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Black Victorians

black victorians cover
black victorians cover

Ebook: September 22, 2022
Hardback: September 22, 2022
Paperback: September 14, 2023

Black Victorians

Keshia N. Abraham, John Woolf

Category: History,

Beyond the patrician vision of Victorian Britain traditionally advanced in our textbooks, there always existed another, more diverse Britain, populated by people of colour marking achievements both ordinary and extraordinary.

In this deeply researched and dynamic history, Woolf and Abraham reach into the archives to recentre our attention on marginalised Black Victorians, from leading medic George Rice to political agitator William Cuffay to abolitionists Henry ‘Box’ Brown and Sarah Parker Remond; from pre-Raphaelite muse Fanny Eaton to renowned composer Samuel Coleridge-Taylor. While acknowledging the paradoxes of Victorian views of race, Black Victorians demonstrates, with storytelling verve and a liberatory impulse, how Black people were visible and influential, firmly rooted in British life.

Reviews

  • ‘The history of Black people in this country is woven into the tapestry that is the United Kingdom. Black Victorians shows us, in vivid detail, how Black people didn't just take part in the Victorian era, they shaped it’ David Lammy MP, author of Tribes

  • ‘Meatily researched and illuminating... [brings] to swaggering life a group of Britons who have spent too long in the shadows’ Susie Goldsbrough, The Times

  • ‘An important survey of the subject based on painstaking research. Woolf and Abraham's Black Victorians: Hidden in History provides an indispensable introduction to the subject told through the lives of some of the most eminent personalities of the era, as well as those hitherto little known. A significant contribution to the field’ Hakim Adi

  • 'This book will generate discussion and change mindsets. It is brilliant’ Dr Maggie Semple OBE

  • ‘The book's telling details are liberating for, in spite of the Black Victorians' subjection and degradation, they are presented not as victims, but rather as resourceful, inventive, assertive human beings in their quests for betterment. Their cumulative experiences are skilfully woven into an engaging, richly textured book – an insightful work of scholarship’ Ron Ramdin, author of The Making of the Black Working Class in Britain

  • ‘Fascinating, thorough, well-researched and extremely readable, Black Victorians provides invaluable insight into a history of Victorian Britain that is not often told’ Hafsa Zayyan, author of We Are All Birds of Uganda

  • ‘Engaging, informative and accessible, Black Victorians shines a light on a little-known aspect of British history. It is written with passion and attention to detail. I highly recommend this book’ Stephen Bourne, author of Black Poppies: Britain's Black Community and the Great War

  • ‘Revelatory. Exposing whitewashing, tackling archival obfuscation, and returning little known figures to history, this book restores colour to our vision of Victorian Britain’ Suzannah Lipscomb, author of What is History, Now?

  • 'An important contribution to the history of Africans in Britain… Abraham and Woolf are truly to be applauded’ Onyeka Nubia, author and Assistant Professor of History, Nottingham University

  • 'Read this book and learn; it’s time to rewrite the narrative and redress the balance of the Black British presence in our histories… Extremely powerful’ Duwaine Brown and Pauline Foster, Islington Black History Working Group

In Ordinary Time

in ordinary time carmel mc mahon
in ordinary time carmel mc mahon

Ebook: February 2, 2023
Hardback: February 2, 2023
Paperback: February 1, 2024

In Ordinary Time

Carmel Mc Mahon

Category: Memoir & Biography,

In 1993, aged twenty, Carmel Mc Mahon left Ireland for New York, carrying two suitcases and a ton of unseen baggage. It took years, and a bitter struggle with alcohol addiction, to unpick the intricate traumas of her past and present.

Candid yet lyrical, In Ordinary Time mines the ways that trauma reverberates through time and through individual lives, drawing connections to the events and rhythms of Ireland’s long Celtic, early Christian and Catholic history. From tragically lost siblings to the broader social scars of the Famine and the Magdalene Laundries, Mc Mahon sketches the evolution of a consciousness – from her conservative 1970s upbringing to 1990s New York, and back to the much-changed Ireland of today.

