Author: Steve

Man Up – a ground-breaking new book on masculinity from a 23-year old journalist

Jack Urwin – author of Man Up

Tom Webber, commissioning editor at Icon Books, has bought UK & Commonwealth rights from Juliet Pickering at Blake Friedmann to MAN UP: Surviving Modern Masculinity by Jack Urwin. Audible have bought unabridged audio rights from Juliet Pickering, to publish simultaneously in June 2016.

Urwin’s article in Vice last year – A Stiff Upper Lip is Killing British Men – went viral on publication and was praised by Irvine Welsh as ‘fabulous’, and by feminist journalist and author Laurie Penny as ‘the brilliant, personal, not-actually-sexist writing by millennials about masculinity and politics that the world has been waiting for’.

Man Up explores why masculinity – for all of its positive achievements – is currently in crisis, and what it means to be a man now. There’s no doubt about that crisis, either: suicide is currently the main cause of death among men between the ages of 18-49 in the UK, according to the Office for National Statistics.

As commentators like Matt Haig have repeatedly said, men are now facing up to the challenges that their gender presents, and as more books are published about women, by women, men are struggling to be part of a similar conversation about the future of their gender.

Inspired in part by his own father’s premature death when Jack was nine, and his subsequent struggles with depression in his teens and early twenties – to which his inability to communicate emotionally was a major contributing factor – Man Up expands on Urwin’s personal experiences, and delves further into the historical causes of toxic male behaviour in both biological and sociological contexts.

In the book, Jack traces crises of masculinity from our grandfathers’ inability to verbalise the horrors of war and the decline of the working class in the latter part of the 20th century, to the mob mentality displayed on the football terraces, and the disturbing rise of mental health problems among men today. He also looks at the wider impact wrought by reinforcement of such rigid definitions of masculinity, harming not only heterosexual men but also the women and LGBT people around them.

Smart, funny and friendly, Man Up is the start of an essential conversation for men, exploring why we have perpetuated various myths of masculinity – and how we can challenge it, and change it.

‘This won’t be the only voice discussing men and masculinity in 2016 – there seem to be few more contemporary topics – but Jack’s is definitely unique’’ Webber says. ‘His writing is extremely resonant and clear, and as well as coming from his own traumatic experiences as a child and teenager, it shows a wisdom that belies his age. We think he’s going to be a star and that this book will only be the beginning of his rise to fame’

Jack Urwin says ‘This is a book from the heart and I’m really looking forward to adding what I can to the debate about masculinity. Icon have a great reputation for books about big ideas, and having already seen how receptive Tom and his colleagues are, I’m more than confident they’ll be the perfect publisher.’

Icon will publish as a paperback and as an ebook on 2nd June 2016.

 

Love Among the Ruins

Love Among the Ruins – A memoir of life and love in Hamburg, 1945

We’re incredibly excited to announce the publication of Love Among the Ruins by Harry Leslie Smith, author of Harry’s Last Stand.

Harry Leslie Smith‘s Guardian articles have been shared almost a quarter of a million times on Facebook and have attracted huge comment and debate. His book Harry’s Last Stand attracted huge praise, with Annie Lennox saying that Harry ‘is absolutely one of my heroes. Everyone should read this and be humbled. Now the 92-year activist and author presents a unique memoir, announced on BookBrunch earlier today.

‘I say accept love as it comes and accept love as it goes because it is the only currency that never devalues us.’

At 22, the war is over for RAF serviceman Harry Leslie Smith – the now 92-year-old activist and author of the acclaimed Harry’s Last Stand – but the battle for love and hope rages on.

Stationed in occupied Hamburg, a city physically and emotionally ripped apart by Allied bombing, and determined to escape the grinding poverty of his Yorkshire youth, Harry unexpectedly finds a reason to stay: a young German woman by the name of Friede.

As their love develops, they must face both German suspicion and British disapproval of relations with ‘the enemy’.

Harry’s ardent, straight-from-the-heart memoir brings to life a city reduced to rubble, populated with refugees, black marketeers, corrupt businessmen and cynical soldiers. It’s a unique snapshot of a terrible period in Europe’s history, and a passionate love letter to a city, to a woman, and to life itself.

Love Among the Ruins will be published in August 2015 and will be available in paperback, as an ebook and as an audiobook.

New Books published in June!

We have three brand new books to share with you, all published this month.

June titles2First up, we’re thrilled to be publishing The Invisible Woman by Helen Walmsley-Johnson. From the irrepressible voice behind the much-loved Guardian column ‘The Vintage Years’ comes a clarion call for any woman who neither wants to be told constantly to look younger, nor is ready to join the ‘cardigan and slippers brigade’.

