41 - 50 of 83 results

CHURCHILL'S LEGIONNAIRE EDMUND MURRAY

Book number: 94232 Product format: Hardback Author: EDITED BY BILL MURRAY

In stock

Bibliophile price £4.50
Published price £14.99


Dedicated to 'that great family of merry, mean yet magnificent mercenaries, the men of the French Foreign Legion', Edmund Murray was chosen in 1950 to protect Sir Winston Churchill MP, then Leader of the Opposition in the House of Commons. 'I was to remain with Sir Winston as his constant companion for the next 15 years, accompanying him wherever he went on land, on sea and in the air... I was just outside his bedroom when he died on 24th January 1965, leaving behind an emptiness that will never be filled.' Having written his autobiography in 1987, he decided to give much more detail about his life in the French Foreign Legion to which he signed up at aged just 19 in 1937 armed with little more than schoolboy French and a desire for a life of adventure. Murray travelled through France and on to the Legion's headquarters in Algeria where he completed a gruelling three month basic training programme. He went on to serve in Morocco and Indochina (now Vietnam) where, towards the end of the War, his regiment were forced to retreat from invading Japanese forces into China where his service ended after eight years as a Legionnaire. Throughout WW2, Murray's overwhelming sense of duty compelled him to try to leave the Legion and join the Allied forces, but he was thwarted at every attempt. He was an Englishman in a French organisation, by definition a home for 'the men with no names', where battle lines and countries' boundaries changed almost daily. He was a diplomatic puzzle, but as such his was an extraordinary wartime experience, and this book which borrows from his earlier autobiography and includes rare insights into Legion life from drills and manoeuvres to feast-days and festivals as well as accounts of friendships forged in exceptional circumstances which would last a lifetime. 151pp, colour photos, badges and decorations.

Additional product information

ISBN 9781913491253

Customers who bought this product also bought

WINSTON CHURCHILL REPORTING
Book number: 94198 Product format: Hardback Author: SIMON READ
Bibliophile price £7.00
Published price £25
LONG SHOT: My Life as A Sniper in the Fight Against ISIS
Book number: 92568 Product format: Paperback Author: AZAD CUDI
Bibliophile price £4.00
Published price £14.99
GOLDEN COMPASS: His Dark Materials Book I
Book number: 93016 Product format: Hardback Author: PHILIP PULLMAN
Bibliophile price £8.00
Published price $37.99
COMMANDO
Book number: 93214 Product format: Paperback Author: JOHN DURNFORD-SLATER
Bibliophile price £5.00
Published price £13.99
CRIMEAN LETTERS FROM THE 41st (THE WELCH) REGIMENT 1854-56
Book number: 93217 Product format: Hardback Author: MAJOR-GENERAL WILLIAM ALLAN,
Bibliophile price £1.50
Published price £18.99
WAR & TRAUMA
Book number: 93972 Product format: Paperback Author: PIET CHIELENS & P. ALLEGAERT
Bibliophile price £12.00
Published price £25

Browse these categories as well: War Memoirs, Historical Biography

REGICIDE: The Trials of Henry Marten

Book number: 94245 Product format: Hardback Author: JOHN WORTHEN

In stock

Bibliophile price £6.50
Published price £20


Henry Marten, soldier, member of Parliament, organiser of the trial of Charles I and signatory of the King's Death Warrant, is today a neglected figure of the 17th century. Yet his life was both extraordinary and emblematic. He was at the fulcrum of English history during the turbulent years of the Civil War, the Protectorate and the Restoration. Imprisoned in the Tower of London and tried at the Old Bailey, Marten was found guilty of High Treason, only to be held captive for years on the equivalent of death row. It was while he was in prison that his letters to his mistress Mary Ward were stolen and published in an attempt to destroy his reputation. Witty, clever, loving, sardonic and never despairing, the letters offer a rare and extraordinary insight into the everyday life of a man in the Tower of London awaiting a sentence of death. The attempt to expose him as immoral revealed him instead as a tender and brave man. In this revelatory biography, he emerges as a clever, lively-minded man, free of the fundamentalist zeal so common in many of his republican contemporaries. Marten never abandoned his beliefs in equality, in a representative Parliament under a Constitution (which he had helped to write) without a monarch or a House of Lords, and in that way can be seen as a very modern man. 'A deeply researched and convincing portrait of the later years of one of the most remarkable radical politicians in British history.' - Ronald Hutton. It also reminds us that not all regicides were soldier puritans, and that some men believed in a republic before the Civil War started. Illustrated, 214pp.

