More From Contributor

£16.99
It is not as widely known as it should be that Britain has the most varied geology of any country in the world. This book is a celebration in words & pictures of what its mountains are made from, & how they got there. This in turn determines what they`re like to climb, scramble on, or walk over. Why is Skiddaw slate so slippery? How do tors form? Why is gritstone so difficult? Why is Lakeland so picturesque, & the granite lands so grim & forbidding? Geology is destiny, whether it`s the rubbishy nature of gullies & screes, the sculpting of valleys by ice or the landslip weirdness of Quiraing on the Isle of Skye. British mountains contain many interesting & different ingredients: gneiss & granite & gabbro; limestone & sandstone; schist & slate; the product & the debris of tectonic shifts, volcanoes, earthquakes & glaciers over many millennia. This book explains all this to the layman, from an expert but personal perspective, & will add immeasurably to the fun & satisfaction to be gained from any day in the hills. ...
Archived Product
£9.99
` Get away from here before you`re completely bewitched & enslaved...` Dorothy Carrington was told, while sitting in a fisherman`s cafe at the magically quiet midday hour. But enslaved she was. Granite Isl&, much more than a travel book, grew out of years spent in Corsica & is an incomparably vivid & delightful portrait. For the first time Corsica is brought to light as a vital element in Europe: a highly individualistic island culture whose people have nurtured their love of freedom & political justice, as well as their pride, hospitality & poetry. ...
Archived Product
£30.00
A dramatic portrait of one of America`s most compelling generals & presidents, Ulysses S. Grant, by Pulitzer Prize winner Ron Chernow, author of the book on which the astonishing musical Hamilton is based. As late as April 1861, when the American Civil War broke out, Ulysses S. Grant was a dismal failure. A competent officer in the war against Mexico, he had resigned from the army over his drinking & had sunk into poverty as a civilian, losing all his money in hopeless investments. He had failed to secure the command of a volunteer unit & was about to return to his abject life working in his family`s leather-goods store when he was offered the colonelcy of an Illinois regiment. Less than four years later he was the commanding general of the victorious Union armies & was hailed as a military genius. He later served two terms as President of the United States. This is the epic biography of a very unheroic American hero, a modest, reticent & principled man who surprised the world & changed it for the better. ...
Archived Product
£12.99
Packed with almost 200 million people speaking nearly sixty languages, brought into nationhood under the auspices of a single religion, but wracked with deep separatist fissures & the destabilizing forces of ongoing conflicts in Iran, Afghanistan & Kashmir, Pakistan is one of the most dynamic places in the world today. From the writers who are living outside the country
- Daniyal Mueenuddin, Kamila Shamsie & Nadeem Aslam
- to those going back
- Mohsin Hamid & Mohammed Hanif
- to those who are living there & writing in Urdu, Punjabi, Sindhi, Baluchi & English, there is a startling opportunity to draw together an exciting collection of voices at the forefront of a literary renaissance. Granta 112: Pakistan will seize this moment, bringing to life the landscape & culture of the country in fiction, reportage, memoir, travelogue & poetry. Like the magazine`s issues on India & Australia, its release will be a watershed moment critically & a chance to celebrate the corona of talent which has burst onto the English language publishing world in recent years.



...
Archived Product
£12.99
First there was the traveller; then the word was emigrants. In America, they turned into immigrants. & today -- in many parts of the world -- they are (we are) aliens. From somewhere else. At odds with & yet fully inside of another culture. At home nowhere. This new issue of Granta features tales from the constantly shifting terrain of alien culture. Mark Gevisser writes of two closeted gay South African men, whose friendship has lasted five decades, dating back to a regime determined to keep black & white apart. Dinaw Mengestu writes of a war being waged in Sierra Leone by exiles managing it from afar in France. Robert Mac Farlane goes for a walk in Palestine, & meets families who can no longer return to their own homes. Nami Mun conjures a couple who feel like strangers in the wake of a terrible betrayal. Whether it`s the closely observed ecology of marriage life or the violent acts of criminals, this issue of Granta will draw into focus one of the most pressing issues of our time: Who do we call outsiders? ...
Archived Product
£12.99
Since Granta`s inaugural list of the Best of Young British Novelists in 1983
- featuring Salman Rushdie, Ian Mc Ewan, Kazuo Ishiguro,
...
Archived Product
£12.99
Hari Kunzru travels to Chernobyl, Detroit, & Japan to investigate the phenomenon of disaster tourism. Policeman-turned-detective-turned-writer A Yi describes life as a provincial gumshoe in China. Physician Siddhartha Mukherjee visits a government hospital in New Delhi, where he meets Madha Sengupta, at the end of his life & on the frontiers of medicine. Robert Macfarlane explores the limestone world beneath the Peak District. & Haruki Murakami revisits his walk to Kobe in the aftermath of the 1995 earthquake.
In this issue--which

Includes::
poems by Charles Simic & Ellen Bryant Voigt, a story by Miroslav Penkov, & non-fiction by David Searcy, Teju Cole, & Hector Abad--GRANTA presents a panoramic view of our shared landscape & investigates our motivations for exploring it. ” One`s destination is never a place, ” Henry Miller wrote, ”but a new way of seeing things.”