Then we have two new paperbacks. Up first is the thrilling And Some Fell on Stony Ground, a visceral and affecting fictionalised report of a bombing mission, from Leslie Mann, a former tailgunner shot down over Germany in the Second World War.

Also published in June, acclaimed popular science author Brian Clegg demonstrates how quantum physics underpins everyday life in The Quantum Age.

 

And finally, don’t forget to check out our brand new catalogue to see what else we’re publishing all the way to the end of the year!

For more information about all future releases and competitions, make sure you sign up to our newsletter.

All books are available in all good bookshops and as an eBook. Head over to @iconbooks to see how you can win all of our new books this month!

Win signed copies of The Invisible Woman!

We have two signed copies of The Invisible Woman: Taking on the Vintage Years to give away!

To celebrate the publication of The Invisible Woman: Taking on the Vintage Years, by Helen Walmsley-Johnson, we’re giving away two signed copies.

First of all, you can regram this picture below on your Instagram with the #invisiblewoman (make sure you follow @iconbooks!)

If you don’t have Instagram, don’t worry! We’ll have another signed copy to giveaway on Twitter, Friday 12th June. Make sure you follow @iconbooks and keep an eye out.

Sixty is the new forty, we’re constantly told. Or is it that seventy is the new fifty?

Yet fashionable clothes shops cater for little but elfin twenty-year-olds; magazines carry little but articles about appearing younger. Heaven forbid you try to apply for a job…

Older women are permitted to be either part of the slippers and cardigans brigade, or to cling desperately to their youth and insist on being ‘young at heart’. Can’t there be a third way? A way to age with grace, security, beauty and adventure, and a way to keep your identity against a growing tide of voices telling you how you’d be happier if only you looked ten years younger.

Covering topics from family, finances and work to cosmetics, fashion and sex, The Invisible Woman – which is also Helen’s Guardian column nom de plume – is a new sort of book about ageing; one that teaches us not how to avoid it, but how to enjoy it, grow with it, and thrive.

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Competition closes on 17th June, 23.59 GMT. Winners will be announced on 18th June.

The Invisible Woman is available now in paperback and as an ebook. Find out more here.

New Books published in May!

We have a bundle of great books to share with you, all published this month!

First up, we’re thrilled to be publishing Einstein’s Masterwork. John Gribbin puts Einstein’s astonishing breakthrough in the context of his life and work, and makes it clear why his greatest year was indeed 1915. Later in the month, published on the 14th May, former England captain and Ashes winner David Gower takes a leap of faith and names his 50 Greatest Cricketers of All Time.

New in paperback is the thrilling Zero Night, the untold story of the Second World War’s most daring escape by Mark Felton.

We have two brand new 30-Second books: Evolution and Twentieth Century and don’t miss the re-issue of Introducing Jung: A Graphic Guide which landed this month!

And finally, you can check out our brand new catalogue to see what else we’re publishing all the way to the end of the year!

All books are available in all good bookshops and as an eBook. Head over to @iconbooks to see how you can win all of our new books this month!

The New Wild

Why invasive species will be natures salvation…

Icon New Wild-5We’ve published this absolutely stunning book in time for Spring. The New Wild by Fred Pearce is a provocative exploration of the ‘new ecology’ and why most of what we think we know about alien species is wrong.

Veteran environmental journalist Fred Pearce used to think of invasive species as evil interlopers spoiling pristine ‘natural’ ecosystems. Most conservationists would agree. But what if traditional ecology is wrong, and true environmentalists should be applauding the invaders? Icon New Wild-6

Icon New Wild-7

To accompany this brave and beautiful book, we’ve given the hardback some lavish production as you can see. Produced in PVC hardback with an acetate jacket, this has to be one of the most stunning books we’ve ever produced.

The New Wild is available in stunning hardback format and as an ebook.

Celebrating International Women’s Day with Non-Fiction Books by Women

As it’s International Women’s Day, we wanted to celebrate by featuring some of our female authors. So, here are some of our most successful, exciting and innovative books written by women!

IWD1

Delusions of Gender: The Real Science Behind Sex Differences by Cordelia Fine is a vehement attack on the pseudo-scientific claims about the differences between the sexes, which the Independent on Sunday described as ‘[a] truly startling book…The hard data is illuminating, and engaging, but Fine manages a light touch throughout.’