Reviews

  • ‘Mc Mahon’s personal story is the unifying strand in a bigger, constantly shifting narrative that explores complex cultural and historical terrain’ Sean O’Hagan, Observer

  • ‘Absolutely gripping… in lucid prose that is both direct and lyrical, she burrows through layers of family history and Irish history’ Irish Times

  • 'A vivid, evocative and resonant counterpoint of time, memory and meaning' Joseph O'Connor, award-winning author of Shadowplay

  • ‘A beautiful memoir’ Ryan Tubridy, RTÉ Radio 1

  • ‘A raw, urgent book, its narrative stretched across the year, from Imbolc (the Feast of St Brigid) to Samhain, as it traces love, loss and all else. An extraordinary debut already being likened to Doireann Ni Ghríofa’s  A Ghost in the Throat but this is shaped by its own hauntings’ RTÉ

  • 'Stunning. A work of great emotional and intellectual heft… Truth and honesty shine out of every line’ Mary Costello, author of Academy Street

  • 'Provocative yet dazzling... A mesmerising work threaded with rich veins of history and heart' Sophie White, Irish Independent

  • ‘Beautiful, compelling, thought-provoking… An uncompromising reflection on what it means to be of Irish heritage today, whether at home or abroad’ Tara Flynn

  • ‘Painfully familiar in its account of family loss and trauma in the urban working class, and personal enough never to feel like a survey or aerial view of Irish women’s history. Sensitively written and quietly devastating, it’s the book I had been waiting for’ Niamh Campbell, award-winning author of This Happy

  • 'In Ordinary Time is the best kind of memoir, a braid of the personal and political, the spiritual and global' Cameron Dezen Hammon, award-winning author of This is My Body

  • 'Magnificent... Spare, pristine, bracing – a marvellous book' Carlo Gébler, author of Confessions of a Catastrophist

  • 'Quietly addictive, deeply moving and enlightening' Priscilla Morris, author of Black Butterflies

  • ‘A beautifully-written memoir. It’s a deeply personal, largely confessional work, in which McMahon ties together strands of her life in New York and Ireland with elements from mythology and history, particularly the often horrific history of Irish women. Anyone who has ever emigrated from Ireland will recognise her compelling descriptions of separation from family and land, the freedom that emigration offers – and the enormous loss’ Jaki McCarrick, author of Belfast Girls

  • ‘We can move consciously towards healing. And we can begin by talking. In Ordinary Time is that conviction in action... a must read’ Olivia Cole

  • ‘The peace I discovered reading In Ordinary Time came from the reminder that the cycles we’re all in can be broken, and they can also be repaired’ Maeve Higgins, Irish Examiner

  • ‘The fragments of her New York life seem carefree alongside the shocking events endured by her family in this beautifully crafted memoir which left me wanting more’ The Gloss Magazine

  • 'Carmel's book is so intelligent, yet so accessible' Grace Bailey, host of San Clemente podcast

The Divided Mind

Ebook: June 6, 2011
Paperback: January 18, 2024

The Divided Mind

John E. Sarno

In his groundbreaking, perennially popular book that helped change the way we think about our health – now repackaged for a new generation of readers – Dr Sarno offers a guide to the range of psychosomatic (mindbody) disorders,  which can include chronic pain, carpal tunnel, sexual dysfunction, IBS and migraine. He describes their psychology, including how knowledge and awareness can have a restorative impact. Paving the way for bestsellers like The Body Keeps the Score, Sarno was among the first to explore the interaction between the conscious mind and repressed emotional pain in the unconscious mind that can be at the root of such disorders. 

Reviews

  • ‘The crowning achievement of Dr John E. Sarno's distinguished career as a ground-breaking medical pioneer’ Psychology Today

  • ‘Brilliantly explores the chasm between the conscious and unconscious minds where psychosomatic ailments originate’ Dr Oz, co-author of You: The Owner's Manual

  • ‘In my opinion, the most brilliant doctor in America... I have recommended Sarno’s books to dozens of friends and acquaintances experiencing chronic pain’ Edward Siedle, Forbes

  • 'Will change the way we think about health and illness... [It] is the crowning achievement of Dr Sarno's distinguished career' The Watkins Review

  • 'My life was filled with excruciating back and shoulder pain until I applied Dr. Sarno's principles, and in a matter of weeks my back pain disappeared. I never suffered a single symptom again... I owe Dr. Sarno my life' Howard Stern

Standard Deviations

Ebook: September 22, 2016
Paperback: February 27, 2025

Standard Deviations

Gary Smith

Category: Popular Science,

Did you know that chicken eggs can influence how computers generate random events? Or that humans can postpone death until after important ceremonial occasions? Or live three to five years longer if they have positive initials, like ACE?