Additional product information

ISBN 9781913368357

Customers who bought this product also bought

HISTORY OF WATER: Being an Account of a Murder, an Epic
Book number: 94166 Product format: Hardback Author: EDWARD WILSON-LEE
Bibliophile price £7.00
Published price £25
TUDORS AND EUROPE
Book number: 93967 Product format: Hardback Author: JOHN MATUSIAK
Bibliophile price £9.50
Published price £20
ACCIDENTAL GODS
Book number: 94224 Product format: Hardback Author: ANNA DELLA SUBIN
Bibliophile price £4.00
Published price £20
IRISH ASSASSINS
Book number: 93879 Product format: Paperback Author: JULIE KAVANAGH
Bibliophile price £3.50
Published price £12.99
FEDERALIST PAPERS
Book number: 94131 Product format: Paperback Author: R. B. BERNSTEIN
Bibliophile price £6.00
RISE OF THE HELLENISTIC KINGDOMS, 336-250 BC
Book number: 93953 Product format: Hardback Author: PHILIP MATYSZAK
Bibliophile price £12.50
Published price £19.99

Browse these categories as well: Crime, Historical Biography, History

TWO-WAY MIRROR: The Life of Elizabeth Barrett Browning

Book number: 94251 Product format: Paperback Author: FIONA SAMPSON

In stock

Bibliophile price £5.00
Published price £9.99


A beautifully told award winning biography, the first full study for over 30 years which incorporates recent archival discoveries to reveal more about Elizabeth Barrett Browning. She famously wrote 'How do I love thee? Let me count the ways', shortly before defying her family by running away to Italy with Robert Browning. But behind the romance of her extraordinary life stands a thoroughly modern figure. Born in 1806, a time when women could neither attend university nor vote, Elizabeth achieved lasting literary fame and remains Britain's greatest woman poet whose work has inspired writers from Emily Dickinson to George Eliot and Virginia Woolf. Here is the woman as a literary giant and high-profile activist for the abolition of slavery who believed herself to be of mixed heritage, and a writer who defied chronic illness and long term disability to change the course of cultural history. The book holds up a mirror to the woman, her work and the art of biography in itself and a life that remains an electrifying study in self invention. Sampson makes a convincing claim that EBB was the first female lyric poet and her point is that Aurora Leigh provides us with a model for understanding how EBB forged a new relationship between female subjectivity and public utterance. 322pp, paperback, colour illus.

Additional product information

ISBN 9781788162081

Customers who bought this product also bought

HOW TO TEACH CLASSICS TO YOUR DOG
Book number: 94239 Product format: Paperback Author: PHILIP WOMACK
Bibliophile price £2.75
Published price £9.99
VOLUNTARY COVER PRICE BIBLIOPHILE CATALOGUE
Book number: 000008 Product format: Unknown Author: Unknown
Bibliophile price £1.00
INTO THE ABYSS: The Story of the First World War Volume One
Book number: 92672 Product format: Paperback Author: G. J. MEYER
Bibliophile price £7.00
Published price £16.99
HORROR OF LOVE: Nancy Mitford and Gaston Palewski
Book number: 93021 Product format: Hardback Author: LISA HILTON
Bibliophile price £2.25
Published price $26.95
LIBRARY OF MISREMEMBERED BOOKS
Book number: 93826 Product format: Hardback Author: MARINA LUZ
Bibliophile price £4.00
Published price £9.99
TUTANKHAMUN AND THE PUZZLES OF ANCIENT EGYPT
Book number: 93968 Product format: Paperback Author: GARETH MOORE
Bibliophile price £4.00
Published price $12.99

Browse these categories as well: Last Chance to buy!, Feminism, Historical Biography

