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As a football-mad young boy growing up in rural Shropshire, within
sight of the Welsh border, Dave Edwards dreamt of playing the game
professionally and perhaps, one day, of wearing the red shirt of
his father's homeland - Wales. Living My Dream is the frank and
fascinating story of just what it took for Edwards to achieve his
life's ambition, and describes how his dedication and commitment to
the game he loves has enabled him to enjoy a successful 16-year
career with over 400 club appearances for Shrewsbury, Luton, Wolves
and Reading, spanning the top five English divisions from the
Conference to the Premier League. Woven into the story of his club
career, Living My Dream is also a behind-the-scenes account of
Dave's brave recovery, after a serious injury in January 2016, to
make the starting line-up in Wales' opening game at that summer's
European Championships, and his magical month inside the Welsh camp
when the team exceeded all expectations to reach the semi-finals.
The first member of the Welsh squad to tell the inside story of
life at the Euros, Edwards reveals how the players thrived within
the camp's 'bubble' and forged an unbreakable team spirit, how
Chris Coleman managed his squad with meticulous planning and
inspirational leadership, and how the Together Stronger ethos was
spurred on by the passion and pride of an entire nation.
The book describes the history of Brassica oilseed crops,
introduces the Brassica genome, its evolution, diversity, classical
genetic studies and breeding. It also delves into molecular genetic
linkage and physical maps, progress with genome sequencing
initiatives, mutagenesis approaches for trait improvement,
proteomics, metabolomics and bioinformatics. The concluding of
portion provides detailed methods for whole genome marker assisted
breeding, the genetics and genomics of important traits including
disease resistance, herbivory, insect and abiotic stress
resistance, and discusses the future prospects for Brassica
improvement through genomics. This volume provides a state of the
moment view of current Brassica genetics, genomics and breeding
research which is the foundation for the continued understanding of
oilseed Brassica species, their genomes, evolution and further
potential as important food and biofuel crops.
Spacecraft are growing in complexity and sensitivity to
environmental effects. The spacecraft engineer must understand and
take these effects into account in building reliable, survivable,
and affordable spacecraft. Too much protections, however, means
unnecessary expense while too little will potentially lead to early
mission loss. The ability to balance cost and risk necessitates an
understanding of how the environment impacts the spacecraft and is
a critical factor in its design. This presentation is intended to
address both the space environment and its effects with the intent
of introducing the influence of the environment on spacecraft
performance.
'Saturday's Kids' is a collection of photographs of the early 1980s
Mod scene in Southern England, the majority previously unseen.
Darren Russell's images capture the style, attitude and innocence
of youth in a scene organised by those who participated and which
was totally driven from within. Although generally ignored by
outsiders at the time, Mod's influence is now firmly established in
high street fashion, music and advertising imagery. Includes rare
photographs of Paul Weller of The Jam.
Growing up in Hornsey Rise, North London, in the sixties and
seventies was a challenge. It was hard for a boy marginalised at
school - and not even liking football! - to find anything of
interest to do. And then the light dawned: history. And,
specifically, military history. Soon a world of model soldiers and
ancient battles spills over into real life with a job at a boy's
dream-of-a-shop on Piccadilly. But horizons expand, and innocent
childhood pranks can give way to more serious adolescent scrapes.
Love at home is contradicted by violence on the streets, and the
'firms' are a force to be reckoned with. Drugs and alcohol can
claim your friends. Knowing how to fight is a way of life. Yet
despite life's tragedies, Dave's humour and intelligence shines
through. He draws you into his youth like a spell-weaver and you're
there right alongside him. You'll still be holding your breath when
he finally escapes. No word of a lie!
'A sequel to The Grade Cricketer? It's like junk time in a second
innings - something you just have to be part of.' Gideon Haigh. Is
life without cricket worth living? It's a question asked and
answered by the Grade Cricketer, as he faces a cricket-free future
after a devious plan goes horribly wrong. Hilarious, ridiculous and
completely true to life to anyone who's ever spent time in a
dressing room, Tea and No Sympathy takes us on a skeweringly funny
sporting misadventure through the world of grade cricket and the
flawed, damaged and occasionally appalling people who play it, from
the creators of the bestselling novel The Grade Cricketer. Praise
for The Grade Cricketer: 'The Grade Cricketer is the finest tribute
to a sport since Nick Hornby's Fever Pitch, and the best cricket
book in yonks. It's belly-laughing funny but it's also a hymn to
the grand and complex game delivered with a narrative pace and
ability I'm afraid most Test players don't have. For anyone who
ever dreamed of excelling at a sport but never quite made it but
still gave it your life, this is the story. A great read!' Tom
Keneally 'The Grade Cricketer has taken us so far inside a district
club dressing room that you feel like a locker. Ligaments could not
be closer to the bone than some of his observations.' Kerry
O'Keeffe 'The Grade Cricketer is strange and, I suspect,
brilliant'. Wisden
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