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With guidance and tips on modern tackle, fly lines and flies, and
many delightful photographs, the 'Little Book of Fly Fishing for
Trout' will help you to improve your tactics, techniques and your
catches.
Until she was seven years old, Anna Rosenburg was happy. She lived
a simple life in a two-room flat with her devoted father. In Anna's
world, there was very little to worry about - until a wealthy,
highminded 'pillar of society' across the road decided that it
really wasn't right for a little girl to be brought up by a poor
father on his own. Telling Anna that they were going for a drive in
the country, she took her away to live in a children's home. The
devastation of this betrayal and the loss of regular contact with
her father destroyed Anna's young world. Her unhappiness was
compounded by her confusion over her own identity. What did her
black skin mean? Why wasn't it the same colour as her father's?
Where did she come from? Who was she really?
The evil thugs of Idi Amin's Uganda and the fanatical bombers and
machine-gun-toting terrorists of Mumbai make The Crocodile's Teeth
a gripping tale of one man's survival and resourcefulness set
against a background of tyranny, terror and hardship on two
continents. Sam Thaker was born to Indian immigrant parents in
Uganda in the days when it was one of the most beautiful, fertile
and contented countries in the world. Then Idi Amin swept to power,
and under his tyranny Sam's paradise became a hell on Earth. Having
been forced by Amin's thugs to give up their home, Sam's thriving
airline cargo business and most of their money and possessions, he
and his family began a new life in England as near-penniless
refugees. But Sam was a survivor. Ignoring his bank manager's
patronising advice to open a corner shop, he decided instead to
build on his experience in the cargo business to start up a
London-based air freight company. Realising the immense potential
of the Indian import market, he returned to the land of his fathers
to build an international company which eventually opened offices
in eight Indian cities. Along the way he and his wife were caught
up in the wave of terrorism which struck Bombay in 1993 and again
in 2008, and narrowly escaped the floods which struck the city in
2005 and drowned more than 5000 people. The Crocodile's Teeth is a
fascinating portrait of survival and resourcefulness against a
background of tyranny and terror on two continents.
Asked to name their ideal job, more people in the UK say they would
like to be an author than anything else. Yet with more than 200,000
books now being published here a year and over two million
worldwide, the competition is getting fiercer by the minute. As
editor in chief of a successful self-publishing house, Chris Newton
spends most of his waking hours editing and ghostwriting books for
other people, and he knows all about how books can go wrong and how
they can be put right. He is also a successful published author,
one of his books having been acclaimed by a professional reviewer
as having 'a good claim to be the finest biography of an angler
ever written'.
Lottie Montmerencie's life could never be dull. The young library
assistant continues to find herself involved in one fantastic
adventure after another, ably assisted by her friend Penny and her
talking pets Allsorts and Scruffy. Guarded and guided everywhere
she goes by a magical talking charm, she will go to any lengths to
save her beloved land of Dofstram from the evil Zanus, the
witch-creature Imelda and their hordes of Zanuthians and
Gorgonians. In this second book in the trilogy, the terrors begin
right back home on her doorstep, when a neighbour called Jeremy
turns out to be less human than they thought - and much more
dangerous. In this thrilling sequel to Lottie and the Land of
Dofstram, M A Haggerty weaves an intriguing tale of spells and
battles, loyalty and betrayal.
Robin Chesham is a successful consultant surgeon with a keen
interest in genetics. When he meets Georgiana Gilmour, a young
rising star in the field, at an international medical conference,
the attraction is immediate, powerful and mutual. But surely,
thinks Robin, he has met Georgiana somewhere before. United by
common professional interests, a shared love of culture and an
irresistible emotional and physical attraction, Robin and Georgiana
become lovers. As they are swept away in an increasingly powerful
tide of love and desire, their illicit life together seems almost
too good to be true. But then a chance meeting opens up a secret
from the past, and reveals to Robin why he feels so drawn to
Georgiana, and she to him. And this is not the last shock that fate
has in store for them both...The Passion Gene is a fascinating
first novel from the pen of Louis de Savy, a former hospital
consultant.
