The Fortunes at War is a novel set against the backdrop of The Crimean War.
Captain James Fortune and Sergeant John Finch both hail from the same village in rural Hampshire.
They are both from vastly different backgrounds, but there are links between them. They are both from the same place and they both join the famed Rifle Brigade.
But there is also another, deeper link that binds them together. The link of family, as they are blood relatives. But this salient fact is not known to both of them.
The are both posted to the Crimea and see action in a variety of locations, the Battle of Alma and the fall of Sevastopol.
The two men are entrusted with a highly secret and very dangerous mission.
Will the two men succeed in their allotted tasks on the mission?
Will they survive the war and return home? Will they both become aware of the fact that they are more than just fellow villagers, although from different social stratas? That they are family?
Tony Foot's novel is extremely well researched and is also very well written. He takes the reader back to the time of the Crimean War, yet as he takes the reader back to the time of the funeral of Wellington (I had not realised what a disaster it had turned into) he only uses enough research to paint you a picture, not baffle you with too many facts.
It's an intriguing book, covering the horrors of war, family life at the time of the Crimea and all told in a charmingly realistic, yet romantic way.
It's published by The Book Guild at £7.99 and is worth every penny.
You can purchase it at the That's Book bookshop, here https://goo.gl/Ltov34.
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Friday, 14 April 2017
Monday, 3 April 2017
In the Doghouse!
In the Doghouse! is new book for children from published author David J. Robertson.
His first children's book, Dognapped! was published by Matador in 2016 and is nominated for the People's Book Prize, 2017.
And now he has reunited his gang of crime fighting pooches for more canine shenanigans and crime fighting.
Rascal is a giant of a German Shepherd. Although he might look a bit scary, the truth is that Rascal is a bit of a cowardly lion type, rather than a ruff tuff canine.
He has grown so large that his kennel can no longer accommodate him, so he very kindly allows his three muttly mates, Misty, Bertie and One-Eyed Rose to have it for their own den.
But one day, the rains come and once they came, they didn't know when to stop! So poor Rascal becomes soaked right through to his skin.
His friends are worried about him catching a chill, so they put their heads together to see if they can find him a new home.
The gang, under the guidance of One-Eyed Rose, end up on the other side of their town, because that, she knows, is a place where they sell kennels.
It's a place that sells a wide range of wooden structures like summerhouses and sheds, but, unfortunately, the gang arrives on a day that it is not open for business!
This doesn't put plucky Rose off, she manages to wriggle her way through a hole in the fence.
There are a group of men working within the compound, loading wooden sheds onto a lorry, using a forklift truck. The men, a gang of robbers, notice the dogs and in the ensuing melee, the summerhouses end up being smashed!
The dogs are chased away, but cowardly Rascal goes the wrong way and becomes lost in the middle of the compound.
When they realise Rascal is lost, the friends go back to find him, but then the alarms are triggered!
What will happen to them? Will they be in a lot of trouble? Where will Rascal be able to live?
The book is wonderfully illustrated by Ian Ward and will be a great book for any child and also for the adults lucky enough to read this story to them!
It's published by Matador at £8.99 and will make a wonderful book to be read by and with children.
You can buy it here at the That's Books bookshop:- https://goo.gl/Ltov34.
His first children's book, Dognapped! was published by Matador in 2016 and is nominated for the People's Book Prize, 2017.
And now he has reunited his gang of crime fighting pooches for more canine shenanigans and crime fighting.
Rascal is a giant of a German Shepherd. Although he might look a bit scary, the truth is that Rascal is a bit of a cowardly lion type, rather than a ruff tuff canine.
He has grown so large that his kennel can no longer accommodate him, so he very kindly allows his three muttly mates, Misty, Bertie and One-Eyed Rose to have it for their own den.
But one day, the rains come and once they came, they didn't know when to stop! So poor Rascal becomes soaked right through to his skin.
His friends are worried about him catching a chill, so they put their heads together to see if they can find him a new home.