Sciku: The Wonder of Science – in Haiku! by Students of the Camden School for Girls – What happens when you mix poetry, science and a whole lot of gumption? SCIKU of course! Now, who said girls can’t do science? Here are a few of the girls themselves to tell you more.

The Year of Living Danishly: Uncovering the Secrets of the World’s Happiest Country by Helen Russell explores a startling statistic: the happiest place on earth isn’t Disneyland, but Denmark, a land often thought of by foreigners as consisting entirely of long dark winters, cured herring, Lego and pastries. ‘Russell is possessed of a razor-sharp wit and a winning self-deprecation – two of the things that make this book such a delight.’ The Independent

Junk DNA: A Journey Through the Dark Matter of the Genome by Nessa Carey who explores, for the first time for a general audience, the incredible story behind a controversy that has generated unusually vituperative public exchanges between scientists. Watch Nessa explain why we need to get to grips with Junk DNA.

Things I Wish I’d Known: Women Tell the Truth About Motherhood edited by Victoria Young and published this month is a reassuring, moving and often hilarious collection that will speak to mothers – and mothers-to-be – everywhere, featuring writers including Cathy Kelly, Adele Parks, Kathy Lette and Lucy Porter (and many more).

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Proust and the Squid: The Story and Science of the Reading Brain by Maryanne Wolf is ‘an inspiring celebration of the science of reading’ (P.D. Smith, Guardian) examining how the elasticity of our brains helps and hinders humans in their attempts to learn to read, and to process the written language.

Introducing Feminism: A Graphic Guide by Cathia Jenainati is an invaluable reference book for anyone seeking the story of how feminism reconfigured the world for women and men alike.

You Are the Music: How Music Reveals What it Means to Be Human by Victoria Williamson, out now in paperback, will delight music lovers of every persuasion as music psychologist Victoria Williamson examines our relationship with music across the whole of a lifetime.

Girls Uninterrupted: Steps for Building Stronger Girls in a Challenging World by Tanith Carey shows the practical strategies you need to create a carefree childhood for your daughters and ultimately help build them into the healthy, resilient women they deserve to be.

The First 20 Minutes: The Surprising Science of How We Can Exercise Better, Train Smarter and Live Longer by Gretchen Reynolds – ‘the new fitness bible for the modern age’ (Dan Coyle, author of The Talent Code) – is an innovative guide to getting fit using cutting-edge science.

New Books published in March!

 We have five more great reads to share with you, all published this month!

 

First up is Junk DNA, A Journey Through the Dark Matter of the Genome by Nessa Carey. From the author of the acclaimed The Epigenetics Revolution (‘A book that would have had Darwin swooning’ – Guardian) comes another thrilling exploration of the cutting edge of human science. Watch Nessa as she tells us why you need to get to grips with Junk DNA.

Study smarter. Focus better. Achieve more. How to be a Knowledge Ninja will show you how. With Graham Allcott, the author who told us all how to get our inbox down to zero in How to be a Productivity Ninja, you can master the ninja approach to studying.

In Girls Uninterrupted, Tanith Carey lays out the steps for building strong girls in a challenging world. Whether they are praised for being pretty rather than smart, or accused of being ‘bossy’ rather than leaders, teaching girls how to be comfortable with themselves has never been more challenging. Laid out in clear simple steps, Girls Uninterrupted shows the practical strategies you need to create a carefree childhood for your daughters and ultimately help build them into the healthy, resilient women they deserve to be.

Women tell the truth about motherhood in Things I Wish I’d Known. Edited by Victoria Young and featuring a stellar cast of contributions from Cathy Kelly, Adele Parks, Kathy Lette and many more, this is a reassuring, moving and often hilarious collection that will speak to mothers – and mothers-to-be – everywhere.

Also published this month is A King in Hiding. The story of how Fahim, a child refugee, became a world chess champion. This is a very modern fairyale, told through the clear eyes of a child, Fahim’s tale is not only a moving account of the grim realities that underlie a supposedly caring society, but also a heartwarming testimony to a father’s determination, the kindness of strangers, and one small boy’s courageous will to succeed.

All books are available in all good bookshops and as an eBook. Head over to @iconbooks to see how you can win all of our new books this month!

New Books published in February!

We have four more great reads to share with you, all published this month!

Feb books

First up is I, Superorganism, by Jon Turney.

Every human body carries a secret cargo: a huge population of micro-organisms that lives in your mouth and nose, on your skin, in your guts. This is the human microbiome and this is the focus of Jon Turney’s cutting-edge work, the first book-length account of a new, thrilling realm of human biology.

Learn about the true make-up of the machine you call a body, question the impact of human habits on the functioning of this ecosystem and see yourself in a new (microscopic) light with I, Superorganism.