...
Archived Product
£12.99
It is not just nations that are made & destroyed by war
- families are scattered, boundaries of loyalty redrawn. The autumn issue
...
Archived Product
£12.99
A powerful curiosity is the hallmark of new kind of Indian writing: important questions about the country`s past & present have found their expression in different forms of non-fiction story-telling that twenty years ago tended to be the preserve of writers from the west. Biography, memoir, narrative history, reportage, the travel account: all these forms now have their interesting & original practitioners in India. In this Granta issue they tackle questions ranging from rape in village India to scandal in Mumbai clubs. & there is room, as always, for the best of India`s fiction. ...
Archived Product
£12.99
The world, as we know it, is changing.. . In the autumn issue of Granta, acclaimed nature writer Barry Lopez meditates on language & seeing; poet Kathleen Jamie travels to the Alaskan wilderness; science writer Fred Pearce describes the effort to keep Sellafield safe; Adam Nicolson investigates murder in rural Romania; Robert Mac Farlane introduces unpublished extracts from the notebooks of Roger Deakin; & new Australian writer Rebecca Giggs witnesses the monumental death of a stranded whale. Fiction by Ben Marcus, Ann Beattie, Deb Olin Unferth & David Szalay. Poetry by Noelle Kocot, Maureen Mc Lane, Ange Mlinko & Andrew Motion. Photography by Helge Skodvin introduced by Audrey Niffenegger. ` Every way one turned the tundra was laid out like a green sea, sedgy & subtle & glinting with secret melt pools & waterways.` Kathleen Jamie ...
Archived Product

Granta 119: Britain

In 2012, Britain is a nation in flux, managing difficult socioeconomic realities, contending with new political alliances and negotiating shifting demographics. Yet it is a country that is still perceived as being bound by tradition and class structures. With new fiction, memoir, poetry, photography and art, Granta`s Britain explores landscape, identities and stories of the British Isles. In `Silt`, Robert Macfarlane writes of the beauty and danger of a stretch of coastline in Essex. Nobel laureate Mario Vargas Llosa tells the story of Irish revolutionary nationalist Roger Casement, executed at Pentonville Prison in 1916. Memoirs by Gary Younge, Andrea Stuart and Nikolai Khalezin and Natalia Kaliada focus on the upheavals and migrations that brought them and their families to
(and from) Britain.Rachel Seiffert, Ross Raisin, Cynan Jones and Jim Crace provide extracts of their new novels: Seiffert describes Glasgow and Northern Ireland in the 1990s; Raisin paints a portrait of a young footballer struggling with his identity; Jones follows a boy on a strange, dangerous outing with his father; Crace shows how the lives of English farmers changed during the Enclosures in the late 1700s and early 1800s. The issue includes original short fiction by Adam Foulds, Mark Haddon, Tania James and Jon McGregor as well as poems by Simon Armitage, Jamie McKendrick, Don Paterson and Robin Robertson. It also introduces a new voice, Sam Byers, with an extract from his darkly comic debut novel, Idiopathy.
RIP - This product is no longer available on our network. It was last seen on 25.09.2019

This page now acts as a permanent archive for this product. Add more information using the comments box below to ensure it can still be found by future generations.

Use our search facility to see if it is available from an alternative contributor.
  • External links may include paid for promotion
  • Availability: Out Of Stock
  • Supplier: Stanfords
  • SKU: 9781905881567
Availability: In Stock
£12.99

Product Description

In 2012, Britain is a nation in flux, managing difficult socioeconomic realities, contending with new political alliances & negotiating shifting demographics. Yet it is a country that is still perceived as being bound by tradition & class structures. With new fiction, memoir, poetry, photography & art, Granta`s Britain explores landscape, identities & stories of the British Isles. In ` Silt`, Robert Macfarlane writes of the beauty & danger of a stretch of coastline in Essex. Nobel laureate Mario Vargas Llosa tells the story of Irish revolutionary nationalist Roger Casement, executed at Pentonville Prison in 1916. Memoirs by Gary Younge, Andrea Stuart & Nikolai Khalezin & Natalia Kaliada focus on the upheavals & migrations that brought them & their families to (and from) Britain. Rachel Seiffert, Ross Raisin, Cynan Jones & Jim Crace provide extracts of their new novels: Seiffert describes Glasgow & Northern Ireland in the 1990s; Raisin paints a portrait of a young footballer struggling with his identity; Jones follows a boy on a strange, dangerous outing with his father; Crace shows how the lives of English farmers changed during the Enclosures in the late 1700s & early 1800s. The issue

Includes::
original short fiction by Adam Foulds, Mark Haddon, Tania James & Jon Mc Gregor as well as poems by Simon Armitage, Jamie Mc Kendrick, Don Paterson & Robin Robertson. It also introduces a new voice, Sam Byers, with an extract from his darkly comic debut novel, Idiopathy.

Reviews/Comments

Add New

Intelligent Comparison

Oooops!
We couldn't find anything!
Perhaps this product's unique.... Or perhaps we are still looking for comparisons!
Click to bump this page and we'll hurry up.

Price History

Vouchers

No voucher codes found.
Do you know a voucher code for this product or supplier? Add it to Insights for others to use.

Facebook

Jargon Buster

Supplier Information

Stanfords
Stanfords was established in 1853 and opened their iconic Covent Garden flagship store in 1901. They have become the top retailer of maps, travel books and accessories in the UK and arguably offer the largest selection of maps and travel books worldwide. Famous names such as Captain Robert Falcon Scott, Ranulph Fiennes and Michael Palin have purchased from Stanfords. They now have a shop in Bristol and both stores together with other venues operate a calendar of events including talks, book signings and exhibitions. As a specialist map retailer, the map selection is comprehensive and includes road maps, street maps and walking maps from worldwide destinations, as well as a selection of world atlases and wall maps. Books include travel guides and travel literature. Stanfords also stock globes, from miniatures made of blue marble to magnificent floor-standing globes. The website features a selection of interesting articles on travel topics.
Page Updated: 2023-11-12 20:15:36

Community Generated Product Tags

Oh No! The productWIKI community hasn't generated any tags for this product yet!
Menu