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Books > Sport & Leisure > Transport: general interest > Ships & shipping: general interest > General
From the bestselling author of Darwin's Dragons and My Friend the
Octopus comes an exciting historical adventure - with a touch of
magic - set aboard the Titanic ... Young cabin steward, Sid, is
proud to be working on the Titanic, the greatest ship ever built.
Clara dreams of adventure too, but she's a stowaway in the hold of
a much smaller boat, Carpathia. Here she meets the biggest, best
dog she's ever known: Rigel, who is on his way to be reunited with
his owner. None of them could have imagined how they would need
each other one ice-cold terrible night - or that an extraordinary
sea creature might also answer their call ... The third
middle-grade historical adventure from the author of Darwin's
Dragons and My Friend the Octopus A new spin on the sinking of the
Titanic, offering an uplifting alternate history of real-life
survivor, Sid Daniels A touching animal friendship lies at the
heart of the story, as well as hints of mythology Showcases Lindsay
Galvin's trademark combination of exciting adventure, rip-roaring
history and non-fiction elements PRAISE FOR DARWIN'S DRAGONS: 'A
striking and original adventure ... just the sort of story I love.'
EMMA CARROLL 'WHAT a voyage! [Darwin's Dragons] is everything you
hope it will be ...' LUCY STRANGE '[A] beautifully fictionalised
story' THE TELEGRAPH
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Ralph
(Hardcover)
Clarence Ralph Fitz, Mardelle Marie Fitz Meyer
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R558
Discovery Miles 5 580
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Ships in 9 - 17 working days
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This Companion is part of the Oxford Reference Collection: using
sustainable print-on-demand technology to make the acclaimed
backlist of the Oxford Reference programme perennially available in
hardback format. The most comprehensive and authoritative reference
book of its kind, The Oxford Companion to Ships and the Sea was
first published in 1976 to huge acclaim, hailed as 'a beguiling
book' (Daily Telegraph), 'marvellous' (The Times), and 'totally
absorbing' (Financial Times). This second edition was published in
2006 and brought together more than 2,600 entries on every
imaginable aspect of the seas and the vessels that sail on them,
from shipbuilding, yachting, diving, and marine mammals, to tidal
power, piracy, and the literature and language of the sea. This
edition provides significant material on topics that have come to
prominence in recent times, such as oceanography and marine
archaeology: key contributions on these subjects from marine expert
Dr Martin Angel at Southampton Oceanography Centre include climate
change, environmental issues, marine pollution, and marine
wildlife. Entries added to this edition are underwater vehicles,
tsunamis, warfare at sea, marine pollution, the Economic Exclustion
Zone, and ship preservation. This Companion also includes
authoritative and fascinating entries on maritime history: its
naval battles, its great ships, from Noah's Ark and the Bounty to
the Titanic and the Mary Rose; and its most famous individuals,
both real and fictional, including Christopher Columbus, Horatio
Nelson, and Robinson Crusoe. Entries are fully cross-referenced,
and the text is illustrated with over 260 detailed drawings.
Flotilla sailing enables thousands of people every year to charter
a yacht and enjoy a holiday in a sunny foreign location: a group of
boats sails together under the guidance of a lead crew. In 1974,
the first holiday flotilla of eleven yachts set off from Aegina in
the Saronic Gulf of Greece and no-one involved could have had any
idea that they were at the beginning of something that would grow
so big. It is now possible to go flotilla sailing in every
continent of the world. The author traces how flotillas originated,
how new cruising areas were opened up and new companies formed. He
worked closely with the pioneers of this form of tourism who
willingly contributed to the research into what they called 'the
time of our lives': managers in one or other of the companies,
skippers or engineers in charge of the boats, and clients. The
second part of the book looks in detail at changes in some villages
and harbours of the Ionian Sea, an area where much of the
development has occurred through the influence of the boats rather
than land-based tourism. It draws on conversations with taverna
owners who remember when two visiting yachts was big business.
