Archives: Titles

Interstellar Tours

Interstellar Tours (eBook)

A Guide to the Universe from Your Starship Window

Brian Clegg

'Strap in and enjoy the ride!' JOHN GRIBBIN

'A window seat on a flight to our galaxy's sites of outstanding beauty' MARCUS CHOWN, AUTHOR OF THE ONE THING YOU NEED TO KNOW

'A refreshing new look at our own corner of space
' HENRY GEE, WINNER OF THE 2022 ROYAL SOCIETY TRIVEDI SCIENCE BOOK PRIZE

'Buckle up for the ride of a lifetime' PHILIP BALL, AUTHOR OF THE BOOK OF MINDS AND BEYOND WEIRD

Take a voyage into space to explore the wonders of the galaxy and beyond.

With award-winning science writer Brian Clegg as your deep space guide, step on board the starship Endurance and marvel at the fascinating sights of deepest, darkest space.

Although our vessel is fictional, the phenomena you will visit, from the vast nebulae that are birthplaces of stars to stellar explosions in vast supernovas, creating the elements necessary for life – or from the planets of other solar systems to the unbelievably supermassive black hole at the heart of the Milky Way – all reflect the best picture current science has to offer.

Accompanying Interstellar Tours is an online gallery with over fifty images and videos in full colour, each directly accessible from the page using QR codes.

It may never be possible to undertake a voyage through the stars for real. But with Interstellar Tours, you can enjoy the ultimate cruise across the Milky Way.



Brian Clegg is a popular science writer whose Dice World and A Brief History of Infinity were both longlisted for the Royal Society Prize for Science Books. He has written for publications including Nature, The Times and BBC Focus.


Bargain! For less than the price of a budget airline ticket, you can have a window seat on a flight to our galaxy's sites of outstanding beauty in this delightfully informative guide by Brian CleggMarcus Chown, author of The One Thing You Need to Know
"The old elephant has performed his trick again," as Albert Einstein reputedly said after posing for his umpteenth photograph. Brian Clegg is neither Einstein nor an elephant, but he is one of the best explainers of science around, and he has performed his trick again, this time covering most of the mysteries of the cosmos in an entertaining series of essays dressed up as part of the voyages of the starship Endurance. We are figuratively taken on a tour of the universe, getting up close and personal to black holes, supernovae and other cosmological beasts while our guide explains their nature in clear and accessible language. Strap in and enjoy the ride!John Gribbin
Buckle up for the ride of a lifetime. With his characteristic clarity, care and charm, Brian Clegg is your guide on a tour of the galaxy, stopping at all the favourite tourist stops: planets around our Sun and other stars, nebulae where stars are born and supernovae and black holes where they die. Thanks to 22nd-century technology, you'll witness the science of the cosmos in a way that people could only dream about a hundred years ago. After this experience, the night sky will never seem the same again!Philip Ball, author of The Book of Minds and Beyond Weird
Welcome aboard the starship Endurance for a luxury cruise like no other. Join Captain Brian Clegg on a guided tour around the amazing sights of our galaxy, from black holes to supernovas, amazing new planets and a refreshing new look at our own corner of spaceHenry Gee, winner of the 2022 Royal Society Trivedi Science Book Prize

ABOUT THIS BOOK

about this book

ISBN: 9781837730773

Price: 14.99 GBP

Pages: 320

Publication date: 21/09/2023

Category: Popular Science & Mathematics

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Ten Tantalising Truths

Ten Tantalising Truths (eBook)

Why the Sky is Blue, and other Big Answers to Simple Questions

John Gribbin

Obvious questions do not always have obvious answers.

John Gribbin is known for giving us simple explanations of big concepts in science. But there is another way to probe the mysteries of the Universe and our place in it. Faced with persistent enquiries from his grandchildren, Gribbin realised that simple questions, such as 'Why is the sky blue?', sometimes require big answers, understandable in straightforward language.

In answering those simple questions, he discovered that he was telling the story of our place in the Universe, from the Big Bang to the evolutionary reasons why men are, on average, bigger than women. The questions may be obvious, but the answers are sometimes surprising and highlight one of the main joys of science – discovering the unexpected.

