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From the bestselling author of Me Before You & two-time winner of the RNA Novel of the Year award. When journalist Ellie looks through her newspapers archives for a story she doesnt think shell find anything of interest. Instead she discovers a letter from 1960 written by a man asking his lover to leave her husband
- & Ellie is caught up in the intrigue of a past love affair. Despite or perhaps because of her own romantic entanglements with a married man. In 1960 Jennifer wakes up in hospital after a car accident. She cant remember anything
- her husband her friends who she used to be. & then when she returns home she uncovers a hidden letter & begins to remember the lover she was willing to risk everything for. Ellie & Jennifers stories of passion adultery & loss are wound together in this richly emotive novel
- interspersed with real last letters.


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£5.24
Will Elliott is out of a job. The lighthouse he's been manning on Prince Albert Rock off the wild Cornish coast is about to become automated. So Will decides to fulfil his lifelong ambition
- to sail round the coastline of Britain. Determined to continue his solitary existence Will begins his preparations for his epic voyage. But before he has time to so much as paint his hull he meets Amy Finn
- a beautiful artist & fellow loner. & as if that isn't distraction enough suddenly his sleepy Cornish village is rocked by the biggest scandal to hit Cornwall since Guenevere ran off with Launcelot. It seems as if Will will never get away & even if he does will his journey be solo or is there hope that he & Amy could be embarking on a two-man voyage of discovery?

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The Last Man is Mary Shelleys apocalyptic fantasy of the end of human civilisation. Set in the late twenty-first century the novel unfolds a sombre & pessimistic vision of mankind confronting inevitable destruction. Interwoven with her futuristic theme Mary Shelley incorporates idealised portraits of Shelley & Byron yet rejects Romanticism & its faith in art & nature. Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley (1797-1851) was the only daughter of Mary Wollstonecraft author of Vindication of the Rights of Woman & the radical philosopher William Godwin. Her mother died ten days after her birth & the young child was educated through contact with her fathers intellectual circle & her own reading. She met Percy Bysshe Shelley in 1812; they eloped in July 1814. In the summer of 1816 she began her first & most famous novel Frankenstein. Three of her children died in early infancy & in 1822 her husband was drowned. Mary returned to England with her surviving son & wrote novels short stories & accounts of her travels; she was the first editor of P.B. Shelleys poetry & verse. ...
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The four dead guards didnt concern Mitch Rapp as much as the absence of the man theyd been paid to protect. Joe Rickman wasnt just another foot soldier. For the last eight years Rickman had run the CIAs clandestine operations in Afghanistan. It was a murky job that involved working with virtually every disreputable figure in the Islamic Republic. More than a quarter billion dollars in cash had passed through Rickmans hands during his tenure as the master of black ops & no one with a shred of sense wanted to know the details of how that money had been spent. At first glance it looks as if Rickman has been kidnapped but Rapp knows certain things about his old friend that cause him to wonder if something more disturbing isnt afoot. Irene Kennedy the director of the CIA has ordered Rapp to find Rickman at all costs. Rapp must navigate the ever-shifting landscape of Afghanistan as the Taliban Iranians Pakistanis & Russians all plot to claim their piece of the war torn state. With Afghanistan crumbling around him Rapp must be as ruthless as his enemies & as deceitful as people in his own government if he has any hopes of completing his mission. ...
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A hero can't always be good.. . Joe Rickman head of clandestine operations in the Middle East has been kidnapped & with him top secret CIA information that could prove disastrous in the wrong hands. Mitch Rapp must find Rickman at all costs. But something doesn't add up & he soon suspects something even more sinister is afoot. With elements inside his own government working against him Rapp will have to make to make a tough call between playing the hero & playing nice. Or will he be stopped dead before he can succeed? ...
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Seven seconds. Thats all it took for Web London to lose everything: his friends his team his reputation. Point man of the FBIs super-elite Hostage rescue Team Web roared into a blind alley towards a drug leaders lair only to meet a high-tech custom-designed ambush that killed everyone around him. Coping with the blame-filled words of anguished widows & the suspicions of colleagues Web tries to put his life back together. To do so he must discover why he was the one man who lived through the ambush
- & find the only other person who came out of the alley alive.. .a ten-year-old boy who has since disappeared. Acting on his instincts Web believes he knows where the killer will strike next. Only this time he may not survive the attack. In this extraordinary work Baldacci uses his unsurpassed storytelling skills to explore the essence of survival itself as a conspiracy of violence surrounds an FBI agent whose fate was to be the.. .LAST MAN STANDING.
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£12.80
As a small boy in Epping Forest Jack Straw could never have imagined that one day he would become Britains Lord Chancellor. As one of five children of divorced parents he was bright enough to get a scholarship to a direct-grant school but spent his holidays as a plumbers mate for his uncles to bring in some much-needed extra income. Yet he spent 13 years & 11 days in government including long & influential spells as Home Secretary & Foreign Secretary. This is the story of how he got there. His memoirs offer a unique insight into the complex sometimes self-serving but always fascinating world of British politics & reveals the toll that high office takes but more importantly the enormous satisfaction & extraordinary privilege of serving both your constituents & your country. Straws has been a very public life but he reveals the private face too & offers readers a vivid & authoritative insight into the Blair/ Brown era & indeed the last forty years of British politics. ...
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It hardly seems credible today that a nineteenyear- old boy just commissioned into the Seaforth Highlanders could lead a platoon of men into the carnage of the Battle of the Somme. Or that as the machine gun bullets whistled past & shells exploded he could maintain his own morale to lead a platoon keeping its discipline & cohesion in spite of desperate losses. Norman Collins the author of this superb memoir was this remarkable man. Using Normans own words Last Man Standing follows him from his childhood in Hartlepool to his subsequent service in France. The book also covers such shattering events as the German naval assault on Hartlepool in December 1914 when as a seventeen-year-old Norman was subjected to as big a bombardment as any occurring on the Western Front at that time. Normans love for & devotion to the men under his command shine out in this book & his stories are gripping & deeply moving. They are illustrated by a rare collection of private photographs taken at or near the front by Norman himself although the use of a camera was strictly proscribed by the Army. Most of the images have never been published before. ...
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£6.89
As a small boy in Epping Forest Jack Straw could never have imagined that one day he would become Britain's Lord Chancellor. As one of five children of divorced parents he was bright enough to get a scholarship to a direct-grant school but spent his holidays as a plumbers' mate for his uncles to bring in some much-needed extra income. Yet he spent 13 years & 11 days in government including long & influential spells as Home Secretary & Foreign Secretary. This is the story of how he got there. His memoirs offer a unique insight into the complex sometimes self-serving but always fascinating world of British politics & reveals the toll that high office takes but more importantly the enormous satisfaction & extraordinary privilege of serving both your constituents & your country. Straw's has been a very public life but he reveals the private face too & offers readers a vivid & authoritative insight into the Blair/ Brown era & indeed the last forty years of British politics. ...
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£4.49
The Rough Diamonds are a close knit team. Kev Mc Govern their captain makes sure they work hard & play hard. Right now John OHara feels hes on the verge of losing everything. His family is about to break up. Hes dumbstruck when he finds out that his Mum is seeing his teacher & Dad...well the less said the better. John feels lonely & insecure; none of this is helping his street cred with the lads & worse still his form on the pitch is really suffering. ...
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Last Man In Russia

