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  • av Stephen Morgan
    131

    It is Sunday morning on the 4th August 1577, in Bongay, a small town in North Suffolk. During a violent thunderstorm, the church is struck by lightning and two parishioners are killed while another is severely injured. Soon afterward, a pamphlet is published claiming that the deaths and injuries were caused by a giant ghostly black dog.

  • av Ali Swift
    151

    Following the release of 'My Wellness Toolbox' in August 2018 I started Talking Tools with You, sharing 26 of the powerful tools that helped me manage and overcome crippling anxiety and build a more positive mindset.

  • av Gillian Young
    151

    Hannah Taylor and her border collie, Tammy, have a special bond. They've grown up together and practically know each other's thoughts. When Tammy suddenly falls ill and dies, Hannah is devastated and wonders how she will ever cope without Tammy.

  • av Martin Venning
    131

    Peace International is a global reconciliation and mediation charity that seeks to prevent wars, regional disputes and rebuild civil societies. When a tip comes in that Iran is building a biological weapons research and production centre, it becomes clear that where they're considering building could destabilise the Gulf region.

  • - 'A Guide to Making Your Dreams Come True When Everything Else is F**ked'
    av Freddie M Bennett
    151

    Starting at Zero is about Freddie who got the wakeup call to start embracing life after watching his father die. He went from stressed, overworked, depressed to Guinness World Record holder, running 200 miles across the Sahara Desert, Ironman, the first person to run a lockdown ultramarathon and diving with great white sharks.

  • - Carlton Chronicles 2
    av Robert Webber
    247

    The second in a series of novels taking its main characters through the Second World War. Set during the Finnish Winter War (1939-1940), events mostly unknown outside of Finland.

  • - A flower girl fairytale
    av Jill Law
    147

    'Fa-ra-ra boom-de-ay!' is a captivating tale of escape, fantasy, adventure and achievement through the eyes of 8 year old soon to be flower girl Farrah Frett - all culminating in a spectacular reveal!

  • - The Art and Balm of Gardening
    av Sally Carr
    271

    This original, lyrical book about creating gardens and writing poems is a part- love song to nature and part memoir. The poems are vivid; the illustrations by Rosamond Ulph are a delight, and together, they are an integral part of the strong evocation of a garden as a place of physical and mental rejuvenation and sanctuary.

  • av Judith Thomson
    151

    It is the last decade of the eventful 17th Century. It is also a period of constant war between William, the King of England and the French Sun King, Louis XlV, a situation half-French Philip Devalle finds trying as his loyalties are constantly divided. Weary of war and politics, Philip has a new plan.

  • - The History of a Provincial Jewish Family
    av Judy Simons
    151

    Judy Simons thought to leave her grandchildren a legacy of reminiscences about her Jewish upbringing in 1950s Sheffield. But when her mother died shortly before her hundredth birthday, Judy discovered a treasure chest of papers hidden at the back of the wardrobe. Reading them, she realised she had unearthed a gripping family saga.

  • av Michael Hill
    137

    Sustained throughout by Michael Hill's boisterous sense of humour, 'A Letter from Marigold' is a wide-ranging book whose careful prose embodies ideas about basic reality alongside shrewd and often comic insights into human nature. Some of the stories are familiar in form.

  • av Max Simov
    131

    In the middle of the last century, in a small remote town lost in the foothills of the magnificent Caucasus Mountains, the local children raid their neighbours' fruit orchards during the summer holidays. The best apples for Pasha, the nine-year old boy, are behind the impenetrable fence of the Glumins and in the orchard of a wicked neighbour.

  • - The Witches' Inheritance
    av Jeff Mills
    211

    Death! The children of the three witches of Bideford who were hanged in 1682 have vowed to kill all those people responsible for their parent's deaths and their own murder by hanging based on trumped-up charges to cover up the crime of their local judge.

  • - A Family Memoir
    av Martha Leigh
    191

    From letters to real life: Invisible Ink is a powerful portrait of love and marriage between a gay man and a refugee, poignantly told by their daughter. Ralph is a brilliant, poor, gay Jew from the East End. Edith, also Jewish, is a tender-hearted but resilient pianist from Central Europe.

