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This book is not just an invaluable piece of social history & railway folklore it is a treasure trove of tales & a joy to read. The Settle to Carlisle line has become famous far beyond the realms of railway enthusiasts for many reasons. An improbable main line climbing through spectacular mountain scenery it has long been legendary as a magnificent setting for steam locomotives working against the grade. What has until now received less emphasis are the true tales of men
- & women
- who have metaphorically worked against the grade to keep the line running in conditions often challenging in the extreme. Mike Harding says it all in his foreword to this long-awaited book: It is the human stories that have always set the Settle-Carlisle apart from other lesser lines & those you will find here in plenty; true gems told simply by men & women who have worked on the line or lived alongside it. This book is not just an invaluable piece of social history & railway folklore it is a treasure trove of tales & a joy to read". Here is brought to life the drama of keeping the tracks clear of snow in past winters that make the recent conditions of 2010/11 seem comparatively easy. Here too is the saga of the railway family who lived at Blea Moor a location so remote that the only way a daughter could leave for her wedding was in the grimy cab of a steam locomotive! There are many similar tales all firmly set on one of the great railway wonders of the world. Hitherto unpublished photographs & cartoon-style line drawings complete this compelling book."

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£6.89
Simon Yates is the one who cut the rope in Joe Simpsons award-winning account of their epic struggle for survival in Touching the Void. Afterwards Yates continued mountaineering on the hardest routes. Perhaps the most testing of all was one of the worlds largest vertical rockfaces the 4 000-ft East Face of the Central Tower of Paine in Chile. Battered by ferocious storms & almost crippled with fear just below the summit Yates & his three companions are forced into a nightmare retreat. After resting in a nearby town they return to complete the climb but Yates knows he still has to face one of lifes greatest challenges... ...
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£17.60
The book engages in a polemical critique of recent efforts to revive World Literature models of literary studies (Moretti Casanova etc) on the grounds that they construct their curricula on an assumption of translatability. As a result incommensurability & what Apter calls the untranslatable" are insufficiently built into the literary heuristic. Drawing on philosophies of translation developed by de Man Derrida Sam Weber Barbara Johnson Abdelfattah Kilito & Edouard Glissant as well as on the way in which "the untranslatable" is given substancein the context of Barbara Cassin's Vocabulaire europeen des philosophies: Dictionnaire des intraduisibles the aim is to activate Untranslatability as a theoretical fulcrum of Comparative Literature with bearing on approaches to world literature literary world systems & literary history the politics of periodization the translation of philosophy & theory the bounds of non-secular proscription & cultural sanction free versus privatized authorial property & the poetics of translational difference." ...
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£16.00
Seven Deadly Sins
- Seven Motives For Murder. An attractive hardback of seven of the best Agatha Christie crime thrillers themed
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£7.19
A passionate & accomplished writer Laura Thompson now turns her highly acclaimed biographical skills to Agatha Christie. Arguably the greatest crime writer in the world thirty years after her death Christies books still sell over four million copies worldwide a year. Thompson describes the Edwardian world in which she grew up explores the relationships she had including those with her two husbands & daughter & investigates the mysteries still surrounding Christies life
- including her disappearance in 1926. Agatha Christie is a mystery & writing about her is a detection job in itself. But with access to all of Christies letters papers & writing notebooks as well as interviews with her grandson daughter son-in-law & their living relations Thompson is able to unravel not only the detailed workings of Christies detective fiction but the truth behind her private life as well.
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£7.59
This miscellany explores the fascinating & enigmatic world created by the undisputed ' Queen of Crime' Agatha Christie. Examining her place in literary history her books & her iconic characters including Hercule Poirot & Miss Marple this unique collection

Includes::
facts trivia "es that feature in Christie's legendary stories & the subsequent film & television adaptations. The Agatha Christie Miscellany will also delve into the secrets mysteries & tricks that made Christie the most sensational & successful mystery writer of her time. For example how is it that she managed to keep us guessing the murderer until the very end? Looking at her life & the influences on her writing this entertaining & informative miscellany will above all unravel the secrets of Agatha Christie's phenomenal success.

