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Two classic stories about the Isle of Scilly from Britain`s best-loved children`s author, Michael Morpurgo. The Wreck of the Zanzibar: Life on the Scilly Isles in 1907 is bleak & full of hardship. Laura`s twin brother, Billy, disappears, & then a storm devastates everything. It seems there`s little hope...that is until the Zanzibar is wrecked on the island`s rocks & everything changes. Why the Whales Came: Gracie & her friend, Daniel have always been warned to stay away from the Birdman & his side of the isl&. They find a message in the sand & discover the Birdman is not who they thought. Then the children get stranded on Samson Isl&... Former Children`s Laureate & award-winning author of War Horse, Michael Morpurgo, demonstrates why he is considered to be the master story teller with these engrossing Island Tales. ...
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My childhood socks were always white, my frocks ironed. Each day predictable, safe. I escaped. Aged 19, I was swept off my feet by a wild adventurer & married within months. Two small children later (with three more to come) complete with Labradors, cats, a heavy horse & hearts full of dreams, we arrived on a remote Hebridean island to begin our life on the Tapsalteerie Estate. Nothing was ever predictable again. ISLAND WIFE tells the story of Judy, who, at 19, met her Wild Pioneer. He whisked her off into an adventure, a marriage of forty years, & a life on a remote Hebridean isl&. Along the way she bears five children, learns how to run a rocky hill farm, a hotel, a recording studio & the first whale watching business in the UK
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Unhappily l&-locked in his early adult life, Frank Fraser Darling`s fortunes changed when he began visiting Scotland`s west coast in the 1930s. Surviving treacherous boat journeys, a broken leg, & hell-bent storms, he made temporary homes with his family on some of the remotest Hebridean islands so he could study the habits of grey seals & seabirds. The family finally settled on an abandoned croft in the Summer Isles, on Tanera Mor, & started farming the barren l&. They repaired a ruined herring fishery & its stone quay. They fertilized the ground with seaweed, cut peat for the fires, & planted a garden behind sheltered walls. Slowly, they brought life back to the isl&. Island Years first published 1940 by G. Bell & Sons, Island Farm first published in 1943 by G. Bell & Sons. ...
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Ever since the dawn of human history, islands have been at the heart of our desires
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Shortlisted for a 2018 Edward Stanford Travel Writing Award. The British Isles are an archipelago made up of two large islands & 6, 289 smaller ones. Some, like the Isle of Man, resemble miniature nations, with their own language & tax laws; others, like Ray Island in Essex, are abandoned & mysterious places haunted by myths, ghosts & foxes. There are resurgent islands such as Eigg, which have been liberated from capricious owners to be run by their residents; holy islands like Bardsey, the resting place of 20, 000 saints, & still a site of spiritual questing; & deserted islands such as St Kilda, famed for the evacuation of its human population, & now dominated by wild sheep & seabirds. In this evocative & vividly observed book, Patrick Barkham explores some of the most beautiful landscapes in the British Isles as he travels to ever-smaller islands in search of their special magic. Our small islands are both places of freedom & imprisonment, party destinations & oases of peace, strangely suburban & deeply wild. They are places where the past is unusually present, but they can also offer a vision of an alternative future. Meeting all kinds of islanders, from nuns to puffins, from local legends to rare subspecies of vole, he seeks to discover what it is like to live on a small isl&, & what it means to be an islander. ...
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This compelling book explores the lived experience of empire in the Pacific, the last region to be contacted & colonized by Europeans following the great voyages of Captain Cook. Unlike conventional accounts that emphasize confrontation & the destruction of indigenous cultures, Islanders reveals there was gain as well as loss, survival as well as suffering, & invention as well as exploitation. Empowered by imaginative research in obscure archives & collections, Thomas rediscovers a rich & surprising history of encounters, not only between Islanders & Europeans, but among Islanders, brought together in new ways by explorers, missionaries & colonists. He tells the story of the making of empire, not through an impersonal survey, but through vivid stories of the lives of men & women
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” Islands” covers the first half-century or so of Dutch settlement at the Cape, opening with a view from the inside of a Khoi nation, the Goringhaicona, under the leadership of Autshumao, dubbed ”chief Harry” by early English visitors. For the indigenous people, it is the beginning of the end of a way of life in close interaction with the subcontinent, its seasons & rhythms, its harshness & abundance. It was during Autshumao`s time that the first key woman of South Africa`s post-colonisation story makes her appearance: she is Autshumao`s niece, Krotoa, brought into Commander Van Riebeeck`s household as Eva, go-between & interpreter between the Europeans & the Khoi. When she is drawn into the first `mixed` marriage of the new colony, one of her children is Pieternella, who becomes the pivot of all the action in this unforgettable epic. Each of the sections of the novel is focused on a man involved in one way or another with Pieternella. Through the life stories of these key figures
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Like most journeys this book moves between light & shade, funny & deadly serious, mundane & inspirational. It reflects on some common themes, such as childhood, schooling, & the unique good fortune of the post war generation
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Peter Conrad, who was born in Tasmania, has produced an original & highly personal account of the role islands play in our dreams & nightmares. With his customary wide range of reference & quick wit, he visits every corner of the globe to explain why islands appeal to us, & on the way covers everything from the myth of Atlantis to Watteaus erotic Cytherea, from Prosperos magical kingdom to Nelson Mandelas prison. Whether we live on an island or merely fancy escaping to one, we can all learn something from this thought-provoking book. ...
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Everyone has to learn to see the West Indies tropics for himself, wrote V.S. Naipaul in The Middle Passage. The landscape has never been recorded...the depth of sky, the brilliancy of light, the insubstantiality of colour in the tropics. The more gifted painters have ceased to record the landscape: the patterns of the leaves are too beguiling. The Islands & the Sea