Find out more and follow Jon on Twitter @jonWturney

 

In It’s Not About the Shark, David Niven explores the theory that having absolute confidence in finding a solution can actually hide answers. Learn how putting problems at the centre of our thoughts serves to shut down our creative abilities, deplete stamina and feed insecurities, and discover how to transform your daily life with a simple but rock-solid principle: If you start thinking about your problems, you’ll never make it to a solution. If you start thinking about a solution, you’ll never worry about your problems again.

‘In this useful tome, Niven gives unusual, yet eminently practical, problem-solving advice . . . This fresh, enthusiastic approach to problem-solving will encourage readers to open themselves up to opportunity and make for a valuable addition to anyone’s self-help shelf.’ Publishers Weekly

‘David Niven will help you think more, panic less, dream bigger, and WIN.’ Bob Danzig, former CEO, Hearst Newspapers

Find out more… and follow David on Twitter @davidnivenphd

Also released this month is Beyond the Call, a cinematic, inspiring tale of the hitherto unknown hero, veteran 8th Air Force Bomber pilot Captain Robert Trimble. Written by the Captain’s own son with the help of British historian Jeremy Dronfield, this daring account tells of wit, courage and a determination to do good in the midst of a terrible war. Embark upon an undercover mission with Trimble as he faces up to a terrifying foe and fights to save hundreds of lives, whilst trying to find his way home to his wife and

‘Beyond the Call is the brilliantly told, fast-paced true story of a remarkable young man… Nerve-wracking, informative, yet profoundly moving, Beyond the Call is a truly inspiring book.’ Susan Ottaway, author of Sisters, Secrets, and Sacrifice

Find out more… and follow Lee and Jeremy on Twitter@BeyondCall

With expert advice, practical exercises and a real-world focus, Introducing Well-being will help you become more energised, optimise your mental and physical health and discover happiness and fulfilment Read more about the Introducing Practical Guide series and follow us on Twitter.

All books are available in all good bookshops and as an eBook. Head over to @iconbooks to see how you can win our new titles!

New Books published in January!

Happy 2015! We have our first five books of the year to share with you, all published this month!

Jan books

Denmark is officially the happiest nation on Earth, so when journalist Helen Russell finds herself spending a year in rural Jutland, she decides she’ll do all she can to uncover the secrets of the Danes’ happiness. But will the long, dark winters and pickled herring take their toll?

‘A lovely mix of English sensibility and Danish pragmatism. Helen seems to have understood more about the Danish character than I have! My only worry is that it will make everyone want to have a go and my holiday home area will get overcrowded.’ Sandi Toksvig

Find out more and follow Helen on Twitter @MsHelenRussell

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Discover the much-advertised antioxidants that aren’t good for you, the truth about fat and sugar, how likely it is that toast will fall butter side down, and why buses will actually come in threes. This is a reference tool for informed modern living that separates scientific truth from media myth

In Science for Life, Brian Clegg cuts through the vested interests and confusing contradictory statements that litter the media and the internet, to give a clear picture of what science is telling us right now about changing our lives for the better. ‘At last – the straight facts on everything – subject by subject – that affects our lives today, written in a clear and accessible style. Brilliant!’ Aggie MacKenzie, Presenter, Channel 4’s How Clean is Your House?

But that’s not all from Brian Clegg this month, we’ve also published a new edition of his best loved books – Light Years – the story of light and the people who were determined to unlock the secrets of one of the greatest puzzles of the Universe. ‘A fascinating book on a fascinating subject. It brings together all aspects of light in an unusual and compelling way.’ Sir Patrick Moore Find out more… and follow Brian on Twitter @BrianClegg

Rasmus Ankerson’s The Gold Mine Effect, now in paperback, shows us how to crack the secrets of high performance. We all want to discover our hidden talents and make an impact with them. But how? Rasmus Ankersen, an ex-footballer and performance specialist, quit his job and for six intense months lived with the world’s best athletes in an attempt to answer this question. ‘[A] great read and a fascinating insight into performance.’ Sir Clive Woodward

With expert advice, practical exercises and a real-world focus,Introducing Personal Finance will help you control your spending behaviour, simplify your spending behaviour and make your money work for you. Read more about the Introducing Practical Guide series and follow us on Twitter.

All books are available in all good bookshops and as an eBook. Head over to @iconbooks to see how you can win our new titles!

Nessa Carey introduces Junk DNA

A journey through the dark matter of the human genome.