In this book, Gribbin invites the reader to join him on this voyage of discovery, where you may think you already know the answers but should be prepared to be surprised – or at least, tantalised by the truth.



John Gribbin's numerous bestselling books include In Search of Schrödinger's Cat and Six Impossible Things, which was shortlisted for the 2019 Royal Society Science Book Prize. He has been described as 'one of the finest and most prolific writers of popular science around' by the Spectator. In 2021, he was made Honorary Senior Research Fellow in Astronomy at the University of Sussex.


ABOUT THIS BOOK

about this book

ISBN: 9781837731121

Price: 8.99 GBP

Pages: 160

Publication date: 26/10/2023

Category: Popular Science & Mathematics

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The Life and Lies of Charles Dickens

The Life and Lies of Charles Dickens (eBook)

Helena Kelly

Think you already know the story of Charles Dickens' life? Think again.

Almost everything you're familiar with was first mentioned in an authorised biography written by Dickens' close friend John Forster 150 years ago. It's the version of events that Dickens himself chose to make public, and newly accessible archives reveal that it's crammed with gaps, inconsistencies, and outright lies.

There's the sister whose existence Dickens kept secret and the Jewish relations whose faith he strove to conceal. There's plagiarism, fraud, and suicide.

And that's only for starters.

Helena Kelly, author of the acclaimed Jane Austen, the Secret Radical, retells Dickens' story from his childhood to his deathbed, uncovers the truths he tried to keep hidden, and offers a fresh – and deeply troubling – perspective on the man who remains one of Britain's best-known novelists.

You won't be able to look at him – or his work – in the same way again.



Helena Kelly holds a doctorate from the University of Oxford, where she has taught classics and English Literature. Brought up in Kent, she now lives in Oxford with her husband and son. She is also the author of Jane Austen, the Secret Radical and The Life and Lies of Charles Dickens.


Praise for Jane Austen, the Secret Radical:

"Bracing. Plausible and vivid."– "The Atlantic"

"Jane Austen, The Secret Radical is wonderful; a revelation. It's difficult to stand out from the crowd when writing about such an influential figure, but Helena Kelly has certainly achieved that with this smart, knowing, perceptive book."–Amanda Foreman, author of A World on Fire

"A fresh take on the life and work of the beloved writer Jane Austen. Reveals the subversive rebel soul behind such towering classics as Sense and Sensibility, Pride and Prejudice, and Mansfield Park."– "Elle"

"A thoroughly engaging read." – The Times Literary Supplement

"An important revisionary work. Helena Kelly provokes."– "The New York Times"

"Amply shows her deep research. She exposes a depth beyond what at first may seem to be silly characters. A fine-grained study that shows us how to read between the lines to discover the remarkable woman who helped transform the novel from trash to an absolute art form." – Kirkus Reviews

"Ambitious. Illuminating, provocative. Kelly offers a salutary argument for reading Austen's novels with the serious attentiveness they invite and deserve."– "The Spectator"

"Do we read Jane Austen's novels as she intended? In this riveting literary-biographical study, the answer is a resounding no. An interpretive coup that is dazzling and dizzying . . . You won't read Austen the same way again."– "The New Yorker"

"Essential. What this radical re-reading of the novels does so brilliantly is to exhort us all to chuck out the chintz, and the teacups, and all the traditional romantic notions about Austen's work that have been fed to us for so long."– "The Bookseller (London)"

"Helena Kelly makes the case for Austen as an author steeped in the fear of war and revolution. Meticulously researched. Kelly shows us that the novels were about nothing more or less than the burning political questions of the day. A sublime piece of literary detective work that shows us once and for all how to be precisely the sort of reader that Austen deserves."– "The Guardian (London)"

"Kelly argues passionately and engagingly. Her critical method is . . . generating meaning from the smallest details of the novels."– "The Washington Post"

Praise for Jane Austen, A Secret Radical

ABOUT THIS BOOK

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ISBN: 9781837731138

Price: 20.00 GBP

Pages: 320

Publication date: 02/11/2023

Category: Literature & Language

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Damn This War!

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Damn This War! (eBook)

Between the Blitz and the Desert, a Story of War-Crossed Love

Julie Hankey

'Moving, funny … an exquisite story of love, hope, distance and, ultimately, disenchantment.' Mail on Sunday
'A sad and truthful fragment of modern history' TLS

'Beautifully written' Jenny Uglow

The love story of Zippa and Tony is nothing without the context of the Second World War.