Includes::
dozens of writers--poets & novelists, naturalists & explorers--who, like Naipaul help us to see the beguiling Caribbean through their eyes.
Editor John Murray opens this anthology, the first of its kind, with an informed essay that provides a perspective on the region in history & literature. Murray then presents writers ranging from Daniel Defoe to Barry Lopez, from Charles Darwin to Edward O. Wilson. In these selections, one can step ashore with Columbus on San Salvador Island in 1492, travel up the forbidding Orinoco River with Sir Walter Raleigh, & explore ancient Mayan ruins along the coast with swashbuckling John Stephens in 1843. Ernest Hemingway, writing to Maxwell Perkins from Key West, Florida, describes the aftermath of the famous Matecumbe hurricane: Indian Key absolutely swept clean, not a blade of grass, & over the high center of it were scattered live conchs that came in with the sea, craw fish, & dead morays. The whole bottom of the sea blew over it. Other contemporary writers include Barry Lopez, Derek Walcott, Rachel Carson, Jamaica Kincaid, & Roger Caras. With each selection Murray

Includes::
an informative introduction.
A Republic of Rivers, John Murray's anthology of nature writing on Alaska & the Yukon, was hailed for its judicious selections, deft editing, &, most importantly, its ability to capture & communicate a sense of place. In The Islands & the Sea, he once again gathers an enthralling collection of writings that convey the beauty Caribbean's luminous waters, its rich, green hillsides, teeming reefs, & remarkable varied people.





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Islander: A Journey Around Our Archipelago

Shortlisted for the Stanford Dolman Travel Book of the Year 2018Shortlisted for the BBC Countryfile Magazine Country Book of the Year 2018`For all the islomaniacs out there, Patrick Barkham`s Islander looks unmissable` Robert Macfarlane`Brimming with nature, this is a fitting tribute to the strangeness and beauty of our British isles` Financial TimesThe British Isles are an archipelago made up of two large islands and 6, 289 smaller ones. Some, like the Isle of Man, resemble miniature nations, with their own language and tax laws; others, like Ray Island in Essex, are abandoned and mysterious places haunted by myths, ghosts and foxes. There are resurgent islands such as Eigg, which have been liberated from capricious owners to be run by their residents; holy islands like Bardsey,
the resting place of 20, 000 saints, and still a site of spiritual questing; and deserted islands such as St Kilda, famed for the evacuation of its human population, and now dominated by wild sheep and seabirds.In this evocative and vividly observed book, Patrick Barkham explores some of the most beautiful landscapes in the British Isles as he travels to ever-smaller islands in search of their special magic. Our small islands are both places of freedom and imprisonment, party destinations and oases of peace, strangely suburban and deeply wild. They are places where the past is unusually present, but they can also offer a vision of an alternative future. Meeting all kinds of islanders, from nuns to puffins, from local legends to rare subspecies of vole, he seeks to discover what
it is like to live on a small island, and what it means to be an islander.
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  • Supplier: Stanfords
  • SKU: 9781783781904
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£9.99

Product Description

Shortlisted for the Stanford Dolman Travel Book of the Year 2018 Shortlisted for the BBC Countryfile Magazine Country Book of the Year 2018` For all the islomaniacs out there, Patrick Barkham`s Islander looks unmissable` Robert Macfarlane` Brimming with nature, this is a fitting tribute to the strangeness & beauty of our British isles` Financial Times The British Isles are an archipelago made up of two large islands & 6, 289 smaller ones. Some, like the Isle of Man, resemble miniature nations, with their own language & tax laws; others, like Ray Island in Essex, are abandoned & mysterious places haunted by myths, ghosts & foxes. There are resurgent islands such as Eigg, which have been liberated from capricious owners to be run by their residents; holy islands like Bardsey, the resting place of 20, 000 saints, & still a site of spiritual questing; & deserted islands such as St Kilda, famed for the evacuation of its human population, & now dominated by wild sheep & seabirds. In this evocative & vividly observed book, Patrick Barkham explores some of the most beautiful landscapes in the British Isles as he travels to ever-smaller islands in search of their special magic. Our small islands are both places of freedom & imprisonment, party destinations & oases of peace, strangely suburban & deeply wild. They are places where the past is unusually present, but they can also offer a vision of an alternative future. Meeting all kinds of islanders, from nuns to puffins, from local legends to rare subspecies of vole, he seeks to discover what it is like to live on a small isl&, & what it means to be an islander.

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Human - A highly developed and adapted mamal and deminant species on earth
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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

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