New & noteworthy
Herba Mythica
Xanthe Gresham-Knight, Sherry Robinson (Illustrator),
Historic Building Mythbusting
James Wright,
The Invention of Charlotte Brontë
Graham Watson,
D-Day Landing Craft
Andrew Whitmarsh,
The Many Faces of Crime
Dennis W McGookin,
Queens of Bohemia
Darren Coffield,
Enemies of All
Richard Blakemore,
Labelled with Love
Andy Bollen,
How Would You Like Your Mammoth?
Uta Seeburg, Max Miller (Foreword), Ayça Türkoğlu,
Bird Tracks
John Rhyder, David Wege,
Wetland Diaries
Ajay Tegala,
Mountains before Mountaineering
Dawn L. Hollis,
Scottish Folk Tales of Coast and Sea
Tom Muir,
The Triumvirate
George Behe,
Black Yanks
Kate Werran, J. Robert Lilly (Foreword),
The Deadly Game
Will Britten,
The Prince and the Poisoner
Dan Morrison,
Captives
,
The Spinning House
Caroline Biggs,
The Princes in the Tower
Philippa Langley,
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New in paperback
A Hell of a Bomb
Stephen Flower,
Silent Village
Robert Pike,
The Hours of Richard III
Anne F. Sutton, Livia Visser-Fuchs,
Hellfire
David Fleming,
An Island’s Eleven
Nicholas Brookes,
The Last Days of the Dinosaurs
Riley Black,
Palestinians and Israelis
Michael Scott-Baumann,
Defying Vichy
Robert Pike,
The Survival of the Princes in the Tower
Matthew Lewis,
From a Rock to a Hard Place
Beverley Trounce,
John Gielgud
Gyles Brandreth,
Recent articles
5th June, 2024 in Women in History
‘I held his hand, he grasped it gratefully’
‘I remember one particularly badly injured pilot amongst the others being brought in. Because of his multiple injuries he was taken straight to the consultant surgeon for examination and treatment, but he was still conscious as he was taken to surgery. There was nothing anyone c…
30th May, 2024 in Women in History
The Invention of Charlotte Brontë
Brimming with lies, hagiography and exaggeration! Elizabeth Gaskell’s sensational 1857 biography of her friend Charlotte Brontë continues to divide historians, critics and Brontë fans over 160 years after its first publication. Some see it as a unique first-hand insight into the…
24th May, 2024 in History, Maritime
Yo-Ho-Ho and a Bottle of Rum: The curious history of pirate music
Pirates and music: I imagine what comes into your head is that haunting refrain from Robert Louis Stevenson’s Treasure Island, or perhaps the soaring chords of an orchestral film score and the thumping rhythm of a sea shanty. Maybe you think of the much later history of ‘pirate r…
30th April, 2024 in , , Women in History
The soundtrack to ‘Queens of Bohemia’
Introduction – G. Puccini, “Quando m’en vo'” La Boheme for Cello & Piano DARREN COFFIELD: Bohemian was a term used for those who lived unconventional lives, when the first Romani Gypsies appeared in sixteenth century France they were labelled bohemian and their non-conformist…
22nd April, 2024 in Military,
A tale of two court cases
The thought arrived as I was hovering inside a crowded coffee shop directly opposite the Royal Courts of Justice on the Strand. Tables and bars pulsed with suited, brief cased, device-bashing professionals; the buzz from conversation being shouted and spoken into phones and faces…
17th April, 2024 in Women in History
The legacy of Charlotte Brontë
This Sunday, 21st April marks the 208th anniversary of the birth of English novelist and poet Charlotte Brontë. While she lived only 38 years, her legacy – and her celebrity – have remained perennially present. Her 1847 novel Jane Eyre is one of the most enduring texts of the 19t…
3rd April, 2024 in Military
The attack on Épinal
And so, in the early morning of 11 May, 973 heavy bombers took off in fine weather from airfields across East Anglia. Their mission was Operation 350: to fly 500 miles across France to attack railway marshalling yards in Mulhouse, Épinal, Belfort and Chaumont, and an airfield at…
3rd April, 2024 in Folklore
Folk Tales from the Scottish coastline
When it comes to folk tales in Scotland we find that the sea plays a very important role, and it’s hardly surprising. The coastline is over 11,600 miles long, taking in all the islands, both large and small. The sea dominated the lives of so many, and the old tales reflected the…
20th March, 2024 in Natural World
For the Love of Flowers
For National Flower Day Emma Timpany author of Botanical Short Stories discusses the fascination with flowers. We humans have a universal, innate love of flowers, and go to great lengths to satisfy this desire. The worldwide flower growing industry is worth billions of pounds, an…
12th March, 2024 in ,
Vanity Fair and trailblazing on Savile Row
One day, we got a phone call from Vanity Fair saying the photographer Michael Roberts would like to shoot us on Savile Row. Michael was something of a trailblazer himself. Only a couple of years earlier, he had shot Vivienne Westwood impersonating Margaret Thatcher for the cover…
7th March, 2024 in , Women in History
Daisy Hopkins: The prostitute who fought against being imprisoned by Cambridge University
Cambridge University is internationally renowned for its ancient colleges. It is lauded for its educational excellence. But in the last quarter of the nineteenth century, infamy blighted its hallowed name. As an alarming number of courtroom dramas exposed the university’s steadfa…
19th January, 2024 in , Women in History
The Last Women of the Durham Coalfield – Hannah’s grand-daughter
This is the last book in the trilogy that started with my great great grandmother, Hannah Hall in the 1820’s as she re-located with her family to a new coal mine opening up in Hetton-le-Hole, County Durham. No-one at that time could have known the importance of that move. By 1822…
24th November, 2023 in , History, Special Editions
Solving the mystery of the Princes in the Tower
Following seven years of investigation and intelligence gathering, including archival searches around the world, Phase One of The Missing Princes Project is complete. The evidence uncovered suggests that both sons of Edward IV survived to fight for the English throne against Henr…
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