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Lukas Zbinden leans on the arm of Kazim, as they walk slowly down
the stairway towards the door of his old people's home. Step by
step, the irrepressible Lukas recounts the life he shared with his
wife Emilie and his son. She loved to walk in the countryside; he
loved towns and meeting strangers. Different in so many ways, what
was the secret of their life-long love? And why is it now so hard
for him to talk to his son? Gradually we get to know a man with a
twinkle in his eye and learn the captivating story of this man, his
late wife, their son and the many people he has met along the way.
Zbinden's Progress is heart-rending, heart-warming and hilarious.
--- Winner of the Bern Literature Prize 2010
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Kivu (Paperback)
Jean Van Hamme; Illustrated by Christophe Simon
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R330
R299
Discovery Miles 2 990
Save R31 (9%)
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Ships in 9 - 17 working days
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The province of Kivu in the Congo is rich in rare and precious
minerals such as coltan, which is vital to our modern technology.
However, that wealth is coveted by so many, within the Congo or
abroad, that the entire region is a permanent bloodbath. Francois
Daans, a young Belgian engineer working for an unscrupulous
corporation, arrives in Kivu. His encounter with a young girl,
survivor of the latest massacre, will be an eye-opening experience
and force him to pick a side...
In this fascinating and entertaining second volume, Christopher
Sykes explores the life and work of Britain's most popular living
artist. David Hockney's career has spanned and epitomised the art
movements of the past five decades. Volume 1 covered his early
life: his precocious achievement at Bradford Art College and the
Swinging 60s in London, where he befriended many of the iconic
cultural figures of the generation. Picking up Hockney's story in
1975, this volume finds him flitting between Notting Hill and
California, where he took inspiration for the swimming pool series
of paintings; creating the acclaimed set designs for operas around
the world; and embracing emerging technologies - the camera and fax
machine in the 1970s and 80s, and most recently the iPad. Hockney's
boundless energy extends to his personal life too, and this volume
illuminates the glamorous circles he moved in, as well as his
sometimes turbulent relationships. With unprecedented access to
Hockney's paintings, notebooks, diaries and the man himself, this
second volume continues the lively and revelatory account of an
acclaimed artist and an extraordinary man.
The highly praised biography of an archetypal great house and the
family who lived there for over 250 years. 'The Big House' is the
biography of a great country house and the lives of the Sykes
family who lived there, with varying fates, for the next two
hundred and fifty years. It is a fascinating social history set
against the backdrop of a changing England, with a highly
individual, pugnacious and self-determining cast, including: 'Old
Tat' Sykes, said to be one of the great sights of Yorkshire (the
author's great-great-great-grandfather), who wore 18th-century
dress to the day of his death at ninety-one in 1861. His son was
similarly eccentric, wearing eight coats that he discarded
gradually throughout the day in order to keep his body temperature
at a constant. He was forced to marry, aged forty-eight,
eighteen-year-old Jessica Cavendish-Bentick - a lively and highly
intelligent woman who relieved the boredom of her marriage by
acquiring a string of lovers, writing novels and throwing
extravagant parties (her nickname became 'Lady Satin Tights'), all
the while accumulating debts that ended in a scandalous court case.
Their son, Mark, died suddenly whilst brokering the peace
settlement at the Paris Peace Conference at the end of World War I;
Sledmere was destroyed by fire shortly afterwards. But the rebuilt
Sledmere rose from the flames to resound again with colourful,
brilliant characters in the 1920s and 1930s including the author's
grandmother, Lily, who had been a celebrated bohemian in Paris.
'The Big House' is vividly written and meticulously researched
using the Sykes' own family's papers and photographs. In this
splendid biography of place and time, Christopher Simon Sykes has
resuscitated the lives of his ancestors and their glorious home
from the 18th- through to the 20th-century.
Cath Kidston - queen of vintage-inspired homeware and joyously
decorated spaces - grants unprecedented insight into her creative
process and personal style in this
lifestyle-meets-memoir-meets-interior-design book. The name 'Cath
Kidston' is associated worldwide with pattern, colour, dreamlike
nostalgia, and comforting, cheerful spaces. In her new book, the
founder of the eponymous brand invites us on a tour of her
Gloucestershire home, sharing stories, decorating tips and
inspirational ideas along the way. The book is divided into four
chapters, each of them focusing on the 21 featured spaces in the
book, including: Entrance Hall, Sitting Room, Study, Dining Room,
Office, Kitchen, Dressing Room, Attic, Greenhouse and Summer House.
There are also the whimsically themed rooms such as the Castle
Bedroom and Fish Bathroom. Delve into Cath's design process as she
reveals the memories and motivations behind her style choices. With
Cath's expertise and advice you'll discover how simple tricks make
stimulating spaces; from using vintage-inspired prints to transform
a quiet corner into an art gallery, to how the right rug can tie a
room together and create a cosy, congenial atmosphere. Discussing
colour, decor, pattern and passion in her own words, Cath will help
make your house a beautiful, practical home. Filled with
inspirational images, expert advice from an industry icon, and
stories that reveal a remarkable life in design, this book will
give you the confidence to click your heels and agree that there's
no place like home.
At the age of only 36, Sir Mark Sykes was signatory to the
Sykes-Picot agreement, one of the most reviled treaties of modern
times. A century later, Christopher Sykes' lively biography of his
grandfather reassesses his life and work, and the political
instability and violence in the Middle East attributed to it. The
Sykes-Picot agreement was drawn by the eponymous British and French
diplomats in 1916 to determine the divide of the collapsing empire
in the event of an allied victory in World War I. Excluding Arab
involvement, it negated their earlier guarantee of independence
made by the British - and controversy has raged around it ever
since. But who was Mark Sykes? A century on, Christopher Simon
Sykes reveals new facets of a misremembered diplomatic giant. Using
previously undisclosed family letters and cartoons by his
grandfather, he delivers a comprehensive and humbling account of
the man behind one of the most impactful policies in the Middle
East.
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