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I read a lot of books about running. I mean a lot. Books that tell you how to train, what to eat, how to run faster, how to run further, how not to get injured, how to discover the meaning of life by running through the desert for seven days solid, how you should stop just running and take up triathlon instead. This book doesn't do any of those things. But it does make you laugh and it does make you cry. And if you are a woman (or, indeed a man) who thinks that even running for the bus is beyond you then it might just change your mind. - Janette |
Ronald Reng Delivery: To home, business or free to our stores. Click for more info. | £16.99 | £12.40 | 27% |   Despatched in 1 business day. |  Add to Basket | Click & Collect: Order now to collect from 11am tomorrow. In stock items only. Click for more info. | £16.99 | £14.44 | 15% |   Currently out of stock in all stores. | Stores - out of stock | New & Used: Our marketplace sellers will deliver to your chosen address. Click for more info. | | | |   Currently unavailable | Currently unavailable |
After the bewildering death of Gary Speed, this William Hill prizewinner is all the more poignant, shedding light upon the 'supermen' of Sport who have to hide their shortcomings and exposing a disease which is rife but shamefully buried in this high-performance world. An artful telling of Robert Enke's struggle expressed through words drenched in sorrow, which still manages to retain a stance of composed reverie throughout. This also covers the reunification of Germany and how that affected its citizens in a myriad of physical and emotional ways. A worthy winner of 2012's top sports book prize. - Benjamin |
Don’t waste your time with the countless biographical rehashings of David Bowie’s career. If you want to understand what transformed ordinary David Jones into rock god David Bowie and how he came to create some of 20th century’s most memorable and influential music, there really is no better book on Bowie than this: it’s the Bowie fan’s bible. Even if the level of detail is more than the casual fan might be looking for, Pegg’s engaging style makes the book as entertaining as it is enlightening: He describes Bowie’s late-period reclamation in concert of ‘Fame’ as a “prowling monster”, “speeding ambient funk” is a delicious description of 1995 album track 'The Voyeur of Utter Desturction (as Beauty)' and his comment that the discovery of any extant recording of Bowie’s early performances of ‘Chim Chim Cheree’ would “blow ‘The Laughing Gnome' out of the water” is hilariously true. - Jonathan |
The metamorphosis of a former creative writing student from quirky correspondent to malevolent stalker, bent on destroying James Lasdun's life, offers vital lessons in the digital age. Lasdun visits the setting for his favourite DH Lawrence novel and the controversial architectural project in Jerusalem that saw his father subjected to anti-Semitic insults, but his meditations on literature are constantly dragged back to the real world by the relentless vitriol of his tormentor. This elegant, self-questioning memoir recounts a shocking story, contrasting the wonder and fear the written word can invoke. - Jonathan |
Virginia Woolf; Sandra M. Gilbert;... A novel that sweeps across 400 years of English history, following the extraordinary life of its hero (later, heroine), Orlando; it's littered with the sort of heart-breaking Woolf-ish vignettes that I love so much in her other works, but this is not your average Woolf novel - it's a playful and genuinely fun read that I would recommend to anyone, even those who have been put off Woolf for life after attempting The Waves. - Gayle |
Friedrich Lindau; Andrew Uffindel More than 150 years after its first publication in German, this English translation of Frederich Lindau’s memoirs is long overdue. The recollections of Lindau were not recorded until 30 years after the events and were dictated to his pastor, Franz Schläger, who wrote the foreword.
The title is slightly misleading, given that the book covers not only Waterloo but the whole period 1809- 1815. It is a first-hand account of a King's German Legion soldier who escaped from Germany in 1809. Lindau served with distinction under Wellington and was involved in numerous major engagements, including Albuera, Badajoz, Salamanca, Vittoria, San Sebastian, Nivelle, and Nive. For his efforts, he was awarded the Guelphic Medal, the Waterloo Medal, and the Bronze Medal of Merit.
This account is entirely unique, as no other private soldiers took part in so many engagements and recorded their experiences.
Reprinted with permission by www.military-times.co.uk
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Daniel Farson and Francis Bacon led equally scandalous lives. Farson, a journalist, photographer and broadcaster, was (as a boy of ten) patted on the head by Adolf Hitler, spent a lifetime obsessing over the true identity of Jack the Ripper, and had Bram Stoker for a great-uncle. Francis Bacon, painter and bon-vivant, single-handedly turned the British art scene on its head. Luckily for us the two were friends. Farson paints a riveting word-picture of sixties Soho, making this an essential read for anyone who loves London as well as those who seek a deeper understanding of Bacon’s art.