MISS DIOR: A Wartime Story of Courage and Couture

Book number: 94501 Product format: Paperback Author: Justine Picardie

In stock

Bibliophile price £7.50
Published price £20


Brilliantly contrasting the Old World of wartime France with the hopeful New World epitomised by Christian Dior's New Look, the book revolves around his younger sister Catherine Dior, a Resistance heroine. Picardie explores the relationship between the visionary designer and his beloved sister who inspired his most famous perfume and shaped his vision of femininity. Picardie's journey takes her to wartime Paris, where Christian honed his couture skills while Catherine dedicated herself to the French Resistance and the battle against the Nazis, until she was captured by the Gestapo and deported to the German concentration camp of Ravensbrück. Catherine's story shines - the quiet Dior who preferred flowers to fashion, the unsung heroine who survived the abuse of the Third Reich to help liberate France. The final section of the book covers in depth the British royal family including a wonderful full page colour photograph of Princess Margaret wearing her Dior gown for her 21st birthday portrait in 1951, photographed by Cecil Beaton. Packed with archive and colour photographs, fashion shoots, illustrations, dress designs, the salon of the Worth Couture House Paris 1910 and even a doll with a shaved head made by a prisoner at Ravensbrück, contrasting the exhaustion, starvation and torment by thirst and abusive guards and snarling dogs with fashion and wealth. 438pp in large softback 17.4 x 23.5cm beautifully designed and extremely well illustrated throughout in both colour and black and white.

Additional product information

ISBN 9780571356539

Customers who bought this product also bought

POP-UP PALACE PETS AND OTHER ROYAL BEASTS
Book number: 94070 Product format: Hardback Author: RACHAEL SAUNDERS
Bibliophile price £2.50
Published price £6.99
PEACOCK BALL POINT FEATHER PEN
Book number: 94926 Product format: Unknown Author: LANGKONGQUE
Bibliophile price £9.99
UNCOMMON PEOPLE: The Rise and Fall of The Rock Stars
Book number: 94851 Product format: Paperback Author: David Hepworth
Bibliophile price £6.00
Published price £10.99
SPLENDID AND THE VILE
Book number: 94572 Product format: Paperback Author: ERIK LARSON
Bibliophile price £6.00
Published price £10.99
TALL TALES AND WEE STORIES
Book number: 94194 Product format: Hardback Author: BILLY CONNOLLY
Bibliophile price £8.00
Published price £20
SPHINX: The Life of Gladys Deacon, Duchess of Marlborough
Book number: 94324 Product format: Paperback Author: HUGO VICKERS
Bibliophile price £5.00
Published price £10.99

Browse these categories as well: Historical Biography, War Memoirs

THOMAS PAINE'S RIGHTS OF MAN

Book number: 94505 Product format: Paperback Author: Christopher Hitchens

In stock

Bibliophile price £5.00
Published price £9.99


Ten years since the death of the world renowned and controversial intellectual, this stylish edition is one of 12 commemorating Christopher Hitchens' most wry and provocative works. Thomas Paine was one of the greatest advocates of freedom in history, and his Declaration of the Rights of Man, first published in 1791, is the key to his reputation. Inspired by his outrage at Edmund Burke's attack on the French Revolution, Paine's text is a passionate defence of man's inalienable rights. It has been celebrated, criticised, maligned, suppressed and co-opted, and forms the philosophical cornerstone of the first democratic republic whose revolution is the only example that still speaks to us - the United States of America. Hitchens marvels at the book's forethought and revels in its contentiousness and this brilliant portrait is an attractive introduction to Paine's life and work as a whole. 158pp, paperback.

Additional product information

ISBN 9781838952259

We also recommend

HITCH IN TIME: Writings from the London Review of Books
Book number: 94492 Product format: Paperback Author: Christopher Hitchens
Bibliophile price £5.75
Published price £12.99
BLOOD, CLASS AND EMPIRE
Book number: 94494 Product format: Paperback Author: Christopher Hitchens
Bibliophile price £5.00
Published price £12.99

