks, is the essence of chess? And what will it reveal about his own character along the way? Wisden PUBLICATION DATE: 01/09/16 EXTENT: 320 In a witty, accessible style that will delight newcomers and irritate purists, Moss imagines the world as a board and marches across it, offering a mordant report on the world of chess in 64 chapters – 64 of course being the number of squares on the chessboard. He alternates between “black” chapters – where he plays, largely uncomprehendingly, in tournaments – and “white” chapters, where he seeks advice from the current crop of grandmasters and delves into the lives of great players of the past. It is both a history of the game and a kind of “Zen and the Art of Chess”; a practical guide and a self-help book: Moss’s quest to understand chess and become a better player is really an attempt to escape a lifetime of dilettantism. He wants to become an expert at one thing. What will be the consequences when he realises he is doomed to fail? Moss travels to Russia and the US – hotbeds of chess throughout the 20th century; meets people who knew Bobby Fischer when he was growing up and tries to unravel the enigma of that tortured genius who died in 2008 at the inevitable age of 64; meets Garry Kasparov and Magnus Carlsen, world champions past and present; and keeps bumping into Armenian superstar Levon Aronian in the gents at tournaments. He becomes champion of Surrey, wins tournaments in Chester and Bury St Edmunds, and holds his own at the famous event in the Dutch seaside resort of Wijk aan Zee (until a last-round meltdown), but too often he is beaten by precocious 10-year-olds and finds it hard to resist the urge to punch them. He looks for spiritual fulfilment in the game, but mostly finds mental torture. Stephen Moss has worked for the Guardian as an editor and writer since 1989. He was the paper’s literary editor, has written widely on sport and culture, and in 2006 edited Cricket’s Age of Revolution, a history of the game since the Kerry Packer coup, for Wisden. He won the Surrey Chess Championship in 2014, though if pressed will admit his success came in the section for players graded below 140 – a level grandmasters consider to be mentally challenged and which many precocious 10-year-olds eschew, boldly preferring to play in the division above. 83 sport Endurance: The Extraordinary Life and Times of Emil Zátopek Rick Broadbent The story of the greatest long-distance athlete in history – a tale of running, redemption and political exile Voted the ‘greatest runner of all time’ by Runner’s World in 2013, Emil Zátopek redefined modern running training techniques – with remarkable results. He is famed for setting a raft of world records, and winning the Olympic 10,000 metres in London in 1948, followed by the remarkable and unprecedented treble of the 5,000, 10,000 and marathon four years later in Helsinki. However, his story goes way beyond races and results. Wisden PUBLICATION DATE: 16/06/16 EXTENT: 304 From a lowly factory worker, ‘the Czech Locomotive’ became a global hero due to his success on the track but – at a time of political instability – Zátopek risked everything for the love of his friends and country, and soon found himself cast adrift into political exile. At its heart, this is a love story as Emil courts and marries Dana, a promising javelin thrower. Born on the same day, they end up winning Olympic gold medals within the space of half an hour. Due to the unprecedented involvement of Dana, award-winning Times author Rick Broadbent has gained unique access to a dramatic past involving blood and guns and the love that sustained the cruellest twists of fate and beatings by Soviet henchmen. With traces of Chariots of Fire and Laura Hillenbrand’s New York Times bestseller/film Unbroken, this is both a wonderful love story and a landmark tale of hope and strength in the face of crushing injustices. Rick Broadbent is an award-winning journalist and author. He has been staff writer at The Times for 10 years and spent 2007–13 as the paper’s athletics correspondent. He has written eight books. These include That Near-Death Thing, winner at the British Sports Book Awards 2013 and shortlisted for the William Hill prize, and Ring of Fire, also shortlisted for the William Hill Prize. He was also the ghost-writer of Jessica Ennis’s Sunday Times top-10 bestselling autobiography. He lives in Bournemouth. @ricktimes 84 sport The Oval World: A Global History of Rugby Tony Collins A comprehensive social history of rugby from its earliest beginnings to the present day Rugby has always been a sport with as much drama off the field as on it. For every thrilling last-minute Jonny Wilkinson drop-goal to win the World Cup or Jonah Lomu rampage down the touchline for a try, there has been a split, a feud or a controversy. Bloomsbury Sport PUBLICATION DATE: 27/08/15 EXTENT: 608 The Oval World is the first full-length history of rugby on a world scale – from its origins in the village-based football games of medieval times up to the globalised sport of the twenty-first century, now played in over 100 countries. It tells the story of how a game played in an obscure English public school became the winter sport of the British Empire, spreading to France, Argentina, Japan and the rest of the world and commanding a global television audience of over four billion for the last World Cup final. It also explores how American football – and other games such as Australian, Canadian and Gaelic football – emerged from their English cousin. Featuring the great moments in the game’s history and its legendary names – David Duckham, Serge Blanco, Billy Boston and David Campese, alongside Rupert Brooke, King George V, Boris Karloff, Charles de Gaulle and Nelson Mandela – The Oval World investigates just what it is about rugby that enables it to thrive in countries with very different traditions and cultures. This is the definitive world history of a truly global sport. Tony Collins is Professor of History in the International Centre for Sports History and Culture at De Montfort University. His previous books include Rugby's Great Split, Rugby League in Twentieth Century Britain, and A Social History of English Rugby Union, each of which won the Aberdare prize for sports history book of the year. In 2009, his Social History of English Rugby Union was selected as a book of the year by the New Statesman, the Guardian and the Independent on Sunday. @collinstony 85 sports highlights The Manager Mike Carson Podium Ben Oakley RIGHTS SOLD: ArtPeople (Danish), Auditorium (Finnish), Editora Belas Letras (Brazilian Portuguese), EXMO (Russian), Optimist Yayin Dagitim (Turkish), Random House Korea (Korean), Rebish (Polish), Softbank (Japanese), Tawseel (Arabic), Vydavatelstvo TATRAN (Slovak), Xiamen Yuejiezu (Simplified Chinese), Knigomania (Bulgarian) Faster Michael Hutchinson The Monuments Peter Cossins RIGHTS SOLD: WPG Uitgeivers Belgie(Dutch) Reckless Alasdair Fotheringham Floodlights and Touchlines: A History of Spectator Sport Rob Steen RIGHTS SOLD: 86 sports highlights This Love Is Not for Cowards Futebol Robert Andrew Powell RIGHTS SOLD: Zahar(Brazilian Portuguese), Forlaget Herrevaerelset (Norwegian), De Fontein Tirion (Dutch), Helios Marek Wawrzynowski (Polish), Ast (Russian), Arial (Spanish), Kalima(Arabic) Danish Dynamite Foul Play Rob Smyth, Lars Eriksen & Mike Gibbons RIGHTS SOLD: Art People (Danish), Pintxo Forlag (Swedish) Alex Bellos Mike Rowbottom RIGHTS SOLD: X-knowledge (Japanese) Thirty-One Nil James Montague Game, Set and Match Mark Hodgkinson The Dirtiest Race in History Sod Seventy Sir Muir Gray Richard Moore RIGHTS SOLD: De Fontein Tirion (Dutch) 87 illustrated and novelty Metropolis Jeremy Black How the city was imagined in maps from ancient times to the present day. Conway PUBLICATION DATE: 08/10/15 EXTENT: 224 The city: a place of hopes and dreams, destruction and conflict, vision and order. The first city atlas, the Civitates Orbis Terrarum, was published by Braun and Hogenburg in 1572 for the armchair traveller interested in a world that was opening up around him. Since then our fascination with foreign cities has not abated. This sumptuous volume looks at the development of the mapping and representation of the city revealing how we organize the urban space. From skyline profiles, bird's eye views and panoramas, to the schematic maps of transport networks and road layouts to help us navigate, and statistical maps that can provide information on human aspirations, cities can reveal themselves in many ways. Focusing on key points in the development of urban representation and including visions of the future of how we would be living today, this enlightening book illustrates some of the oldest, youngest, liveliest, and most contested cities in the world. Each map has a purpose and its design reflects this. Extended captions explain its relevance and elegance. For anyone interested in the city in which they live or with the desire to explore the history and culture of a metropolis overseas, this book is an enlightening companion. Jeremy Black is Professor of History at the University of Exeter and a Senior Fellow at the Center for the Study of America and the West at the Foreign Policy Research Institute in Philadelphia. He is the author of more than eighty books and has lectured extensively around the world. Jeremy's recent publications include Avoiding Armageddon: From the Great War to the Fall of France, 191840 (Bloomsbury, 2012), The Great War and the Making of the Modern World (Continuum, 2011) and London: A History (Carnegie, 2009). 88 illustrated and novelty Knives & Ink Isaac Fitzgerald and Wendy MacNaughton Chefs and tattoos are inextricably linked. From New York Times bestselling illustrator Wendy MacNaughton and BuzzFeed books editor Isaac Fitzgerald comes this stunning four-color illustrated book of stories behind the tattoos that chefs--celebrity and otherwise--proudly wear, featuring their signature recipes throughout. Bloomsbury USA PUBLICATION DATE: 01/12/16 EXTENT: 144 Chefs take tattoos as seriously as they do their knives. From gritty grill cooks in backwoods diners to the executive chefs at the world’s most popular restaurants, it’s hard to find a cook who doesn’t sport some ink. From the hilarious (chef John Gorham of Portland’s Toro Bravo has his sous chef’s name tattooed on his backside) to the very serious (sushi chef Johny Daley has “rice” and “fish” tattooed on his knuckles), chefs’ tattoos are as numerous and colorful as the food artists who wear them. Knives & Ink features the tattoos of more than 60 chefs, both behind-the-scene line cooks and such rockstars in the kitchen as Danny Bowien of Mission Chinese in New York, who remembers his mother with fiery angel wing tattoos on his forearms, and Dominique Crenn of San Francisco’s Atelier, whose ink is about “doing anything in life that you put your heart into.” Like the dishes they thoughtfully create, every tattoo has a rich, personal story behind it. Knives & Ink portrays these tattoos as the beautiful works of art they are, and shares the fascinating stories behind them, along with special chef recipes throughout. Isaac Fitzgerald has written for McSweeney’s, Mother Jones, and The San Francisco Chronicle. He is the editor of BuzzFeed Books. Visit him at isaacfitzgerald.net and follow him @isaacfitzgerald. He lives in New York City. also available Wendy MacNaughton is a New York Times bestselling illustrator whose books include Lost Cat: A True Story of Love, Desperation, and GPS Technology and The Essential Scratch-and-Sniff Guide to Becoming a Wine Expert. Her work has appeared in places like the New York Times, the Wall Street Journal, Lucky Peach, and Print Magazine. Visit her at wendymacnaughton.com and follow her @wendymac. She lives in San Francisco. Pen & Ink Isaac Fitzgerald and Wendy MacNaughton RIGHTS SOLD: Letterpress (Korean) 89 illustrated and novelty The Gutsy Girl Caroline Paul From a real-life derring-do woman, exhilarating stories, activities, and tips to inspire girls to pursue a life of adventure and excitement. Why should girls miss out on the joy of adventure? They can jump off rocks, swing on ropes, and climb trees just as well as boys can. But girls often allow fear to stand in their way. Bloomsbury USA PUBLICATION DATE: 01/03/16 EXTENT: 160 In The Gutsy Girl, author Caroline Paul emboldens girls to seek out a life of exhilaration. Once a young scaredy-cat herself, Caroline decided that fear got in the way of the life she wanted--of excitement, confidence, self-reliance, friendship, and fun. She has since flown planes, rafted big rivers, climbed tall mountains, and fought fires as one of the first female firefighters in San Francisco. In The Gutsy Girl, she shares her greatest escapades as well as those of other girls and women from throughout history, and offers engaging activities such as confidence-building stances, creating a compass, positive self-talk, and using crickets to estimate outside temperatures. Each section includes a place for girls to “journal” their