Every page has coloured reproductions from the original brochures
and cruising guides, and in the Ionian section modern photos are
set alongside equivalent views before the yachts started coming in
numbers. The book may be an introduction to flotillas, an insight
into the background of the companies which now offer charters of
this sort, or just a memento of a wonderful holiday.
This title includes full-sized plans for 8 canoe designs, most of
which are the author's own adaptations. The step-by-step directions
are accompanied by more than 100 photographs and illustrations.
Covering everything from safety in the boat to shop repairs, Gil
Gilpatrick thoroughly explains the whys and shortcuts learned from
his experience in the shop and on the water. A Maine guide, he uses
his own canoes and tests their performance on the challenging
Allagash River every summer. It includes full-sized plans for 8
well-proven canoe designs, most of which are the author's own
adaptations. Step-by-step directions for building a canoe from
start to finish are accompanied by more than 100 photographs and
illustrations.
Painstakingly researched, this book contains much
never-before-published archival material, presented in traditional
storytelling style while still adhering to the strict rules for
historical revelation. The saga told chronicles the dawn of
steam-powered vessels in the early 19th century, and the resistance
to this first technology that allowed humans to artificially
overcome Nature to practical effect. While the brilliant Robert
Fulton's first "steamboats" proved their worth on rivers, lakes and
bays, there was deep skepticism that such vessels were capable of
overcoming the unpredictable powers of the sea. To prove that it
was possible for such a craft to cross the Atlantic Ocean, Captain
Moses Rogers designed not a "steamboat," but a "steamship," the
first of its kind. To most mariners, however, this vessel named
Savannah seemed so dangerous that they considered it nothing more
than a "steam coffin."
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Titanic in Photographs
(Paperback)
Daniel Klistorner, Steve Hall, Bruce Beveridge, Art Braunschweiger, Scott Andrews; Foreword by …
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R595
R536
Discovery Miles 5 360
Save R59 (10%)
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Ships in 9 - 17 working days
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The name Titanic has become synonymous with catastrophe, the story
of this luxurious liner legendary. Wrecked after colliding with an
iceberg on her maiden voyage, the loss of around 1,500 lives among
her passengers and crew has gone down in history as one of the most
emotive and tragic disasters in history. In this evocative
collection of photographs the authors of Titanic The Ship
Magnificent tell her full story, from the shipyards of Harland
& Wolff and its early vessels, with the backdrop of the great
race to build the biggest and best passenger liner, to the frenzy
of excitement surrounding her launch. Looking at her officers and
crew, as well as her stops at Cherbourg and Queenstown - including
some special, rare photographs - the book follows the story to its
inevitable conclusion, considering the lifeboats, the presence of
the Carpathia and the aftermath of the disaster.
Fully illustrated in a striking landscape format, Ships contains
300 mercantile and military vessels arranged in chronological
order, from ancient times to the present day. Every type of vessel
from every part of the world is featured, from Phoenician war
galleys from 1500BC, through the graceful trading clippers of the
nineteenth century, to the sophisticated and heavily armed
submarines of the nuclear era. In these information-packed pages
you will find out about ancient galleys, Viking longships, medieval
cogs, galleasses, galleons, men-of-war sailing ships, coastal
gunboats, iron-clad steam boats, dreadnoughts, aircraft carriers
and nuclear submarines. Many well-known ships are included, such as
Nelson's flagship HMS Victory, the ill-fated passenger liner
Titanic, the infamous German World War II battlecruiser Bismarck
and many, many more. Each ship is illustrated with a colourful
artwork, while lively text offers a concise service history of the
ship and a specification box provides comprehensive technical data,
including displacement, dimensions, machinery, armament, speed and
complement.
