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Search Results for: true story

Showing 193-216 of 225 results for true story

Gautama Buddha

Gautama Buddha

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Vishvapani Blomfield

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£12.99
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Paperback
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America's Mistress

America's Mistress

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John L. Williams

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£9.99
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Paperback
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Hotel K

Hotel K

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Kathryn Bonella

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Price
£9.99
Format
Paperback
THE INTERNATIONAL BESTSELLER

Hotel K – Bali’s most notorious jail – is Hell in Paradise.


Welcome to Hotel Kerobokan, or Hotel K, Bali’s most notorious jail. Its walls touch paradise; sparkling oceans, surf beaches and palm trees on one side, while on the other it’s a dark, bizarre and truly frightening underworld of sex, drugs, violence and squalor.

Hotel K’s filthy and disease ridden cells have been home to the infamous and the tragic: a Balinese King, Gordon Ramsay’s brother, Muslim terror bombers, beautiful women tourists and surfers from across the globe. Petty thieves share cells with killers, rapists, and gangsters. Hardened drug traffickers sleep alongside unlucky tourists, who’ve seen their holiday turn from paradise to hell over one ecstasy pill.

Hotel K is the shocking inside story of the jail and its inmates, revealing the wild ‘sex nights’ organised by corrupt guards for the prisoners who have cash to pay, the jail’s ecstasy factory, the killings made to look like suicides, the days out at the beach, the escapes and the corruption that means anything is for sale – including a fully catered Italian jail wedding, or a luxury cell upgrade with a Bose sound system.

The truth about the dark heart of Bali explodes off the page.
Don Vito

Don Vito

Contributors

Massimo Ciancimino, Francesco La Licata

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£12.99
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Paperback
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Constantine

Constantine

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Paul Stephenson

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£12.99
Format
Paperback
Confucius

Confucius

Contributors

Meher McArthur

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Price
£12.99
Format
Paperback
Empress of Rome

Empress of Rome

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Matthew Dennison

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£12.99
Format
Paperback
Gandhi

Gandhi

Contributors

Jad Adams

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£12.99
Format
Paperback
Macbeth

Macbeth

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Fiona Watson

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£12.99
Format
Paperback
At the Loch of the Green Corrie

At the Loch of the Green Corrie

Contributors

Andrew Greig

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£10.99
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Paperback
A homage to a remarkable poet and his world.

‘At The Loch of Green Corrie is more than merely elegant, more than a collection of albeit fascinating insights, laugh-out-loud observations and impressively broad erudition’ – Sunday Herald
‘You could easily make a case that Andrew Greig has the greatest range of any living Scottish writer’ – Scotsman

For many years Andrew Greig saw the poet Norman MacCaig as a father figure. Months before his death, MacCaig’s enigmatic final request to Greig was that he fish for him at the Loch of the Green Corrie; the location, even the real name of his destination was more mysterious still. His search took in days of outdoor living, meetings, and fishing with friends in the remote hill lochs of far North-West Scotland. It led, finally, to the waters of the Green Corrie, which would come to reflect Greig’s own life, his thoughts on poetry, geology and land ownership in the Highlands and the ambiguous roles of whisky, love and male friendship.

At the Loch of the Green Corrie is a richly atmospheric narrative, a celebration of losing and recovering oneself in a unique landscape, the consideration of a particular culture, and a homage to a remarkable poet and his world.
Women Who Kill

Women Who Kill

Contributors

Vanessa Howard

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Price
£3.99
Format
ebook
Every murder is shocking, but few crimes shock society more than when the killer is a woman. There has been an explosion in female violence in the last ten years, and Women Who Kill brings to light some of the most horrific and compelling cases in this disturbing trend.

From the happy-slapping teenage murderer Chelsea O’Mahoney to Heather Stephenson-Snell, the psychotherapist turned Scream-masked psychopath; from Edith McAlinden, butcher queen of Glasgow’s ‘House of Blood’ to the mother of Baby P, women who kill have motives as diverse as the methods of slaying their victims.

Are they victims themselves, or just evil? As society changes, will more and more women feel driven to kill?
Hitler

Hitler

Contributors

Robin Cross

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Price
£7.49
Format
ebook
As Chancellor of Germany between 1933 and 1945, Adolf Hitler exercised unrestricted power over his country’s social, political and economic life. Hitler’s belligerent re-armament programme, his imposition of anti-Semitic legislation and his territorially aggressive policies led to genocide and worldwide conflict on an unprecedented scale. Although the subject of numerous biographies and fictional portrayals, there have hitherto been few succinct, factual narratives of Hitler’s life. Hitler is a short chronicle of the Fuhrer’s career, amplified with numerous rare photographs and artefacts from the period. Second World War expert Robin Cross offers a clear outline of Hitler’s progress: from his unhappy childhood as the son of a minor Austrian official in Braunau, to his inglorious early occupation as a jobbing Viennese artist; from his formative experiences as a corporal in the First World War, to his emergence as leader of the National Socialist Workers’ Party in the 1920s; from his extraordinary rise to supreme power in 1933, to his suicide amidst the ruins of Berlin in 1945. Commanding, informative and stylish, and written by a scholar who is steeped in knowledge of the period, Hitler is an essential companion for anyone with a fascination for the twentieth century, the Second World War or the age of dictators.
Beyond the Body Farm