Customers who bought this product also bought

FREEDOM: The Overthrow of the Slave Empires
Book number: 92419 Product format: Hardback Author: JAMES WALVIN
Bibliophile price £1.50
Published price $27.95
NO TRADESMEN AND NO WOMEN
Book number: 93296 Product format: Hardback Author: MICHAEL COOLICAN
Bibliophile price £3.50
Published price £20
THE BOYS: A Memoir of Hollywood and Family
Book number: 93602 Product format: Hardback Author: RON HOWARD & CLINT HOWARD
Bibliophile price £2.50
Published price £18.99
WHERE'S WALLY? EXCITING EXPEDITIONS
Book number: 93740 Product format: Paperback Author: MARTIN HANDFORD
Bibliophile price £3.00
Published price £7.99
LEGENDS OF KING ARTHUR AND HIS KNIGHTS
Book number: 94142 Product format: Paperback Author: SIR JAMES KNOWLES
Bibliophile price £9.99
STRANGE SURVIVAL OF LIBERAL BRITAIN
Book number: 94248 Product format: Hardback Author: VERNON BOGDANOR
Bibliophile price £9.00
Published price £35

Browse these categories as well: Historical Biography, History

MR ATKINSON’'S RUM CONTRACT

Book number: 94313 Product format: Paperback Author: RICHARD ATKINSON

In stock

Bibliophile price £4.00
Published price £9.99


Sub-titled 'The Story of a Tangled Inheritance', what would you do if you found out that your ancestors were slave owners? Richard Atkinson was in his late 30s and approaching a milestone he had long dreaded, the age at which his father died, when one day he came across a box of old family letters gathering dust on top of a cupboard. This discovery set him on an all-consuming, highly emotional journey, ultimately taking him from the weather-beaten house of his Cumbrian ancestors to the abandoned ruins of their sugar estate in Jamaica. His search has led him to one forebear in particular, an earlier Richard Atkinson, a West India merchant who had shipped all the British army's supplies during the American War of Independence, and amassed staggering wealth and connections along the way. 'Rum' Atkinson died young, at the height of his powers, leaving a vast inheritance to his many nephews and nieces, as well as the society beauty who had refused his proposal of marriage. Described as 'a real page-turner, the subject matter is Georgian-era merchants, early merchant banks, the American War of Independence, slavery, trade, war with France, sugar and abolition', and defying classification, this is part political thriller and definitely a history of what could be described as a British Alexander Hamilton figure. 502pp including historical line art and colour photos and other images.

Additional product information

ISBN 9780007509232

Customers who bought this product also bought

FAMILY BUSINESS: An Intimate History of John Lewis
Book number: 92840 Product format: Hardback Author: VICTORIA GLENDINNING
Bibliophile price £5.00
Published price £20
RESOLUTION: Two Brothers, a Nation in Crisis, a World at War
Book number: 92937 Product format: Hardback Author: DAVID RUTLAND & EMMA ELLIS
Bibliophile price £2.75
Published price £30
EXPOSURE
Book number: 93491 Product format: Hardback Author: HELEN DUNMORE
Bibliophile price £4.25
Published price $25
LITTLE BOOKROOM
Book number: 93401 Product format: Paperback Author: ELEANOR FARJEON
Bibliophile price £4.00
Published price $12.99
DR WHO: 100 ILLUSTRATED ADVENTURES
Book number: 93454 Product format: Hardback Author: EDITED BY RICHARDS AND GREEN
Bibliophile price £10.00
Published price £20
QUEEN VICTORIA AND THE EUROPEAN EMPIRES
Book number: 93770 Product format: Paperback Author: JOHN VAN DER KISTE
Bibliophile price £8.50
Published price £20

Browse these categories as well: Historical Biography, History

ROARING GIRLS

Book number: 94319 Product format: Paperback Author: HOLLY KYTE

In stock

Bibliophile price £3.75
Published price £10.99


A Roaring Girl was loud when she should be quiet, disruptive when she should be submissive, sexual when she should be pure, 'masculine' when she should be 'feminine'. Meet the unsung heroines of British history who refused to play by the rules. Bold and inspiring, Holly Kyte has selected the game changing life stories of eight formidable women whose grit, determination whose grit, determination and radical unconventionality saw them defy the odds to forge their own paths. From the notorious cross-dressing thief Mary Frith in the 17th century, rebel slave Mary Prince, Caroline Norton who fought her repulsive husband, adventurer, industrialist and LGBT trailblazer Anne Lister aka Gentleman Jack in the 19th century, Mad Madge Margaret Cavendish, old maid Mary Astell, cavalier Charlotte Charke, the Amazon Hannah Snell. 462pp, well illustrated paperback.