All these ‘facts’ have been presented with a straight face by researchers and backed up with convincing statistics. In Standard Deviations, economics professor Gary Smith walks us through the various tricks and traps we so often fall into. Today, data is so plentiful and our reliance on computer analysis and AI so entrenched that researchers spend precious little time distinguishing between good, meaningful deductions and rubbish. Not only do others use data to fool us, we fool ourselves.

Drawing on breakthrough research in behavioural economics by luminaries like Daniel Kahneman and Dan Ariely, and taking to task some of the conclusions of Freakonomics, Standard Deviations demystifies the science behind the statistics.

Reviews

  • 'A very entertaining book about a very serious problem. We deceive ourselves all the time with statistics, and it is time we wised up' Robert J. Shiller, winner of the Nobel Prize in Economics and author of Irrational Exuberance

  • 'Demystifies and illuminates... A must for the new data-driven economy' The Times

  • 'Gary Smith is brilliant when it comes to writing lively and understandable statistical analysis. Standard Deviations joins Darrell Huff's How to Lie With Statistics as a "must-read" classic in the field' Woody Studenmund, Laurence de Rycke Professor of Economics, Occidental College

  • 'It's entertaining; it's gossipy; it's insightful; it's destined to be a classic. Based on a lifetime of experience unravelling the methodical blunders that remain all too frequent, this book communicates Gary Smith's wisdom about how not to do a data analysis. Smith's engaging rendering of countless painful mistakes will help readers avoid the pitfalls far better than merely mastering theorems' Edward E. Leamer, Chauncey J. Medberry Professor, UCLA

  • 'Shows in compelling fashion why humans are so susceptible to the misuse of statistical evidence and why this matters. I know of no other book that explains important concepts such as selection bias in such an entertaining and memorable manner' Richard J. Murnane, Thompson Professor of Education and Society, Harvard Graduate School of Education

  • 'Both a statement of principles for doing statistical inference correctly and a practical guide for interpreting the (supposedly) data-based inferences other people have drawn. The book is cleverly written and engaging to read, full of concrete examples that make clear not just what Smith is saying but why it matters. Readers will discover that lots of what they thought they'd learned is wrong, and they'll understand why' Benjamin M. Friedman, William Joseph Maier Professor of Political Economy, Harvard University

  • 'Standard Deviations will teach you how not to be deceived by lies masquerading as statistics. Written in an entertaining style with contemporary examples, this book should appeal to everyone, whether interested in marriages or mortgages, the wealth of your family, or the health of the economy. This should be required reading for everyone living in this age of (too much?) information' Arthur Benjamin, Professor of Mathematics, Harvey Mudd College and author of Secrets of Mental Math

  • 'Statistical reasoning is the most used and abused form of rhetoric in the field of finance. Standard Deviations is an approachable and effective means to arm oneself against the onslaught statistical hyperbole in our modern age. Professor Smith has done us all a tremendous service' Bryan White, Managing Director, BlackRock, Inc.

  • 'Gary Smith reveals in this deeply insightful skeptical analysis of the use and abuse of statistics, the numbers never just speak for themselves... His catalogue of mistakes we all make - including and especially scientists - should be memorized by every citizen... and member of Congress' Michael Shermer, publisher of Skeptic and columnist for Scientific American

  • 'Effective in encouraging readers away from passive acceptance of what data findings cross our paths and towards active skepticism... Overall he delicately balances telling stories of bad actors with condemning fields of inquiry as a whole... We, as human consumers of data, must do better, and this book tells us how' Significance magazine

The Possibility of Life

the possibility of life
the possibility of life

Ebook: April 20, 2023
Hardback: April 20, 2023
Paperback: April 11, 2024

The Possibility of Life

Jaime Green

Category: Popular Science,

One of the most potent questions we ask about the cosmos is: are we alone? From astrobiology to exoplanets in the ‘Goldilocks Zone’, Jaime Green traces our understanding of what and where life in the universe could be, drawing on the long tradition of scientists, writers and artists who have stimulated research by extrapolating worlds.