- Nina |
Dave Robert's love letter to his hoarding affliction manages that rare feat of being nostalgic for the now. Detailing what it's like to feel like the obsessive loser, for those that have never quite 'made it' and are looking for solace in belonging to something or anything. This is a charming account of not only an incorrigible football nut, but a struggler. It will speak to any fanatic who has travelled six hours to Northampton or wherever to see their team lose 1-0 in the sodding drizzle with no attempts on goal. And still loved it! A pleasant antidote to the masses of books being produced upon the corpulent Premier League circus that equates 'football' today. Disclaimer: This was written by a QPR fan. - Benjamin |
David Edmonds; John Eidinow If you think chess is the ultimate yawnfest think again. Bobby Fischer Goes to War has all the intrigue, excitement and doublethink of a Cold War spy thriller. Culminating in the legendary ‘shoot out’ in Reykjavik in 1972, this superbly written account follows the lives and careers of two boy geniuses, Bobby Fischer and Boris Spassky, and the devious political chess game between the nuclear superpowers that was played out around them. No previous knowledge of chess is required to enjoy this book – but don’t be surprised if you’re addicted to the game by the time you finish it. - Nina |
A an exquisitely designed, giant (45x 35cm) limited edition collectible: the definitive tribute to the greatest footballer the world has ever known, limited to 2500 copies globally, each numbered and personally hand-signed by Pele. - Sport Dept. |
Desperate to join the RAF from the age of 12, Tom Neil makes no bones about the fact that the war was 'a very exciting business for a 19-year-old'. He acknowledges in the foreword to this, his sixth book on his experiences as a fighter pilot, that some may consider his approach to such a grave subject as too light-hearted, his tone too buoyant. Rather than apologising, he maintains that 'youth sees great humour in almost everything – even destruction and death'.
These words set the tone for this war memoir: conversational, often stream of consciousness, skipping between past and present tense as if Neil’s flashbacks are vivid enough to bring the moment back into being. The text is scattered with exclamations from his teenage self – 'Crikey! My first solo in a Spit! Electrifying! Wonderful!' – and he is self-deprecating and honest about the crippling fear of battle. Nearly 65 pages of glossy photographs and diagrams include copies of touching log-book entries: 'My first flight. Nearly died of shock'. Later, 'We lost half squadron… I was very, very scared.'
Few World War II fighter pilots reached their 50th combat mission. Tom Neil flew 141. Granted the Distinguished Flying Cross, awarded for 'an act or acts of valour, courage or devotion to duty whilst flying in active operations against the enemy', he shot down 13 enemy aircraft, earning himself the title of 'Ace'. On this he is characteristically modest, saying only that all the fighters 'simply did the best we could'.
Neil is now 89 years old, and has outlived all of his squadron but one. As such, he was determined to write this Battle of Britain memoir as the ranks of 'The Few' gradually diminish, keen that the story of their efforts and achievement remains fresh. This volume is the second reprint of the original Gun Button to Fire, published in 1987 and now very scarce. The bulk of his material came from the discovery of over 600 letters, the extensive correspondence between Neil and his parents during the five years he flew in World War II, which Neil found when clearing his family home in the 1970s.
New information has seen the epilogue updated. Neil notes it as extraordinary that, although he knew some of the men he fought alongside for only a few days or weeks, he remembers the smallest details of their tastes and idiosyncrasies. The epilogue describes each of his colleagues and friends from this period, both then and, if they survived, since. Irreverent, honest, but always affectionate, his respect for each and every one reflects back onto his own achievements.
Chosen for his 6'4" stature and good looks, Neil was featured in a Ministry of Information propaganda booklet on the Battle of Britain. He was also part of some of the most widely circulated and easily recognisable of the Battle of Britain photographs - distributed amongst Luftwaffe pilots as a representation of the type of RAF pilot they were up against. An icon of the battle as well as one of its most successful pilots, he is uniquely qualified to tell a story that is both the ultimate military epic and also distinctly personal.
Reprinted with permission by www.military-times.co.uk |
A beautifully written account of early American life focussing on this intriguing figure at the centre of the Salem Witch Trials. Thoroughly enjoyable.
- Gary |