The war introduced them – they met as blackout wardens in London. It gave them darkened streets to wander in, hand in hand, then, by sending Tony away to officer training camps, it sharpened their hunger for each other, casting a glow over his comings and goings. It turned them into schemers and wanglers against fate and army regulations. It pressed them into marriage, and when the war decided to deploy him to North Africa, it whispered the urgent question of a baby. To which Tony, thinking of the war, replied maybe not; and Zippa, thinking of the war, said yes.

In spite of themselves, the war experience was changing them both, and yet both were hanging on, looking back, suspended in memory and time, and living from letter to letter.

Decades later, their daughter Julie discovered their letters, and piecing them together began to create a portrait of her parents and their relationship that was completely unfamiliar to her. Vivid, honest and completely absorbing, Damn This War! is a true insight into a wartime love story.



Julie Hankey is the author of A Passion for Egypt and Kisses and Ink, books that draw on private letters and wider research to bring the past to life.


Moving, funny … an exquisite story of love, hope, distance and, ultimately, disenchantment.Mail on Sunday
A beautifully written family story, and a moving account of the toll of war, in the desert and at homeJenny Uglow
Damn This War is a sad and truthful fragment of modern history … Julie Hankey remembers her parents with the wisdom of her own long years, and pays them and their times due tributeThe Times Literary Supplement

ABOUT THIS BOOK

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ISBN: 9781837730377

Price: 8.99 GBP

Pages: 304

Publication date: 09/11/2023

Category: Biography & Memoir

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What's Cooking in the Kremlin

What's Cooking in the Kremlin (eBook)

A Modern History of Russia Through the Kitchen Door

Witold Szabłowski

Antonia Lloyd-Jones

'A spicy and original romp through Russian history' ROBERT SERVICE

'Poignant, comical, and in the best sense disturbing'
PAUL FREEDMAN, AUTHOR OF TEN RESTAURANTS THAT CHANGED AMERICA

'This wickedly delicious tale uncovers the secret, gustatory history of the Kremlin and will leave you begging for seconds' DOUGLAS SMITH, AUTHOR OF RASPUTIN: FAITH, POWER, AND THE TWILIGHT OF THE ROMANOVS


What's Cooking in the Kremlin
is a tale of feast and famine told from the kitchen, the narrative of one of the most complex, troubling and fascinating nations on earth.

We will travel through Putin's Russia with acclaimed author Witold Szabłowski as he learns the story of the chef who was shot alongside the Romonovs, and the Ukrainian woman who survived the Great Famine created by Stalin and still weeps with guilt; the soldiers on the Eastern front who roasted snails and made nettle soup as they fought back Hitler's army; the woman who cooked for Yuri Gagarin and the cosmonauts, and the man who ran the Kremlin kitchen during the years of plenty under Brezhnev. We will hear from the women who fed the firefighters at Chernobyl, and the story of the Crimean Tatars, who returned to their homeland after decades of exile, only to flee once Russia invaded Crimea again, in 2014.

In tracking down these remarkable stories and voices, Witold SzabÅ‚owski has written an account of modern Russia unlike any other – a book that reminds us of the human stories behind the history.



Witold Szabłowski is an award-winning Polish journalist and the critically-acclaimed author of books including Dancing Bears and How to Feed a Dictator. Szabłowski lives in Warsaw.


A spicy and original romp through Russian history through the tales and recipes of the cooks who served rulers from Nicholas II to Vladimir PutinRobert Service, Oxford University; author of A History of Modern Russia and biographies of Lenin, Stalin, Trotsky and Nicholas II
A riveting account of a uniquely sumptuous cuisine prepared in often grotesque and dangerous settings. Poignant, comical, and in the best sense disturbingPaul Freedman, Yale University; author of Ten Restaurants That Changed America
This wickedly delicious tale uncovers the secret, gustatory history of the Kremlin and will leave you begging for secondsDouglas Smith, author of Rasputin: Faith, Power, and the Twilight of the Romanovs

ABOUT THIS BOOK

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ISBN: 9781837730216

Price: 12.99 GBP

Pages: 256

Publication date: 09/11/2023

Category: Social & Cultural History

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The Age of Deer

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The Age of Deer (eBook)

Trouble and Kinship with our Wild Neighbours

Erika Howsare

A stag leaps on an ancient brooch. A doe and a fawn step across a field at first light. A pair of antlers is silhouetted by the side of a busy road.