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£8.96
A brand new learning aid incorporating 2 CDs & a complementary book that uses the stories of the peerless Queen of Crime Agatha Christie to both teach & improve English. A new product designed for those people who wish to improve their English by the tried & tested method of reading hearing & understanding. Using Christies simple yet flawless English the twists & turns of her plots will keep listeners entertained whilst they improve their grammar & vocabulary. Each volume is read by a selection of celebrated readers many of who are already synonymous with Agatha Christie The Queen of Crime after appearing in the world-renowned television adaptations of her work. With each CD specifically featuring a variety of readers listeners will get used to hearing & understanding English spoken in a variety of dialects tones & pitches. CD1 Death by Drowning (read by Joan Hickson) -- an architect stands accused of murdering an unmarried mother-to-be! The Plymouth Express (read by David Suchet) -- the body of a millionaires daughter is found under a train seat! CD2 The Lamp (read by Christopher Lee) -- in a haunted house a young boy discovers an invisible playmate! The Case of the Missing Lady (read by James Warwick) -- an arctic explorer asks Tommy & Tuppence Beresford to find his missing fiancee! ...
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£12.80
Agatha Christies life & career told through the decades from the never-before-published original ending to her first book to the unused ideas for her last complete with two unpublished Agatha Christie stories
- including a lost Miss Marple. In this follow-up volume to the acclaimed Agatha Christies Secret Notebooks Christie archivist & expert John Curran leads the reader through the six decades of Agatha Christies writing career unearthing some remarkable clues to her success & a number of never-before-published excerpts & stories from her archives. Starting his investigation in the 1920s John Curran examines the conventions of detective novels as they existed then & how Agatha Christies publisher talked her into changing the ending of her very first book The Mysterious Affair at Styles a move that almost certainly changed the fortunes of not only her career but the future of the whole crime writing genre. For the very first time this book prints Agathas original ending painstakingly transcribed from her notebooks. Every decade saw Agatha Christies success grow to new heights. The emergence of the world-famous Collins Crime Club in 1930 brought with it the very first Miss Marple mystery the austerity of the 1940s had Agatha Christie preparing to kill off Hercule Poirot & the 1950s saw her experiment increasingly with formats influenced by more modern thrillers. Focusing on the detail of more than 20 Christie novels to illustrate this John Curran shows the evolution of Agathas writing through the decades including the influence of the swinging sixties & seventies concluding the book with a look at Agathas last notebook using his Christie knowledge to speculate about what she had in mind based on her brief notes for an unwritten final book. Also

Includes::
a number of short stories from the archives reproduced in full including the unpublished The Man Who Knew How I Created Hercule Poirot & an early draft for a Miss Marple story The Case of the Caretakers Wife.


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£6.74
Agatha Christies life & career told through the decades from the never-before-published original ending to her first book to the unused ideas for her last complete with two unpublished Agatha Christie stories
- including a lost Miss Marple. In this follow-up volume to the acclaimed Agatha Christies Secret Notebooks Christie archivist & expert John Curran leads the reader through the six decades of Agatha Christies writing career unearthing some remarkable clues to her success & a number of never-before-published excerpts & stories from her archives. Starting his investigation in the 1920s John Curran examines the conventions of detective novels as they existed then & how Agatha Christies publisher talked her into changing the ending of her very first book The Mysterious Affair at Styles a move that almost certainly changed the fortunes of not only her career but the future of the whole crime writing genre. For the very first time this book prints Agathas original ending painstakingly transcribed from her notebooks. Every decade saw Agatha Christies success grow to new heights. The emergence of the world-famous Collins Crime Club in 1930 brought with it the very first Miss Marple mystery the austerity of the 1940s had Agatha Christie preparing to kill off Hercule Poirot & the 1950s saw her experiment increasingly with formats influenced by more modern thrillers. Focusing on the detail of more than 20 Christie novels to illustrate this John Curran shows the evolution of Agathas writing through the decades including the influence of the swinging sixties & seventies concluding the book with a look at Agathas last notebook using his Christie knowledge to speculate about what she had in mind based on her brief notes for an unwritten final book. Also

Includes::
a number of short stories from the archives reproduced in full including the unpublished The Man Who Knew How I Created Hercule Poirot & an early draft for a Miss Marple story The Case of the Caretakers Wife.


