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Newman’s Birds by Colour offers beginner birders a quick and simple way
to identify southern Africa’s most common birds using colour as a
starting point. Now in its fourth edition, this handy illustrated guide
has been updated to include the latest common names, expanded habitat
information, and up-to-date distribution maps. An informative
introduction provides practical tips for identifying birds, and
includes information on bird anatomy and classification, and guidance
on where to look for birds and what you need to go birding.
Newman se Voëls volgens Kleur bied vir die beginnervoëlkyker ’n
vinnige, eenvoudige manier om Suider-Afrika se algemeenste voëls
volgens hul kleur te identifiseer. Die vierde uitgawe van dié nuttige
geïllustreerde gids is bygewerk met die nuutste gewone voëlname,
uitgebreide habitatinligting en die mees onlangse verspreidingkaarte.
Die leersame inleiding bevat praktiese wenke oor die uitken van voëls,
inligting oor voëlanatomie en -klassifikasie, en raad oor waar om vir
voëls te soek en wat jy op só ’n uitstappie moet inpak.
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Spike (Paperback)
Ian Hislop, Nick Newman
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R360
Discovery Miles 3 600
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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It's 1950s austerity Britain, and out of the gloom comes Goon mania
as men, women and children across the country scramble to get their
ear to a wireless for another instalment of The Goon Show. While
Harry Secombe and Peter Sellers get down to the serious business of
becoming overnight celebrities, fellow Goon and chief writer Spike
nds himself pushing the boundaries of comedy, and testing the
patience of the BBC. Flanked by his fellow Goons and bolstered by
the e orts of irrepressible sound assistant Janet, Spike takes a
ourishing nosedive o the cli s of respectability, and mashes up his
haunted past to create the comedy of the future. His war with
Hitler may be over, but his war with Auntie Beeb - and ultimately
himself - has just begun. Will Spike's dogged obsession with nding
the funny elevate The Goons to soaring new heights, or will the
whole thing come crashing down with the stroke of a potato peeler?
The true and extraordinary story of the satirical newspaper created
in the mud and mayhem of the Somme, interspersed with comic
sketches and spoofs from the vivid imagination of those on the
front line. In a bombed out building during the First World War in
the French town of Ypres (mispronounced Wipers by British
soldiers), two officers discover a printing press and create a
newspaper for the troops. Far from being a sombre journal about
life in the trenches, they produced a resolutely cheerful,
subversive and very funny newspaper designed to lift the spirits of
the men on the front line.
Want to keep up with emerging design thinking and issues worldwide?
Design Studio is a new thematic series that distils the most
topical work and ideas from schools and practices globally.
Everything needs to change. Every minute we pollute the air and
rivers using resources that we cannot replenish. Each newly erected
building aggravates by consuming additional materials and energy.
Exploring architecture and the climate emergency, editors So fie
Pelsmakers (sustainable architect, educator and author of The
Environmental Design Pocketbook) and Nick Newman (climate activist
and Director of award-winning practice Studio Bark) are channelling
the message of Greta Thunberg to inspire, enthuse and inform the
next generation of architects. By including articles, building pro
files and design projects from a range of leading voices, it
explores solutions to climatic, environmental and social
challenges. It urges readers to radically rethink what it means to
be an architect in an era of climate crisis, and what the role of
the architect is or can be. Features: Goldsmith Street, Norwich;
Kingsdale School, London; Upcycle Studios, Orestad; Olympic
Pavilion, Tokyo; School of Dancing Arches, Bhadran; Burwood
Brickworks, Melbourne; UN17 Village, Copenhagen, and more. Discover
how by using local materials and working with nature, radical
design processes and transformative learning, infused with
activism, hope can be found in the burning world. The cover has
been designed in four unique fluorescent colours - green, pink, red
or yellow - and delivered at random. Together, we can force change
for a more sustainable and equitable tomorrow.
Edited by 'Private Eye' cartoonist Nick Newman, this is a hilarious
celebration of five decades of classic comic art. It features over
1500 cartoons in total, including some of the funniest and most
influential, as well as those which have been forgotten over the
years.
British comedy starring Burt Reynolds as Jefferson Steel, a
washed-up Hollywood action star desperate to revive his flagging
career. When his sleazy agent (Charles Durning) signs him up for
what he believes is a high-profile Royal Shakespeare Company
production of King Lear at Stratford upon Avon, Steel thinks he has
finally landed the plum role he has been waiting for. However, he
soon discovers that he has been tricked into joining an amateur
dramatics group for a charity production. Imelda Staunton, Derek
Jacobi and Samantha Bond co-star.
It's normal for rain to stop play in cricket. But that's not all:
flying objects, passing dictators, animals of all kinds including a
very improbable tiger - they have all had the same effect. But even
when the game keeps going, cricket is a magnet for the weird and
wonderful. For the past quarter-century the Chronicle section of
Wisden has been collecting the most remarkable events in the game:
the eccentric, the extraordinary and the excruciatingly funny. This
is the cricket that reference books would normally ignore, from the
village greens of England to the back alleys of Asia. This
selection is about Tendulkar-worshippers and angry neighbours;
about scoring a thousand and being all out for nought. There are
politicians and protesters; celebs and streakers; judges and
jobsworths ... and batsmen who really do murder the bowlers.
Writing matters. We all do it, and we all admire it when it's done
well. It doesn't just express us; it represents us. We write to
connect with other people - to make them laugh, or cry, or think.
We also write to work out what we think ourselves: there's nothing
like it for concentrating the mind. So what's the secret of a
stylish essay, or story, or email? How do you make your sentences
sparkle? Dorothy Parker had a point when she said that writing "is
the art of applying the ass to the seat", but in this slim volume,
a leading editor who is also a pop critic and sportswriter shows
you much fun you can have while sharpening your pen. Tim de Lisle's
book is packed with good, simple advice: be clear, be concise, be
vivid, be organised. In a few breezy chapters, he explains the
secrets of good writing, and along the way he quotes dozens of
great lines, from the plays of Shakespeare to the journalism of
Caitlin Moran. "Writing," he says, "is like dancing, in that you
can tell instantly if someone is good at it. But it's also like
driving in that it can be learnt." Spend a couple of hours with
this book and you'll learn things that will help you in years to
come.
Following critical acclaim for The Wipers Times, Ian Hislop and
Nick Newman have once again taken inspiration from real life events
for their new play Trial by Laughter. William Hone, the forgotten
hero of free speech, was a bookseller, publisher and satirist. In
1817, he stood trial for 'impious blasphemy and seditious libel'.
The only crime he had committed was to be funny. Worse than that he
was funny by parodying religious texts. And worst of all, he was
funny about the despotic government and the libidinous monarchy. A
Watermill Theatre production.
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