From Oliver Bullough the acclaimed author of the Orwell Prize-shortlisted Let Our Fame Be Great a study - part travelogue part political analysis - of a nation in crisis. In the 1960s when the Soviet Union said it was building heaven on earth and the brave non-conformist dissidents lived like free men in the midst of this enormous prison the Russian nation began to drink itself to death. For a while government income from vodka surpassed their income from oil. Now fifty years later with the Soviet state dismantled this is still a country where Muscovites might drink a bottle of vodka before breakfast where demographers look with astonishment as the population of the worlds largest country continues to fall far beyond the rate of decline in the West. In The Last Man in Russia award-winning
writer Oliver Bullough uses the life of an extraordinary Orthodox priest with equal passions for writing and for saving his fellow citizens from the KGB to find out why. Following in the footsteps of Father Dmitry Bullough reconstructs the world he experienced: the famine the occupation the war the frozen wastes of the Gulag the collapse of communism and the giddy excesses that followed it. While the story of Russias self-destruction is shrouded in secrecy and denial with no contemporary documents to acknowledge or explain why so many Russians were seeking oblivion Dmitrys diaries and sermons are that rare thing: an insight into life in a totalitarian state unmediated and raw exposing the deep spiritual sickness born out of the countrys long communist experiment. Offering a portrait of
Russia like no other one that traces the current contours of the Russian soul Oliver Bullough shows that in a country so willing to crush its citizens there is also courage resilience and - at last - small flickering glimmers of hope. Brisk lucid style.. .skilful interweaving of historical context with his own rich experience of Russia. [Bullough] has a talent for sketching the people he meets often administering a welcome dose of humour.. .and he appreciates the absurd in the best Russian tradition.. .an ambitious and wide-ranging journey". (Arthur House Sunday Telegraph). "An extraordinary portrait of a nation struggling to shed its past and find peace with itself". (Anthony Sattin Sunday Times). "[A] superb hybrid of travel and social analysis.. .raw poetic
prose...The Last Man in Russia is distinguished by the excellence of its writing and its lucid unsparing gaze". (Ian Thomson Daily Telegraph). "[Bullough] is particularly good at conjuring key moments vivid characters and credible dialogue and at flipping between the small incident and the big picture...Imagining [the whole country of Russia] is a whole lot easier with such a lively well-written and commanding narrative to guide us". (Anthony Sattin Observer). Praise for Let Our Fame Be Great: "Raw romantic". (Guardian). "A haunting portrait of a people blown to the winds by a forgotten storm". (Economist). "Brilliant...Bullough draws you irresistibly into his narrative fusing reportage history and travelogue in colourful absorbing prose...The book
is a pleasure". (Spectator). "Wonderful.. .compelling". (Financial Times). Oliver Bullough studied modern history at Oxford University and moved to Russia after graduating in 1999. He lived in St Petersburg Bishkek and Moscow over the next seven years travelling widely as a reporter for Reuters news agency. He is now the Caucasus Editor for the Institute of War and Peace Reporting. His first book Let Our Fame Be Great: Journeys Among the Defiant People of the Caucasus received the Cornelius Ryan award in the United States and was shortlisted for the Orwell Prize in Britain. Oliver Bullough received the Oxfam Emerging Writer award in 2011."
  • Availability: In Stock
  • Supplier: WHSmith
  • SKU: 9781846143731
Availability: In Stock
£12.80