From the earliest cave paintings to the present day, humans and deer have a long and complex history. Royal harts were the coveted quarry of European kings, while the first Americans relied on deer for everything from buckskins to arrow heads. Once hunted to the point of extinction in some parts of the world, deer numbers have exploded in recent years, causing tension between scientists and conservationists. And yet, this is our own story, as the fortune of deer is inextricably bound up with the actions that we humans take on the world around us.

Weaving together history and reportage, in The Age of Deer Erika Howsare deftly explores the relationship between our two species in the line where wildness meets humankind. It is a reminder of the poetry and violence of the natural world, from an exciting new voice in nature writing.



Erika Howsare is a writer, journalist and teacher. Her essays, reviews and interviews have appeared in publications such as the Los Angeles Review of Books and The Rumpus, and she is the author of two collections of poetry, How is Travel a Folded Form? and FILL: A Collection (with Kate Schapira). She lives in the Blue Ridge in central Virginia.


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ISBN: 9781785789489

Price: 14.99 GBP

Pages: 208

Publication date: 04/01/2024

Category: Nature & Environment

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Into the Dark

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Into the Dark (eBook)

What darkness is and why it matters

Jacqueline Yallop

'Often poetic … highly-researched and thought-provoking' New Scientist
'Gently and thoughtfully enquiring' The Spectator

Can you remember the first time you encountered true darkness? The kind that remains as black and inky whether your eyes are open or closed? Where you can't see your hand in front of your face?

Jacqueline Yallop can. It was in an unfamiliar bedroom while holidaying in Yorkshire as a child, and ever since then she has been fascinated by the dark, by our efforts to capture or avoid it, by the meanings we give to it and the way our brains process it.

Taking a journey into the dark secrets of place, body and mind, she documents a series of night-time walks, exploring both the physical realities of darkness and the psychological dark that helps shape our sense of self. Exploring our enduring love-hate relationship with states of darkness, she considers how we attempt to understand and contain the dark, and, as she comes to terms with her father's deteriorating Alzheimer's, she reflects on how our relationship to the dark can change with time and circumstance.

Darkness captivates, baffles and appals us. It's a shifty thing of many textures, many moods, a state of fascination and of horror, an absence and a presence, solace and threat, a beginning and an end. Into the Dark is the story of the many darks that fascinate and assail us. It faces the darkness full on in all its guises and mysteries, celebrating it as a thing of beauty while peering into the void.



Jacqueline Yallop is the author of three critically acclaimed novels and three works of non-fiction. She lives in West Wales and teaches creative writing at the University of Aberystwyth.


Often poetichighly-researched and thought-provoking.New Scientist
In what might seem a literally dark time in a metaphorically dark year, Yallop's book makes a welcome companion, gently and thoughtfully enquiring.The Spectator
A beautiful read, scholarly yet personal, full of ideas and yet intensely sensuous and tangible.George Szirtes
A beautifully written, deep and moving exploration of darkness, its history, its science, its cultural weight. Yallop is both lyrical and rigorous, and Into the Dark doubles as a tender and fascinating exploration of the workings and misfirings of the mind.Seán Hewitt, author of All Down Darkness Wide

ABOUT THIS BOOK

about this book

ISBN: 9781837730735

Price: 12.99 GBP

Pages: 256

Publication date: 09/11/2023

Category: Biography & Memoir, Social & Cultural History

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Eyes in the Sky

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Eyes in the Sky (eBook)

Space Telescopes from Hubble to Webb

Andrew May

Over 50 years ago, astronomers launched the world's first orbiting telescope to gaze further into outer space to examine anything that appears in the sky above our heads, from comets and planets to galaxy clusters and stars. Since then, almost 100 space telescopes have been launched from Earth and are orbiting our planet, with 26 still active and relaying information back to us.