Additional product information

ISBN 9780008423148

Customers who bought this product also bought

HENRY VIII: The Evolution of A Reputation
Book number: 93761 Product format: Paperback Author: KEITH DOCKRAY
Bibliophile price £2.75
Published price £14.99
SHADOWY THIRD: Love, Letters, and Elizabeth Bowen
Book number: 94743 Product format: Paperback Author: Julia Parry
Bibliophile price £5.00
Published price £10.99
WISDOM OF TREES
Book number: 94113 Product format: Hardback Author: MAX ADAMS
Bibliophile price £8.50
Published price £14.99
ENID
Book number: 94497 Product format: Paperback Author: Robert Wainwright
Bibliophile price £5.00
Published price £10.99
PERMANENT MARKERS Pack of 8
Book number: 94481 Product format: Unknown Author: JUST STATIONERY
Bibliophile price £5.00
ASSASSIN'S RIDDLE
Book number: 94281 Product format: Paperback Author: PAUL DOHERTY
Bibliophile price £5.00
Published price £8.99

Browse this category: Historical Biography

SPHINX: The Life of Gladys Deacon, Duchess of Marlborough

Book number: 94324 Product format: Paperback Author: HUGO VICKERS

In stock

Bibliophile price £5.00
Published price £10.99


One of the most beautiful and brilliant women of her time, Gladys Deacon dazzled and puzzled the glittering social circles in which she moved. Born in Paris to American parents in 1881, she emerged from a traumatic childhood - her father having shot her mother's lover dead when Gladys was only 11 - to captivate and inspire some of the greatest literary and artistic names of the Belle Epoque. Marcel Proust wrote of her, 'I never saw a girl with such beauty, such magnificent intelligence, such goodness and charm.' Berenson considered marrying her, Rodin and Monet befriended her, Boldini painted her, and Epstein sculpted her. She inspired love from diverse dukes and princes and the interest of women such as Gertrude Stein. In 1921 when Gladys was 40, she achieved the wish she had held since the age of 14 to marry the 9th Duke of Marlborough, then freshly divorced from his fellow American Consuelo Vanderbilt. Gladys's circle now included Lady Ottoline Morrell, Lytton Strachey and Winston Churchill who described her as 'a strange, glittering being'. But life at Blenheim was not a success. When the Duke evicted her in 1933, the only remaining signs of Gladys were two sphinxes bearing her features on the west terraces and mysterious blue eyes in the grand portico. She became a recluse, and the wax injection she had to straighten her nose when she was 22 had by now ravaged her beauty. Gladys was to spend her last years in the psych-geriatric ward of a mental hospital, where she was discovered by a young Hugo Vickers. Intrigued and compelled to unmask the truth of her mysterious life, he visited her over the course of two years and eventually published this marvellous biography, his first book, in 1979, two years after Gladys's death. 40 years on, he has now completely rewritten and revised his original biography, updating it with previously unavailable material. We enter the heady world of the upper classes at a time of great social, artistic and political change. 388pp, paperback with photos.

Additional product information

ISBN 9781529390742

Customers who bought this product also bought

HOW TO TRAIN YOUR DRAGON
Book number: 94435 Product format: Hardback Author: CRESSIDA COWELL
Bibliophile price £6.00
Published price £12.99
JAZZ & BLUES ENCYCLOPEDIA: New and Expanded Edition
Book number: 94774 Product format: Hardback Author: JEFF WATTS & HOWARD MANDEL
Bibliophile price £11.00
Published price £20
TELLER OF THE UNEXPECTED: The Life of Roald Dahl
Book number: 94884 Product format: Hardback Author: MATTHEW DENNISON
Bibliophile price £6.50
Published price £20
HISTORY OF ROCK 'N' ROLL IN TEN SONGS
Book number: 94538 Product format: Paperback Author: GREIL MARCUS
Bibliophile price £4.75
Published price £12.99
CHUNKY: The Best Bits from Acorn Antiques to Kitty
Book number: 94853 Product format: Hardback Author: Victoria Wood
Bibliophile price £12.00
Published price £25
SHADOWY THIRD: Love, Letters, and Elizabeth Bowen
Book number: 94743 Product format: Paperback Author: Julia Parry
Bibliophile price £5.00
Published price £10.99