The gang, under the guidance of One-Eyed Rose, end up on the other side of their town, because that, she knows, is a place where they sell kennels.
It's a place that sells a wide range of wooden structures like summerhouses and sheds, but, unfortunately, the gang arrives on a day that it is not open for business!
This doesn't put plucky Rose off, she manages to wriggle her way through a hole in the fence.
There are a group of men working within the compound, loading wooden sheds onto a lorry, using a forklift truck. The men, a gang of robbers, notice the dogs and in the ensuing melee, the summerhouses end up being smashed!
The dogs are chased away, but cowardly Rascal goes the wrong way and becomes lost in the middle of the compound.
When they realise Rascal is lost, the friends go back to find him, but then the alarms are triggered!
What will happen to them? Will they be in a lot of trouble? Where will Rascal be able to live?
The book is wonderfully illustrated by Ian Ward and will be a great book for any child and also for the adults lucky enough to read this story to them!
It's published by Matador at £8.99 and will make a wonderful book to be read by and with children.
You can buy it here at the That's Books bookshop:- https://goo.gl/Ltov34.
Saturday, 1 April 2017
That's Christmas: Mathmos Lava Lamps. Original and best for 54 years...
That's Christmas: Mathmos Lava Lamps. Original and best for 54 years...: Britain has seen enormous changes in the last 54 years especially in technology and fashion. Many have said that quality has been lost a...
Prince Sadruddin Aga Khan Humanitarian and visionary
This is the biography of a man who was born into fantastic wealth, yet who gained a reputation in his own right of being a humanitarian, a man of vision and of a deep and abiding concern for matters involving conservation and the environment.
He was the son of the once very well known figure the Aga Khan III.
He was born in France and spent several years living in Switzerland and studied at the prestigious Harvard University.
In her biography. Diana Miserez, who first became acquainted with the Prince whilst she was an employee of the UN High Commissioner's Office for Refugees and he was the working with UNESCO and as the UN's High Commissioner for Refugees, writes of his childhood and his early years.
She also focuses on his deep concerns over the North-South divide and the consequences that he was able to foresee.
He was at the heart of many world issues and concerns such as the continuing plight of refugees, nuclear proliferation, Alpine conservation, seal cub massacres, the genocide in Rwanda, globalisation and so much more.
It is a deft and thoughtful profile and biography of a man who many thought should have been appointed UN Secretary-General, but never was.
The book is copiously illustrated and will help people get to know much more about this charming, urbane and vitally important figure in recent world history.
It is 390 pages in length and published in hardback by The Book Guild. It is available from the That's Books books shop, which you will find here https://goo.gl/Ltov34.
He was the son of the once very well known figure the Aga Khan III.
He was born in France and spent several years living in Switzerland and studied at the prestigious Harvard University.
In her biography. Diana Miserez, who first became acquainted with the Prince whilst she was an employee of the UN High Commissioner's Office for Refugees and he was the working with UNESCO and as the UN's High Commissioner for Refugees, writes of his childhood and his early years.
She also focuses on his deep concerns over the North-South divide and the consequences that he was able to foresee.
He was at the heart of many world issues and concerns such as the continuing plight of refugees, nuclear proliferation, Alpine conservation, seal cub massacres, the genocide in Rwanda, globalisation and so much more.
It is a deft and thoughtful profile and biography of a man who many thought should have been appointed UN Secretary-General, but never was.
The book is copiously illustrated and will help people get to know much more about this charming, urbane and vitally important figure in recent world history.
It is 390 pages in length and published in hardback by The Book Guild. It is available from the That's Books books shop, which you will find here https://goo.gl/Ltov34.
Caught in the Act
Caught in the Act is a series of masterful short stories.
Unlike some short story authors who always seem unable to resist the urge to cram a whole novel's worth of ideas into the very restricted space of a short story and end up rather like Uncle Ivo's overstuffed leather chair. (If you want to find out about Uncle Ivo's chair, you can do so in one of the 26 short stories contained in this anthology.)
