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The Boy Who Could Bee (Hardcover)
Rowan Gordon; Edited by Roger G. Gosden; Illustrated by Kim Lynch
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R673
R573
Discovery Miles 5 730
Save R100 (15%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Two views of the Great Retreat
Imperial Germany had long planned the conflict that was to become
the First World War, but when the onslaught came there was little
sign that the nations which would be embroiled were prepared for
the storm. Germany advanced in the east and west where French and
Belgian armies were forced to retire by overwhelming odds. The
small British Army, the 'B. E. F', was rushed to the continent with
most of its troops having less than a week between garrison life
and the firing line. Under Sir John French, it was allocated the
western end of the line, and at Mons it inflicted far more
causalities on the enemy than its numbers would suggest. No army of
its size, however, could stand against the German superiority in
men (at least five to one) or artillery and machine guns. An
envelopment was inevitable and so a stubbornly fought retreat was
ordered. Near Le Cateau, the British turned at bay and
Smith-Dorrien's determination to stand and fight undoubtedly saved
the British Army from annihilation. Many people imagine the First
World War as a stalemate of mud, wire and trenches, but in the
first six months it was a great European war fought in much the
same way that Napoleon, Wellington and Blucher had fought a century
before. This Leonaur Original edition contains two concise accounts
of the early campaign of the great conflict where the 'Contemptible
Little Army' of the B. E. F earned undying fame in the history of
military conflict.
Leonaur editions are newly typeset and are not facsimiles; each
title is available in softcover and hardback with dustjacket; our
hardbacks are cloth bound and feature gold foil lettering on their
spines and fabric head and tail bands.
My Heavens! charts the progress of the authora (TM)s own
substantial observatory (with additional material from amateur
constructors of large observatories elsewhere) from conception,
through design, planning and construction, to using an observatory
of the kind that all amateur astronomers would aspire to own.
This book tells the a oewarts and alla story of small beginnings
in amateur astronomy, leading to the construction of a a oetop of
the rangea observatory at a house on the edge of a country village
between Oxford and London. The author is a qualified building
surveyor, and looks at building the observatory from his own
professional perspective. There were of course many errors,
problems, technical and organizational difficulties along the way,
and the author never shies away from admitting his mistakes a" and
in doing so he reduces the chances of others falling into the same
traps. Comparisons are made with similar large projects in the USA,
taking a look at the differences and similarities in planning and
building regulations, and in construction methods on both sides of
the Atlantic.
Eventually an observatory materialized, set up to facilitate the
taking of very high quality images of the deep sky on those special
days of best seeing.
The story doesna (TM)t end with the construction of the
observatory, but goes on to describe the authora (TM)s choice of
equipment, setting it up, and his own techniques for obtaining
superb astronomical images like the ones he shows in his book.
Stan Gordon began his journey in field investigations of UFOs and
other Paranormal encounters in Pennsylvania in 1965. During 1973
UFOs began to make widespread appearances in the sky across the
Keystone State. It was during the summer of that year however when
a mysterious wave of events began to unfold. Alarmed citizens over
a widespread area reported close encounters with huge hairy
Bigfoot-like creatures. Frightened residents called local
authorities and media outlets reporting enormous footprints and
terrified animals.As the pace of the abnormal encounters quickened
through the following months, more eyewitness reports of other
strange creatures, and a variety of other paranormal events came to
the attention of Gordon's investigation team. Stan's second book
covers many of the mysterious incidents from that period which
continued into 1974, including illustrations and photos. For the
first time the author reveals many new details about this puzzling
period of time. Someof the startling cases discussed suggest that
there may be more to the Bigfoot mystery than a flesh and blood
explanation. Some of the first hand accounts and details you will
read about include: UFOs And Bigfoot Seen At The Same Time And
Place The Case Of The Vanishing Bigfoot Bigfoot Shooting Incidents
UFO Landings And Car Pursuits Mystery Men Interviewing Witnesses
And Destroying Evidence The Government Interest
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The Boy Who Could Bee (Paperback)
Rowan Gordon; Edited by Roger G. Gosden; Illustrated by Kim Lynch
|
R426
R365
Discovery Miles 3 650
Save R61 (14%)
|
Ships in 10 - 15 working days
|
Two views of the Great Retreat
Imperial Germany had long planned the conflict that was to become
the First World War, but when the onslaught came there was little
sign that the nations which would be embroiled were prepared for
the storm. Germany advanced in the east and west where French and
Belgian armies were forced to retire by overwhelming odds. The
small British Army, the 'B. E. F', was rushed to the continent with
most of its troops having less than a week between garrison life
and the firing line. Under Sir John French, it was allocated the
western end of the line, and at Mons it inflicted far more
causalities on the enemy than its numbers would suggest. No army of
its size, however, could stand against the German superiority in
men (at least five to one) or artillery and machine guns. An
envelopment was inevitable and so a stubbornly fought retreat was
ordered. Near Le Cateau, the British turned at bay and
Smith-Dorrien's determination to stand and fight undoubtedly saved
the British Army from annihilation. Many people imagine the First
World War as a stalemate of mud, wire and trenches, but in the
first six months it was a great European war fought in much the
same way that Napoleon, Wellington and Blucher had fought a century
before. This Leonaur Original edition contains two concise accounts
of the early campaign of the great conflict where the 'Contemptible
Little Army' of the B. E. F earned undying fame in the history of
military conflict.
Leonaur editions are newly typeset and are not facsimiles; each
title is available in softcover and hardback with dustjacket; our
hardbacks are cloth bound and feature gold foil lettering on their
spines and fabric head and tail bands.
This scarce antiquarian book is a selection from Kessinger
Publishing's Legacy Reprint Series. Due to its age, it may contain
imperfections such as marks, notations, marginalia and flawed
pages. Because we believe this work is culturally important, we
have made it available as part of our commitment to protecting,
preserving, and promoting the world's literature. Kessinger
Publishing is the place to find hundreds of thousands of rare and
hard-to-find books with something of interest for everyone
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R1,150
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Discovery Miles 8 870
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