adventures, thus encouraging a new generation to develop a zest for challenges and a healthy relationship to risk. The Gutsy Girl is Lean In for young girls, a book about the glorious things that happen when you unshackle from fear and open up to exhilaration. Fully illustrated and enlivened throughout by bestselling illustrator Wendy MacNaughton’s whimsical pen-andink drawings. Caroline Paul is the author of Lost Cat: A True Story of Love, Desperation, and GPS Technology (also illustrated by Wendy); the novel East Wind, Rain; and Fighting Fire, a memoir about her career as a San Francisco firefighter. She is a longtime member of the San Francisco Writers' Grotto. Wendy MacNaughton is a New York Times bestselling illustrator whose books include Lost Cat, Pen & Ink, and Meanwhile in San Francisco. They live in San Francisco. also available Lost Cat Caroline Paul & Wendy MacNaughton RIGHTS SOLD: Global Group Holdings (Complex Chinese), Heyne (German), Jilin (Simplified Chinese), Salani Editore (Italian), Will Book (Korean), Versus Yayinlard (Turkish), Ariel (Spanish), Forgalet Press (Norwegian), Kodansha (Japanese), Vallant Publishing (Romanian) 90 illustrated and novelty The Illustrated Farmageddon: The True Cost of Cheap Meat Philip Lambery An illustrated edition of the bestselling Farmageddon packed full of photographs and infographics. The perfect introduction to the way food is produced and how current farming practice effects our world. Bloomsbury Publishing PUBLICATION DATE: 12/01/17 EXTENT: 192 Option Publishers: Nikkei BP (Japanese), AND Publishing (Complex Chinese), Illuminatio Lukasz (Polish), Nutrimenti (Italian), Garamond (Czech) Farm animals have been disappearing from our fields as the production of food has become a global industry. We no longer know for certain what is entering the food chain and what we are eating – as the UK horsemeat scandal demonstrated. We are reaching a tipping point as the farming revolution threatens our countryside, health and the quality of our food wherever we live in the world. A brilliant, infographic book investigating the quiet revolution of mega-farming that is threatening our countryside, farms and food. Follow this industry around the world – from the UK, Europe and the USA, to China, Argentina, Peru and Mexico. A highly accessible, engaging, and fresh look at our current food production and eating practices and an attempt to find a way to a better farming future. Fascinating for children and adults alike! Philip Lymbery is the CEO of leading international farm animal welfare organization, Compassion in World Farming and a prominent commentator on the effects of industrial farming. Isabel Oakeshott is Political Editor at the Sunday Times and commentator on BBC One’s Sunday Politics show. 91 illustrated and novelty Patternalia Jude Stewart From the author and designer of ROY G. BIV, a delightful, fully illustrated new volume on patterns, from polka dots to plaid: their histories, cultural resonances, and hidden meanings. Bloomsbury USA PUBLICATION DATE: 13/10/15 EXTENT: 160 We wake up in the morning and put on our striped socks and our plaid shirts, sit down to breakfast at a gingham tablecloth, perhaps eyeing the wallpaper with its fleur-de-lis. Patterns are everywhere--yet they can go unnoticed. In fact, every pattern is a story, a surprisingly deep trove of historical information and cultural associations. Jude Stewart, author of ROY G. BIV: An Exceedingly Surprising Book About Color, brings her same sprightly sense of humor, sparkling personality, and roving curiosity to this cultural history of patterns. From camouflage to keffiyeh, plaid to paisley, slipping out of the Carmelites' scandalously striped mantle and into an itsy-bitsy-teeny-weeny yellow polka-dot bikini, Patternalia plumbs the backstories of individual patterns, the surprising kinks in how each developed, the parallels between patterns natural and invented, and the curious personalities these patterns accrue over time. Boldly designed by Oliver Munday and cleverly cross-referenced, Patternalia is pure pattern pleasure: a beautiful object and a dazzling read that will appeal to anyone interested in design, fashion, and the cultural history buzzing all around us. Jude Stewart writes about design and culture for Slate, the Believer, Fast Company, Design Observer and other publications. She is also a contributing editor at PRINT magazine. Her first book, ROY G. BIV: An Exceedingly Surprising Book About Color was published in six languages. Stewart lives in Chicago. Read more at www.judestewart.com or @joodstew. also available Roy G. Biv Jude Stewart RIGHTS SOLD: Foksal (Polish) 92 illustrated and novelty Unbored Adventure 70 seriously Fun Activities for Kids and Their Families "It’s a book! It’s a guide! It’s a way of life!"* The exciting new book in the acclaimed, bestselling, award-winning UNBORED series: Here comes UNBORED Adventure. Bloomsbury USA PUBLICATION DATE 06/10/15 EXTENT: 176 UNBORED Adventure has all the smarts, innovation, and free-wheeling spirit of the original UNBORED and its 2014 spinoff, UNBORED Games, but with a fresh focus on encouraging kids to break out of their techno-passivity and explore the world around them--whether that’s a backyard, a downtown, or a forest. Combining old-fashioned favorites with today’s high-tech possibilities, the book offers a goldmine of creative, constructive activities that kids can do on their own or with their families. From camouflage techniques, survival skills, and cloudspotting advice to instructions on how to build an upcycled kite or raft, to using apps to navigate and explore, it’s all here--along with comics that dive into the secret history of everything from bicycling to women explorers. A fun corrective to our over-anxious parenting culture, UNBORED Adventure encourages kids to become more independent and resilient, to solve problems and ask questions, and to engage with both their community and natural environment. The original UNBORED is already a much beloved, distinctly contemporary family brand. Along with UNBORED Games, UNBORED Adventure extends the franchise in a handy, flexibound format so that the whole family can enjoy themselves indoors, outdoors, online, and offline. also available UNBORED Joshua Glenn and Elizabeth Foy Larsen RIGHTS SOLD: O’Reilly (Japanese) UNBORED Games Joshua Glenn and Elizabeth Foy Larsen 93 illustrated and novelty highlights Le Road Trip: A Traveller’s Journal of Love and France Vivian Swift Abbey Road Alastair Lawrence Heirloom