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Julia Almond believes she is special and dreams of a more exciting
and glamorous life away from the drab suburbia of her upbringing.
Her work in a fashionable boutique in the West End gives her the
personal freedom that she craves but escape from her parental home
into marriage soon leads to boredom and frustration. She begins a
passionate affair with a younger man, which has deadly
consequences. Based on the events of a sensational murder trial in
the 1920s - the Thompson/Bywaters case - Julia becomes trapped by
her sex and class in a criminal justice system in which she has no
control. Julia finds herself the victim of society's expectations
of lower-middle-class female behaviour and incriminated by her own
words. Tennyson Jesse creates a flawed, doomed heroine in a novel
of creeping unease that continues to haunt long after the last page
is turned.
From neoclassical monuments to neon storefronts, Berlin is filled
with beautiful typography. Over the past few years, the Berlin
Typography project has been photographing the city's best examples
of typography, both to celebrate the diversity of letterforms and
to preserve its typographic heritage before the old signs of this
rapidly changing city are removed and replaced. This book collects
the best of these images and shows how walking through Berlin can
be like a stroll through a living art gallery-if you're willing to
look. Complete with over 200 full-color illustrations, this book
showcases the typographic richness of Berlin, including its
elaborate, ostentatious shop- front signs, the non-commercial
typography of public buildings such as libraries and universities,
and the fantastic array of type styles used on street signs and in
the city's public transport system. The book also includes an
introduction to the history of typography in Berlin as well as a
look to its future. The book's captions locate each image within
the city. Perfect for graphic designers or lovers of Berlin, this
mesmerizing book effortlessly illustrates the role typography plays
in our experience of the city.
Made from prefabricated concrete panels, Plattenbauten rose from
the ruins of Berlin, providing a quick and inexpensive solution to
the severe housing shortage faced by the city after World War II.
Although criticized in their day for their sterility and impersonal
scale, they nonetheless became an integral part of the city. Drawn
from his extensive investigations into Berlin's urban landscape,
Jesse Simon's texts and photographs offer a convincing argument for
the aesthetic and social value of buildings that were once
described as "eyesores." Focused on urban developments constructed
between the 1950s and the early 1990s, the book is structured
geographically, devoting equal attention to the former East and
West. It includes more than 200 images filled with warm light and
saturated hues, revealing a diversity of color and detail that may
often be lost on the casual observer. It also illustrates how,
despite vast differences in political ideologies, both East and
West Berlin employed remarkably similar approaches to the creation
of new urban spaces. For fans of Brutalism and Modernism,
Plattenbau Berlin is both an engaging reconsideration of postwar
urbanism, and a unique entry point for exploring Berlin's history
and architecture.
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