'Four Poplars' is about Clifford Davies' childhood when he was
brought up in the village of Wroxham in the Norfolk Broads in the
early years of the last century, the youngest child of the village
schoolmaster. He enjoyed a childhood of extraordinary happiness and
security. There was boating and swimming in the River Bure, which
still ran crystal clear (the Broads had not yet become a holiday
mecca). There were summer picnics on the river, messing about in
(and with) boats and games of pirates and explorers. At home there
was a great deal of music, singing and amateur dramatics. But life
was not easy. For two years during the First World War,
eight-year-old Clifford and his older brother had to work seven
days a week looking after the cattle on a farm because the labourer
had been called up. There was tragedy too; Clifford could never
forget the day in 1917 when his mother received a letter to say
that the eldest boy, away fighting in France, had been killed in
the trenches. In later years the Church beckoned, and Clifford went
on to a career as a Naval chaplain where he served both at home and
abroad, in ships and shore bases, from 1936 until 1962. He was
awarded the OBE (Military) in 1942 for his efforts to boost and
maintain morale on board HMS Despatch, sailing in the Pacific,
isolated and out of touch with UK. In 1959 he was appointed
Honorary Chaplain to HM the Queen. But memories of those first
golden years always drew him back to his childhood. In 1971 he
wrote the 'Four Poplars' as a memoir of those times and a tribute
to the village where he had known such happiness. The trees of the
title, which stood by the spot where Clifford and his chums used to
bathe, were a landmark which stayed with him throughout his life.
Forty years on and 31 years after his death in 1980 at the age of
74, Clifford Davies' family have resurrected his manuscript and
entrusted it to Memoirs Books to edit and publish. It is an
enchanting story of an England which has long gone.
All the photographs in the book were taken in and around the
village and on two walks. They give the reader a small insight into
the village and some its beautiful surrounding countryside
throughout the year. They show some of Bibury's most famous views
as well as a few lesser known 'nooks and crannies'. These small
gems often lie undiscovered by many visitors as they sit in the
spectacular shadow of Arlington Row. Bibury sits scattered around
the Church of St Mary that dates back to the 8th century. The Saxon
period covered a time from the end of Roman Britain and the
establishment of Anglo-Saxon kingdoms in the 5th century and came
to an end in 1066 when William of Normandy came to England and
defeated Harold. Some 30 or so years after the Black Death had
wiped out almost half of the population and during the rein of
Richard II (1377-1399) the world famous timber framed Arlington Row
was built (around 1380,) its original use was as a wool store but
was then converted into weavers' cottages during the booming 17th
century economy. The steep pitch on the roofs are thought to have
housed the workers' looms. Today Bibury retains a magical and
etherial quality of England past. It seems as if it is woven into
the fabric of the village. The quiet tranquility, ancient history
and quintessential Englishness of Bibury attracts people from all
over the world. William Morris who had a summer retreat nearby
described it as surely the most beautiful village in EnglandA". A
view which is difficult to argue with, even Hollywood recognised
the village as being pure England, and used Arlington Row as part
of the mythical village of 'Wall' in the film 'Stardust'. Henry
Ford also thought Arlington Row was something of an English gem.
Whilst visiting the Cotswolds he attempted to buy the entire row of
houses and ship them back to his home in Michigan, and then
re-build them so that he could include them in his history theme
park. The Gloucestershire Archaeological Trust managed to block
this plan and The Row was bought and restored by the Royal Society
of Arts. The National Trust subsequently took ownership in 1949.
Henry Ford had to make do with a cottage from another Cotswold
village.
Love in the Midst of Grief is the story of a devastating double
tragedy; the deaths of two much-loved young men within a short time
of one another, one from a terrible virus, the other from unknown
causes. Their loss devastated their family. Nine years on, their
younger brother-in-law, Satenam Johal, who has a professional
background in social care, has written a detailed account of the
tragedy and its aftermath. In doing so he hopes not only to help
his family in their continuing grief but to provide others who are
mourning loved ones to understand and manage the grieving process.
The book will also be of great help to professionals seeking to
help the bereaved.