As a result of these space-based instruments, such as NASA's iconic Hubble Space Telescope, we know much more about the universe now than we did half a century ago. But why is Hubble, orbiting just 540 kilometres above the Earth, so much more effective than a ground-based telescope? How can a glorified camera tell us not only what distant objects look like, but their detailed chemical composition and three-dimensional structure as well?

In Eyes in the Sky, science writer Andrew May takes us on a journey into space to answer these questions and more by looking at the development of revolutionary instruments, such as Hubble and the James Webb Space Telescope, exploring how such technology has helped us understand the evolution of the Universe.



Andrew May is a freelance writer and former scientist, with a PhD in astrophysics. He has written five books in Icon's Hot Science series: Destination Mars, Cosmic Impact, Astrobiology, The Space Business and The Science of Music. He lives in Somerset.


ABOUT THIS BOOK

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ISBN: 9781837731282

Price: 7.99 GBP

Pages: 176

Publication date: 18/01/2024

Category: Popular Science & Mathematics

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Narcotopia

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Narcotopia (eBook)

In Search of the Asian Drug Cartel that Outwitted the CIA

Patrick Winn




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ISBN: 9781785789748

Price: 14.99 GBP

Pages: 320

Publication date: 01/02/2024

Category: Current Affairs & Politics

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Ten Men

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Ten Men (eBook)

A Year of Casual Sex

Kitty Ruskin

Book every woman should read.




Book every woman should read.Daily Mail
A no-holds-barred account of the highs and lows of being a single woman on the modern dating scene.Sunday Times Style
Ruskin's book digs deep into honest conversations around sex, consent and vulnerability.Cosmopolitan
Ten Men offers a candid and provocative exploration of modern relationships and sexuality … With wit, humour, and vulnerability, Ruskin navigates the complexities of intimacy and desire in the digital age, inviting readers to reflect on their own experiences and attitudes towards sex and relationships. It is a bold and thought-provoking read that challenges societal norms on consent, exploitation and celebrates the power of self-discovery.Glamour
Taking on the darker side of women's lives … [Ten Men] celebrates women's sexuality but also unflinchingly reveals the truth of how women are perceived – and used – in society by men.Stylist
A really stunning non-fiction debut about casual sex, empowerment and the often dire state of modern dating … Should be required reading.Beth McColl, Everything is Content podcast
When journalist Kitty Ruskin embarks on 'a year of casual sex' she's expecting a thrilling journey of sexual discovery, but the reality is more dangerous and damaging.Red Magazine
A brave, bold book – Ruskin perfectly captures the complexity – and the risk – of sex for women today.Nichi Hodgson, author of The Curious History of Dating

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ISBN: 9781837730704

Price: 10.99 GBP

Pages: 256

Publication date: 11/04/2024

Category: Biography & Memoir

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Well Beings

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Well Beings (eBook)

How the Seventies Lost Its Mind and Taught Us to Find Ourselves

James Riley




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ISBN: 9781785787904

Price: 18.99 GBP

Pages: 384

Publication date: 28/03/2024

Category: General History

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Harpy

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Harpy (eBook)

A Manifesto for Childfree Women

Caroline Magennis

Amid a flood of sensationalist headlines about declining birth rates, Caroline Magennis's Harpy is a tonic: a tongue-in-cheek manual for dealing with Spanish Inquisition-style questioning about saying pass to procreation and building an enriching life beyond the nuclear family.




Amid a flood of sensationalist headlines about declining birth rates, Caroline Magennis's Harpy is a tonic: a tongue-in-cheek manual for dealing with Spanish Inquisition-style questioning about saying pass to procreation and building an enriching life beyond the nuclear family.Vogue
This 'manifesto for childfree women' is hilarious, brilliantly audacious and frankly overdue.iNews
A rallying cry for child-free women.Stylist

In Harpy, Caroline Magennis promises to outline the perils and pitfalls that people without children encounter in our personal and professional lives as we navigate other people's expectations. What is really unusual in this book is the way Magennis also keeps her promise to showcase some of ways one might make a life outside traditional expectations – ways of being joyful, of being singular, of being in a community that is, as she puts it, 'completely your own'.
Harpy made me nod in recognition, and shake my head with sorrow, and then it made me laugh out loud. Because life without kids in a world that expects the opposite can be challenging and sad, and it can also be hilarious. This is that rare thing, a book which captures both sides.

