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The Last Full Measure

Hardback: August 15, 2013
Paperback: August 15, 2013

The Last Full Measure

Michael Stephenson

Category: History,

Behind every soldiers death lies a story, a tale not just of the cold mathematics of the battlefield but of an individual human being who gave his life. What psychological and cultural pressures brought him to his fate? What lies and truths convinced him to march towards his death? Covering warfare from prehistory through the present day, The Last Full Measure tells these soldiers stories, ultimately capturing the experience of war as few books ever have.

Reviews

  • A great achievement of research, perception and fine writing. Few other books have managed to convey the true experience of war with such power and clarity

    Antony Beevor

  • 'Plainly ranks among the most important works of history I've encountered over the last quarter century a comprehensive, readable, humane, moving and enlightening achievement of analysis and scholarship. This brilliant book will endure' Tim O'Brien, author of The Things They Carried and Going After Cacciato

  • 'Stephenson brings the face of battle even closer to us than John Keegan did over thirty years ago' Hew Strachan, author of The First World War and Chicele Professor of the History of War, Oxford University

Order, Order!

Hardback: June 2, 2016
Paperback: June 1, 2017

Order, Order!

Ben Wright

Category: History,

Britain’s first Prime Minister, Robert Walpole, smuggled wine up the Thames with the help of the Navy. Tony Blair confessed that a stiff drink and half a bottle of wine a night had become a helpful crutch while in office. Joseph Stalin flushed out traitors with vodka. The disintegration of Richard Nixon and Boris Yeltsin was largely down to drink. Winston Churchill was famous for his drinking, often taking a whisky and soda first thing in the morning and champagne ritually with dinner.

But why did these politicians drink and what was their tipple of choice? How did drinking shape the decisions they made? Ben Wright, political correspondent for the BBC, explores the history of alcohol within politics, from the debauched drinking practices of eighteenth-century ministers to today, often based on his own experiences supping with politicians in Westminster bars.

With exclusive interviews and in-depth research, Order, Order! uses alcohol as a lens through which to meet a remarkable cast of politicians, to understand their times and discover what drove them to drink. A story of boozy bon viveurs – but with many casualties too – and the complexity of the human condition and the pull of the bottle.

Reviews

  • 'Like being the only sober guest at an uproarious party' Sunday Times

  • 'A thoroughly enjoyable, comprehensive book' Harry Mount, Times Literary Supplement

  • 'An entertaining history of political drinking' The Times

  • 'Fast-paced and witty... unputdownable' The Lady

  • 'A corker... the dourest of Scots felt obliged to pretend to be a beer drinker, but harboured a private penchant for champagne, and could knock back a glass in one great gulp' Telegraph

  • 'An entertaining book... often funny, though not without sombre appraisals of many curtailed careers and damaged lives' Prospect

  • 'A fascinating account of politics and drink... informative and entertaining' Alistair Campbell

  • 'A breezy, anecdote-rich and instructive survey of booze and politics' The National

  • 'Well researched and breezily told, Wright's book is an enjoyable romp' New Criterion

  • 'Alcohol has always lubricated political life... [Order, Order!] is about the British experience with examples of careers enhanced and destroyed by booze' Keith Simpson MP's Summer Reading List, Total Politics

The Nine Lives of John Ogilby

Hardback: November 17, 2016
Paperback: June 13, 2019

The Nine Lives of John Ogilby

Alan Ereira

Category: History,

Four hundred years ago, every barrister had to dance because dancing put them in harmony with the universe. John Ogilby’s first job, in 1612, was to teach them. By the 1670s, he was Charles II’s Royal Cosmographer, creating beautiful measured drawings that placed roads on maps for the first time. During the intervening years, Ogilby had travelled through fire and plague, war and shipwreck; had been an impresario in Dublin, a poet in London, a soldier and sea captain, as well as a secret agent, publisher and scientific geographer. The world of his youth had been blown up and turned upside down. Beset by danger, he carefully concealed his biography in codes and cyphers, which meant that the truth about his life has remained unknown… until today.

In this enlightening book, Alan Ereira brings a fascinating hidden history to light, and reveals that Ogilby’s celebrated Britannia is far more than a harmless road atlas: it is, rather, filled with secrets designed to serve a conspiracy of kings and England’s undoing. The Nine Lives of John Ogilby is the story of a remarkable man, and of a covert journey which gave birth to the modern world.

Reviews

  • ‘A spectacular book with a wide range of insights to the 17th Century’

    Terry Jones

  • Ereira is justly proud… situates Britannia in its political context, connecting it to Charles II’s military purposes and need to crush rebellion'

    Guardian

  • ‘Compelling... a terrific subject for a biography... Ereira’s enthusiasm is infectious [and his] generous biography conveys both the irrepressible energy and the shifty elusiveness of Ogilby.’

    TLS

  • Britannia was created by a cunning Scot, to help the monarch’s absolute ascendancy over the whole of Britain. The secret is finally out.'

    Scotsman

The History of the Occult Tarot

Ebook: July 18, 2013
Paperback: July 18, 2013

The History of the Occult Tarot

Ronald Decker, Michael Dummett

Category: History,

An essential volume for the libraries of all serious students of the Tarot.

When the Tarot was invented in Italy during the early fifteenth century, it was simply a pack of cards used for playing games. Esoteric interpretations of the pack date from late eighteenth century France, and were confined to that country for a hundred years. But today the cards are used throughout the world and not only for fortune telling – for true believers they are the key to secret knowledge and the meaning of life.

A History of the Occult Tarot is the classic work on the history of the Tarot deck and its use in occult circles. Starting with the late nineteenth century, the Decker and Dummett examine how the Tarot became the favoured divination tool of occultists, a bridge to the spirit world, and a map of the unconscious. From Theosophical to Aleister Crowley to the Order of the Golden Dawn and P.D. Ouspensky, this compelling survey of the Tarot’s history describes the many fascinating decks imagined over time as well as the secret histories of mystics.

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