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Showing 1 - 7 of
7 matches in All Departments
Compelling, moving and unexpected portraits of London's poor from a
rising star British historian - the Dickensian city brought to real
and vivid life. Until now, our view of bustling late Georgian and
Victorian London has been filtered through its great chroniclers,
who did not themselves come from poverty - Dickens, Mayhew, Gustave
Dore. Their visions were dazzling in their way, censorious, often
theatrical. Now, for the first time, this innovative social history
brilliantly - and radically - shows us the city's most compelling
period (1780-1870) at street level. From beggars and thieves to
musicians and missionaries, porters and hawkers to sex workers and
street criers, Jensen unites a breadth of original research and
first-hand accounts and testimonies to tell their stories in their
own words. What emerges is a buzzing, cosmopolitan world of the
working classes, diverse in gender, ethnicity, origin, ability and
occupation - a world that challenges and fascinates us still.
A snowstorm. A country house. Old friends reunited. It's going to
be murder... Torben Helle - art historian, Danish ex-pat and owner
of several excellent Scandinavian jumpers - finds himself dragged
to a remote snowbound Northumbrian mansion for a ten-year reunion
with old university friends. At the dinner table their host, a
reclusive and irritating tech entrepreneur, makes some shocking
revelations. And when these are followed by an apparent suicide,
the group faces a test of their wits... and their trust. Snowed in
and cut off, surrounded by enigmatic housekeepers and off-duty
police inspectors, not to mention a peculiar last will and
testament, suspicion and sarcasm quickly turn to panic. Kept afloat
by strong drink and stronger women, Torben must draw upon the
skills of his training and all the tricks of Golden Age detectives
past. As the temperature drops and the tension mounts, it is up to
him to work out how much money it would take to turn one of his old
friends into a murderer - before someone else ends up dead. This
witty murder mystery puts a modern spin on the classic country
house whodunnit. A must-read for fans of Agatha Christie, Richard
Osman and Janice Hallett.
A snowstorm. A country house. Old friends reunited. It's going to
be murder... Torben Helle - art historian, Danish ex-pat and owner
of several excellent Scandinavian jumpers - finds himself dragged
to a remote snowbound Northumbrian mansion for a ten-year reunion
with old university friends. At the dinner table their host, a
reclusive and irritating tech entrepreneur, makes some shocking
revelations. And when these are followed by an apparent suicide,
the group faces a test of their wits... and their trust. Snowed in
and cut off, surrounded by enigmatic housekeepers and off-duty
police inspectors, not to mention a peculiar last will and
testament, suspicion and sarcasm quickly turn to panic. Kept afloat
by strong drink and stronger women, Torben must draw upon the
skills of his training and all the tricks of Golden Age detectives
past. As the temperature drops and the tension mounts, it is up to
him to work out how much money it would take to turn one of his old
friends into a murderer - before someone else ends up dead. This
witty murder mystery puts a modern spin on the classic country
house whodunnit. A must-read for fans of Agatha Christie, Richard
Osman and Janice Hallett.
A thrilling tale of Norse Gods and a terrifying hunt . . . Astrid -
a Viking Princess - and Leif (a poet) are on the run, having been
banished from Denmark. They are trying to escape to Sweden. But
Grimnir, a coldblooded assassin, has been sent to kill them. And
that is the least of their worries, for Leif has managed to offend
Odin, the king of the Norse Gods, which means the dreaded Wild Hunt
- Odin's hunt - is after them, and ready to take their lives in
revenge . . . An epic tale of battle, bloodshed and the terror of
being hunted.
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