Emilie Pine, author of Notes to Self and Ruth & Pen

Defiant, funny and inspiring, Harpy holds open a vital space to think about alternative lives, self-invention and feminist camaraderie.Seán Hewitt, author of All Down Darkness Wide
Harpy is a measured, compassionate and truly compelling read. I've been waiting to read a book like this for such a long time. It's not often I see my own experience so honestly and respectfully reflected. I was struck by the way Magennis takes such care to share stories which often go unheard or dismissed. This book will be the catalyst for so many conversations.Jan Carson, author of The Raptures
Written with all of Caroline Magennis's characteristic refreshing candour, Harpy is a sharp, timely book about the assumptions and expectations that still keep women down, and a heartfelt vision of the freedoms that can and do enrich us. Though subtitled 'a manifesto for childfree women', this book is written for us all.Lucy Caldwell, author of These Days
Harpy is an important book, it will affirm childfree readers and open the eyes of everyone else. It's a book of clear thinking and deep feeling, I can see so many people learning from the stories in these pages, the voices of women telling us who they are. I do think parents will find themselves moved and inspired by the book, not least to ask more interesting questions of their childfree friends at dinner parties. Most importantly though, Harpy belongs to the harpies. This book is their place, for community, inspiration, and wild hopefulness.Claire Lynch, author of Small: On Motherhoods
Blending personal testimonies and factual observations, Magennis offers a uniquely positive perspective on childlessness that focuses on the inspiration that can be found in real and fictional heroines.Emma Duval (MillennialEmma)
A much-needed book on the topic of being childfree … warm, relatable and humourous.Margaret O'Connor, Are Kids For Me?
Harpy is so much more than a manifesto for childfree women, it's a celebration of us all and the amazing things we've been able to do with our lives. Weaving together Caroline's own hilarious anecdotes with the life stories of her fellow harpies, and the narratives fed to us through media and literature, this vibrant, vital book is a personal, political, and above all, positive portrayal of childfree life in the twenty-first century.Zoë Noble, Founder of We are Childfree

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ISBN: 9781837730674

Price: 13.99 GBP

Pages: 272

Publication date: 09/05/2024

Category: Biography & Memoir

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The Beacon Bike

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The Beacon Bike (eBook)

Around England and Wales in 327 Lighthouses

Edward Peppitt




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ISBN: 9781837731695

Price: 14.99 GBP

Pages: 288

Publication date: 25/04/2024

Category: Lifestyle & Travel

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The Kremlin's Noose

The Kremlin's Noose (eBook)

Vladimir Putin’s Bitter Feud with the Oligarch Who Made Him Ruler of Russia

Amy Knight




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ISBN: 9781837732227

Price: 20.00 GBP

Pages: 288

Publication date: 06/06/2024

Category: General History

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The History Lessons

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The History Lessons (eBook)

Shalina Patel




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ISBN: 9781837731633

Price: 13.99 GBP

Pages: 336

Publication date: 09/05/2024

Category: General History

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The Drummond Affair

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The Drummond Affair (eBook)

Murder and Mystery in Provence

Stephanie Matthews

Daniel Smith

The tragic murder of a British family in France in 1952 appeared an open-and-shut case. But as Stephanie Matthews and Dan Smith meticulously show it was anything but. The Drummond Affair is a serious reinvestigation full of revealing background information that sheds additional light on what was then and now remains a shocking crime.




The tragic murder of a British family in France in 1952 appeared an open-and-shut case. But as Stephanie Matthews and Dan Smith meticulously show it was anything but. The Drummond Affair is a serious reinvestigation full of revealing background information that sheds additional light on what was then and now remains a shocking crime.Paul French, author of CWA Non-Fiction Dagger award-winning Midnight in Peking
A thought-provoking examination of an intriguing murder mystery from the FiftiesMartin Edwards, award-winning crime novelist
This riveting, eye-opening reinvestigation of a 70-year-old murder mystery reads like a whodunit. Authors Stephanie Matthews and Daniel Smith sift through a mountain of intriguing evidence, line up an array of shady suspects, and dissect a flawed prosecution in their relentless search for the truth. A true crime must-read.Dean Jobb, author of The Case of the Murderous Dr. Cream

Like private investigators examining a cold case, Matthews and Smith reveal their conclusions in a cool and analytical narrative style and expose the very British Drummond's secret life that hints at possible espionage links. But this is as much social history as it is gripping true crime and the clear-eyed storytelling makes this a compelling read that lingers long after the last page has been turned.