Bringing together expert interviews, cutting-edge astronomy, philosophical inquiry and pop culture touchstones ranging from A Wrinkle in Time to Star Trek, The Possibility of Life delves into our evolving conception of the cosmos to wonder what we might find… out there. 

Reviews

  • 'An entertaining and instructive rumination on both earthbound existence and the prospect of extraterrestrial encounter' TLS

  • 'Ostensibly a book about aliens, The Possibility of Life is really a treatise about how we think about the world—and the ways in which our discoveries fuel our imaginations, and vice versa... It had me hooked from the first page' Ed Yong, bestselling author of An Immense World

  • ‘A fascinating and thoughtful reminder of the fact that we may not be alone. Highly recommended’ Jeff VanderMeer, New York Times-bestselling author of Annihilation

  • 'Jaime Green’s The Possibility of Life takes the reader on an utterly gripping, endlessly surprising voyage from the “hopeful monsters” of early multicellular organisms to the records of human existence hurtling beyond the edge of our solar system. Green’s voice is rigorous, curious, tender, and often rightfully bemused. She is the best company I could imagine for this journey to the limits of what we can imagine, and a thrilling ruminator on what these acts of imagination might teach us about ourselves' Leslie Jamison, New York Times-bestselling author of The Empathy Exams

  • ‘Jaime Green casts her gaze deep into the universe for the possibilities of extraterrestrial life but, at the same time, looks deep into us, too, into our humanity and our history and into why we even want to look for that life in the first place. What results is an accessible, weird, funny and ultimately illuminating look into the search for life beyond our world’ Chuck Wendig, bestselling author of Star Wars: Aftermath

  • ‘A rivetingly good read… Even the most basic questions about extraterrestrial life have no meaningful consensus at all. With such a lack of consensus, the field is wide open for “what if”-type speculation – and that’s what this book is all about. Fascinating and enjoyable, intelligent and well-informed’ Andrew May, author of Astrobiology: The Search for Life Elsewhere in the Universe

  • The Possibility of Life left me dizzy with awe and brimming with hope. Jaime Green elegantly uncorks our tiny patch of the universe and takes us on a tour of our best and worst approximations of aliens—unearthly heptapods, a manipulative ocean, and blue humanoids—and explains why the most likely aliens may be more like a platypus than a Klingon. Although The Possibility of Life asks us to fathom the unfathomable, Green is a steadfast, witty, and charming guide through this cosmic murk. I found myself yearning for a signal in the cosmos and this book acutely reminded me of how all life on Earth is already more than enough’ Sabrina Imbler, author of My Life in Sea Creatures

  • The Possibility of Life is both a delight and a marvel, widening the imagined potential of life on Earth, in the cosmos, and in our art and stories. Every page of this book makes our shared universe feel larger and more interesting than ever before, a true gift of fascinating science and engrossing storytelling’ Matt Bell, author of Appleseed

The Lost Carving

lost carving cover
lost carving cover

Ebook: March 21, 2013
Hardback: March 14, 2013
Paperback: February 15, 2024

The Lost Carving

David Esterly, Jenny Uglow

Category: Memoir & Biography,

The highly acclaimed memoir of a renowned artisan with a new introduction by Jenny Uglow, The Lost Carving reveals the inspirational secrets of wood and craft. On a chance visit to St James’s church, Piccadilly, David Esterly was awestruck by the delicate beauty and ambition of master carver Grinling Gibbons’s limewood decorations. The encounter changed the course of Esterly’s life as he devoted himself to these lost techniques.

By 1986, when a fire at Hampton Court Palace destroyed much of Gibbons’s masterpiece, Esterly was the only candidate to restore his idol’s work to glory, though the experience forced him to question his abilities and delve deeply into the subtle skills of making. 