In 1816 the author's great-great grandfather, Thomas Kearey,
arrived in England to seek his fortune. He was the latest - but by
no means the last - in a line of strong and resourceful men. This
book is the story of the Keareys, and of their place in history
through the centuries. It relates how the Ciardha ('Ciar's people')
in the Ireland of the Dark Ages evolved into the modern Keareys,
how holders of that name laboured, loved and fought through the
centuries, and how in more recent times they were proud to fight
with honour for their adopted country of Britain in two world wars.
Terence Kearey has woven the carefully-researched story of what
happened to his family over the centuries into the economic and
social history of these islands, explaining how his ancestors coped
with, and in some cases helped to change, the vicissitudes of
poverty, war and economic and social change. The result is a
detailed and vivid picture of a past that is quickly fading from
memory.
William Rigg was born into a humble Cumbrian family in 1911,
eventually becoming one of 13 children. His mother died when he was
three and by the age of five he was having to put up with a
stepmother's bullying. Often sleeping three in a bed and sharing
shoes with his siblings because there weren't enough pairs to go
round, he scarcely knew what it was to eat a decent meal. He would
scrounge leftovers, steal turnips and potatoes to supplement the
family menu and eat hawthorn and nettle leaves from the hedgerows.
A bright child, he had to pass up the chance to go to grammar
school because his parents couldn't afford the uniform. Despite all
this Bill grew up healthy, happy and fulfilled, serving with honour
in France, Italy, Austria and North Africa in the Second World War,
impressing employers in a variety of jobs from farm work and
roadmending to process work at a nuclear power plant, and raising a
happy and successful family. This book is published as Bill and his
family celebrate his one hundredth birthday.
David Wilkie and Gladys Salmon were born in the early years of the
20th century at opposite ends of Britain. They met in 1931 in the
London hospital where Gladys was nursing. David was a young doctor
just down from Edinburgh, but although Gladys had trouble
understanding his accent at first, it proved no bar to romance.
They married in 1936 and went on to remain happily married for
nearly half a century. David and Gladys lived through enormous
social and cultural changes. During 48 happy years together they
produced three daughters and in later life had the joy of nine
grandchildren. Merely Players has been written by their daughter
Margaret, in her parents' memory and as a tribute to their lives.
From Smuggling to Cotton Kings is the story of the Greg Family, who
helped to shape the economic fortunes of Britain for more than two
centuries. It tells of their rise to power and prominence in the
fields of textiles, shipping, banking and marine insurance, their
role in the industrial revolution and how their fortunes declined
in the 20th century. In 1715 John Greg, a descendant of the
McGregor clan, sailed from the family home in Ayrshire to seek his
fortune in Ulster. He soon built a successful business as a
merchant, his own sons becoming successful businessmen. Half a
century later two of his grandsons, Thomas and Samuel, sailed back
to Britain and founded businesses of their own at opposite ends of
England, Thomas in banking and finance, Samuel in textiles. Helped
by the patronage and finance of Robert Hyde, Samuel became a
prominent figure in the development of the cloth industry. He
helped to take the industry forward by investing heavily in the
adoption of water power, and founded Quarry Bank Mill in north
Cheshire, which today is open to visitors as a National Trust
property. Meanwhile brother Thomas made a prudent entry into the
marine insurance business, at a time when Britain's overseas trade
was expanding at a prodigious rate. By the end of the 18th Century
they had built up large fortunes. After a serious setback caused by
the economic slump in the aftermath of the Napoleonic Wars in the
early 19th Century, business recovered and by the time brothers
died in the 1830s they were both, in today's terms,
multi-millionaires. Their descendants kept the family businesses
running successfully for several decades and diversified into
agriculture, literature and politics, but the 1860s recession saw
the end of the great wealth the Gregs and their associates had
built up.