‘If you really want to understand where biology is going and what the next horizon is in our understanding of the human genome, then you absolutely have to come to grips with Junk DNA’

From the author of the acclaimed The Epigenetics Revolution (‘A book that would have had Darwin swooning’ – Guardian) comes another thrilling exploration of the cutting edge of human science.

For decades after the structure of DNA was identified, scientists focused purely on genes, the regions of the genome that contain codes for the production of proteins. Other regions – 98% of the human genome – were dismissed as ‘junk’. But in recent years researchers have discovered that variations in this ‘junk’ DNA underlie many previously intractable diseases, and they can now generate new approaches to tackling them.

Nessa Carey explores, for the first time for a general audience, the incredible story behind a controversy that has generated unusually vituperative public exchanges between scientists. She shows how junk DNA plays an important role in areas as diverse as genetic diseases, viral infections, sex determination in mammals, human biological complexity, disease treatments, even evolution itself – and reveals how we are only now truly unlocking its secrets, more than half a century after Crick and Watson won their Nobel prize for the discovery of the structure of DNA in 1962.

Here is Nessa herself to tell you more:

Junk DNA will be available from March 2015 in hardback and as an ebook. Find out more here.

Behold the @ScikuGirls!

What happens when you mix poetry, science and a whole lot of gumption? SCIKU of course!
Now, who said girls can’t do science?

SCIKU is a brilliant new book of science-inspired haiku written by students at The Camden High School for Girls.

The book features gems of science-poetry such as:

Gravity:
An attractive force
Between all objects with mass
Just like you and me

and

Photosynthesis:
Carbon dioxide
And water combine to form
Glucose thanks to light

Here are a few of the girls themselves to tell you more:

All royalties from the book will go towards modernising the school’s science laboratory. Find out more here.

New Books published in November

Just look at all these books we published this month!

November wout boxsetsHow do you poison someone without the police finding out? Which way is the earth spinning? Instead of politicians, why don’t we let the managers of IKEA run the country? And most importantly, Do You STILL Think You’re Clever? From the ever-curious mind that brought you the bestselling Do You Think You’re Clever? comes a brand-new trip into the far reaches of the intellectual universe, courtesy of even more notoriously provocative Oxbridge interview questions.

In Geoff Hurst’s 50 Greatest Footballers, we have the perfect stocking filler. Sir Geoff Hurst, from his vantage point as a true national hero and international football ambassador – and still the only man ever to score a hat-trick in a World Cup Final – risks controversy as he narrows down football’s finest to a select 50 in this brilliant new book

Allum’s Antiques Almanac 2015 is the first annual compendium of stories and facts from the world of art and antiques, by BBC Antiques Roadshow regular Marc Allum. Find out, amongst other things, what Lee Harvey Oswald’s wedding ring sold for – and what he paid for it, why someone was prepared to pay over £3 million for the miniature effigy of a dashing bodyguard. But that’s not all from Marc Allum this month: The Antiques Magpie, a compendium of absorbing history, stories and facts from the world of antiques, is now in paperback!

Ask John is no-nonsense business advice from John Timpson, Chairman of the eponymous high street chain, from his much-admired Daily Telegraph column. From why low cost will never be a real substitute for proper customer service to the etiquette of employing interns, John’s honest, common-sense business advice should be required reading for anyone running a business – whatever the size. Ask John is available in paperback for the special price of £9.99 from The Daily Telegraph.

Sciku: The Wonder of Science – in Haiku! Written by Students of the Camden School for Girls. Sciku brings together more than 400 revealing, poignant, witty haiku on scientific subjects. These poems show that science may have given us the atom bomb, the laptop and the artificial heart but that it remains elegiac, enigmatic and often mind-bogglingly beautiful. Find them on Twitter @Scikugirls.

November just boxsetsA Burglar Caught by A Skeleton by Jeremy Clay is new in paperback. HOLIDAYMAKER FIGHTS OFF AFRICAN LION IN WELSH HOTEL ROOM and other extraordinary, bizarre and often morbidly funny stories from the depths of the Victorian press. This is the perfect stocking filler for the morbidly inclined.

And don’t forget the two boxsets: Mark Forsyth’s Ternion Set, a beautiful box set containing The Etymologicon, The Horologicon and The Elements of Eloquence in hardback. Finally, there’s A Charm of Magpies, give the gift of the Magpie with this beautiful collection of three fascinating miscellanies. Containing, The Science Magpie, The Nature Magpie and The Antiques Magpie.

All books available in all good bookshops and as an eBook. Head over to @iconbooks to see how you can win our new titles!