The authors have done a remarkable job of reconstructing the story and offering a possible new solution to this terrible murder mystery.

The Drummond Affair comes on the heels of Smith's other true crime books, The Peer and the Gangster and Scandal at Dolphin Square

Jeremy Craddock, author of The Jigsaw Murders

A meticulously researched re-examination of the shocking murder of Britain's top biochemist Sir Jack Drummond, his wife Anne, and their young daughter Elizabeth, in 1950s Provence. The Drummond Affair puts the victims of this terrible crime – in which an innocent man was sentenced to the guillotine – back at the heart of the story, identifying a prime suspect, and shedding fascinating new light on Jack Drummond's heroic war time career as well as his little-known top secret government work.Caitlin Davies, author of Private Inquiries: The Secret History of Female Sleuths
The Drummond Affair strips away prejudice and propaganda to reveal a grave miscarriage of justice. A light is shone on Drummond's secret life, recasting one of the 20th century's most notorious murders in a fascinating and important new light.Historia Magazine, Historical Books to Look Out For in 2024
A stunning story of science, secrecy and a search for a killer. Stephanie Matthews and Daniel Smith's The Drummond Affair is a terrific read, thrilling and unpredictable. It seamlessly blends story and supposition with scientific and documentary precision. Set in 1950's France where Sir Jack Drummond, his wife and young daughter are murdered in the middle of the night on a quiet rural road, it asks why this internationally renowned scientist and his family have been killed. Was Gaston, the old farmer eventually accused of the murder, the killer or was it an opportunistic robbery that got out of hand or, more darkly, an organised execution? Matthews and Smith joyfully explore Drummond's wartime work for the government, his connection with big pharma and the rumours that he was involved in espionage. Could any of those have been the reason for the deaths? It's a cracking tale with a pace that twists and teases. But ultimately, do we know who killed Jack Drummond? What is the conclusion of the storytellers, and have they solved the crime? You will just have to read this fascinating and emotive true story of murder and mystery in Provence … because I'm not telling you.Phil Rowlands, author of Sienna and Single Cell
The murder of a British scientist, his wife and daughter on a country road in southern France shocked people on both sides of the Channel in 1952. Was it a simple case that Sir Jack Drummond and his family were in the wrong place at the wrong time, or was there a deeper untold story of espionage and revenge? Stephanie Matthews and Daniel Smith have come up with what is surely the definitive answer and one that is more about the victims than the murderer.Stephen Bates, author of The Poisonous Solicitor
The Drummond Affair cleverly interweaves the stories of the botched investigation of the murder of a family in the 1950s and nutritional science in the first half of the twentieth century with an attempt to uncover the truth about the life of the murder victim Sir Jack Drummond. It seems extraordinary that Sir Jack, feted by the UK and US establishments for his contributions to the discovery of vitamins, to UK nutrition in the second world war and nutrition in Europe at the end of the war, seems at the same time to have been such a murky character. His origins seem just as mysterious as his death. This book raises as many new questions as those it answers. Was there a link between Sir Jack's interest in agrochemicals and a possible involvement in chemical weapons? What else did he do in the two world wars and the early cold war? Why was he an Honorary Commander of the Royal Naval Reserve and above all what on earth was he really up to when he stopped at the roadside where he and his family were murdered? Despite all the unanswered questions this is an enthralling read and bowls along at great pace.Professor Paul Luzio, Emeritus Professor of Molecular Membrane Biology, University of Cambridge
Not only a most interesting account of the life of Sir Jack Drummond, whose work for the Ministry of Food ensured that the British nation remained well fed and nourished during the Second World War, but [it] also sheds new light on the mystery surrounding the murder of Sir Jack and his family while they were on holiday in France in 1952.Professor Sir Philip Cohen

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ISBN: 9781837730605

Price: 13.99 GBP

Pages: 288

Publication date: 06/06/2024

Category: General History

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Chain Reactions

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Chain Reactions (eBook)

A Hopeful History of Uranium

Lucy Jane Santos

Tracing uranium's past, and how it intersects with our understanding of other radioactive elements, this book aims to disentangle our attitudes and to unpick the atomic mindset.