Harvest Amy Goldman RIGHTS SOLD: Kawade Shobo Shinsha (Japanese) RIGHTS SOLD: Astrel (Russian), China CITIC Press (Simplified Chinese), Common Master Press (Complex Chinese) Dogs Make Us Human Art Wolfe & Jeffrey Moussaieff Masson RIGHTS SOLD: Rizzoli (Italian) A Guinea Pig’s Nativity RIGHTS SOLD: Fisher (German) A Guinea Pig Pride & Prejudice Jane Austen, Alex Goodwin and Tess Grammell RIGHTS SOLD: Fisher (German) 94 cookery The Saffron Tales: Recipes from the Persian Kitchen Yasmin Khan A glorious celebration of the food and people of Iran: stories from home kitchens and more than 80 delicious modern recipes Armed with little more than a notebook and a bottle of pomegranate molasses, British-Iranian cook Yasmin Khan traversed Iran in search of the country’s most delicious recipes. Her quest took her from the snowy mountains of Tabriz and the paddyfields of Gilan to the cosmopolitan cafés of Tehran and the pomegranate orchards of Isfahan, where she was welcomed into the homes of artists, farmers, electricians and teachers. Through her travels, she gained a unique insight into the culinary secrets of the Persian kitchen and the lives of ordinary Iranians today. Bloomsbury Publishing PUBLICATION DATE: 02/06/16 EXTENT: 320 In The Saffron Tales, Yasmin weaves together a tapestry of stories from Iranian home kitchens with exclusive photography and fragrant, modern recipes that are rooted in the rich tradition of Persian cooking. All fully accessible for the home cook, Yasmin’s recipes range from the inimitable fesenjoon (chicken with walnuts and pomegranates) to kofte berenji (lamb meatballs stuffed with prunes and barberries) and ghalyieh maygoo (prawn, coriander and tamarind stew). She also offers a wealth of vegetarian dishes, including tahcheen (baked saffron and aubergine rice) and domaj (mixed herb, flatbread and feta salad), as well as sumptuous desserts such as rose and almond cake, and sour cherry and dark chocolate cookies. With stunning photography from all corners of Iran and gorgeous recipe images, this lavish cookbook rejoices in the land, life, flavours and food of an enigmatic and beautiful country. Yasmin Khan is a writer and cook from London who loves to share people’s stories through food. She runs Persian cookery classes, pop-up supper clubs, and consults on Iran-related artistic projects. Outside of the kitchen, Yasmin has worked as a campaigner running high-profile campaigns for NGOs and grassroots groups, with a special focus on the Middle East. thesaffrontales.com / @yasmin_khan 95 cookery Land of Fish and Rice Recipes from the Culinary Heart of China Fuchsia Dunlop Exquisite recipes from Shanghai and the southern Yangtze region, by internationally renowned Chinese food expert Fuchsia Dunlop The lower Yangtze region, with its modern capital Shanghai, has been known since ancient times as the ‘Land of Fish and Rice’. For centuries, local cooks have been using the plentiful produce of its lakes, rivers, fields and mountains, combined with delicious seasonings and flavours such as rice vinegar, rich soy sauce, spring onion and ginger, to create a cuisine that is renowned in China for its delicacy and beauty. Bloomsbury Publishing PUBLICATION DATE: 28/07/16 EXTENT: 384 Drawing on years of study and exploration, Fuchsia Dunlop explains basic cooking techniques, typical cooking methods and the principal ingredients of the southern Yangtze larder. Her recipes are a mixture of simple peasant cooking and rich delicacies – some are famous, some unsung. You’ll be inspired to try classic dishes such as Beggar’s chicken and sumptuous Dongpo pork. All the recipes contain readily available ingredients and, with Fuchsia’s clear guidance, you will soon see how simple it is to create some of the most beautiful and delicious dishes you’ll ever taste. With evocative writing, stunning location photography and mouth-watering recipe pictures, this is an important new work about one of China’s most fascinating regions. Fuchsia Dunlop was the first Westerner to train at the Sichuan Higher Institute of Cuisine, and has been travelling around China and collecting recipes for more than two decades. She has written for publications including the Financial Times, Saveur, the New Yorker and the Observer, and has appeared on Gordon Ramsay’s The F-Word and The Food Programme on BBC Radio 4. Her previous books include the award-winning Sichuan Cookery, Every Grain of Rice: Simple Chinese Home Cooking and Shark’s Fin and Sichuan Pepper: A Sweet-Sour Memoir of Eating in China. She speaks, reads and writes Chinese, and she lives in East London. fuchsiadunlop.com / @fuchsiadunlop 96 cookery Good Good Food Sarah Raven © Jonathan Buckley 250 gorgeous, colourful, healthy recipes from award-winning food writer and qualified doctor Sarah Raven Bloomsbury Publishing PUBLICATION DATE: 19/05/16 EXTENT: 464 Not only is Sarah Raven an inspirational cook, but she was also once a doctor and so has a wealth of medical training and knowledge behind her. Here she brings together her unique talents to offer a magnificent canon of recipes, sharing her medical knowledge to explain exactly how and why certain foods help protect your body and give you the best possible chance of a longer, healthier life. The 250 sumptuous and colourful recipes include Coconut sugar marmalade, Spiced aubergine salad with pomegranate raita, Lemon chicken and summer herb salad, Cashew hummus, Black bean burritos, Blood orange sorbet and Basil yoghurt ice cream. Woven through the book are 100 mini ‘superfood’ biographies, where Sarah draws on her expertise and experience to explain the science behind good-for-you ingredients such as kale, broccoli, salmon, red wine, blueberries, apples and seeds. With luminous photography by Jonathan Buckley, this generous and stylish book offers recipes to make you feel well, look well and live longer – by using the most beneficial ingredients and without ever compromising on sheer deliciousness. Sarah Raven worked as a doctor at the Royal Sussex County Hospital in Brighton before becoming a broadcaster, teacher and writer. She has cooked all her life for family and friends with an emphasis on goodness, healthiness and general wellbeing. Sarah runs her own cookery and gardening school at Perch Hill in East Sussex, and has established a mail order gardening company with 80,000 active customers. She has made regular appearances on the BBC’s Great British Garden Revival and Gardeners’ World; and she is the author of Sarah Raven’s Food for Friends and Family, Sarah Raven’s