Beyond the Body Farm

Contributors

Jon Jefferson, Jefferson Bass, Dr Bill Bass, Jon Jefferson

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Price
£4.99
Format
ebook
Dr Bill Bass’ work, and in particular his Body Farm, has furthered forensic anthropology and made it possible to prove from the discovery of a skeleton, no matter how much time has elapsed since death, how and when death occurred and to whom the body belonged. His work has been vital for the sake of science and the cause of justice In Beyond the Body Farm Jefferson Bass details the most memorable cases from his career, including alibis he has broken, cold cases he has solved – including one from the Ancient world that took him to Iran – and several cases he has been able to revisit throughout his career as new techniques have become possible and scientific discoveries made. This is what happens when Dr Bass goes beyond the Body Farm.
Gangsters' Wives

Gangsters' Wives

Contributors

Tammy Cohen

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Price
£3.99
Format
ebook
Behind every good man is a good woman. But what lies behind every bad man? Gangsters’ Wives tells the side of the story you didn’t know – what it’s like to live with Britain’s most lawless men, from the women who married them.
Devoted mum-of-three Judy Marks was imprisoned alongside her husband, notorious drug smuggler Howard Marks; while Flanagan, the first ever Page Three girl, found herself splashed across the papers as the fiancée of legendary East End villain Reggie Kray. Jenny Pinto, wife of gangster Dave Courtney, has given the police keys to their house to stop them breaking down the front door.
In ten funny, moving, searingly honest first-person accounts, Gangsters’ Wives tells you all you ever wanted to know about the lives and loves of the women who are, quite literally, married to the mob.
Janey and Me

Janey and Me

Contributors

Virginia Ironside

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Price
£4.49
Format
ebook
Is it every woman’s fate to turn into her mother? This is renowned writer and journalist Virginia Ironside’s poignant and blackly funny memoir of life with fashion professor and media icon Janey Ironside.

Stylish, beautiful and self-loathing, Janey Ironside was to lead a cultural revolution. In 1956 she became Professor of Fashion at the Royal College of Art, then an extraordinary appointment for a young mother. Discovering and promoting designers like Ossie Clark and Bill Gibb, she changed the way people dressed around the world and herself became a fashion icon. Yet the qualities that made her great – wit, talent and drive – did not bring happiness to either her or her family. Having grown up in colonial India, Janey suffered a painful childhood separation from her parents.

She married dashing artist Christopher Ironside, but eking out wartime rations ill-suited a woman whose idea of divine punishment was ‘to spend eternity washing up.’ Dress-making soon filled the void, while her daughter Virginia endured a string of au pairs, embarrassing outfits and acute loneliness. As Virginia fought to be her own person, plunging into the swing of the sixties as a rock journalist, she was caught between a father she adored and a mother bent on self-destruction. Now a renowned writer, she has drawn a startling portrait of a gifted woman in a time of extraordinary change. Blackly comic, beautifully written and deeply moving, JANEY AND ME reflects the universal struggle to emerge from our parents’ shadow.
A Year with Rudolf Nureyev

A Year with Rudolf Nureyev

Contributors

Derek Robinson, Simon Robinson

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Price
£4.99
Format
Digital (deliver electronic)
Here, for the first time, is an intimate and fascinating portrait of Rudolf Nureyev off-stage – a man who was an exacting, unpredictable, parsimonious and often immature individual, yet who, at the same time, aroused great affection in a host of friends.

Simon Robinson frankly recalls his eventful year working for Nureyev. He did everything for this hopelessly impractical dancer except be his lover, much to Nureyev’s disappointment. It was the Russian’s insatiable sexual appetite that eventually destroyed him.

Nureyev had six houses on three continents but no staff in any of them and he couldn’t cook, drive, write a letter, tie a necktie or even change a light bulb. In 1990 Simon Robinson, until then professional crew on a racing yacht, became his PA. For the next twelve months they travelled from the Caribbean to America to Europe, living in luxury in Nureyev’s New York and Paris apartments and in spartan isolation on his tiny Mediterranean island.

Nureyev’s explosive nature was exhausting to live with and many times during their year together Robinson nearly quit – and Nureyev nearly sacked him. It didn’t happen, however, because Nureyev needed his PA’s calm reliability to ballast his own rocky life, and because Robinson knew that genius must make its own rules.
The Pillow Friend

The Pillow Friend

Contributors

Lisa Tuttle

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£4.49
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ebook
Perfect for fans of Tanith Lee and Joyce Carol Oates, this extremely dark and disturbing novel by award-winning author Lisa Tuttle is ‘Impossible to forget’ Neil Gaiman.

Be careful what you wish for . . .

As a child, Agnes Grey dreamed of the perfect friend to ease her loneliness: a doll that would talk to her, tell her stories, share her secrets, just like her Aunt Marjorie used to have.