The Invisible Woman

The Invisible Woman – How to Navigate the Vintage Years

We’re incredibly excited to announce the publication of The Invisible WomanHow to Navigate the Vintage Years by Helen Walmsley Johnson.

From the author of the Guardian’s popular ‘The Vintage Years’ column comes a rallying call to sanity for those women who refuse to become part of the ‘slippers and cardigans brigade’ – but also resent the expectation to cling desperately to their youth and insist on being ‘young at heart’.

Sixty is the new forty, we’re constantly told. Or is it that seventy is the new fifty?

Covering topics from family, finances and work to cosmetics, fashion and sex, The Invisible Woman – which is also Helen’s Guardian column nom de plume – is a new sort of book about ageing; one that teaches us not how to avoid it, but how to enjoy it, grow with it and thrive.

Commissioning Editor Kate Hewson says: ‘​​The Invisible Woman is a vital, timely book about how to navigate that stage of life when women – no longer blushing brides or mothers of children – seem to somehow disappear from public life. With this book Helen takes what she has done so well as a Guardian columnist and expands it to an even wider audience – her unique skill is that she writes in a way that appeals not just to women her age, but to their partners, daughters, sons and everyone in between.​’​

The Invisible Woman will be published in June 2015 and will be available in hardback and as an ebook

The Untold Story of the Attack in Benghazi

Under Fire jacket coverOctober saw the publication of Under Fire – The Untold Story of the Attack in Benghazi by Fred Burton and Samuel M. Katz.

Benghazi, Libya. 11th September 2012. Just over a year after the fall of Gaddafi, and on the eleventh anniversary of the 9/11 attacks, a group of heavily armed Islamic terrorists had their sights set on the U.S. diplomatic and intelligence presence in the city.

In the prolonged attack, four Americans died, including the American ambassador to Libya, Christopher Stevens. This was the first time a US ambassador has been killed on duty for over thirty years. Based on confidential eyewitness sources within the intelligence, diplomatic, and military communities, Under Fire is the terrifying account of that night, and of a desperate last stand amid the chaos of rebellion.

Under Fire was released to wide critical acclaim in the US, where Vanity Fair described it as ‘Heart-stopping, minute-by-minute detail … a tale of valour on the ground.’ The Huffington Post said that it was ‘A gripping first-hand narrative of the night of the attack… [The authors] keep the politics out of it and let the events of that night speak for themselves.’ Keep your eyes peeled because Under Fire is soon to be an HBO film from the producer of Behind The Candelabra.

Follow Fred Burton on Twitter @fred_burton.

Under Fire is available now from all good bookshops and as an eBook.

Writing popular science with Brian Clegg and Simon Flynn

The Science Magpie jacket coverAre you a scientist or researcher with an idea for a popular science book or a journalist, or a non-fiction author interested in writing for the popular science market? There’s a Guardian Masterclass this month created just for you!

The Quantum Age jacket coverIcon Books authors Brian Clegg, author of Inflight Science, The Universe Inside You, Dice World and newly published The Quantum Age and Simon Flynn, science teacher and author of The Science Magpie, are taking part in a brilliant class on how to write a popular science book on Sunday 20th July.

With talks from Brian Clegg, Simon Flynn, scientist and communicator Professor Stephen Curry, TV presenter,  author Angela Saini, and former biologist and author M.G. Harris, plus the opportunity to pitch your book ideas to an expert panel for instant feedback, it should be a brilliant day.

Head over to the Guardian to find out more about the day and how to book a ticket. Tickets need to be purchased by Monday 7th July to ensure your place.

Watch Ian Plenderleith introduce Rock ‘n’ Roll Soccer

Rock 'n' Roll Soccer jacket coverThe USA national team will tonight line up against Belgium in Brazil to compete for a place in the World Cup quarter finals. They are on the brink of equalling their best ever World Cup showing and the sport’s popularity has soared state-side as result. Not since Pelé was strutting his stuff for the Cosmos has ‘soccer’ been such a hot topic, so what better time to indulge in some NASL nostalgia.

Watch the video below of Ian Plenderleith, author of upcoming Rock ‘n’ Roll Soccer: The Short Life and Fast Times of the North American Soccer League, introduce his book. Rock ’n’ Roll Soccer reveals in all its glory the colour and chaos of the world’s first truly international league. How it sold itself in a continent unfamiliar with soccer, and how it crashed back down to earth like a rock star’s private jet, bankrupt but laughing all the way.

Rock ‘n’ Roll Soccer by Ian Plenderleith, with a Foreword by Rodney Marsh, will be available everywhere books are sold from 4th September. Go here to read more about it.