We read of the sea cruise that never was or probably never would be, of cups with cracked glazes, the problems of concentration when you didn't want to, of sea fishing, of dances and of school days and of murder in the vicarage which, the author points out, is based on a real event.
There are stories of lost ideals, of broken promises, of remembered past experiences and of those who are lonely and those who are alone, which is not always the same thing.
It is a thoughtful book and a truthful book and there is much to commend the work of the author, David Spiller.
The stories are well-written with a clear and concise tone and with beautiful phrasing and colours.
The book is published by the Book Guild at £7.99 and is heartily recommended to all lovers of the genre of short stories.
You can purchase it here at the Thats Books bookshop https://goo.gl/Ltov34.
Unlike some short story authors who always seem unable to resist the urge to cram a whole novel's worth of ideas into the very restricted space of a short story and end up rather like Uncle Ivo's overstuffed leather chair. (If you want to find out about Uncle Ivo's chair, you can do so in one of the 26 short stories contained in this anthology.)
We read of the sea cruise that never was or probably never would be, of cups with cracked glazes, the problems of concentration when you didn't want to, of sea fishing, of dances and of school days and of murder in the vicarage which, the author points out, is based on a real event.
There are stories of lost ideals, of broken promises, of remembered past experiences and of those who are lonely and those who are alone, which is not always the same thing.
It is a thoughtful book and a truthful book and there is much to commend the work of the author, David Spiller.
The stories are well-written with a clear and concise tone and with beautiful phrasing and colours.
The book is published by the Book Guild at £7.99 and is heartily recommended to all lovers of the genre of short stories.
You can purchase it here at the Thats Books bookshop https://goo.gl/Ltov34.
The Weathermen, their story
The Weathermen, their story, is an absolutely riveting read by Gordon Tripp OBE, MA.
It relates how the arts ands science of weather watching and forecasting dates back at least two Millennia, with written records of weather dating back to the third century BCE,there is also evidence, reports Tripp, that the Babylonians were making efforts to both understand and predict the weather.
Cloud patterns were viewed as being of significance and weather lore began to develop when observers began to match what they could see to the weather that always seemed to follow them.
The Chinese, as one might expect, were also deeply involved with the study of the weather and putting into practice what they had learned.
The scientists of the Arab world were also keen to learn about the weather with people such as Ibn Wahshiyaa who began to predict weather based upon their observations of wind directions in about 900 CE, or 900AD as it is also known.
The book covers a variety of weather-related instruments that were developed by scientists such as Galileo and Torricelli.
We learn of Daniel Fahrenheit, of Celsius, and of the amazing work of John Dalton who kept a stunning amount of weather observations, 200,000 of them, over a period of 57 years.
In order to do this he had to design and make his own instruments to record temperature, air pressure, humidity and wind speed.
In America Benjamin Franklin was also keen on weather watching and recording.
We read of the pioneering, but often ignored due to commercial interests, of Admiral Fitzroy and of the importance of weather forecasting in maritime safety, and how wicked vested interests destroyed Admiral Fitzroy and his efforts to use weather forecasting to improve maritime safety.
The efforts of meteorologists to improve weather forecasting during World War 2 are covered as are later developments, including weather satellites and so forth.
It is a truly remarkable book and will make an excellent present for everyone who is interested in the weather.
It costs £7.99 and can be bought at the That's Book bookshop, here https://goo.gl/Ltov34.
It relates how the arts ands science of weather watching and forecasting dates back at least two Millennia, with written records of weather dating back to the third century BCE,there is also evidence, reports Tripp, that the Babylonians were making efforts to both understand and predict the weather.
Cloud patterns were viewed as being of significance and weather lore began to develop when observers began to match what they could see to the weather that always seemed to follow them.
The Chinese, as one might expect, were also deeply involved with the study of the weather and putting into practice what they had learned.
The scientists of the Arab world were also keen to learn about the weather with people such as Ibn Wahshiyaa who began to predict weather based upon their observations of wind directions in about 900 CE, or 900AD as it is also known.