Reviews

  • 'A wonderful book... riveting' Edmund de Waal

  • 'An illuminating and exhilarating book, as intricate and wonderfully engaging as the carvings that lie at its heart' TLS, Best Books of the Year

  • 'A beautifully written account of craft and inspiration' The New Republic, Best Books of the Year

  • 'One of those gentle quest memoirs in which the reader becomes an intimate... Esterly writes evocatively... Full of fine-grained and engaging detail' Mail on Sunday

  • 'A beautiful, intricate mediation on creativity and discovery, on fire and rebirth, on culture and history. Truly, this is a story to be pored over with love and admiration' Elizabeth Gilbert

  • 'Every now and then there comes along a memoir that stands out for its beauty, its ability to charm, and its insights into a life given over to art. This lovely book about woodcarving is just such a work. Entrancing' Alexander McCall Smith

  • ‘A big moment for the obscure world of wood carving' Wall Street Journal

A Book of Your Own

a book of your own anne dickson
a book of your own anne dickson

Ebook: November 2, 2023
Paperback: November 2, 2023

A Book of Your Own

Anne Dickson

Drawing on the author’s decades of experience as a psychologist, trainer and advocate for women, this small but perfectly formed, pocket-sized book contains bite-sized snippets of insight and inspiration on communication, relationships, work, body image, overwhelm, emotional trials and more.

Pop it in your bag or nightstand and draw on it to boost your self-belief, awareness, energy and assertiveness each day – or gift it to friends and family to help them confront life’s everyday challenges.

Reviews

  • PRAISE FOR A WOMAN IN YOUR OWN RIGHT

    ‘There’s no doubt we’ve made giant strides towards quality over the decades, but in some ways this advice is even more pertinent today’ Linda Kelsey, Daily Mail

  • ‘The classic assertiveness bible… You might be better off with A Woman in Your Own Right than any of the modern girlboss manuals that claim to be able to transform you wholesale into a kickass corporate woman’ Rhiannon Lucy Cosslett, Guardian

  • ’The bible for anyone who wants to get their voice heard… invaluable' Lesley Garner

Nice is Not a Biscuit

Ebook: February 17, 2022
Hardback: February 17, 2022
Paperback: April 6, 2023

Nice is Not a Biscuit

Peter Mead

100 lessons from one of Britain’s most successful businessmen

You must know businesses or leaders that seem to have it all – loyalty and success in equal measure. Do you aspire to the same, but worry that ‘nice guys finish last’?

In Nice Is Not a Biscuit, Peter Mead reveals the secrets of his success, and distils a lifetime’s thought about the right way to do business. His 100 entertaining lessons include:

  • How to be a boss and a human being at the same time
  • Why trust in your brand is so precious
  • How to gain a share of both heads and hearts

Nice is not patting people on the head. It’s every person respecting every other person. Do that and you create a great business. It’s a credo for life.

Reviews

  • 'Wise words' Financial Times

  • 'The best and wisest book on advertising I've ever read' Bernard Barnett, former editor of Campaign

Sinners of Starlight City

Sinners of Starlight City cover
Sinners of Starlight City cover

Ebook: July 20, 2023
Paperback: July 20, 2023

Sinners of Starlight City

Anika Scott

Category: Historical Fiction,

FROM INTERNATIONALLY BESTSELLING AUTHOR ANIKA SCOTT

Madame Mystique is a performer extraordinaire, come to work her scandalous magic at the glittering 1933 Chicago World’s Fair. Of African American and Sicilian heritage, Mystique – aka Rosa Mancuso – and her fellow performers move on the margins. Her ambiguous status serves a hidden vendetta: she awaits the arrival of Paolo Amanta, the dashing pilot sent by Mussolini to dazzle spectators with a phenomenal air show.

Back in Sicily, Paolo’s band of young Fascists had murdered her relatives as the old Mafia families were swept from their palazzi with unsparing brutality. Rosa is fixed on revenge. Then her estranged cousin, Mina, comes to the Fair, begging her help to face down their American family. Sinners of Starlight City is an immersive story of injustice, retribution and redemption that asks: who decides who we are and where we belong?