Lighthouses have been used as aids to maritime navigation for
centuries. They are highly recognisable and beloved features of our
coastline and waterways, treasured by communities and captivating
visitors. But how many are there and is it really possible to visit
them all? The British Lighthouse Trail is the only book of its kind
to provide a comprehensive listing of all lighthouses in Scotland,
England, Wales, Northern Ireland, the Isle of Man and Channel
Islands accompanied by practical advice on how to reach them. The
author, an avid pharologist, set off on a quest in 2012 to visit
all lighthouses around the British coastline only to find that
there were many more lighthouses to be discovered. This
comprehensive book is the result of further extensive research and
significant travel. Over 600 lighthouses are featured - from the
perilous beauty of Shetland's Muckle Flugga Lighthouse to the
elegant serenity of Jersey's Corbiere Lighthouse. Complete with
helpful maps highlighting the location of every lighthouse in each
region and colour photography of a broad selection of our nation's
most weird and wonderful aids to navigation throughout, this book
is an indispensable guide to visiting and seeing some of our
nation's most majestic, historical and isolated buildings. Each
listing features a description of the structure, its light
characteristic as well as any notable designers. Access information
offers the best ways to reach or see each lighthouse, and whether
it is possible to explore inside the tower. Nearby or related
places of interest, such as other notable aids to navigation and
relocated lighthouse optics, are also included. Experience the
secluded joy of visiting tidal islands, watch waves lapping against
some of the most remote rock structures, and feel the magic of
walking in the footsteps of the lighthouse keepers inside the
towers. This book will guide you on countless journeys never to be
forgotten.
A unique view of the revolution: from the ocean The only foreign
writer to portray things Cuban as a volunteer merchant marine, Ron
Ridenour sailed six months on five Cuban ships around the island
nation delivering petroleum, and to and from Europe with container
goods, to tell Cuban sailors' views of their society and the world.
Follow the crew through a gale, catching a giant shark, struggling
with a life boat gone amuck, night life ashore... 108 pages with
photos.
Anyone going to sea needs an understanding of maritime flags, and
this handy book is the perfect pocket-sized reference. Concise but
comprehensive, it includes: - National maritime flags - Special
ensigns, jacks, burgees, official and defence flags, and code flags
- Yacht club burgees - Signal flags (including naval codes,
distress signals and racing codes) - Flag etiquette and usage (from
positions to salutes to timing and more) Expanded and updated for
its third edition, the book now includes masthead burgees, as well
as new advice on changing rules in European waters and beyond, and
more information on the use of and etiquette surrounding local,
regional and other unofficial flags. If you have ever put to sea
wondering about the different types of flag, how they are made up,
and the dos and don'ts as well as traditions and myths of flying
flags then this will be both a fascinating read and a useful
on-board guide.
Most of us never realize how many words and expressions used in
everyday English have a fascinating nautical origin. This charming
pocketbook explains the practical ship-board beginnings of over 200
such phrases--colorful, bizarre and surprising--and how they came
ashore. For anyone with an interest in the sea & its
traditions--landlubbers, boaters, historians, linguists.
Since its first publication in 1972, more than 30,000 blue-water
sailors have looked to this book when injury or illness struck at
sea. Virtually every accident or ailment that might occur when
professional medical care is unavailable is squarely faced and
dealt with, using layman's language and step-by-step instructions
that calmly take the reader from diagnosis through treatment to
follow-up care. The fifth edition brings this standard work
up-to-date with current medical practice. While maintaining its
ease of use for quick, easy reference in case of a medical
emergency at sea, diagrams inside the front and back covers point
the reader to the appropriate section of the book. Each section
starts with a short account of a possible accident or sickness that
might occur on a voyage, and then lists the steps to be taken by
the caregiver. Photographs and diagrams accompany many of the
procedures. Separate chapters are devoted to preparing a crew and
the boat's medical chest for long cruises, including lists of drugs
for which prescriptions are needed. A number of chapters deal with
the unique needs of children.