Complete Christmas, Sarah Raven’s Garden Cookbook (which was the Guild of Food Writers’ Cookery Book of the Year 2008) and The Cutting Garden. sarahraven.com / @srkitchengarden also available 97 cookery Mammissima Elisabetta Minervini The cookbook that reveals how to be the ultimate Italian mamma – with simple and delicious Puglian recipes Puglia is the ‘heel’ of Italy. Bordering the iridescent Adriatic Sea, this is a region where the olive oil is like liquid gold, where the fish is cooked up fresh from the sea, and where sun-dried tomatoes, peppers and aubergines are at the heart of the cuisine. The food here is light, nutritious and rustic, and firmly centred around family life. Bloomsbury Publishing PUBLICATION DATE: 05/05/16 EXTENT: 208 Born in this charming region, vivacious and modern mother-of-two Elisabetta Minervini has brought the vitality of Puglian cooking to her home in London, and in Mammissima she shares the traditional recipes that her children (and their friends) have come to adore. These include orecchiette (‘little-ear’ pasta), focaccia, pasta al forno (oven-baked pasta), Salento rustic pie, and the ultimate pizza that will get everyone involved. This kind of cooking suits a hectic lifestyle and can be prepared quickly and easily, using inexpensive ingredients. With enchanting food photography, illustrations and plenty of personality, this glorious book will allow you to add Italian panache and bring la dolce vita to your own everyday cooking. Elisabetta Minervini was born in Molfetta near Bari, a medieval port in the beautiful region of Puglia in southern Italy, and she moved to England in 1997. She is the founder of award-winning publishing company Alma Books. She lives in Richmond, London, with her husband Alessandro and their two children, aged twelve and nine. Mammissima is her first book. 98 cookery River Cottage Love Your Leftovers Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall 100 imaginative recipes for making the most of every potential ingredient in your kitchen We all occasionally suffer a guilty conscience about those languishing ingredients that stay untouched in the fridge or cupboard for days: the bendy carrots, the wilting salad, the foil-wrapped roast chicken, the rock-like bread and that little nugget of Cheese… Bloomsbury Publishing PUBLICATION DATE: 08/10/15 EXTENT: 336 In this new bible, Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall offers nifty and creative ideas to transform leftovers into irresistible meals. Hugh starts by giving practical advice for cooking on a weekly basis with leftovers in mind – helping to save money and avoid waste – and provides tips on how best to store your ingredients to make them last for as long as possible. Hugh then gives handy recipe templates that can be applied to all kinds of leftover ingredients, and provides simple and flexible recipes. He shows, for instance, how you can transform leftover meat into Chilli beef noodles, Stew enchiladas, Spicy chicken salad with peanut butter dressing; surplus root vegetables into Roast root hummus, Quick lentil and parsnip curry and Beetroot and caraway seed cake; spare eggs into Hazelnut remoulade and easy Macarons. He also gives ingenious ideas for Christmas leftovers, shows how to assemble a delicious meal in under ten minutes, and how to make simple store-cupboard suppers. With more than 100 recipes, and gorgeous photographs and illustrations, this is the ultimate companion for everyone’s kitchen – you’ll never be bored of leftovers again. Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall is a writer, broadcaster and campaigner. His series for Channel 4 have earned him a huge popular following, while his River Cottage books have collected multiple awards including the Glenfiddich Trophy and the André Simon Food Book of the Year. Hugh’s additional broadcasting, like the hugely influential Fish Fight, has earned him a BAFTA as well as awards from Radio 4, the Observer and the Guild of Food Writers. Hugh lives in Devon with his family. rivercottage.net / @rivercottage 99 cookery River Cottage Gluten Free Naomi Devlin © Laura Edwards More than 120 inspiring recipes for those who want to cut out gluten without compromising on taste – perfect for anyone with coeliac disease or gluten intolerance Bloomsbury Publishing PUBLICATION DATE: 07/01/16 EXTENT: 272 Gluten is found in an extraordinary number of foods, yet it can be problematic for so many of us. Whether you need to cut gluten out of your diet or you’re cooking for friends and family with gluten intolerance, River Cottage Gluten Free will provide the tools you need to gain inspiration and navigate mealtimes. Expert nutritionist Naomi Devlin gives clear advice for gluten-free eating – including detailed guidance on alternative flours, methods of fermentation and delicious baking ideas. She offers ingenious recipes for breakfasts, bread, pastry, soups, salads, snacks, main meals and puddings, including Prosciutto and egg muffins, Blinis with crème fraîche and smoked salmon, Leek and bacon quiche, Courgette hummus, Blackberry bakewell tart, Luscious lemon cake and Chocolate fondants. With an introduction by Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall and helpful tips from Naomi throughout, this is the definitive gluten-free cookbook – it will add fresh vitality to your cooking and eating, and a host of recipes to make you feel great. Once dubbed ‘the Nigella of gluten-free’, nutrition expert Naomi Devlin is an unashamed foodie who was blessed with a coeliac diagnosis. After studying native diets around the world, she now believes that the key to health and happiness is to cook from scratch wherever possible. It doesn’t have to be fancy, but it should be tasty and satisfying. Using gluten-free wholegrains and sourdough cultures, she teaches people about the endless possibilities and rich flavours of gluten-free grains at River Cottage and Ashburton Cookery School, and at bespoke cookery days in her own steamy kitchen. Naomi lives in West Dorset with her husband, son and ginger cat in a sustainable house they built themselves. rivercottage.net / @naomidevlin 100 cookery SPUNTINO Russell Norman A sizzling New York cookbook from the bestselling author of POLPO Hidden behind a rust-coloured frontage in the bustling heart of London’s Soho, Spuntino is the epitome of New York’s vibrant restaurant scene. After bringing the bàcari of Venice to the backstreets of the British capital at his critically acclaimed restaurant POLPO, Russell Norman scoured