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George Orwell once said that the British love a really good murder.
He might have added that the only thing the British love more than
a good murder is a really good scandal, and best of all are the
sexual and political scandals that take place behind the gilded
doors of Britain's royal palaces. From Edward II's intimate
relationship with Piers Gaveston to Prince Harry and Meghan
Markle's dramatic exit from the royal family, the royal residences
have seen it all. This glorious romp of a book contains new
information on well-known and not-so-well-known scandals, including
those that have only recently been revealed through the release of
previously secret official papers. Exploring surviving palaces such
as Kensington as well as long -vanished residences including
Whitehall, Scandals of the Royal Palaces is the first in-depth look
at the bad behaviour of not just the royals themselves but also
palace officials, courtiers, household servants and hangers-on.
Delving into the bitter hatreds that generations of King Georges
nursed for their eldest sons, Queen Victoria's opium -fuelled rages
and Edward VII's near-miss perjury conviction, royal expert Tom
Quinn reveals that scandal and the royal family have always been
bedfellows. And if the behaviour of today's royals is anything to
go by, the glittering palaces will continue to house intriguing,
embarrassing and outrageous scandals for centuries to come.
For as long as the British monarchy has existed, royal children
have been brought up in ways that seem bizarre and eccentric to the
rest of us. From medieval wet nurses to today's Norland nannies and
elite boarding schools, princes and princesses have endured
parental abandonment for centuries as their parents farmed out
childrearing duties to paid staff. And as this marvellous romp of a
book demonstrates, dysfunctional childhood experiences produce
emotionally damaged adults, as evidenced by Edward VIII - who was
horribly mistreated by his nanny - and his marriage to his
substitute mother figure, Mrs Simpson; by alcoholic party girl
Princess Margaret; and by rebellious Harry and his desperate desire
to adopt Meghan Markle's world view, to the detriment of his
relationship with his brother. Interweaving exclusive testimonies
from palace staff with historical sources, Tom Quinn also uncovers
outrageous tales of royal children misbehaving, often hilariously -
from Edward VII smashing up his schoolroom to the Queen
mischievously pranking unsuspecting visitors with dog biscuits to
Prince William pinching a teacher's bottom. Amusing and shocking in
equal measure, Gilded Youth examines how the royal family has clung
to outmoded traditions that centre on emotional coldness and
detachment, and how, when it comes to children, the British royal
family is still living in the Dark Ages.
This is a major new exploration of traditional British
craftsmanship, accompanying the prime time BBC TV series presented
by Monty Don. It celebrates all aspects of rural crafts including
woodcraft, thatching, weaving, stone masonry, metalwork and glass
making. It showcases some of Britain's leading master craftsmen and
explains the techniques at the heart of their trades. It reveals
the fascinating history of British craftsmanship, inspiring
interest and involvement in these valuable and rewarding crafts.
"Mastercrafts" represents a major shift in attitudes towards
appreciating handmade, sustainable crafted products rather than the
cheap mass-produced items with which people have become
increasingly disillusioned.
A quirky collection of stories from London's stranger side,
featuring a tiny prison cell in Trafalgar Square, a train disguised
as a ship, and a church that's completely the wrong way round.
London’s Strangest Tales takes a walk on London’s weirder side
with an absorbing collection of curious tales from one of the
world’s greatest cities. This fascinating book is packed with
amazing things you didn’t know about Britain’s capital, like
the fact that it’s still forbidden to run, carry an umbrella or
whistle in the Burlington Arcade, and the fat lamppost at the
corner of Trafalgar Square that is secretly a tiny prison cell. And
did you know that the entrance to Buckingham Palace you see from
the Mall is actually the back door and not the front? The stories
within these pages are bizarre, fascinating, hilarious and, most
importantly, true. Revised, redesigned and updated for a new
generation of London-lovers, this book is a brilliant alternative
guide to the city, whether you’re a visitor, a daily commuter or
one of its 8 million inhabitants. Word count: 45,000
Barking Mad taps into the British passion for dogs by bringing
together a unique collection of extraordinary, touching and
sometimes bizarre but true stories covering sporting dogs (and
hounds) military mascots, eccentric companions, war heroes and
Royal dogs. Many of the best and most intriguing stories, which
date back to the early nineteenth century, have been discovered in
long-forgotten books and magazines, but all reflect our enduring
passion for man's best friend. Stories include everything from the
Labrador that saved its master from drowning to the hound that
spent years travelling unaccompanied across Britain by train, and
the pooch that carried a penny to the local bakery every day to buy
its own cakes. Beautifully illustrated by Nicola L. Robinson this
book is a wonderful anthology for all who love man's best friend.
