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  • - with a camera 1961-1964
    av Alan M. Clarke
    309

  • - New and reopened Stations and Lines from1948
    av Terry Gough and Bob Avery
    269,-

  • av Henry Conn
    319,-

    Walter Alexander was registered on May 23, 1924 and for many years was the largest bus company in Scotland. For more than 30 years the operations were divided into three areas - Southern, Fife and Northern.

  • - Visitor Guide
     
    135

  • av Chris Harris
    98

    The 3rd Parkstone troop, which came into being in 1931, was effectively a scion of the 4th Poole troop which dated from 1917. This book tells the story of 3rd Parkstone from its origins as part of 4th Poole through to the final cub meeting before closure in 2006.

  • av John C. Beckett
    319,-

  • av Bob Gordon
    149

  • - Blohm & Voss BV 155
    av Dan Sharp
    162

    Design and development of an extreme high-altitude fighter for the Luftwaffe during WW2.

  • av Mathew Willis
    159,-

    A history of the Supermarine Seafire - a naval version of the famous Spitfire.

  • av David Smith
    199

    The life and work of Britain's last railway chemists - the men who defined the 'wrong sort of leaves'.

  • - Heinkel HE 162
    av Dan Sharp
    189

    Dan Sharp analyses Germany's last-gasp WW2 Volksjäger jet fighter program.

  • av Adam Lunney
    199

    Historian Adam Lunney's authoritative account of two RAF fighter squadrons that fought through WW2.

  • av Mike Cowton
    125

    Chilling accounts of the worst crimes of the 1970s.

  • - Creation of the Great Western Railway
    av Robin Jones
    199

  • - Adventures on a Dutch Barge
    av Keith Harris
    125

    Keith Harris's anecdotes and adventures on board a narrowboat in Europe.

  • av Peter Samsonov
    189

    The design and development programmes which led to the world-beating Soviet T-34 WW2 tank.

  • av Richard Georgiou
    125

    Take one self-deprecating idiot with a sense of adventure and a sense of humour but no sense of direction, add a vindictive GPS, and you have One Man on a Bike. This book is a record of author Richard Georgioüs month-long solo trip from England to Greece and back on his motorbike. With his incredible propensity for disaster, he bumbles through Europe in his own special style attempting to absorb his surroundings while keeping his inner Mr Angry at bay. Sometimes he succeeds, sometimes he really doesn¿t. Follow Richard through his 6000-mile, little boy¿s adventure. You might be laughing with him or (more likely) at him, but by the end of the book yoüll understand a little more about what it¿s like being someone who struggles to reach the dizzy heights of average.

  • av Dan Sharp
    189

    Full profile of the legendary German Second World War fighter.

  • av Dan Sharp
    319

    A selection of exciting, intriguing and thoroughly researched stories from the last days of WW2.

  • - The RAF's F.155T/O.R. 329 Fighter Projects
    av Dan Sharp
    349

    The West was stunned when the Soviet Union dropped its first atomic bomb in August 1949 and a year later the Korean War showcased Russia's incredible technological progress in the form of the MiG-15 - a fighter capable of besting anything the RAF had to offer at that time. In the wake of the Second World War, funding for the RAF's Fighter Command had fallen away dramatically but now there was an urgent need for new jet fighters to meet the threat of Russian bombers head-on. Britain's top aircraft manufacturers, including Hawker, English Electric, Fairey, Vickers Supermarine, De Havilland, Armstrong Whitworth and Saunders-Roe, set to work on designing powerful supersonic aircraft with all-new guided missile systems capable of meeting a Soviet assault and shooting down high-flying enemy aircraft before they could unleash a devastating nuclear firestorm on British soil.The result was some of the largest, heaviest and most powerful fighter designs the world had ever seen - and a heated debate about whether the behemoths should be built at all as guided weapons became ever more advanced. This is the story of Britain's secret cold war fighter jet designs, fully illustrated with a host of drawings, illustrations and photographs.

  • - Lessons learned from tragedies on the tracks
    av Robin Jones
    199

    This is the story of how Britain¿s railway disasters, horrific though they may be, change the network for the better through the crucial lessons that are learned.It starts with fatalities on early mining tramways before the dawn of the steam age and takes the story up to the present day. While many of Britain¿s worst tragedies are covered in depth, such as Quintinshill in 1915 and Harrow & Wealdstone in 1952, the book also looks at others that had resounding consequences for safety.

  • - Discover YOUR personal path to a happier life
    av Lisa Jansen
    149

    Lisa Jansen offers a new and fresh perspective on a very popular topic: finding happiness. Instead of providing generic, one-size-fits-all advice and tactics, Lisa guides readers through an empowering journey and process that helps them design their own strategy for a happier life-based on their unique personality, values, and strengths and weaknesses.Drawing on extensive research and the author¿s personal experience of turning her life around, this book offers a real-life, jargon-free perspective on finding happiness. Written in an easy to understand, engaging way and incorporating numerous practical and fun exercises, it will be extremely attractive to anyone who is looking for new insights in finding happiness and who wants practical advice on how to live their best possible life.

  • - The Home of Rail Engineering in the North-East
    av Jonathan Webb
    109

    It is 200 years since the small town of Darlington emerged as the cradle for a rail industry that transformed travel around the globe. 19th April 1821 saw Royal Assent given for the Stockton and Darlignton Railway to be built. The single line officially opens four years later, 27th September 1825.As preparations begin for the Stockton & Darlington Railway's bicentenary in 2025, this special publication examines the important role played by the town in the invention of the railways and how, two centuries on, the nearby Hitachi factory ensures the North East is still at the heart of rail engineering technology.Despite looking to the future, Darlington has not forgotten its rail heritage. Thanks to the commitment of 21st century enthusiasts, a number of steam locomotives - the most famous of which is 60163 Tornado - are being built and preserved for future generations, putting the town well and truly back on the railway map.

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