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  • av Simon Webb
    134

    Taking you through the year day by day, The Colchester Book of Days contains quirky, eccentric, amusing and important events and facts from different periods in the history of Britain's oldest recorded town. Featuring hundreds of snippets of information gleaned from the vaults of Colchester's archives, it will delight residents and visitors alike.

  • av Neil Arnold
    179

    Tunbridge Wells is a town steeped in history - and history, of course, means ghost stories. After this creepy jaunt you'll never see this delightful town in quite the same light, so grab your candle and hold your nerve and prepare to meet a gaggle of ghouls and ghosts and other twilight terrors of Tunbridge Wells.

  • av James Marsh
    105,-

    This is not a guidebook. This little book brings together past and present to offer a taste of Southampton. Learn about the movers and shakers who shaped this fantastic town. Small wonders, tall stories, triumph and tragedy. Best places - worst places. Origins, evolution, future. Written by a local who knows what makes Southampton tick.

  • av Andrew Wright
    209

    A creepy collection of true-life tales from local writer Andrew James Wright, who regularly gives talks on the subject of hauntings in Leicester.

  • av Giles Chapman
    155

    The KdF car, a German acronym for Strength Through Joy, was conceived by Adolf Hitler's Third Reich as a true German 'people's car'.

  • av Jean A. Hooper
    215

    `I Can't Stop While There Are Lives to be Saved': The incredible story of British spy nurse Edith Cavell. Including more than 60 illustrations, and with the history of institutions such as the prisoner-of-war camps of the Napoleonic era and the slums and workhouses of the Victorian age, you'll never see the city in the same way again.

  • av Peter Higginbotham
    255,-

    For two centuries, the shadow of the workhouse hung over Britain.In the early hours of 31 August 1888, the mutilated body of Mary Ann Nichols - the first generally accepted victim of Jack the Ripper - was discovered in Buck's Row, Whitechapel, just a little way from the Whitechapel workhouse infirmary.

  • av Leicestershire Guild of Storytelling
    209

    These lively and entertaining folk tales from one of Britain's most ancient counties are vividly retold by Leicestershire Guild of Storytelling. Their origins lost in the oral tradition, these thirty stories from Leicestershire and Rutland reflect the wisdom (and eccentricities) of the counties and its people.

  • - Miners
    av Anthony Burton
    169

    Mining is Britain's oldest industry, and this book follows the men and, in the past, women who spent their lives working underground. This story is also one of invention and innovation, looking particularly at how the independent miners of Cornwall and Devon were at the forefront of the development of the steam engine that was to transform society.

  • av Dr Bruce Durie
    419

    Genealogists and local historians have probably seen every birth, marriage, death and census record available, and are adept at unsing the internet for research. However, once they have learnt everything they can from them, the next step is reading and understanding older documents.

  • av Frogg Moody
    215

    The magnificent medieval city of Salisbury is steeped in history ... and hauntings. Among those examined in Haunted Salisbury are the `Demented Whist Player' who still walks the floors of the famous Haunch of Venison, and the tragic lovesick ghost of Zeals House.

  • - Classic Liners
    av Andrew Britton
    325

    This colourful history tells the story of Cunard's RMS Queen Mary, who along with her running mate Queen Elizabeth covered the transatlantic route from Southampton to New York via Cherbourg, the British answer to the German and French superliners.

  • av Edmund Yorke
    145,-

    Kabul is a name that has had much resonance in current affairs over the last few years, however its place in military history can be charted much further back to the first British incursions into Afghanistan during the 19th century.

  • av David W Potter
    145,-

    The Celtic miscellany

  • - From He-Man to Shell Suits
    av Michael A Johnson
    135

    A nostalgic look at life growing up in the 1980s

  • av Dr Keith Souter
    145

    Golf is one of the most popular games in the world. A good round can bring great joy and satisfaction, while a bad round can end in depression, a binge at the bar, arguments with one's partner and the need for prompt evasive action by the family cat.

  • - The Corpse on the Tube and Other Stories
    av Scott Wood
    145,-

    Just like the early folk tales that came before them, which were attempts to explain the spiritual world, these tales are formed from reactions to spectacular events in the modern world, and reflect our current values.

  • - Secret Agents and Double Agents from the Second World War to the Cold War
    av Ian Dear
    145,-

    The shadowy world of supposedly legalized spying has an enduring fascination for us all. Spy and Counterspy reveals for the first time the web of spies that spanned the globe during and after the Second World War, working for organisations like MI5 & MI6, the CIA & OSS, Soviet Smersh & NKVD, Japanese Tokko and the German Gestapo.

  • av Brian Cregan
    189,-

    From the Houses of Parliament to the blighted villages of the West of Ireland, from the courtrooms of the Royal Courts of Justice to the cells of Kilmainham Gaol, this is the story of how the character of one man could alter the fate of two nations.

  • - Events, People and Places Over the 20th Century
    av Brian Evans
    185

    This fascinating selection of photographs illustrates the extraordinary transformation that has taken place in Ilford during the twentieth century. The book offers an insight into the daily lives and living conditions of local people and gives the reader glimpses and details of familiar places during a century of unprecedented change.

  • - Classic Liners
    av Andrew Britton
    325

    This colourful history covers the SS United States' active service from 1952 to 1969 when she dominated the seas of Atlantic, sweeping all rivals before her.

  • - The Transformation of Manchester City
    av Steve Mingle
    145,-

    There've been highs and lows, but the lows have been desperate and the highs restricted to minor triumphs of promotions and occasional derby wins. Meaningful silverware hasn't been delivered since 1976.Kevin Keegan looks like he's lost the will to live, let alone manage City, and the transfer kitty is bare.

  • av Dr Chris Brown
    169

    The Battle of Kohima was the turning point in the Japanese invasion of India and known as 'the Stalingrad of the East'. It was a bitter battle fought in three stages, spanning three months and ending with the siege of Imphal. If you want to understand what happened and why - read Battle Story.

  • av Martin Greaney
    215

    The landscape has had a huge impact on the history of Liverpool and Merseyside. It explains why Liverpool looks the way it does today, and how clues in the modern landscape reveal details of its long history. You'll see how the landscape created Liverpool, and how in turn Liverpool recreated the landscape.

  • av Gemma King
    139

    Take an eerie journey through the historic town of Boston, where ghostly friars still occupy the land of their thirteenth-century monastery, and where Sarah Preston's disembodied cries of `Pestilence!' can sometimes be heard as her ghostly apparition jumps from the top of St Botolph's Church.

  • - A Regency Detective Mystery 1
    av Terence James & David Lassman
    145

    To all appearances Jack Swann is a typical gentleman of the Regency period;

  • av David Phelps
    209

    Worcestershire is a county of contrasts, with one face turned to the modern buzz of Birmingham and the other turned towards the quiet rural landscape of the West Country.

  • - A Guide to Horse-Drawn Tramroads and Waggonways
    av Mark Jones
    145

    Discovering Britain's First Railways is devoted to the history, rediscovery and exploration of Britain's first railways, examining its network of over 1,500 miles of horse-drawn tramroads and waggonways.

  • av Steven Blake
    185

    Famous for its spa heritage, Regency architecture, schools and colleges and annual Festivals, Cheltenham was also once home to many notable inhabitants, including Gustav Holst, composer of 'The Planets', Edward Jenner, the pioneer of the smallpox vaccine and Edward Wilson, the Antarctic explorer.

  • - Mary Lackland and the Suffolk Witch Hunts
    av David L. Jones
    199

    The year 1645 saw the biggest witch-hunt in English history.

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