London's Strangest Tales takes a walk on London's weirder side with
an absorbing collection of curious tales from one of the world's
greatest cities. This fascinating book is packed with amazing
things you didn't know about Britain's capital, like the fact that
it's still forbidden to run, carry an umbrella or whistle in the
Burlington Arcade, and the fat lamppost at the corner of Trafalgar
Square that is secretly a tiny prison cell. And did you know that
the entrance to Buckingham Palace you see from the Mall is actually
the back door and not the front? The stories within these pages are
bizarre, fascinating, hilarious and, most importantly, true. This
brand new edition, redesigned in splendid hardback for 2018, is a
brilliant alternative guide to the city, whether you're a visitor,
a daily commuter or one of its 8 million inhabitants. Word count:
45,000
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Nusantara
Tom Quinn
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R309
R255
Discovery Miles 2 550
Save R54 (17%)
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Ships in 9 - 15 working days
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It was famously the scene of Charles and Diana's nightmare marriage
and Charles's serial adulteries. But then Kensington Palace has a
long history of royal philandering. George II installed his wife
and mistress in the palace, for example, and made his mistress
sleep in a room so damp there were said to be mushrooms growing on
the walls. And then there were the eccentrics. George III's sixth
son, Augustus, Duke of Sussex, became a virtual recluse at the
palace. He collected hundreds of clocks and mechanical toys,
thousands of early Bibles and dozens of songbirds that were allowed
to fly freely through the royal apartments. Today, the palace is
home to the future King William and his wife Catherine, and until
recently home to the newly married Duke and Duchess of Sussex,
Harry and Meghan. Tom Quinn takes the reader behind the official
version of palace history to discover intriguing, sometimes wild,
often scandalous, but frequently heart-warming stories.
From the very start, when George Stephenson's famous Rocket knocked
over and killed a government minister at the opening of the
Liverpool to Manchester line in 1830, the world's railways have
given rise to intriguing stories. In this fascinating book, updated
with a new selection of tales, railway buff Tom Quinn explores the
bizarre side of train travel, featuring weird weather conditions,
audacious robberies, hair-raising accidents, vanishing passengers,
an infestation of maggots and a mysterious missing mummy. From the
dawn of rail travel, when speeds of 15mph were considered dangerous
to health and people mistook engines for fire-breathing demons,
through the Victorian heyday of royal trains and seaside specials
to today's more prosaic leaves on the line, this whistlestop tour
through railways' long and storied history is the perfect gift for
armchair travelers, history fans and trainspotters.
All the fun of Portico's bestselling Strangest series, now in quiz
form! Test your London knowledge with this fascinating book, packed
with fun and challenging quiz questions based around the weirdest
events from the illustrious history of this wonderful city. Quiz
categories include: Ancient traditions London eccentrics Getting
about Ghosts and ghouls Corridors of power Monumental monuments
Quirky buildings Just plain weird Whether you're testing your
friends, practising for pub quizzes or just reading it in an
armchair, this book will take your London knowledge to a whole new
level. Word count: 30,000 words.