  • av Rachel Loewen
    191

    Simon knows nothing about the fetish scene. His only experience with dominant women was his last girlfriend. But that taste has left him longing for more...

  • av Tim Topps
    247

    An entertaining and witty memoir from an author who has had a long and interesting life. The author has insightful views on a wide and diverse range of subjects such as what a possible side effect might be to the cure for malaria and why the UK population might be getting progressively more stupid.

  • av Chris Coppel
    151

    The Lodge unveils the mystery of a hunting lodge in the remote hills of the Scottish Highlands during the Christmas holidays. After the report of an accidental death at the lodge, Andrew, a young constable from the nearest town, drives up through a growing blizzard.

  • av Irene F. Brandt
    147

    This book does not fit into an identified genre. I like to call it a geographical/historical saga as each chapter is based on an artefact, place or event which occurred near to Loch Broom in Wester Ross.

  • av David Heathcote
    111

    A Reddish Sky is a reflection of love lost, unrequited and fulfilled. Pain and joy with historical example, plus the reminisce to those who we have found and loved, lost of left. Distant friends and some who seem to sometimes, still appear daily in fine nuance and soul.

  • av Christopher Owen
    191

    The locations of these stories range from Birmingham 1890's, and 1900's to America in the 1900's, to the UK from the 1960's to present day. The subject matter includes desertion within the family, a young woman who relies of body decoration to secure her identity, life in a Children's Home in the early 1900's, a travelling salesman and his dog...

  • - A Modern Morality Tale
    av George Alston
    151

    Set in the 1970s, The Blue Sky Door follows Stewart, who deserts his girlfriend, leaves his job and departs for the Highlands of Scotland. Here, he meets and connects with a mysterious young woman, Melanie, who lives on a mountainside.

  • av James Ward
    137

    Hannah and Soraya are in the business of making rock music with a social conscience. The way Britain currently works, that means they're 'snowflakes'. They've learned to live with the mudslinging, but not happily. Worse than that, it's starting to overwhelm them. Then, out of the blue, they suffer a string of personal and professional crises.

  • av Robert Cole
    147

    It has been two years since Nicholas lost his wife. Still bereft he decides to take a holiday on the Greek island of Rhodes, hoping that the break will help him in his recovery. Whilst there he takes a day trip to the tiny island of Halki. On the ferry he meets Alessandra, who is working as a researcher at the museum on Rhodes.

  • av Harripersad Samaroo
    151

    Usati is a four year old growing up in Sunnyvale, a small, poor and remote sugar cane farming village in Trinidad in the 1940's. He describes the world he sees, and captures the language and culture of the mainly illiterate peasant workers who live around him.

  • av Neil MacDonald
    121

    Vince is an accomplished liar and undercover Special Branch agent. Truth, for him, is the story we tell. Sworn to his country, committed to his work, he takes on a new mission - masquerading as an Islamic convert to infiltrate a British Jihadi group.

  • av Chris Coppel
    227

    Luck is the story of Daniel - a man born with the gift of being able to influence others. He learns thathe can both charm as well as destroy. As his ability grows, so does his craving for acceptance.

  • av Barrie Shore
    131

    On a cold December Sunday, book-seller Jack Carter struggles through the ritual of making breakfast for his wife Eva, whose dementia confines her body to her bed and her mind to a world of its own.

  • - "I did the best I could. Let those who can, do more"
    av Paul Fjelrad
    171

    At 10am on the 3rd of May, 2013, Paul walked into John's therapy room. The sense of fear was immediate and palpable. He was shaking, hadn't slept meaningfully for weeks, was barely able to function and in unbearable psychological and physical pain.

  • av N L Collier
    147

    January 1918: Franz Becker, a high-scoring, decorated ace, rejoins his fighter squadron in Flanders. He has been fighting since October 1914, and is suffering badly from the strain of war. Imperial Germany is almost finished, strangled by the Allied blockade, its people starving.

  • av Jack Callan
    141

    A bomb goes off at the Tobacco Market, London. John Chase, ex-Fusilier and Red Marine, is wrongly arrested. Along with Burns, a union official who has confessed to the bombing, he is taken to The Warrior, a prison hulk moored on the Thames. Discovering that he and Burns are to be murdered, Chase manages to escape to the safe confines of the Warren.

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