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Books > Sport & Leisure > Travel & holiday > Places & peoples: general interest
In Great World Wonders, travel enthusiast and writer Michael Turtle
offers a curated guide to the best UNESCO World Heritage sites
around the globe, each with a fascinating tale and insight into our
shared humanity. Opulent palaces let us peek into the lives of the
rich and famous, while the centres of great empires show the
evolution of civilisations. There's the surprising beauty in
industrial sites from the past century, and the dazzling buildings
that were constructed in the name of love. And through it all is
the inescapable influence of human behaviour, with many of the
World Heritage Sites directly linked to important historical events
and people. From icons like the Egyptian Pyramids and the Taj
Mahal, to undiscovered gems like gold mines and ancient rock
paintings,Great World Wonders is a beautiful collection and
exploration of the best (and sometimes worst) of history. Featuring
stunning photography, this selection of the most interesting World
Heritage Sites is not just a source of travel inspiration, it's an
incredible journey through the amazing story of our world.
In 1987, skeletal remains were encountered during excavation just
west of Old Fort Erie, in Ontario's Niagara Peninsula. While
possession of the land had been bitterly contested in 1814, it
remained virtually undeveloped and only in the 1980s, with the
construction of permanent homes, did excavations yield evidence of
the distant past. An international team of scholars and scientists
investigated the remains and identified the individuals'
nationalities for repatriation, where appropriate. The resulting
archaeological dig has proven crucial to our understanding of the
siege of Fort Erie, and provided new information about military
clothing, personal gear, medical science, and other details of the
day-to-day life of a soldier living under battlefield conditions
during the War of 1812. Snake Hill provides a detailed account of
this investigation, documenting an important story of suffering and
carnage, and providing the reader with a rare glimpse at life and
death during the War of 1812. This book contributes significantly
to our understanding of events before, during and after Fort Erie's
1814 siege.
Plymouth is one of the America's oldest and most beloved
communities. From Plymouth Rock and the Mayflower to Gurnet Point
and Monomet, form the Pilgrim Progress Parade to parades of
tourists, photojournalist Greg Derr captures the spirit of
America's Hometown. He shows us both the highlights enjoyed by
visitors and the secret treasures that residents know and cherish.
He brings New England's oldest town to vivid, colorful life.
London is an ever-changing city, blink and one building disappears
and another appears bigger, taller, shinier. This is a compilation
of photos of now, this moment in time. Ten years from now, how many
photos would be the same? This is a photographic moment of the here
and now in London and you are invited in to share the moment. Yes,
there are hundreds of pictures of the Royal Albert Hall, Trafalgar
Square and Buckingham Palace but how many have a feature, an angle,
an effect? Something unusual, unique, whilst staying true to the
original image. Did you know there was a ship on top of Liberty's?
Or that there are three naked golden ladies leaping off the roof in
Piccadilly? Use it to imagine you are in London from the comfort of
your sofa, or on the train journey home from work.
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Recollections
(Hardcover)
Philip Jones Griffiths
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R1,475
R971
Discovery Miles 9 710
Save R504 (34%)
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?????? Philip Jones Griffiths is renowned as the foremost
photographer of the war in Viet Nam. President of Magnum for a
record five years, his 1971 publication Viet Nam Inc was a crucial
influence in changing public opinion in the US at the time of the
conflict. ?????? This new book however presents a period much
closer to home, with a departure towards many previously unseen
images taken of Britain in the 1950s, 60s and 70s. ??????
Griffiths's images depict social and political affairs and landmark
events over three decades of change and upheaval in Great Britain.
?????? From the Beatles in Liverpool and coalminers in Wales, to
CND marches on the streets of London and funeral processions in
Northern Ireland, the images are acute, human, and often wry,
moments describing an important transition in British society.