More extraordinary but true stories from London's history. In this
fascinating follow-up to his bestselling London's Strangest Tales,
Tom Quinn makes a further foray into the weirder side of the
capital, bringing us a splendiforous collection of bizarre-but-true
stories that explore a thousand years of London's history. Discover
the ghosts that stalk West End theatres, the mysterious mummy who
lives in a City church cupboard, and secret tunnels under the
Thames. Find out why there's a TARDIS at Earl's Court, why frogs
once rained from the skies, and why the mulberry tree in the
gardens at Buckingham Palace isn't quite what it was supposed to
be. A dip-in-and-outable treasure trove of London lore, London's
Truly Strangest Tales is both an ideal gift for dyed-in-the-wool
Londoners who want to find out more about the great city they live
in, and the perfect souvenir for people just passing through. Word
count: 58,000
For more than 200 years the younger members of the British royal
family - including future monarchs - have lived at Kensington
Palace, alongside royal aunts and uncles, distant cousins and
assorted aristocratic eccentrics. Kensington Palace has been the
scene of countless bizarre events - here, for example, the young
Queen Victoria was held a virtual prisoner for eighteen years; and
it was from Kensington Palace that Queen Caroline ran the country
while her husband George II moved his pictures around. In more
recent times, Kensington Palace was famously the scene of Charles
and Diana's nightmare marriage and Charles's serial adulteries. But
then Kensington Palace has a long history of royal philandering.
George II installed his wife and mistress in the palace, for
example, and made his mistress sleep in a room so damp there were
said to be mushrooms growing on the walls. And then there were the
eccentrics. George III's sixth son, Augustus, Duke of Sussex,
became a virtual recluse at the palace. He collected hundreds of
clocks and mechanical toys, thousands of early Bibles and dozens of
songbirds that were allowed to fly freely through the royal
apartments. Today, the palace is home to the future King William
and his wife Catherine, and until recently home to the newly
married Duke and Duchess of Sussex, Harry and Meghan. The palace
has been described as a royal menagerie, a hive of industrious
freeloaders, an ant heap and even a lunatic asylum. Tom Quinn takes
the reader behind the official version of palace history to
discover intriguing, sometimes wild, often scandalous, but
frequently heart-warming stories.
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Nusantara
Tom Quinn
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R506
R412
Discovery Miles 4 120
Save R94 (19%)
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Ships in 9 - 15 working days
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Born in 1910, Rose Plummer grew up in an East End slum; she knew at
first hand a soot-blackened world, lit by candles and oil lamps,
where you slept in your clothes - if you hadn't already been sewn
into them for the winter - and fought an unending battle with
hunger and bed bugs. At its best, life was lived on the bustling,
noisy streets where fish sellers jostled with hurdy-gurdy men,
organ grinders and street fighters, where children dodged between
the wheels of horse-drawn carts and where money could still be made
by mudlarks and the rag and bone man. At the age of fifteen, Rose
left the noise and squalor of Hoxton and started work as a live-in
maid at a house in the West End. Despite the poverty of her
childhood, nothing could have prepared her for the long hours, the
backbreaking work and the harshness of this new world; a world in
which servants were treated as if they were less than human. It was
a world in which Rose found herself working from six in the morning
till nine at night in a house where the only unheated bedroom was
the one she slept in. Here and in later, grander, houses Rose had
to endure the strict hierarchy of the servants' world where the
maid was expected to put up with sex pests, deranged employers,
verbal and even physical abuse. But however difficult life became,
Rose found something to laugh about, and her remarkable spirit and
gift for friendship shines through in her memories of a
now-vanished world. This is upstairs downstairs as it really was.
'Shiveringly good suspense!' Lisa Gardner THE FIFTH BOOK IN A
GRIPPING SERIES FROM 30 MILLION COPY SELLING AUTHOR. One by one
he'll stalk them, then he'll squeeze the trigger, savouring the way
each lifeless body crumples to the reddening snow. One down
already. And then there were five... Sheriff Dan Grayson lies near
death and the police department of Grizzly Falls, Montana, is in
shock. Then a prominent judge's body is found. Detectives Regan
Pescoli and Selena Alvarez head up the search for the killer, but
they don't realize how personal and dangerous the case is going to
be. Headstrong and eager for justice, Pescoli tracks the scant
clues straight to a monster who has had her and Alvarez in his
sights all along . . . 'She is one of the best' Harlan Coben THE
NEXT BOOK IN THE SERIES, DESERVES TO DIE, IS AVAILABLE NOW
A unique collection of fishing stories from the past 200 years that
prove that when it comes to fishing, things can and often do go
hilariously wrong. From stories of record breakers that got away to
boats that sank, rods that broke and pike and salmon that ran
amoke, Great Angling Disasters is the ultimate chronicle of those
less than triumphant days on the riverbank. For everyone interested
in fishing with rod and line whether they are game, coarse or sea
fishermen.
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