So when she receives an old-fashioned porcelain doll as an adult, painted to look like an old-world gentleman, she’s certain her dreams have come true. But as the line between fantasy and reality begins to blurs, Agnes discovers that every dream has its price and every wish must be paid for . . .
The Walled Garden

The Walled Garden

Contributors

Lisa Tuttle

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Price
£1.99
Format
ebook
‘A strong, poignant, and outright magical tale’ New York Review of Science Fiction

In this exclusive short story from critically acclaimed and award-winning author Lisa Tuttle, a woman is haunted by an experience she had as a five-year-old, when she believed she had seen herself with her true love in the future…

‘The Walled Garden’ was originally written for Hidden Turnings, a YA fantasy anthology edited by Diana Wynne Jones and was reprinted in Lisa Tuttle’s collection Ghosts and Other Lovers and The Year’s Best Horror and Fantasy, edited by Ellen Datlow and Terry Windling.
Gertrude and Alice

Gertrude and Alice

Contributors

Diana Souhami

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Price
£4.99
Format
ebook
Gertrude Stein and Alice B. Tokas were the talk of pre-war Paris. Photographed by Cecil Beaton and Man Ray, painted by Picasso and written about by Hemingway, they were at the heart of Parisian cultural and literary life.

Alice, convinced that Gertrude was a genius, cooked for her, typed her manuscripts and fought to obtain the fame she was convinced Gertrude was due. Alice said Gertrude was the happiest person she had ever known, and was besotted with her for the many years they were together. They were indomitable, charismatic, and wildly eccentric, driving around in ‘Auntie’, their Ford, with Basket, their cherished poodle. In Gertrude and Alice, award-winning writer Diana Souhami brings these two extraordinary women, and the fascinating world in which they moved, to vivid life.
Eureka!

Eureka!

Contributors

Hazel Muir

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Price
£6.99
Format
ebook
From Aristotle’s pioneering research into animal biology to Harvey’s theory of the circulation of the blood; from Copernicus’s theory of the heliocentric universe to Carl Sagan’s speculations on extraterrestrial life; and from Einstein’s theory of Relativity to Heisenberg’s uncertainty principle, Eureka! condenses the essential biographies and principal discoveries of the world’s most important scientists
into 300 bite-sized entries.

Spanning the full spectrum of scientific disciplines – including physics, biology, earth science, cosmology, chemistry, archaeology and behavioural science – this book is the perfect introduction to the pioneering work of scientists throughout the ages.
27: Jim Morrison

27: Jim Morrison

Contributors

Chris Salewicz

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Price
£1.49
Format
ebook
Jim Morrison, musician, singer and poet was found dead, the victim of a suspected heroin overdose, in a Paris apartment bathtub in 1971. He was 27.

Morrison was a talented, charismatic, wild-tempered cultural cipher. He struggled to cope with his exalted status and his death, officially from heart failure, remains shrouded in mystery.

In 27: Jim Morrison, acclaimed music critic Chris Salewicz pays homage to Morrison as a rock icon, whilst acknowledging the dark side of this conflicted character.

It is the sixth title in a series of exclusive music ebooks, an ambitious project examining the perils of genius, celebrity and excess. Other titles in the series include 27: Amy Winehouse, 27: Kurt Cobain, 27: Jimi Hendrix and 27: Janis Joplin.
27: Brian Jones

27: Brian Jones

Contributors

Chris Salewicz

Price and format

Price
£1.49
Format
ebook
Brian Jones, multi-instrumentalist, visionary and the ‘golden boy of the ’60s’, was, at the age of 27, the first rock casualty of his generation.

A strange, somewhat impenetrable character, Brian Jones was a founding member and guiding spirit of The Rolling Stones. Adored and misunderstood in equal measure, Jones was perhaps the most creatively ambitious cultural force of his time, an artist whose commitment to the experimental and exotic remains profoundly influential.

Always unconventional, Jones’s voracious appetite for life’s extremes led to unparalleled debauchery, drug and alcohol fuelled paranoia, and ultimately personal ruin.

27: Brian Jones is the third in a series of exclusive music ebooks, an ambitious project examining the perils of genius, celebrity and excess. Other titles in the series include 27: Amy Winehouse, 27: Jimi Hendrix, 27: Jim Morrison and 27: Kurt Cobain.
27: Janis Joplin

27: Janis Joplin

Contributors

Chris Salewicz

Price and format

Price
£1.49
Format
ebook
Janis Joplin, singer-songwriter, counterculture icon, the Queen of rock and roll, died aged just 27. During a short four-year career, blighted by alcoholism and drug abuse, she changed the face of music, carving out opportunities for a generation of female talent. Her powerful, raw vocals touched fans of folk music, blues and soul alike, with recordings such as ‘Me and Bobby McGee’, ‘To Love Somebody’ and ‘Mercedes Benz’ widely recognized as classics of their era.

In 27: Janis Joplin acclaimed author Chris Salewicz examines Joplin’s troubled and unconventional existence, and explains her profound musical influence. This is the fifth in a series of exclusive music ebooks, an ambitious project examining the perils of genius, celebrity and excess. Other titles in the series include 27: Amy Winehouse, 27: Kurt Cobain, 27: Brian Jones, and 27: Jimi Hendrix.
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