??????Tock! presents a domestic revolution, from a photographer
whose international fame covering a country on the other side of
the world is now put in the context of his equally incisive work at
home. ?????? An exhibition of over 50 images from the book was
exhibited in 2007 at Trolley Gallery, London and afterwards at
Savignano Festival, Italy. ?????? In 2008 the images will be
exhibited in Liverpool, England, as part of their 'City of Culture'
celebrations. ?????? Philip Jones Griffiths was recently honored
for Achievement in Photojournalism, at the 5th Annual Lucie Awards
in New York, October 2007.
If you owned a car in 1960s Britain, then you'll love this blast
back in time to when driving was still fun, highway speed limits
were unheard-of (well, until 1965 anyway), and buying a new car was
a thrilling family event. It was a golden period for iconic classic
cars - the Mini Cooper, Jaguar E-type, AC Cobra and MGB - but also
a time when British manufacturers really got their act together
with stylish family models. Who can forget great little runabouts
with evocative names like Anglia, Herald, Imp, Viva, Cortina and
Hunter? Meanwhile, Rovers, Triumphs and Jags were delighting
executives as they cruised along near-empty motorways. It was too
good to last, of course, with regulations looming and fancy foreign
cars creeping on to Britain's driveways by the end of the decade.
In this richly illustrated book, Giles Chapman recalls all the key
cars of the era that you probably owned - or at least coveted - and
brings the swinging '60s back to life.
Micronesia, Hawaii, Polynesia, Bora Bora, Seychelles, Maldives,
Australia - where does the mind go when imagining such places.
Drawn from the best travel blogs and Instagram images, this book
brings together the most beautiful locations near, on, or under
water. From eco resorts to remote, pristine islands; from sailing
on ultra-blue oceans to diving in translucent waters; in aerial and
underwater photography, the focus is on finding paradise. Whether
thinking about a trip or longing for sun and sand, this book is
where those daydreams begin.
'First of all, let's get one thing straight. Your Italy and out
Italia are not the same thing. Italy is a soft drug peddled in
predictable packages such as hills in the sunset, olive groves,
white wine and raven haired girls. Italia, on the other hand, is a
maze. It's alluring but complicated. In Italia you can go round and
round in circles for years. Which of course, is great fun.' Beppe
Severgnini was The Economist's Italian correspondent for ten years.
A huge Anglophile as well as an astute observer of his countrymen,
he's the perfect companion for this hilarious tour of modern Italy
that takes you behind the seductive face it puts on for visitors -
la bella figura - and uncovers the far more complex, paradoxical
true self. Alongside the historic cities and glorious countryside,
there'll be stops at the places where the Italians reveal
themselves in all their authentic, maddening glory: the airport,
the motorway and the living room. Ten days, thirty places. From
north to south, from food to politics, from saintliness to
sexuality. This witty and beguiling examination will help you
understand why Italy, as Beppe says, 'can have you fuming and then
purring in the space of a hundred metres or ten minutes.'
A delightful destination for lovers of cobbled lanes and
old-fashioned bars, tiny cafes and gorgeous, ancient architecture,
Prague boasts a cultural heritage in music and art that surrounds
the visitor with wonder and calm. The city of Alphonse Mucha houses
vaulting gothic buildings, collections of modern art and, of
course, the music of Dvorak in a breathtaking setting that leaps
from every page of this new book.
Historic images lead the reader through old Berlin and its famous
landmarks from the former Stadtschloss to Schloss Charlottenburg,
with an historic overview providing an introduction to the now
unified city. The book's main focus is on the Imperial Period from
the formation of the German Empire in 1871 until the end of the
First World War in 1918. Old photographs and historic city views
help readers understand today's lifestyle and current trends in
urban development.