the scruffiest and quirkiest boroughs of the Big Apple to find authentic inspiration for an urban, machine-age diner. Since its smash-hit opening in 2011, the restaurant has delivered big bold flavours with a dose of swagger to the crowds who flock to its pewter-topped bar. Bloomsbury Publishing PUBLICATION DATE: 10/09/15 EXTENT: 304 RIGHTS SOLD: Karakter (Dutch) Spuntino will take you on a culinary adventure from London to New York and back, bringing the best of American cuisine to your kitchen. The 120 recipes include zingy salads, juicy sliders, oozing pizzette, boozy desserts and prohibition-era cocktails. You’ll also get a glimpse of New York foodie heaven as Russell maps out his walks through the city’s cultural hubs and quirky neighbourhoods such as East Village and Williamsburg, discovering family-run delis, brasseries, street traders, sweet shops and liquor bars. With radiant photography by Jenny Zarins capturing New York’s visceral grittiness, Spuntino pays homage to the energy, dynamism and extraordinary cuisine that the world’s greatest melting pot has inspired. Russell Norman is a restaurateur. Over the last 20 years he has worked in many of London’s landmark restaurants as a waiter, bartender, maître d’, general manager and operations director. In 2009 he founded an independent restaurant company with his best friend and has since opened eight restaurants in central London including Polpo, Spuntino and Mishkin’s. His book POLPO: A Venetian Cookbook (of Sorts) was voted Waterstones Book of the Year 2012, and in 2014 he presented The Restaurant Man, a six-part prime-time documentary for BBC2. russellnorman.co / @russellnorman_ spuntino.co.uk / @Spuntino also available 101 cookery Junk Food Japan Scott Hallsworth In Junk Food Japan ex-Nobu Head Chef Scott Hallsworth showcases the incredible food that is making his Kurobuta restaurants some of the most talked-about places to eat in London. Absolute Press PUBLICATION DATE: 07/04/16 EXTENT: 304 Packing a heavy punch and offering a fresh new look at Japanese food, Junk Food Japan showcases Kurobuta's ‘insanely delicious delicacies’ (Jay Rayner, The Observer). It is food that is both incredibly inventive yet comfortingly familiar. Signature dishes featured in this exciting new cookbook include Barbecued Pork Belly in Steamed Buns, with a Spicy Peanut Soy Sauce, Tea Smoked Lamb, and Kombu, Roasted Chilean seabass. It is food full of flavour, achievable to create at home and guaranteed to wow friends, family and hungry gatecrashers. Chapters with titles such as Snack, Junk Food Japan, Significant Others, Something Crunchy and On the Side give an idea of the gastronomic fun that is to be found within. Featuring approximately 100 recipes brilliantly showcasing Scott’s wild and inventive style, Junk Food Japan presents Japanese classics with twists and turns alongside a selection of new, stunning Scott-conceived dishes, including Tuna Sashimi Pizza and Wagyu Beef Sliders. Superb photography from legendary photographer David Loftus features throughout. Scott Hallsworth has been forging a mighty path in Japanese cuisine for nearly two decades, having worked for many years as Head Chef at the legendary Nobu in London and then later opening Nobu in Melbourne in his native Australia. He has appeared on BBC1’s Saturday Kitchen with more television and press profile planned. kurobuta-london.com / @KurobutaLondon / @scotthallsworth 102 cookery MasterChef: the Masters at Home Master chefs from around the globe congregate in this ground-breaking book to celebrate delicious food for perfect weekends at home. The incredible selection of chefs includes Ferran Adria, Andoni Aduriz, Michael Anthony, Elena Arzak, Jason Atherton, Joe Bastianich, Lidia Bastianich, Claude Bosi, Massimo Bottura, Claire Clark, Wylie Dufresne, Graham Elliot, Andrew Fairlie, Peter Gilmore, Peter Gordon, Bill Granger, Angela Hartnett, Tom Kerridge, Tom Kitchin, Atul Kochhar, Pierre Koffmann, Jamie Oliver, Ashley Palmer-Watts, Neil Perry, Gordon Ramsay, Eric Ripert, Joan and Jordi Roca, Ruth Rogers, Curtis Stone, David Thompson, Mitch Tonks and Tetsuya Wakuda. Absolute Press PUBLICATION DATE: 16/07/15 EXTENT: 336 RIGHTS SOLD: Tapioca (Brazilian Portuguese), Ekswo (Russian), Veltman (Dutch) Ever wondered what chefs such as Tom Kerridge, Jamie Oliver and Bill Granger love to cook when they are in their own kitchen? Away from the intensity and heat of restaurant service, what food makes them happiest on a weekend off? 33 globally renowned chefs have each shared three recipes for their favourite weekend treats in this special MasterChef collection of food at home. The fascinating background of each chef is explored and accompanying candid snapshots from their home life provide a unique, never-seen-before window into their world. Such an intimate showcase of chefs’ private cooking is artistically captured by the legendary photographer David Loftus. 103 cookery Quinntessential Baking Frances Quinn Quintessential baking ideas for turning simple cakes and biscuits into ingenious creations, from Frances Quinn, winner of The Great British Bake Off Bloomsbury Publishing PUBLICATION DATE: 27/08/15 EXTENT: 320 Frances Quinn wowed the judges with her imaginative showstoppers and extraordinary baking skill to win The Great British Bake Off in 2013. Here is Quinntessential Baking: a treasure trove of inspirational ideas to bring a spark of creativity and a teaspoon of wonder into your kitchen. Frances' combination of ideas and ingredients will provide you with straightforward master recipes or ‘building blocks’, and she explains how to apply a little magic to turn them into beautiful bakes. She’ll show you how to take a basic flapjack recipe and create honey bee bites; transform shortbread into a giant jammy dodger; and turn chocolate sponge into hidden bulb cakes. Frances will give you the foundation to create distinctive and different bakes – and it’s easy once you know how. Whether you’re a baker novice or extraordinaire, you’ll find achievable bakes for all occasions. With striking graphic design and photography and Frances’ own illustrations sprinkled throughout, this book will capture your imagination and become the classic you turn to for definitive cake recipes, original designs and quintessential baking ideas. Frances Quinn is the winner of the Great British Bake Off 2013. Having studied Textile Design at Nottingham Trent University, she worked at design companies in London and Vancouver, and has most recently worked for Joules Clothing as