Reviews

  • ‘A lush and beautifully rendered novel that will keep you turning pages long into the night. Mystery, intrigue, secrets and a vendetta fuel this story, which is ultimately about the meaning of family and the power of love. Brava!’ Adriana Trigiani, New York Times-bestselling author of The Good Left Undone

  • ‘This novel whisked me away to 1930s Chicago and all the wonders of the World’s Fair. Family secrets, revenge and women who refuse to do what they're told – an ideal combination. I loved it’ Louise Hare, author of This Lovely City and Miss Aldridge Regrets

  • ‘Expansive and emotive, I couldn't put this book down. Amid the intrigue, revenge, and redemption set against the backdrop of the Chicago World's Fair, Anika Scott still manages to make Sinners of Starlight City a deeply intimate story about family with characters that jump off the page. Another notch in Scott's literary belt!’ Catherine Adel West, author of The Two Lives of Sara and Saving Ruby King

  • 'Full of Italian mobsters and family strife, this tale of historical fiction and drama will transport readers to the fantasy and glory that was the 1933 World’s Fair’ Booklist

Hotbed

hotbed
hotbed

Ebook: July 14, 2022
Hardback: July 14, 2022
Paperback: July 20, 2023

Hotbed

Joanna Scutts

New York City, 1912: in downtown Greenwich Village, a group of women gathered, all with a plan to change the world.

This was the first meeting of ‘Heterodoxy’, a secret social club. Its members were passionate advocates of women’s suffrage, labour rights, equal marriage and free love. They were socialites and socialists; reformers and revolutionaries; artists, writers and scientists. Hotbed is the never-before-told story of the club whose audacious ideas and unruly acts transformed an international feminist agenda into a modern way of life.

For readers who loved Mo Moulton’s Mutual Admiration Society and Francesca Wade’s Square Haunting.

Reviews

  • ‘Joanna Scutts’ fascinating secret US club of early twentieth-century feminists… An enthralling story of rebellion but also of the power of female friendship… Rigorous social history is enlivened by brio and belief throughout’ Hephzibah Anderson, Observer

  • ‘Sets out to recover these forgotten activists, women who were engaged in some of the most important campaigns of the twentieth century... A series of illuminating vignettes that remind us how far feminism has come over the past century, but also how much remains familiar and yet to be achieved’ Kathryn Hughes, Sunday Times

  • '[A] lively and absorbing new social history… it was only after I read Hotbed that I realized the type of feminist friendship from which I am more directly descended was that of the Heterodites' New York Review of Books

  • 'Incredibly resonant in today’s times, and a profound read' Fiona Davis, New York Times-bestselling author of The Lions of Fifth Avenue

  • 'Deeply researched and deftly rendered... a spirited, inspiring history' Lauren Elkin, author of Flâneuse

  • 'A transporting tour-de-force of storytelling' Janice P. Nimura, author of The Doctors Blackwell

  • 'Spirit and panache... one for anyone interested in the history of feminism, friendship, or New York City' Ruth Franklin, award-winning author of Shirley Jackson: A Rather Haunted Life

  • 'A wonderful tribute to the "restless audacious [and] creative spirit" that pushes a culture beyond convention and complacency and toward something new... fascinating' Maggie Doherty, award-winning author of The Equivalents: A Story of Art, Female Friendship, and Liberation in the 1960s

  • ‘This enlightening book covers the first ten or so years of the club’s existence. It is also the story of the early feminist movement in the US, and highlights the underacknowledged part that these activist women played in psychology, education, theatre, journalism, anti-lynching legislation and the early-twentieth-century American labour movement’ Ann Kennedy Smith, Times Literary Supplement

  • ‘A deeply researched and kinetic historical telling of Heterodoxy’s fruitful, if also fraught, period, from its inception until the early 1920s. In vibrant prose that summons the idealism and daring of the very existence of Heterodoxy as a center for sisterhood and women-led political thought, Scutts brings to life the stories of women who formed friendships among their ranks, the majority of whom were upper-middle-class authors, journalists, sociologists and artists’ Washington Post

  • 'Joanna Scutts hones in on one particularly fascinating corner of this world: the Heterodoxy Club, a coterie of women that included Charlotte Perkins Gilman, Alice Kimball, Alison Turnbull Hopkins, and Susan Glaspell, among other influential figures. Hotbed brings you to the heart of the social world that sustained and supported them, and it is filled with fascinating details for anyone remotely interested in this history’ LitHub

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