This beautiful book, packed with stunning photographs, will take
you on a pictorial journey through Alaska's most magnificent
landscapes. From the arctic north, with its glittering sea ice,
frozen tundra and ethereal aurora borealis, to the lush rainforests
and breathtaking fjordlands of the south, this is a country as
diverse as it is immense. Take in the wild majesty of Denali
National Park and its towering peaks, marvel at the blue-white
glaciers of Glacier Bay and the untamed rivers of Alaska's pristine
Interior. Encounter the wind-battered coastlines of the Aleutian
Islands, and the sheltered bays of the Kodiak Archipelago; embrace
frontier spirit along its highways, railways and winding hiking
trails. Uncover Alaska's intriguing history through its onion-domed
churches, Native villages, remote settlements and abandoned
boomtowns. And if that was not enough, experience close encounters
with some impressive Alaskan residents, including humpback whales,
bears, caribou, moose, puffins, seals and more. Exploring sights
both familiar and unexpected, natural and man-made, new and old,
Best-kept Secrets of Alaska will introduce you to one of the most
awe-inspiring places on earth.
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Sahel
- The End of the Road
(Hardcover)
Sebastiao Salgado; Foreword by Orville Schell; Introduction by Fred Ritchin; Afterword by Eduardo Galeano; Designed by Lelia Wanick Salgado
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R1,504
R1,311
Discovery Miles 13 110
Save R193 (13%)
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In 1984 Sebastiao Salgado began what would be a fifteen-month
project of photographing the drought-stricken Sahel region of
Africa in the countries of Chad, Ethiopia, Mali, and Sudan, where
approximately one million people died from extreme malnutrition and
related causes. Working with the humanitarian organization Doctors
Without Borders, Salgado documented the enormous suffering and the
great dignity of the refugees. This early work became a template
for his future photographic projects about other afflicted people
around the world. Since then, Salgado has again and again sought to
give visual voice to those millions of human beings who, because of
military conflict, poverty, famine, overpopulation, pestilence,
environmental degradation, and other forms of catastrophe, teeter
on the edge of survival. Beautifully produced, with thoughtful
supporting narratives by Orville Schell, Fred Ritchin, and Eduardo
Galeano, this first U.S. edition brings some of Salgado's earliest
and most important work to an American audience for the first time.
Twenty years after the photographs were taken, "Sahel: The End of
the Road" is still painfully relevant. Born in Brazil in 1944,
Sebastiao Salgado studied economics in Sao Paulo and Paris and
worked in Brazil and England. While traveling as an economist to
Africa, he began photographing the people he encountered. Working
entirely in a black-and-white format, Salgado highlights the larger
meaning of what is happening to his subjects with an imagery that
testifies to the fundamental dignity of all humanity while
simultaneously protesting its violation by war, poverty, and other
injustices. 'The planet remains divided,' Salgado explains. 'The
first world in a crisis of excess, the third world in a crisis of
need.' This disparity between the haves and the have-nots is the
subtext of almost all of Salgado's work.
To travel through Italy is as close as one gets to being in
paradise. For centuries, writers, artists, architects, and
merchants have been drawn here, inspired by the beauty of Venice,
Florence, Naples, and Rome. Countless books, paintings, poems, and
sculptures are evidence of its undying appeal, and over the past 60
years, the country has become one of the world's top travel and
holiday destinations. The loveliness of Italy is, if not eternal,
certainly enduring, and the easygoing and relaxed Italian lifestyle
is still unrivaled. Here, some of Italy's most amazing landscapes
and diverse regions are brought to life, like Tuscany, Umbria, the
Amalfi Coast, and, no less magical, the Aeolian Islands off the
coast of Sicily. In these mythical surroundings are legendary
hotels full of atmosphere, where novels are set, movies are made,
weddings are celebrated, and famous love stories consummated: Villa
d'Este on Lake Como, the Pellicano Hotel in Porto Ercole, the Il
San Pietro on the Amalfi Coast, and the Palazzo Margherita in
Basilicata-to name just a few. Angelika Taschen also reveals where
to find more secret and hidden jewels-from the Locanda Cipriani, a
destination for food lovers on the island of Torcello, to the
romantic Castello di Vicarello in Tuscany and the atmospheric
Masseria Moroseta in Puglia.