Browse this category: Historical Biography

WINSTON CHURCHILL REPORTING

Book number: 94198 Product format: Hardback Author: SIMON READ

In stock

Bibliophile price £7.00
Published price £25


Blending biography and history this is a highly readable account of Winston Churchill's adventures as a young war correspondent from the jungles of Cuba and the mountains of the North-West Frontier to the banks of the Nile and the plains of South Africa. Enthralled by combat, cigars and whisky, young Winston showed extraordinary courage and tenacity under fire. He was the brazen foreign correspondent covering wars of empire in Cuba, India, the Sudan, and South Africa and in those far-flung corners of the world he reported from the front lines between 1895 and 1900. He mastered his celebrated command of language and formed strong opinions about war. He thought little of his own personal safety, so convinced was he of his destiny, jumping at any chance to be where bullets flew and canons roared. Based on his private letters and war reportage, the book intertwines young Winston's daring exploits in combat, adventures, and rise as a major literary talent, experiences that shaped the world leader he was to become. The huge public interest generated by his South African activities, his capture and subsequent escape provided the final boost Churchill needed to edge his way as a Conservative into the formerly Liberal parliamentary seat of Oldham. 309 exciting pages, photos.

Additional product information

ISBN 9780306823817

Customers who bought this product also bought

CHURCHILL'S LEGIONNAIRE EDMUND MURRAY
Book number: 94232 Product format: Hardback Author: EDITED BY BILL MURRAY
Bibliophile price £4.50
Published price £14.99
CHURCHILL: The True Story DVD and Magazine
Book number: 94391 Product format: Unknown Author: DANANN PUBLISHING
Bibliophile price £4.00
Published price £14.99
CHURCHILL'S SHADOW RAIDERS
Book number: 93757 Product format: Hardback Author: DAMIEN LEWIS
Bibliophile price £7.00
Published price £22
GRUB STREET: The Origins of The British Press
Book number: 93863 Product format: Hardback Author: RUTH HERMAN
Bibliophile price £4.50
Published price £20
HAPPY DOGGIES: A5 Spiral Bound Notebook
Book number: 93811 Product format: Hardback Author: PAGE PUBLICATIONS
Bibliophile price £5.00
Published price $15.99
JANE AUSTEN NOTEBOOK
Book number: 93822 Product format: Unknown Author: ABRAMS NOTERIE & ANITA RUNDLES
Bibliophile price £3.50
Published price £11.99

Browse these categories as well: War Memoirs, War & Militaria, History, Historical Biography

ROMULUS: The Legend of Rome's Founding Father

Book number: 94419 Product format: Hardback Author: MARC HYDEN

In stock

Bibliophile price £9.00
Published price £25


Most of us learned in schooldays that Romulus was the son of a god; he was left for dead until a she-wolf rescued him; sometime later, he murdered his brother Remus and ultimately established Rome. Few people know much more about Rome's purported founding father than this because historians have in large part disregarded him and there are at least 60 different extant histories of Rome's founding. The book is presented not as history but as the myth that later Romans knew well and the kernel of truth within the Romulus legend. Born to a Vestal Virgin and left for dead as an infant near the Tiber River, his early life nearly ended as quickly as it began. A humble shepherd rescued the child and helped raise him into manhood. As Romulus grew older, he fearlessly engaged in a series of perilous adventures that ultimately culminated in Rome's founding, and he became its fabled first king. Establishing a new city had its price, and Romulus was forced to defend the nascent community. He tirelessly safeguarded Rome and proved that he was a competent leader and talented general, yet he also harboured a dark side which tainted his legacy. But despite all his misdeeds, redemption and subsequent triumphs were usually within his grasp. 'A delicious book that will satisfy any Roman/Latin language lover.' 284pp, maps.

Additional product information

ISBN 9781526783172
Browse these categories as well: History, Historical Biography
41 - 50 of 83 results