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£7.19
3157 B.C. At the eastern edge of the great southern desert in Mesopotamia, men are at war. Roaming bandits desperate for food, water, women, & slaves ravage vulnerable town. Yet one thing eludes them: gold. A rogue named Ariamus has joined forces with Korthac, a fierce bandit who saved his life, & together they set their sights on the impenetrable walled city of of Akkad, ruled by the former barbarian Eskkar & his enchanting wife Trella.

Korthac devises a brilliant plan to conquer the city from within. Slipping into Akkad in disguise, he will gradually win the trust of Trella. While Eskkar is away, bringing other towns into his burgeoning empire, Korthac & Ariamus will strike, wreaking havoc on the city in a way it never expects.

Told with rich historical detail & full of violence, sex, passion, & battles reminiscent of the best of Bernard Cornwell, The Road to Empire is a marvelous trip into the past.



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£15.29
This ambitious book explores the role of empire in world history. What does it mean to be an empire? How does one empire differ from another? Why does an empire rise & why fall? Why have empires flourished in some eras & regions of the world but not in others? On an unusally wide canvas, Dominic Lieven addresses all these questions. His central focus is on the rise & fall of empire in Russia & the Soviet Union. The dynamics of empire's history in Russia are explored through comparisons not only between the tsarist & Soviet periods but also between Russia, its great contemporaries & rivals of the Ottoman, Habsburg & British empires, & a broad range of other cases from ancient China & Rome to the present-day United States, Indonesia, India & the European Union. Dominic Lieven shows that many of empire's dilemmas still have force in today's world. His perspective throws light on the current crisis in the former USSR by comparing post-Soviet problems & dangers with the upheavals caused by the collapse of other leading powers' empires. A fresh view of many of today's most intractable issues is also provided, from the troubles in Ulster to ethnic cleansing in the Balkans & the fate of Russian, British, German & Asian diasporas stranded by the collapse of empire. ...
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£18.00
For thousands of years we have grown, cooked & traded food, & over that time much has changed. Where once we subsisted on gritty, bland grains, we now enjoy culinary creations & epicurean delights made with vegetables from the New World, fish trawled from the deep sea, & flavoured with spices from the Orient.

But how did we make that change from eating for survival to the innovations of modern cuisine? How has food helped to shape our culture? & what will happen when global warming & peak oil have their inevitable effect on agriculture?

Empires of Food is an authoritative exploration of the innumerable ways that food has changed the course of history. The earliest cities, after all, were founded on the creation & exchange of food surpluses, & since then trade routes of ever greater sophistication have developed. We've built complex societies by shunting corn & wheat & rice along rivers, up deforested hillsides, & into the stockpots of history.

But we cannot go on forever. As Evan D. G. Fraser & Andrew Rimas compellingly show, the abundance that we all enjoy comes at a price, & unless we think of a more sustainable way to grow, eat & enjoy food, we may find that our civilization reaches its best before date.





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£18.38
For thousands of years we have grown, cooked & traded food, & over that time much has changed. Where once we subsisted on gritty, bland grains, we now enjoy culinary creations & epicurean delights made with vegetables from the New World, fish trawled from the deep sea, & flavoured with spices from the Orient.

But how did we make that change from eating for survival to the innovations of modern cuisine? How has food helped to shape our culture? & what will happen when global warming & peak oil have their inevitable effect on agriculture?

Empires of Food is an authoritative exploration of the innumerable ways that food has changed the course of history. The earliest cities, after all, were founded on the creation & exchange of food surpluses, & since then trade routes of ever greater sophistication have developed. We've built complex societies by shunting corn & wheat & rice along rivers, up deforested hillsides, & into the stockpots of history.

But we cannot go on forever. As Evan D. G. Fraser & Andrew Rimas compellingly show, the abundance that we all enjoy comes at a price, & unless we think of a more sustainable way to grow, eat & enjoy food, we may find that our civilization reaches its best before date.





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Archived Product
£8.09
For thousands of years we have grown, cooked & traded food, & over that time much has changed. Where once we subsisted on gritty, bland grains, we now enjoy culinary creations & epicurean delights made with vegetables from the New World, fish trawled from the deep sea, & flavoured with spices from the Orient.

But how did we make that change from eating for survival to the innovations of modern cuisine? How has food helped to shape our culture? & what will happen when global warming & peak oil have their inevitable effect on agriculture?

Empires of Food is an authoritative exploration of the innumerable ways that food has changed the course of history. The earliest cities, after all, were founded on the creation & exchange of food surpluses, & since then trade routes of ever greater sophistication have developed. We've built complex societies by shunting corn & wheat & rice along rivers, up deforested hillsides, & into the stockpots of history.

But we cannot go on forever. As Evan D. G. Fraser & Andrew Rimas compellingly show, the abundance that we all enjoy comes at a price, & unless we think of a more sustainable way to grow, eat & enjoy food, we may find that our civilization reaches its best before date.





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Archived Product
£7.19
A magnificent epic set against a history of seven thousand years of the struggles of Gods & Kings & men
- of strange lands & events
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Archived Product

Empty Cradles

EMPTY CRADLES is a powerful testament to an ordinary woman's astonishing dedication, compassion and stubborn courage.

In 1986 Margaret Humphreys, a Nottingham social worker and mother of two, investigated the case of a woman who claimed that,

RIP - This product is no longer available on our network. It was last seen on 01.03.2015

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  • Supplier: RBooks
  • SKU: 055214164x
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£8.99

Product Description

EMPTY CRADLES is a powerful testament to an ordinary woman's astonishing dedication, compassion & stubborn courage.

In 1986 Margaret Humphreys, a Nottingham social worker & mother of two, investigated the case of a woman who claimed that, at the age of four, she had been put on a boat to Australia by the British government. At first incredulous, Margaret Humphreys soon discovered that this woman's story was just the tip of an enormous iceberg. As many as an estimated 150, 000 children had in fact been deported from children's homes in Britian & shipped off to a 'new life' in distant parts of the Empire
- the last as recently as 1967.

Many of the children were told that their parents were dead. Their parents, too, were often deceived; many believed that their children had been adopted in Britain. The reality was very different: for numerous children it was to be a life of horrendous physical & sexual abuse in institutions in Western Australia & elsewhere.

Margaret Humphreys reveals how she gradually unravelled this shocking secret; how she became drawn into the lives of some of these innocent & unwilling exiles, how it became her mission to reunite them with their families in Britain, & how her lonely crusade led to the founding of the Child Migrants Trust.

EMPTY CRADLES is a strong indictment of government, as well as charitable & religious organisations. It is a sad, harrowing story that will move the reader to anger & tears. Yet it offers a message of hope to all the victims of a shameful scandal that has been ignored for too long.

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LED - Light Emitting Diode - a small light source
strong - A descriptive word for an item that has physical strength
Physical - Used to describe strength or visual properties of an item
LED - Light Emitting Diode. A bulb that is very efficient at producing light. Often small.
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