 

Celebrating Independent Booksellers Week 2014: Our Unknown Unknowns

Independent Booksellers Week 2014 starts today, which means Mark Forsyth’s The Unknown Unknown: Bookshops and the Delight of Not Getting What You Wanted has been released into the world and is now available exclusively from independent bookshops. In this essay, Mark Forsyth explores why only a bookshop can give you that precious thing – what you never knew you were looking for – the unknown unknown, so we thought we would celebrate by sharing our own unknown unknowns discovered indie bookshops!

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Celebrating Independent Booksellers Week 2014: Our Unknown Unknowns

Leena (Publicity & Digital Sales Executive)
Moving to a new area is a little disconcerting, but I always find my gravity in knowing where the nearest good bookshop is. A quick Google search told me that the Muswell Hill Bookshop was right around the corner from my new haunt. I went in the next day to see if the contents of the tin matched the label and was greeted by a warm warren of shelves and cubbyholes stocked high with a beautifully curated collection of titles. Among them was Recipes for Sad Women by Hector Abad – a translated title with the driest of humours and language so elegant it easily wets the eye. Of course, with advice on how to boil tears and skewer a dinosaur, none of the recipes are actually real, but as Abad reminds us: ‘the cure s in the air the words exhale’. ​

Henry (Publicity Director)
I stumbled across Winter’s Bone on one of the back tables at John Sandoe when I first moved to London in, when was it, late 2007? Before it became a very good Jennifer Lawrence film anyway. I’d never heard of author Daniel Woodrell, but the bleakness of the cover appealed. I like bleak sometimes. Woodrell’s sparse, beautifully measured prose creates the perfect tone for the novel’s setting – the Ozark mountains of Missouri. The story of teenager Ree, struggling to keep her family together while trying to find the truth about her father’s disappearance in a harsh environment and even harsher community, remains one of my favourite books to this day. In short, thank goodness for out-of-the-way bookshop tables!

Kate (Commissioning Editor)
I bought True Grit on one of my many meanderings through Foyles at St Pancras. It was the nearest bookshop to my office, and I often went there for work research, present buying and just for the sheer joy of perusing its carefully curated shelves. On this occasion, I was killing time waiting for a train, and I wasn’t looking for anything in particular, but I happened across this in the fiction section and – remembering the film and having a strange fascination with grim American Westerns and spiky female leads – decided to give it a go. I’m halfway through, and its combination of sparse description and fantastic characters is everything I’d hoped for – think The Road meets The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn.

Celebrating Independent Booksellers Week 2014: Our Unknown Unknowns

Kiera (Series Editor)
I usually wander into Gosh! Comics in Soho with no idea of what I’m looking for. I’ll be in the area and will find myself, somehow, standing outside the shop, gazing at the rainbow of comics, graphic novels and illustrations that fill its windows. (Must be the tractor beam they keep in the basement.) My best accidental purchase was Hope Larson’s graphic novel adaptation of A Wrinkle in Time, originally by Madeleine L’Engle. It’s so beautiful and comforting, I find myself reading it again and again.

Andrew (Sales and Marketing Director)
I bought Laurent Seksik’s The Last Days on a whim last summer from Herne Hill Books in south London. The shop is probably the smallest I know, so they have to be very select with the stock that they carry. Like all of Puskin Press’ recent output the cover is beautiful, and the story – a fictionalised account of the last few weeks of the lives of German Jewish writer Stefan Zweig and his wife in Brazil in 1942, where they’d fled persecution in Europe – immediately appealed. I probably read more non-fiction than fiction though I love Zweig’s stories and so this book probably couldn’t be better calculated to appeal to me! I devoured it in a few hours beside the nearby Brockwell lido…

Michael (Sales Executive)
As is so often the case, a few years ago I found myself in King’s Cross Station needing to kill the time freed up by a cancelled train. My well-practiced drill in these circumstances is to hurry past the crowds cooing at J.K. Rowling’s half-constructed luggage carrier to take sanctuary in Watermark Books. After browsing the display tables I invariably end up in front of the sports shelves in the back. The book I took away on this particular day – Ian Hawkey’s The Feet of the Chameleon – is unlike any football book I had or have since read, unpicking the complex role football plays in African life. It’s a fascinating history of a continent which is too often ignored by the footballing world.

