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Pungent tales of World War Two converge with more distant memories
of the Thirty Years War in this powerful, compelling debut novel.
The year is 1946. The war is over. A young British army doctor
finds himself ordered to investigate a curious plague in a Polish
refugee camp. What he finds there is deeply unsettling and
harrowing... Meanwhile, a colleague is much more concerned with
unravelling uncannily similar events three hundred years old,
events twisted by the centuries into their current, misshapen form,
as the fairy-story of the Pied Piper of Hamelin... Set in the
Borderlands between Germany and Poland, this powerful first novel
is reminiscent in mood, complexity and accomplishment of Pat
Barker's World War One trilogy or Sebastian Faulks' Birdsong.
The third novel from the acclaimed author of The Pied Piper's
Poison and The Resurrection Club Leaving behind a dowdy northern
winter for the warming delights of the French Riviera, Martin and
his three student friends soon find their feet, turning a tidy
profit as beach-bum salesmen and taking to the joys of life by the
Mediterranean with relish. Martin soon gets addicted to those
delights, jacks in his degree and goes down deeper into a life less
ordinary - scuba-diving, bed-hopping and bar-keeping his way into
corners and out again. Out on the high seas, on board the laden
'Anne', ship's surgeon Martin is looking for the fresh start a life
on the ocean wave can afford a man with a problematic past. As his
captain steers his precious cargo - but not his crew - to safety
through a raging, swelling storm and onward to the riches of the
uncharted African coast, Martin comes to realize that down deeper
lie secrets, desires and freedoms of uncanny power. The laws seem
different out on the ocean, criss-crossing the Mediterranean or
hugging Africa's shore, couriering yachts or cocaine, trafficking
in spices or more human contraband. Living outside the dry land's
dry laws is liberating, but, as Martin discovers, the lawgivers and
the lawkeepers always turn up, looking for their justice.
Christopher Wallace, the prize-winning author of The Pied Piper's
Poison and The Resurrection Club, tells an exhilarating pair of
stories that reflect off each other like the sun off the sea to
illuminate just how a man - with all his principles and
compromises, desires and doubts - can find honour and more in
piracy.
Mediocre PR consultant Charles Kidd might just have found his meal ticket. With brilliant, charming new client Peter Dexter’s plans for the ultimate fringe spectacular at this year’s Edinburgh Festival, it would appear that Charles finally has the chance to be somebody, to make a splash.But in a city whose murky past is filled with graverobbers, mad, murderous scientists, charlatans and showmen, this particular image consultant would do well to look past the sheen of his new star customer, beyond a polished performance which cloaks a more sinister, manipulative purpose…With consummate skill, Christopher Wallace weaves a tale full of invention, ambiguity, unease and menace.
An exuberant biography of the life of the iconic photographer and
naturalist Peter Beard, whose life and work captured the cultural
imagination Peter Beard lived an astonishing life. The
artist, wildlife photographer, and bon vivant enthralled and
inspired both because of his work and his legendary lifestyle. A
scion of American industry turned explorer of Africa and
environmental advocate, Beard embodied the extremes of his time:
grand adventurer and sexually voracious partier, friend of everyone
from the Rolling Stones to Jackie Onassis to Andy Warhol to Karen
Blixen. And Beard had a passion—probably more like an
obsession—with the faults of the entire human experiment, with
the ways in which our consumption of the world’s resources have
come to consume us all. Beard’s outsize life and character—his
death-defying documentation of both the endangered wildlife of
Africa, and, closer to home, some of the world’s most beautiful
women for a range of fashion magazines—animate this lively but
authoritative biography. The journalist Christopher Wallace, long
fascinated by Beard’s artistic legacy, adventurous spirit, and
hard-partying persona, came to know him well later in Beard’s
life. Capturing the varied social and cultural scenes that Beard
moved through with glamorous ease over five decades, Wallace also
makes a powerful case for the lasting impact of his work. In
Twentieth-Century Man, Wallace has rendered this towering figure in
all of his contradictions and complexities—a deeply romantic and
idiosyncratic personality, beloved by so many, whose sensibilities
nonetheless remained firmly rooted in an era characterized by
racist and colonialist attitudes. Stirring and visceral,
Twentieth-Century Man is the definitive portrait of Peter Beard.
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Are you looking for alternative streams of revenue for your
business, low-hanging-fruit opportunities, and better profit
margins? According to McKinsey, a dozen or so emerging economies
will collectively have an annual GDP of more than 20 trillion USD
by 2020, exceeding that of the United States. In 2015, developing
economies will account for more than half of the world's annual
GDP. And the largest consumer markets of the next generation can be
found in emerging markets like China, India, and Africa. With
figures like these, "going global," particularly to emerging
markets can present the opportunities for which you are looking. As
markets in developed countries stagnate, slow, dwindle, or reach
saturation, companies are looking for new horizons to sustain them
in the next generation economy. This is no less true for
entrepreneurs and SMEs. While going global has become a business
imperative and entrepreneurs and SMEs look for new opportunities
like larger firms, questions arise around how? How do we go global?
How do we tap into markets far away with limited resources? How
will going global make a difference? How long should we wait before
going global? Going Global on a Dime answers the "how" of going
global from both a strategic and practical approach, focusing on
new and existing firms considering or just starting the going
global process. It re-wires the framework for going global so firms
can navigate the course dynamically while minimizing costs,
managing and maximizing cash flow and return on investment,
streamlining processes, and keeping the "small" firm ready to take
advantage of profitable opportunities. This book will teach you
that it is not your assets that you own alone that will make this
possible, but the addition of resources into which you can tap.
Large multinational corporations no longer hold the monopoly on
going global successful. The author, Lauri Elliott, will share what
she has experienced in leading a small, but global firm, as well as
what she has learned through the process of helping other firms go
global or expand globally. And she brings the experience of others
who advise and lead global firms to the table through interviews
conducted to learn not only the obvious facets of going global, but
the underlying nuances and dynamics at work. Going Global on a Dime
helps you develop a framework and path wrapped around an
opportunity you discover. "It's not a book you read and put to the
side, but a bible of sorts that you keep with you to shape your
opportunities," says Elliott. "Your best return on investment is
putting it to use."
the library of orthodox thinking.
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Paperback
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Discovery Miles 3 100
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