their baby toddler wear designer. Combining a love of design and baking, Frances produces unique and unforgettable bakes. francesquinn.co.uk / @frances_quinn 104 cookery sketch Mourad Mazouz, Pierre Gagnaire A dreamscape book about one of London's most fascinating restaurants: sketch. Absolute Press PUBLICATION DATE: 22/09/16 EXTENT: 320 sketch is a unique meeting place in the centre of London created by Mourad Mazouz and Pierre Gagnaire. The converted 18th-century building in Mayfair is an opulent, zany maze with treasures to be discovered in every room. A mad hatter’s fantasy comes alive in the enchanted woodland Glade tearoom. Eccentric tasty tricks abound in the Parlour patisserie. Eat your fill of gorgeous flavours in the Gallery bistro art installation. Chic pre-dinner cocktails in the urbane East Bar prepare you for the Michelin magic unleashed in the vibrant Lecture Room & Library. Whether you want a tearoom, bistro, restaurant, bar or nightclub, sketch has the best to offer. Now these myriad food, drink and entertainment styles are captured in a book – the phantasmagoric compendium of all things sketch. Unique cuisine is at its heart, world-renowned three-Michelin-star chef Pierre Gagnaire showcases the best 85 recipes from sketch’s kaleidoscopic menus. Interlaced throughout are artistic interpretations of the recipes, contributed by an array of people involved in all elements of sketch, ultimately creating a sensual feast in a book. Photography by Jean Cazals. Mourad Mazouz, the celebrated restaurateur and art connoisseur, combines the most unusual in the most unexpected way. His hybrid restaurants and bars have created unique experiences in Paris, London, Dubai, Abu Dhabi and Beirut. Pierre Gagnaire’s name is synonymous with iconoclastic cooking and technical mastery. He is a leading figure of modern French fare and mad-scientist food experiments, with restaurants in Paris, Berlin, London, Moscow, Las Vegas, Tokyo, Hong Kong, Seoul and Dubai. sketch.uk.com / @sketchlondon 105 cookery Tom’s Table Tom Kerridge Simple everyday recipes with irresistible flavour – from Michelin-starred chef Tom Kerridge Absolute Press PUBLICATION DATE: 24/09/15 EXTENT: 256 Tom Kerridge is known for beautifully crafted food and big, bold flavours. Tom’s Table features 100 delicious everyday recipes so that anyone can achieve his Michelin-starred cooking at home. This is the sort of food you’ll cook again and again, whether you bring his hearty and delicious starter, side, main and dessert recipes to quick mid-week meals or weekend dinners. The recipes include Cheddar and ale soup, Simple sunflower-seed-crusted trout, the ultimate Roast chicken, Lamb ribs with roasted onions, Stuffed green peppers, Home-made ketchups, Popcorn bars, Date and banana milkshake, Pecan tart, and many more. With every recipe photographed by Cristian Barnett, this book is full of inspiring yet simple ideas from the man of the moment. Tom Kerridge worked as a chef in restaurants across Britain before deciding to set out on his own and take over a rundown pub in the quiet town of Marlow. He opened The Hand & Flowers with his wife Beth in 2005, and it went on to become the first pub in the world to acquire two Michelin stars. In 2014 he opened The Coach, his second pub in Marlow. As well as hosting his own BBC television series, Tom has recently been at the helm of the BBC’s Food & Drink and Spring Kitchen series, and appears regularly on major broadcasts such as Saturday Kitchen, Great British Menu and MasterChef. Tom Kerridge’s Proper Pub Food Tom Kerridge RIGHTS SOLD: Veltman (Dutch) 106 Tom Kerridge’s Best Ever Dishes Tom Kerridge cookery Indian Harvest A vibrant vegetarian cookbook from New York's hottest Indian chef. One of Vikas Khanna’s favorite places in the world growing up was the garden he and his grandmother planted at their home in Amritsar, India. He would rush home from school to tend to the aromatic basil and cardamom, tomatoes, peas, and squash. His intimate knowledge of spices and produce would guide him on his journey to become the Michelin-starred chef at one of New York’s most highly regarded Indian restaurants, Junoon. And this knowledge of nature’s bounty and its seasons informs his inspiring and beautiful cookbook, in which vegetables are the star ingredients. Vegetables have always been integral to Indian cuisine, and Khanna’s dishes expertly showcase their natural goodness, their flavor and color and hidden nuances. Khanna brings together traditional recipes, handed down over generations, alongside exciting new ones--for soups, salads, and starters; main courses; rice dishes and lentil dishes; breads; condiments; desserts; and drinks. Though the flavors are complex, the recipes are written to be simple and inviting, to encourage seasonal substitutions and experimentation. Vikas Khanna’s love of food and culture, his enthusiasm and warm hospitality shines on every page. Bursting with 125 recipes and more than 200 color photographs from Michael Swamy and Khanna himself, Indian Harvest opens a new world of inspiration to vegetarians and omnivores alike. 107 cookery highlights The Detox Kitchen Bible Lily Simpson and Rob Hobson Benares Atul Kochhar The Seahorse Social Sweets Mitch Tonks Jason Atherton The Boat Cookbook Atul’s Curries of the World RIGHTS SOLD: Heijnen (Dutch), Turbine (Danish) RIGHTS SOLD: Christian Verlag (German), Veltman (Dutch) RIGHTS SOLD: Veltman (Holland) RIGHTS SOLD: Scriptum (Holland), Edel (Germany) Dabbous Ollie Dabbous World Encyclopedia of Champagne & Sparkling Wine Tom Stevenson RIGHTS SOLD: Sterling (US) 108 Fiona Sims Atul Kochhar cookery highlights River Cottage Light & Easy Hugh’s Three Good Things River Cottage Baby & Toddler Cookbook RIGHTS SOLD: Gottmer (Dutch) AT Verlag (German) Max Strom (Swedish) Strandberg (Danish) RIGHTS SOLD: Giabancle (Italian), Gottmer (Dutch), Strandberg (Danish) RIGHTS SOLD: AT Verlag (German), Cook Books (Russian) River Cottage Fruit Every Day! River Cottage Veg Every Day! Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall RIGHTS SOLD: Strandberg (Danish) Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall Nikki Duffy Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall RIGHTS SOLD: AT Verlag (German), Baltos Lankos (Lithuanian), Cappelen Damm (Norwegian), Edizioni Gribaudo Srl (Italian), Gottmer (Dutch), Lua de Papel, an imprint of Grupo Leya (Portuguese), Max Strom (Swedish), Random House Canada (Canada), Strandberg (Danish), Ten Speed Press Random House (US), Alexandra (Hungarian) River Cottage Fruit & Veg Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall 109 cookery highlights Heston Blumenthal at Home The Fat Duck Cookbook Heston Blumenthal RIGHTS SOLD: Alexandra (Hungarian), Azbooka-Atticus (Russian), Elliot Edizionii (Italian), Flammarion (French), Karakter (Dutch) Paul Hollywood Paul Hollywood’s Pies & Puds Paul Hollywood RIGHTS SOLD: Goodcook (Dutch) 110 Heston Blumenthal RIGHTS SOLD: My House Publishing Co (Complex Chinese) Heston Blumenthal Paul Hollywood’s British Baking Historic Heston Paul Hollywood’s Bread Paul Hollywood How to Bake Paul Hollywood RIGHTS SOLD: Thorbeke (German) Goodcook (Dutch) Gribaudo (Italian) cookery highlights Ice Cream & Other Frozen Delights The Flavour Thesaurus Every Grain of Rice Ben Vear RIGHTS SOLD: Berlin (German), Casa da Palavra (Portuguese for Brazil), CITE (Chinese complex), Exmo (Russian), Gribaudo (Italian), Forma (Sweden), Lua da Papel (Portuguese), Marabout (French), Podium (Dutch), Rakkousha, INc (Japanese), Random Huose Penguin (Spanish), Vaga (Lithuanian) RIGHTS SOLD: Karakter (Dutch), W W Norton & Company (US) Sarah Raven’s Garden Cookbook The Superfood Diet Everybody, Everyday Sarah Raven Niki Segnit Gurpareet Bains Fuchsia Dunlop Alex Mackay RIGHTS SOLD: Veltman (Dutch) RIGHTS SOLD: Terra Lanoo (Dutch), Universe / Rizzoli (US) 111 cookery highlights POLPO International Night RIGHTS SOLD: Christian Verlag (German), Karakter (Dutch) RIGHTS SOLD: Sindbad (Russian) Russell Norman Cooking for Real Life Joanna Weinberg 112 Mark Kurlansky and Talia Kurlansky Bocca Jacob Kenedy 80 Cakes From Around the World Claire Clark RIGHTS SOLD: Solar (French), Newton Compton (Italian) A Year at Otter Farm Mark Diacono cookery highlights Mushrooms John Wright Sea Fishing Nick Fisher Preserves Bread RIGHTS SOLD: AT Verlag (German), Amphora (Russian), Editions La Plage (French), De Agostiai (Italian), Ten Speed Press (US) RIGHTS SOLD: AT Verlag (German), Alexadnria (Hungarian), De Agostiai (Italian), Editions La Plage (French), Alma Litera (Lithuanian), Tea Speed (USA) Hedgerow Fruit Pam Corbin John Wright Daniel Stevens Mark Diacono Veg Patch Mark Diacono Edible Seashore John Wright RIGHTS SOLD: Ulmer (German) Cakes Pam Corbin Herbs Nikki Duffy RIGHTS SOLD: De Agostiai (Italian) Chicken & Eggs Mark Diacono RIGHTS SOLD: AT Verlag (German) Booze John Wright Curing & Smoking Pigs & Pork Gill Meller Game Tim Maddams Steven Lamb RIGHTS SOLD: AT Verlag (German) 113 subagents UK Originated Titles BRAZIL Tassy Barham Associates 231 Westbourne Park Rd London W11 1EB Tassy Barham tassy@tassybarham.com T: +44 (0) 207 792 5899 UK Non-Fiction Tuttle-Mori Agency, Inc 2-15 Kanda Jinbocho Chiyoda-ku, Tokyo 101 Japan T: +81 3 3230 4081 Asako Kawachi asako@tuttlemori.com POLAND ITALY KOREA RUSSIA Marco Vigevani Agenzia Letteraria Via Cappuccio 14 20123 Milano Italy T: +39 02 86 99 65 53 Claire@marcovigevani.cpm CHINA & TAIWAN Big Apple Agency 3FL, No 838, North Zhongshan Road Zha Bei District Shanghai 200070 PR China T: +86 21 6658 0086 Big Apple Agency, Inc. 5F-4, No. 102, Sec. 1, Dunhua S. Road Taipei City, 105 Taiwan R.O.C. Tel. +886 2 8771 4611 Chris Lin Chris-lin@bigapple-taipei.com JAPAN UK Fiction Japan Uni Agency, Inc. Tokyodo Jinbocho No.2 Bldg 1-27 Kanda Jinbocho Chiyoda-ku, Tokyo 101-0051 Japan T: +81 3 3295 0301 Miko Yamanouchi Miko.yamanouchi@japanuni.co.jp 114 Eric Yang Agency 3F, e B/D, Banpo-Dong Seocho-Ku Seoul 137-803 Korea T: + 82 2 592 33 56 Jackie Yang jackieyang@eyagency.com THAILAND Tuttle-Mori Agency 459 Soi Piboonoppathum, Ladprao 48 Samsen Nok, Huay Kwang, Bangkok 10320, Thailand T: + 66 2 392 1718 Pimolporn Yutisri pimolporn@tuttlemori.co.th EASTERN EUROPE Serbia, Croatia, Bosnia, Albania, Macedonia, Slovenia, Romania, Bulgaria Prava I Prevodi Yu-Business Centre Blvd Mihaila Pupina 10B, 5th Floor, Suite 4 11070 Belgrade Serbia Milena Kaplarevic milena@pravaiprevodi.org HUNGARY Katai & Bolza H-1406 Budapest, PO Box 55 Hungary T: +36 1 456 0313 Miki Leklos miki@kataibolza.hu Macadamia Literary Agency ul. Nugat 3 m. 20, 02-776 Warsaw Poland Kamila Kanafa kamila@macadamialit.com T: 0048 793 930 360 Andrew Nurnberg Suite 72 Stroenie 6 Tsvetnoy Blvd 21 127051 Moscow Russia Ludmilla Sushkova sushkova@awax.ru ISRAEL Deborah Harris Agency P.O. Box 8528 Jerusalem 9108401 Israel T: 972 (0)2 5660568 Ilana Kurshan ilana@thedeborahharrisagency.com TURKEY Nurcihan Kesim Literary Agency Dumankaya Vizyon Esentepe Mah. Milangaz Cad. No: 77 A1 Blok Kat: 23 D: 128 Kartal-Istanbul Turkey Filiz Karaman filiz@nurcihankesim.net subagents USA Originated Titles BRAZIL Tassy Barham Associates 231 Westbourne Park Rd London W11 1EB Tassy Barham tassy@tassybarham.com T: +44 (0) 207 792 5899 ITALY Marco Vigevani Agenzia Letteraria Via Cappuccio 14 20123 Milano Italy T: +39 02 86 99 65 53 Claire@marcovigevani.cpm CHINA & TAIWAN Bardon-Chinese Media Agency Taiwan Office: 3F, No. 150 Roosevelt Road, Sec.2, 100 Taipei, Taiwan. Beijing Office: Room 2-702, Bldg 2, RongHuaShiJia, No.29, XiaoYingBeiLu, Chao Yang District Beijing 100101, China. Yu-Siuan Chen yushian@bardon.com.tw JAPAN English Agency Japan (EAJ) Sakuragi Bldg 4F 6-7-3 Minami Aoyama Minato-ku Tokyo 107-0062 Japan THAILAND Tuttle- Mori Agency 459 Soi Piboonoppathum, Ladprao 48 Samsen Nok, Huay Kwang, Bangkok 10320, Thailand T: + 66 2 392 1718 Pimolporn Yutisri pimolporn@tuttlemori.co.th EASTERN EUROPE Serbia, Croatia, Bosnia, Albania, Macedonia, Slovenia, Romania, Bulgaria Prava I Prevodi Yu-Business Centre Blvd Mihaila Pupina 10B, 5th Floor, Suite 4 11070 Belgrade Serbia Milena Kaplarevic milena@pravaiprevodi.org GERMANY Agence Hoffman Landshuter Allee 49 80637 Munchen Germany Uwe Neumahr u.neumahr@agencehoffman.de HUNGARY Katai & Bolza H-1406 Budapest, PO Box 55 Hungary T: +36 1 456 0313 Miki Leklos miki@kataibolza.hu POLAND Macadamia Literary Agency ul. Nugat 3 m. 20, 02-776 Warsaw Poland Kamila Kanafa kamila@macadamialit.com T: 0048 793 930 360 RUSSIA Andrew Nurnberg Suite 72 Stroenie 6 Tsvetnoy Blvd 21 127051 Moscow Russia Ludmilla Sushkova sushkova@awax.ru ISRAEL Deborah Harris Agency P.O. Box 8528 Jerusalem 9108401 Israel T: 972 (0)2 5660568 Ilana Kurshan ilana@thedeborahharrisagency.com TURKEY Nurcihan Kesim Literary Agency Dumankaya Vizyon Esentepe Mah. Milangaz Cad. No: 77 A1 Blok Kat: 23 D: 128 Kartal-Istanbul Turkey Filiz Karaman filiz@nurcihankesim.net KOREA Eric Yang Agency 3F, e B/D, Banpo-Dong Seocho-Ku Seoul 137-803 Korea T: + 82 2 592 33 56 Jackie Yang jackieyang@eyagency.com 115
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