The lines, circles, ticks, hooks, dots and dashes of Pitman
shorthand used by some postcard writers during the early twentieth
century are obscure to most people. Could the mysterious messages
contain scandalous gossip, tales of adventure or declarations of
undying love? Fifty Mysterious Postcards presents fascinating
examples from the 'Golden Age' of the postcard, each with a message
written in the dying art of Pitman shorthand. The rules of Pitman
have changed since the postcards were written and posted over 100
years ago, but careful transcription has unlocked their meaning to
bring stories of penfriends, sweethearts, holidays and the First
World War to life once more.
This collection of reflective essays-all exploring themes of
artistic self-discovery and regional awareness-showcases 19
nationally known writers who have roots in Alabama.In "The
Remembered Gate," nationally prominent fiction writers, essayists,
and poets recall how their formative years in Alabama shaped them
as people and as writers. The essays range in tone from the pained
and sorrowful to the wistful and playful, in class from the
privileged to the poverty-stricken, in geography from the rural to
the urban, and in time from the first years of the 20th century to
the height of the Civil Rights era and beyond.
In all the essays we see how the individual artists came to
understand something central about themselves and their art from a
changing Alabama landscape. Whether from the perspective of C. Eric
Lincoln, beaten for his presumption as a young black man asking for
pay for his labors, or of Judith Hillman Paterson, floundering in
her unresolved relationship with her troubled family, these
personal renderings are intensely realized visions of a writer's
sense of being a writer and a human being. Robert Inman tells of
exploring his grandmother's attic, and how the artifacts he found
there fired his literary imagination. William Cobb profiles the
lasting influence of the town bully, the diabolical Cletus Hickey.
And in "Growing up in Alabama: A Meal in Four Courses, Beginning
with Dessert," Charles Gaines chronicles his upbringing through the
metaphor of southern cooking.
What emerges overall is a complex, richly textured portrait of
men and women struggling with, and within, Alabama's economic and
cultural evolution to become major voices of our time.
A wild little troll runs away from home because he doesn't want to
do his chores. Rollo tries living with various woodland animals,
but he finds out that there is no place like home, and returns to
his family just in time for "the best Christmas ever."
Among the animals who take him in are an owl family, a mother bear
and two rambunctious cubs, some playful river otters, a hungry lynx
and a friendly moose family.
Jan Brett creates an irresistible, mischievous character that kids
will recognize in themselves. Jan transports us to a glorious
Scandinavian landscape where a beautiful fall turns into a
magnificent snowy winter. Her signature borders depict the troll
family missing Rollo, and animals as appealing as those found in
"The Mitten."
A warm, fun-loving Christmas picture book for families to share and
love and laugh over together.
Escape the nine-to five and learn how to live and work on the road
with the latest addition to Lonely Planet's Handbook series, a
practical guide inspiring and motivating people to achieve their
goal of travelling more, starting a whole new way of living and
creating a flexible work/life balance. Divided into two sections,
this informative book firstly explains the practicalities of
working on the road, such as income generation, managing career
changes, keeping in touch with family and maintaining
relationships, what to do with your stuff, overcoming common
pre-departure fears, keeping healthy on the road and much more. The
second showcases a number of ideal destinations for digital nomads,
offering invaluable travel insights and information about the
location in question, pros and cons, as well as inspirational tales
from digital nomads out on the road. From the palm-fringed beaches
of blissful Bali to the bright, neon-lights of dynamic Seoul,
aspiring nomads will be inspired to make the move and start a whole
new way of living. Written by some of Lonely Planet's very own
nomadic experts, this book is packed with top tips, insights and
real life tales on what it's really like to be working on the road.
Chapters throughout include: 10 perks of being a digital nomad What
jobs do digital nomads do? 15 items every digital nomad should
carry 10 ways to overcome loneliness Top destinations for digital
nomads Learning the lingo About Lonely Planet: Lonely Planet is a
leading travel media company and the world's number one travel
guidebook brand, providing both inspiring and trustworthy
information for every kind of traveller since 1973. Over the past
four decades, we've printed over 145 million guidebooks and grown a
dedicated, passionate global community of travellers. You'll also
find our content online, on mobile, video and in 14 languages, 12
international magazines, armchair and lifestyle books, ebooks, and
more.
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