Product Description

From Oliver Bullough the acclaimed author of the Orwell Prize-shortlisted Let Our Fame Be Great a study
- part travelogue part political analysis
- of a nation in crisis. In the 1960s when the Soviet Union said it was building heaven on earth & the brave non-conformist dissidents lived like free men in the midst of this enormous prison the Russian nation began to drink itself to death. For a while government income from vodka surpassed their income from oil. Now fifty years later with the Soviet state dismantled this is still a country where Muscovites might drink a bottle of vodka before breakfast where demographers look with astonishment as the population of the worlds largest country continues to fall far beyond the rate of decline in the West. In The Last Man in Russia award-winning writer Oliver Bullough uses the life of an extraordinary Orthodox priest with equal passions for writing & for saving his fellow citizens from the KGB to find out why. Following in the footsteps of Father Dmitry Bullough reconstructs the world he experienced: the famine the occupation the war the frozen wastes of the Gulag the collapse of communism & the giddy excesses that followed it. While the story of Russias self-destruction is shrouded in secrecy & denial with no contemporary documents to acknowledge or explain why so many Russians were seeking oblivion Dmitrys diaries & sermons are that rare thing: an insight into life in a totalitarian state unmediated & raw exposing the deep spiritual sickness born out of the countrys long communist experiment. Offering a portrait of Russia like no other one that traces the current contours of the Russian soul Oliver Bullough shows that in a country so willing to crush its citizens there is also courage resilience &
- at last
- small flickering glimmers of hope. Brisk lucid style.. .skilful interweaving of historical context with his own rich experience of Russia. [ Bullough] has a talent for sketching the people he meets often administering a welcome dose of humour.. .and he appreciates the absurd in the best Russian tradition.. .an ambitious & wide-ranging journey". (Arthur House Sunday Telegraph). " An extraordinary portrait of a nation struggling to shed its past & find peace with itself". (Anthony Sattin Sunday Times). "[A] superb hybrid of travel & social analysis.. .raw poetic prose... The Last Man in Russia is distinguished by the excellence of its writing & its lucid unsparing gaze". (Ian Thomson Daily Telegraph). "[ Bullough] is particularly good at conjuring key moments vivid characters & credible dialogue & at flipping between the small incident & the big picture... Imagining [the whole country of Russia] is a whole lot easier with such a lively well-written & commanding narrative to guide us". (Anthony Sattin Observer). Praise for Let Our Fame Be Great: " Raw romantic". (Guardian). "A haunting portrait of a people blown to the winds by a forgotten storm". (Economist). " Brilliant... Bullough draws you irresistibly into his narrative fusing reportage history & travelogue in colourful absorbing prose... The book is a pleasure". (Spectator). " Wonderful.. .compelling". (Financial Times). Oliver Bullough studied modern history at Oxford University & moved to Russia after graduating in 1999. He lived in St Petersburg Bishkek & Moscow over the next seven years travelling widely as a reporter for Reuters news agency. He is now the Caucasus Editor for the Institute of War & Peace Reporting. His first book Let Our Fame Be Great: Journeys Among the Defiant People of the Caucasus received the Cornelius Ryan award in the United States & was shortlisted for the Orwell Prize in Britain. Oliver Bullough received the Oxfam Emerging Writer award in 2011."

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Contemporary - Modern era design
Contemporary - A design reference to indicate post war modern design
Humour - Something either verbal of physical that provides amusement and can provoke laughter
Oil - A hydrophobic liquid with high carbon and hydrogen content. Has many variations including; cooking oils, petrochemical oils, essential oils.
bottle - A container with a narrow neck in comparison to the body. Often used for containing fluids such as wine and milk.
Key - A physical or virtual device or code used for opening something
History - Anything that happens in the past. An acedemic subject.
World - A physical grouping, commonly used to describe earth and everything associated with ti
Earth - A planet third from the sun. Similar size to Venus but rich in water and complex life.
Raw - Unprocessed state. Something that is raw has not been processed.
Small - something that takes up less space than normal.
Contemporary - An object that is living in the same time.
Experiment - A procedure that is undergone to clarify facts and discover new unknown facts
Wide - Something with a large width.
Experience - To gain further knowledge by practising.
Wonderful - Another word for describing something that is extremely good, marvellous.

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