Chain Reactions looks at the fascinating, often-forgotten, stories that can be found throughout the history of the element. Ranging from glassworks to penny stocks; medicines to weapons; something to be feared to a powerful source of energy, this global history not only explores the development of our scientific understanding of uranium, but also shines a light on its cultural and social impact.

By understanding our nuclear past, we can move beyond the ideological opposition to atomic technology and encourage a more nuanced dialogue about whether it is feasible – and desirable – to have a genuinely nuclear-powered future.



Lucy Jane Santos, author of Half Lives: The Unlikely History of Radium and Chain Reactions: A Hopeful History of Uranium, is an expert in the history of the twentieth-century with a particular interest in the cultural history of all things nuclear. She is the Executive Secretary of the British Society for the History of Science. Lucy lives in England.


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ISBN: 9781837731558

Price: 15.99 GBP

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Publication date: 04/07/2024

Category: Popular Science & Mathematics

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Weather Science

Weather Science (eBook)

How Meteorology Has Gone from Folklore to High-Tech

Brian Clegg

Everyone has an interest in the weather, whether it's to check the prospects for a day out or to know when best to harvest a crop. The Earth's weather systems also provide some of the most dramatic forces of nature, from the vast release of energy in a lightning flash to the devastating impact of tornadoes and hurricanes.

For centuries, our only real guide to future weather was folklore, but with the introduction of the first weather forecasts and maps in Victorian times, attempts were made to give some warning of the weather to come. Until relatively recently, these forecasts could be wildly inaccurate – think of Michael Fish's denial that there was a storm on the way the night before the UK's great storm of 1987. This was due to the mathematically chaotic nature of weather systems, first discovered in the 1960s, the understanding of which would transform forecasting from the 1990s and mean that meteorologists became some of the foremost users of supercomputers.

From the crystalline perfection of the snowflake to the transfer of energy from the Sun, science lies at the heart of the weather and our understanding of it. In recent years, weather science has moved to the leading edge with advanced modelling, versatile use of satellite data and a better understanding of mathematical chaos. This is a true example of hot science at work.



Brian Clegg is a popular science writer whose Dice World and A Brief History of Infinity were both longlisted for the Royal Society Prize for Science Books. He has written for publications including Nature, The Times and BBC Focus.


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ISBN: 9781837731541

Price: 8.99 GBP

Pages: 192

Publication date: 18/07/2024

Category: Popular Science & Mathematics

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Sunderland AFC

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Sunderland AFC (eBook)

The Definitive History

Rob Mason

The definitive history of Sunderland AFC.
Formed by a group of teachers nearly 150 years ago in 1879, Sunderland AFC have a long and storied history in English football. The club has won six top-flight titles, only five other teams have won more, and they have lifted the FA Cup twice – once in 1937 and once in 1973.
The Black Cats are renowned for having one of the largest and most loyal fan bases in the country, and records have regularly been broken for attendance figures at the Stadium of Light. After hitting a nadir with back-to-back demotions from the Premier League down to the third division in 2018, the club is now back on the ascendancy and plotting a return to the top-flight.
Drawing on interviews with key players, managers and staff members, esteemed club historian Rob Mason delves into Sunderland's 150-year history, charting the glorious highs and the ignominious lows to trace how the Black Cats have come to dominate football in the North-East.



Rob Mason is Sunderland AFC's official club historian. He has written many books on the club, edited their official publications for more than 30 years and won several awards. He first watched Sunderland in 1967 and has been featured on broadcasts around the world talking about the Black Cats.


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ISBN: 9781837730179

Price: 15.99 GBP

Pages: 320

Publication date: 18/07/2024

Category: Sport

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To Catch a Spy

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To Catch a Spy (eBook)

How the Spycatcher Affair Brought MI5 in from the Cold

Tim Tate




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ISBN: 9781837731183

Price: 20.00 GBP

Pages: 400

Publication date: 15/08/2024

Category: General History

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