Sanni Kruger was once so short of money that all she could afford
to eat was baked beans and potatoes. Now an accountant, she has
published a book designed to help people who don't have enough cash
- or simply think they don't - to live more fulfilled lives by
changing their attitude to money. Sanni learned about money
management as a young girl by helping out at her father's
accountancy practice in her home city of Hamburg, Germany. Now
living and working in Bristol, she owns and runs Holistic Money
Manager, a financial coaching service for people who need help
managing their money. She wrote Making Friends With Money,
subtitled How to start feeling wealthy without waiting till you're
rich, after realising how many people allow money problems to
dominate their lives. Her work has taught her that there is very
little correlation between how much people have and how happy they
are. "It's all about your relationship with the money in your life"
she says. "My book invites you to define your real goals and then
shows you how to make your money help you to achieve them, however
much or little you have. "There is plenty of help and advice
available for those who have lots of money and for those who are
genuinely poor. But there is very little for the many who are
somewhere in between." The book's first lesson is how to get out of
debt - and stay out of it. "So many of us allow debt to get out of
control by trying to pretend it will go away" says Sanni. "It
becomes the ogre under the bed, the nagging voice that wakes us in
the middle of the night. "It's far better to take control. With
proper planning you can work out a budget that enables you to keep
your creditors off your back while leaving enough for the quality
of life you want. Once you are out of debt, you will find that
money comes to you in ways you hadn't imagined."
New York lawyer Paul Anfield can't take his eyes off the mysterious
beauty who appears at his Uncle Lenny's funeral, complete with a
bodyguard escort. Then Paul's new boss shows him a top-secret file
Lenny left for his colleagues, and he begins to realise that there
was more to his uncle, mentor and former boss than anyone realised.
The file is pure dynamite. It reveals links at the highest level
between big business, the international drugs trade and the US
Government. But Paul's attempts to get to the bottom of the mystery
quickly draw the attention of some very powerful and dangerous
people, and soon his life and the lives of those close to him are
hanging by a thread. H J van de Koppel's top-flight experience in
big business and high finance lends an authenticity and complexity
to the narrative that is startling in a work of fiction. The
suspense never falters for a second as the story works its way to
its terrifying, remorseless ending. Shocking and erotically
charged, Grillos is a compelling read from start to finish.
When Steve Phillips started as a 15-year-old apprentice with a
Birmingham engineering company in 1961, the Beatles were still the
Quarrymen and a pint of mild cost one shilling and threepence. Five
years of dirt and grind, legpulls, laughter and sheer hard graft
later, Steve was a skilled turner and fitter, schooled the
old-fashioned way by senior craftsmen who knew how to turn a screw,
mill a die or grind a component to half a thousandth of an inch
using manually-controlled machine tools, a micrometer and the skill
in their fingers. He had also found the time - and saved the money
- to marry his teenage sweetheart and buy a house. Steve went on to
a varied and successful career in the UK manufacturing industry.
Half a century on, now retired and living in Cyprus, he looks back
on an era before computers and CNC machines, when Birmingham and
its factories were the backbone of industrial Britain and families
and workmates stuck together. Ten bob an hour is a fascinating
portrait of an era long gone.
Journey Towards the Light, tells of how Suzanne Haslam's life
changed after she married a man who turned out to be an obsessive
control freak, she found herself constantly humiliated, manipulated
and bullied. Her husband was clever enough to make sure her family
and friends never saw what was going on, and because the abuse was
not physical there were no scars, which she could display as
evidence. Her family accused her of imagining it all and even
allowed her husband - who was working in the family business - to
worm his way into their favour as the one who had been wronged.
After seven years of misery, Suzanne managed to pluck up the
courage to divorce her husband. However, the stress of coping with
the abuse and the tension with her family drove her to a full-scale
nervous breakdown and she was forced to take extended sick leave
from the nursing job she loved. She sought sanctuary in a remote
Spanish monastery, where she experienced a series of vivid psychic
events, which ultimately showed her how she could rebuild her life.
When Ingrid Steel was first put into an orphanage at the age of
four, she did not even know her real name. Nor would anyone tell
her who her parents were, or what had happened to them. After years
of bullying, deprivation and gratuitous punishment - even sexual
abuse - in a series of homes and orphanages, she was incarcerated
first in a borstal, then in a mental hospital. One day after
returning to the orphanage, Ingrid made a secret pilgrimage to
Somerset House in London to discover her real identity. She came
back in triumph clutching her precious birth certificate - only to
have it taken from her. That was the last straw. Desperate to be
free to live her own life, she forced her way out of the orphanage
and into the cold and wet. Would she at last be able to lead a life
of freedom? Little Girl Lost is the first part of Ingrid Steel's
shocking, heartrending life story.