The book covers a variety of weather-related instruments that were developed by scientists such as Galileo and Torricelli.
We learn of Daniel Fahrenheit, of Celsius, and of the amazing work of John Dalton who kept a stunning amount of weather observations, 200,000 of them, over a period of 57 years.
In order to do this he had to design and make his own instruments to record temperature, air pressure, humidity and wind speed.
In America Benjamin Franklin was also keen on weather watching and recording.
We read of the pioneering, but often ignored due to commercial interests, of Admiral Fitzroy and of the importance of weather forecasting in maritime safety, and how wicked vested interests destroyed Admiral Fitzroy and his efforts to use weather forecasting to improve maritime safety.
The efforts of meteorologists to improve weather forecasting during World War 2 are covered as are later developments, including weather satellites and so forth.
It is a truly remarkable book and will make an excellent present for everyone who is interested in the weather.
It costs £7.99 and can be bought at the That's Book bookshop, here https://goo.gl/Ltov34.
Colour Sergeant Chesney V.C.
Colour Sergeant Chesney V.C. is a novel by Steven Baker.
With many accounts of the First World War, both fictional and factual, being published to mark the 100th anniversary of that terrible conflict, author Steven Baker has taken us back to an earlier and perhaps simpler time.
Like many of his contemporaries in Victorian Britain, Harry Chesney had a hard and tough childhood.
His mother died from tuberculosis and his father underwent what could be described as the living death of the alcoholic, unable to cope with the loss of his wife, he took his escape via the well known route of the bottle. Eventually he was overcome by the physical death that such an escape all too often brings.
As a result, Harry ends of in the place of last resort for many of the lower orders, the workhouse.
But Harry is made of tougher stuff than most and he decides to leave the workhouse in search of a better life through joining the British Army.
He rises through the ranks form a common private to the illustrious position of being the Regimental Colour Sergeant and the holder of the Victoria Cross.
His army career takers a sudden and catastrophic hit when, after there is an uprising on the North-West Frontier, Harry is the sole survivor from his platoon.
After a time he makes his way back to England and obtains in the position of being the guardian of Ravi, the illegitimate son of Captain Shervington, a now deceased hero of the regiment.
But then the Boer War comes and Ravi decides that he, too, must join up and fight for Queen and Country.
The novel is redolent of the Boy's own Story books, yet is sympathetically written and draws characters that are full and very believable.
It is published by The Book Guild at £8.99 and can be bought at the That's Books bookshop at https://goo.gl/Ltov34.
With many accounts of the First World War, both fictional and factual, being published to mark the 100th anniversary of that terrible conflict, author Steven Baker has taken us back to an earlier and perhaps simpler time.
Like many of his contemporaries in Victorian Britain, Harry Chesney had a hard and tough childhood.
His mother died from tuberculosis and his father underwent what could be described as the living death of the alcoholic, unable to cope with the loss of his wife, he took his escape via the well known route of the bottle. Eventually he was overcome by the physical death that such an escape all too often brings.
As a result, Harry ends of in the place of last resort for many of the lower orders, the workhouse.
But Harry is made of tougher stuff than most and he decides to leave the workhouse in search of a better life through joining the British Army.
He rises through the ranks form a common private to the illustrious position of being the Regimental Colour Sergeant and the holder of the Victoria Cross.
His army career takers a sudden and catastrophic hit when, after there is an uprising on the North-West Frontier, Harry is the sole survivor from his platoon.
After a time he makes his way back to England and obtains in the position of being the guardian of Ravi, the illegitimate son of Captain Shervington, a now deceased hero of the regiment.
But then the Boer War comes and Ravi decides that he, too, must join up and fight for Queen and Country.
The novel is redolent of the Boy's own Story books, yet is sympathetically written and draws characters that are full and very believable.
It is published by The Book Guild at £8.99 and can be bought at the That's Books bookshop at https://goo.gl/Ltov34.
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