'If you enjoy Dilly Court or Rosie Goodwin, this one will be right
up your street' reader review 'One of the nation's favourite saga
writers' Lancashire Post In the grand tradition of Catherine
Cookson, Josephine Cox and Poldark, comes a page-turning and
enthralling new Cornish-set saga of shipwrecks, smugglers, secrets
and romance, from Jennie Felton.
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She always knew a piece of her heart was missing... Cecile has been
raised to a life of privilege at Polruan House, by her widowed
father and aunt. Now she's of age, they are determined that she
make a proper match, but Cecile's heart belongs to their coachman,
Sam - most definitely not suitable marriage material. When Sam
turns to his friend, smuggler Zach Carver, for help eloping with
Cecile, Zach tells of a recent encounter with Lise, a beautiful but
poor girl in St Ives, who is the mirror image of Cecile. And so a
daring plan is born to briefly swap the girls. But bringing Cecile
and Lise together will uncover an astonishing family secret of a
bold escape from a loveless marriage, a treacherous shipwreck and a
sister thought lost to the sea long ago...
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For more heartwrenching, heartwarming saga, look out for The Stolen
Child and A Mother's Sacrifice, out now! And don't miss Jennie's
Families of Fairley Terrace series, which began with Maggie's story
in All The Dark Secrets and continued with Lucy's story in The
Miner's Daughter, Edie's story in The Girl Below Stairs, Carina's
story in The Widow's Promise and Laurel's story in The Sister's
Secret.
The modern lobster boat has evolved slowly over decades to become
the craft it is today: seaworthy, strong, fast, and trusted
implicitly by the lobstermen and women to get the job done and get
them home, each and every time, through the most terrifying--and
sometimes life-threatening--conditions that the sea can dish up.
"Where do lobster boats come from?" "What is the origin of their
design?" "Who builds them?" "How do they work?" The story of the
Maine lobster boat needs to be told--before the storied history of
this iconic American craft slips away forever into the past, on the
heels of what may be the last surviving traditional lobster boat
builders. Filled with colorful characters, old maritime tales, and
fascinating details, this a definitive look at the origins and lore
of Maine's most ubiquitous vessel.
In Titanic Tragedy maritime historian John Maxtone-Graham documents
the vessel's design, construction, and departure from Southampton,
her passengers' lifeboat ordeal, their Carpathia rescue, the role
of new technologies, and memorials to her crew. He describes
poignantly the performance of her eight gallant bandsmen who played
on deck to the very end; none survived. Added historical bonuses
include seven letters, ostensibly from a Titanic passenger. In
fact, they were written by one of America's most eminent
historians, Walter Lord, author of the seminal A Night to Remember
of 1955. His devastating parodies about life aboard the doomed ship
appear here in print for the first time.
A classic by Edward Rowe Snow, first published in 1943 and updated
in 1944 and again in 1946, Storms and Shipwrecks of New England
relates what William P. Quinn calls ""stories of stormy
adventure."" Jeremy D'Entremont has provided annotations to Snow's
chapters, covering the pirate ship Whidah, the wreck of the City of
Columbus, the Portland Gale, the 1938 hurricane, and more, bringing
the information about the storms and shipwrecks up to date.
Geoff Hunt is known to millions of readers across the world as the
artist responsible for the covers of Patrick O'Brian's
Aubrey-Maturin novels, and more recently for those of Julian
Stockwin's Thomas Kydd books. He is widely acknowledged to be one
of the leading marine artists of his generation. More than a
showcase of the versatility and creativity of his work, this book,
written by the artist himself, also reveals its accuracy, through
five key case studies that explain the initial inspirations,
gathering of source material and often lengthy artistic progression
that leads to the creation of a finished painting. The artist has
selected over 150 paintings and sketches to illustrate his prolific
career, painting techniques and influences, dividing them into
sections on Nelson's Navy, The American War of Independence,
illustrating the naval writers and the Modern Maritime Scene, which
includes recent commissions from the commercial sector and yachting
community.
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