Celebrating Independent Booksellers Week 2014: Our Unknown Unknowns

Stacey (Marketing Executive)
I visited the lovely new Foyles Charing Cross Road bookshop on the day it opened and I was determined to buy a book I’d never heard of before, which tends to be a rare occurrence as nearly all my book purchases are based on recommendations or are books I’ve read about before. I bought A Drowned Maiden’s Hair: A Melodrama by Laura Amy Schlitz because I thought it had a beautiful cover! I’m looking forward to delving into the world of Maud and the Hawthorne sisters…

Peter (Chairman)
The last book I bought was Flash Boys: A Wall Street Revolt by Michael Lewis and I bought it in Watermark Books in King’s Cross Station. Flash Boys is excellent, appropriately moving very fast as it’s all about money trading, legal and illegal. I love Watermark Books because they’re always on the ball and helpful and I browse in there every time I’m waiting for a train.

Philip (Managing Director)
The last book I bought from an independent was at Galaxy in Sydney, Australia. I’ve popped in frequently over the years as they have a wonderful selection of old SF novels from the 50s, 60s and 70s. Lo and behold they had a favourite of mine, the original copy of which had long disappeared. Harry Harrison’s, Bill the Galactic Hero, it might not have won any prizes for literature but I thoroughly enjoyed re-reading it after so many years from my economy A380 Singapore Airlines seat en route back to Blighty.

Visit iconbooks.com/events for details about Mark Forsyth’s Independent Booksellers Week author tour and read more about The Unknown Unknown here. Find out how to win a special leatherbound edition of The Elements of Eloquence plus National Book Tokens at iconbooks.com/theunknown. Follow Mark Forsyth on Twitter @inkyfool.

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Michael Sells’ World Cup update!

Icon’s Sales Executive Michael Sells gives us his take on the World Cup so far, with particular reference to those players on whom we’ve published biographies by Luca Caioli!

Well, with the group stages of the World Cup complete and the knockout rounds upon us there’s been little chance to pause for breath and reflect.

Before we knew it Costa Rica and the USA had managed to shock all to escape their groups, whilst the England team boarded their plane back to Blighty.

Expectations were low to start with for Hodgson’s inexperienced selection, chalked off as a learning experience before the games had even begun, but for other nations this tournament has been sighted as do-or-die.

NeymarAs the host nation, the expectancy surrounding Brazil is even higher than usual with all hopes firmly pinned on Barcelona’s starlet Neymar. Scoring 4 goals in 3 games, he has been instrumental in guiding Brazil out of their group with the pressure taking its toll on a number of his more experienced teammates.

Meanwhile Argentina’s 100% record reveals only half the story as they made hard work of an easy groups. The South Americans were twice pegged back by Nigeria before winning 3-2 and had to rely on an injury time wonderstrike from Lionel Messi to claim all three points against Iran. It seems that after years of underachieving in an Argentina shirt, the Barcelona star is finally beginning to excel in the blue and white of his nation. Messi

Cristiano Ronaldo has had an altogether less enjoyable tournament as his Portugal side failed to progress from the groups. Tendonitis prevented the 2014 Ballon d’Or winner from hitting full stride, although he did score the winner in their final game against Ghana. It was a disappointing end to a glittering season for Ronaldo, the highlight of which was undoubtedly Real Madrid’s thrilling Champions League final victory over local neighbours Ateltico Madrid.

Already well on its way to becoming one of the best World Cups in history, if Brazil manage to triumph it would kick-start the party to end all parties.

Ronaldo

Win a limited edition leatherbound copy of The Elements of Eloquence, signed by Mark Forsyth, with National Book Tokens

The Elements of EloquenceIndependent Booksellers Week begins on 28th June and we want to let you know about a very special competition you can enter!

Mark Forsyth’s essay, The Unknown Unknown: Bookshops and the Delight of Not Getting What You Wanted, specially commissioned for Independent Booksellers Week, will be available exclusively from indies on Saturday for only £1.99. Mark Forsyth’s third book, The Elements of Eloquence, is also available in paperback early.

If you want the chance to win a leatherbound limited edition (only twelve exist in the world!) of The Elements of Eloquence, tweet a photo of The Unknown Unknown in front of your favourite indie bookshop using #IBW2014 and be entered to win a copy, signed to the winner by Mark, plus £20 of National Book Tokens. We also have four National Book Tokens worth £20 each for runners up!

Tweet between June 28th and the end of August. Winners will be picked at random from all tweets and announced at midday on Monday 1st September 2014 by @iconbooks.

Find out more about The Unknown Unknown and this exciting competition here. Find your nearest independent bookshop here and follow Mark Forsyth on Twitter @inkyfool. Mark Forsyth is also going on tour for Independent Booksellers Week – go here for tour dates.

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