The Butterfly's Cage, is the heart wrenching, inspiring true story
of a young Pakistani woman's flight to freedom. Suffering familial
abuse, tyranny and disownment as a result of refusing to submit to
the abuse received by not one but two violent husbands, Shahnaz*
opens the doors to a hidden world, illustrating how cultural values
can allow human rights violations to prosper and the cost of
reputation is integrity, respect and love. Born into a wealthy
family with homes in both Britain and Pakistan, she was forced to
give up school at the age of 12 in order to care for her younger
brothers. There followed two arranged marriages, to a violent, drug
addicted, petty criminal and then to a vicious, controlling sadist.
Her family ignored her pleas to escape her marital hell, instead
casting her as the wicked, immoral daughter whose selfish desires
threatened to damage the family's reputation. After years of abuse
and intimidation in both England and Pakistan, Shahnaz fled the
family homes to try to start a new life in London with her young
daughter only to be lured back to Pakistan under false pretences.
Stripped of her possessions and kept under house arrest, Shahnaz
was in constant fear of her life for a further 18 months, enduring
brutal beatings and diabolical threats to her life. Through her
intelligence, courage and unwavering fortitude alone, Shahnaz
overcame adversity, won her freedom, her family's acceptance and
now lives in England with her daughter and third husband, embarking
on a career in social care. Six years on, wishing to reveal the
pain and suffering that can be caused by misguided cultural
attitudes and social values, Shahnaz has written her story.
*Shahnaz is not her real name - she does not want herself or her
family to be identified
"After all the upsets, struggles, and negative experiences I have
had, including at one point nearly ending it all, I have felt a
deep desire to move on to a more positive and healthy life. Having
done so, I now wish to share this wonderful transformation of mine
with others and above all to inspire you. I mean this from my heart
and soul. To know that I can help just one person from this book
will make this journey of mine all worthwhile. So prepare yourself,
if you are ready to change your life for a brighter future - as I
promise you will be after reading this book. Once you have applied
all the information in it and have become more aware of your own
existence to take this first step in faith, you will be on the way
to becoming the person you really desire to be."
Insurance underwriter Ken Hinde is driving home from Kempton
Racecourse when his car inexplicably goes out of control and
crashes. The doctors are unable to save him, and he dies a few
hours later in hospital. The verdict - accidental death. But
Valerie Elphick, Ken's personal assistant and close friend, refuses
to accept the verdict. She makes some enquiries of her own - and
soon attracts the attention of the wrong sort of people, people who
will stop at nothing to hide the truth about what really happened
to two valuable racehorses, and why Ken had to die.
For more than two years, Rose Elders and her daughter Elizabeth
were hounded, bullied and intimidated almost to the point of
madness, all because certain junior public servants misused their
power, while senior ones who could have stopped it failed to use
theirs properly. It all started when Elizabeth complained that they
were being stalked by a well-known local misfit who was clearly
trying to gain power over the women in order to get his hands on
their money. She was accused of libelling him. The social worker
assigned to the case, for perverted reasons of her own, decided to
take the stalker's side and set out to have Elizabeth certified.
Thanks to the incompetence of some of those in authority, she very
nearly succeeded. The author has written A Desperate Obsession,
based on a true story, to show how open to abuse UK mental health
legislation is.
Sniff Streetwas the dirtiest, scruffiest street in Bogsley, and
Miss Potts' house was the most disgusting and revolting of all the
disgusting and revolting houses in it. She seemed to take delight
in surrounding the place with rubbish, bottles of rancid milk and
maggot-infested garbage. And why did one of her eyes stick out like
a glassy golf ball? No wonder eleven-year-old Charlie Mace did his
best to keep away from the place. But one day Charlie finds himself
cornered by Miss Potts, and is roughly transported into a strange
woodland world, a world in which he encounters a very odd
collection of beings. They all seem to live in dread of The Stink,
a dark, smelly and noisome creature which haunts the forest.
Charlie does his best to help his new friends fight back - and then
he discovers the shocking link between the Stink and Miss Potts -
Charlie Mace and the Big Stink is a vivid, colourful and compelling
story for youngsters aged 10-14.
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