...
Available
£6.74
A fascinating exploration of the contents of Agatha Christies 73 recently discovered notebooks including illustrations deleted extracts & two unpublished Poirot stories. When Agatha Christie died in 1976 aged 85 she had become the worlds most popular author. With sales of more than two billion copies worldwide she had achieved the impossible
- more than one book every year since the 1920s every one a bestseller. So prolific was her output it was even claimed that Agatha must have a photographic memory. Was this true? Or did she resort over those 55 years to more mundane methods of planning her ingenious crimes? Following the death of Agathas daughter Rosalind at the end of 2004 a remarkable legacy was revealed. Unearthed among her affairs at the family home of Greenway were Agatha Christies private notebooks 73 handwritten volumes which though known about for years had been largely ignored probably because Agathas unmistakable handwriting was so hard to read. But when archivist John Curran began deciphering the notebooks the extent of this treasure trove became apparent... This book lifts the lid on Agatha Christies biggest secret
- how her pencilled notes lists & drafts led to her many successful books plays & stories. Alternative plots titles & characters deleted scenes even her plans for the books she didnt get to write
- John Currans investigation reveals a wealth of unpublished material including two complete Hercule Poirot short stories never before published: The Incident of the Dogs Ball & the unseen thirteenth Labour of Hercules!


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Agatha Christie At Home

Agatha Christie was the author of over eighty novels and over a dozen plays including The Mousetrap the longest continuously running play in theatrical history. Her books have been translated into more languages than the works of Shakespeare. Agatha Christie's first home was at Ashfield in Torquay a house that she retained for nearly half a century until she sold it in 1938 in order to buy Greenway her 'dream house' on the River Dart. She spent all her summers there till she died in 1976. It was she wrote: 'the loveliest house in the world.' Now owned by the National Trust Greenway was opened to the public in 2009. Both Devon homes which featured in several of her novels and stories were central to Agatha's life but she also loved the process of acquiring and planning houses in other
places - from Sunningdale to Baghdad: at one time before the Second World War she owned eight properties in London. Her enthusiasm for buying restoring and decorating houses is one of the lesser-known aspects of her life but one that was very important to her. Agatha Christie at Home - illustrated with photos of her life her homes and of the Devon she loved - recounts this side of her life and its author Hilary Macaskill writes about some of the houses Agatha Christie lived in her relationship with the staff who ran them and her love of domesticity. Illustrated with rarely-seen archive images and evocative photographs of Greenway and the surrounding countryside Agatha Christie at Home provides an insight into the life and work of a much-loved author.
  • Availability: In Stock
  • Supplier: WHSmith
  • SKU: 9780711230293
Availability: In Stock
£16.00

Product Description

Agatha Christie was the author of over eighty novels & over a dozen plays including The Mousetrap the longest continuously running play in theatrical history. Her books have been translated into more languages than the works of Shakespeare. Agatha Christie's first home was at Ashfield in Torquay a house that she retained for nearly half a century until she sold it in 1938 in order to buy Greenway her 'dream house' on the River Dart. She spent all her summers there till she died in 1976. It was she wrote: 'the loveliest house in the world.' Now owned by the National Trust Greenway was opened to the public in 2009. Both Devon homes which featured in several of her novels & stories were central to Agatha's life but she also loved the process of acquiring & planning houses in other places
- from Sunningdale to Baghdad: at one time before the Second World War she owned eight properties in London. Her enthusiasm for buying restoring & decorating houses is one of the lesser-known aspects of her life but one that was very important to her. Agatha Christie at Home
- illustrated with photos of her life her homes & of the Devon she loved
- recounts this side of her life & its author Hilary Macaskill writes about some of the houses Agatha Christie lived in her relationship with the staff who ran them & her love of domesticity. Illustrated with rarely-seen archive images & evocative photographs of Greenway & the surrounding countryside Agatha Christie at Home provides an insight into the life & work of a much-loved author.

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Jargon Buster

History - Anything that happens in the past. An acedemic subject.
World - A physical grouping, commonly used to describe earth and everything associated with ti
running - A sport or hobbie of moving rapidly on foot. Can also refer to the running of equipment or run time refering to the length of time an applicance can run or the quiet running of an applicance.
Love - Someone who shows deep affection for someone else.
Home - A place of permanent residence for families.

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