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Readers will discover: Who was John Kennedy's first dangerous
lover? Who made rock music possible? Who created the 'Green
Revolution'? Who was Simon Cowell's mentor? Who stopped Catholic
priests marrying? Who invented the 'hole in the wall' ATM? Whose
hand does the French Foreign Legion salute? Who inspired the Red
Cross? Who built the first bra? Whose driving error started World
War I? Whose 'devil's paintbrush' killed millions? Which doctors
finished off Elvis and Michael Jackson? Who first broke the sound
barrier? Whose blood cells are 'immortal'?
All over the world there are places that became famous forever
because something extraordinary happened there by chance.
Beautifully illustrated and carefully researched Fame By Chance
covers 380 such places with new insights and facts that are
amusing, surprising and sometimes controversial. Foreword by Peter
Ackroyd. All over the world there are places that became famous
forever by chance - battles briefly waged, scenes of triumph and
disater, sites of murder and intrigue, centres of influential
creativity and noted mythical places from books and film. How and
why did; Angora, Tabasco, Duffel and Fray Bentos give us products
good and bad; Kohima's tennis court save India; Storyville's 269
brothels helped it to create jaz; Botany Bay never saw any British
convicts; Tay Bridge was a disaster avoided by Marx and Engels;
'OK' stands for a farmhouse; Ferrari chose the 'Prancing Horse of
Maranello'; Kyoto was saved from Hiroshoma's terrible fate; The
British built the Great Hedge of India; With 432 pages beautifully
illustrated and carefully researched Fame By Chance covers 380 such
places with new insights and facts that are amusing, surprising and
sometimes controversial.
That night for most people was of little interest. But it would
turn out to be the most momentous and threatening of their lives. A
mysterious meteor-like object hits the sea off Ireland, quickly
followed globally by hundreds more, creating vast amounts of
vapour, but little damage. The mists soon clear and people start to
relax. But within weeks comes a shocking realisation. Men are
suddenly and inexplicably impotent and infertile, with doctors as
baffled as they are. No more babies? The devasting news dominates
the media - and markets across the globe begin to collapse as the
horrific economic implications of an ageing and terminally reducing
world sink in. Scientific and military and space experts find
evidence that now convinces sceptical world leaders that an alien
force intends to take over a weakened world by the patient and
devious means of destroying human reproduction. However, one brave
woman puts forward a radical idea as the only possible and secret
solution. But will it work?
Readers will discover: Who was John Kennedy's first dangerous
lover? Who made rock music possible? Who created the 'Green
Revolution'? Who was Simon Cowell's mentor? Who stopped Catholic
priests marrying? Who invented the 'hole in the wall' ATM? Whose
hand does the French Foreign Legion salute? Who inspired the Red
Cross? Who built the first bra? Whose driving error started World
War I? Whose 'devil's paintbrush' killed millions? Which doctors
finished off Elvis and Michael Jackson? Who first broke the sound
barrier? Whose blood cells are 'immortal'?
More than 1300 numerical nuggets of the most astonishing, bizarre,
and quirky numbers, from the number of emails a spammer must send
to get a response, to the number of teeth on a tortoise Numbers are
a common language, as every day people use PIN numbers, figure
costs, study sports scores, maintain speed limits, check bank
balances, play the lottery, and more. This collection reveals
hidden and often astonishing numbers, with entries divided into 14
sections, including science, human body, modern life, business,
nature, military, music, space, and history. Readers will learn the
minimum number of dollars it would be worth Bill Gates' time to
bend down and pick it up--a lot, not surprisingly. They'll also be
well informed about deadly sins, the pounds per square inch at
which champagne is bottled, how many miles of arteries and veins
are in the human body, the staggering number of bottles of wine
that Napoleon's army took to Russia, the number of chopsticks the
Japanese use in a year, and much more.
In the opening chapters the author records his father Toby's
remarkable career in PR. This began just before World War II with
Toby becoming responsible for taking the initiative away from
Germany's propoganda machine controlled by the well organized and
funded Nazi party. After the war Toby was one of the first
political spin-doctors, worked for the Conservative Party and later
rose to be the doyen of commercial and international PR in the UK.
Later in the book, Donough picks up his own story and this really
comes to life when he joins the Irish Guards. He then treats us to
four years of amusing military recollections. On leaving, the
author started civilian work in a London that is just beginning to
come alive - the Swinging Sixties have arrived. Like his father he
goes into PR and records a memoir of the most colourful people of
the period. The glamorous certainly feature - Joanna Lumley,
Jacqueline Bisset and Charlotte Rampling are just some. His
involvement in the opening of the trendiest nightclub of the
period, Sibylla's, with its guest list of all the greats of rock n'
roll is another seminal moment.
A completely new look at plants - not only in food, drink and
commerce, and how they have created civilisation, trade and
empires, but also in love, in war, in crime, in horror and delight,
in music, poetry and prose, and on the screen. Not just another
gardening or plant book, this is a complete picture of how plants
affect people, for better or worse, now, in the past and in the
future with illuminating and startling facts about their ubiquitous
presence in human affairs - through life, death, illness,
happiness, murder, despair, desperation, love, hate, loss, and far
more. From Presidents to pop stars, from scientists to slavers,
royals to religious leaders, chefs to charlatans, pioneers to
politicians, artists to actors, Plants & Us is a unique
overview of plants, wild and cultivated, their vital importance and
the threats they face. Above all, how they affect all our lives in
stories that will often surprise the reader.
A completely new look at plants - not only in food, drink and
commerce, and how they have created civilisation, trade and
empires, but also in love, in war, in crime, in horror and delight,
in music, poetry and prose, and on the screen. Not just another
gardening or plant book, this is a complete picture of how plants
affect people, for better or worse, now, in the past and in the
future with illuminating and startling facts about their ubiquitous
presence in human affairs - through life, death, illness,
happiness, murder, despair, desperation, love, hate, loss, and far
more. From Presidents to pop stars, from scientists to slavers,
royals to religious leaders, chefs to charlatans, pioneers to
politicians, artists to actors, Plants & Us is a unique
overview of plants, wild and cultivated, their vital importance and
the threats they face. Above all, how they affect all our lives in
stories that will often surprise the reader.
In a sleepy country village, Detective Inspector Robin Marshal -
now in retirement - is nearly killed by a stranger. His friend
Alice, a police psychiatrist, discovers that the murder attempt was
almost certainly ordered by a terrifying criminal, 'Big Mack',
currently incarcerated in a notoriously violent prison. There his
criminal kingdom controls not only the inmates, but many of the
guards, through the power of money and the threat of extreme
violence. When Alice goes to work in the prison to find out more,
she, too, becomes a target, her car machine-gunned on a country
road; and Robin is attacked again while recovering in Spain. Under
pressure from an outraged public and with political concern rising,
the authorities try to put a stop to Big Mack's activities. But
everyone is under threat when he is suddenly at large following a
murderous escape. How can this evil man be stopped?
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