United Kingdom Books
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Used price: $28.74

Why Slavery Matters.Review Date: 2006-02-16
this book is SWEET!!!Review Date: 2005-02-21
Woodcuts, paintings, diaries, short stories and artifactsReview Date: 2001-02-15
Used price: $1.42
Collectible price: $16.99

Hours, tube directions, and specialties are coveredReview Date: 2001-02-21
What a Source Book!Review Date: 2007-12-30
Book Lovers' LondonReview Date: 2003-05-10
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Born to Shop--LondonReview Date: 2000-05-18
Suzy Gershman captures the London shopping scene in one bookReview Date: 1999-08-09
Don't leave home without it!Review Date: 1999-02-23

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A wealth of research and detailed notes supporting the meticulous accounting of detailsReview Date: 2006-06-05
An interesting and engaging storyReview Date: 2006-05-30
An excellent work of history Review Date: 2006-05-18
With the 48th Pennsylvania in the Battle of Crater, author Jim Corrigan paints a thoroughly engaging and very fair portrait of the events that led up to the battle and the battle itself. The work is well-balanced in portraying both the Union and Confederate side. Corrigan has done a great job in telling of the remarkable feat performed by the 48th PA in the face of great disadvantage and has made sense of all the complicated military, social, and political factors that occured both before and during the battle.
I highly recommend this book to anyone wishing to learn more about the war in the East and about the 48th Pennsylvania Regiment. This book is an excellent work of history told in a clear and easily understandable manner, despite the many complexities involved in the tunneling and in the battle. Very well-done.

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My happy hours with Osbert Sitwell.Review Date: 2000-05-11
A treasure in the study of material cultureReview Date: 2005-10-09
Britain Then and NowReview Date: 2001-04-18

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Makes World War I Come AliveReview Date: 2008-04-20
Great book but!Review Date: 2008-01-26
Another Fine Piece of WorkReview Date: 2006-01-24
There is no need to rehash the contents of the publisher's blurb above. Chappel's name is enough to recommend serious consideration of acquiring it.
For those of us who see Mike Chappell's name on a publication know there is not much more to say. He is one of the finest and most respected illustrators working in modern times. His precision of detail is superb, yet there is no stiffness in his figures.
So when I see that Mike Chappell is both writer and illustrator of a work in my fields of interest, I do not hesitate to order it, for I know that I am in for an even more pleasurable hour of good reading of a most reliable work in prose and picture. His prose is just as vigorous as is his art work.
Just as I have with most other works to which he has contributed as either writer (too seldom) or as illustrator, I will put it on the reference shelf and consult it again.
So if you want a book worth reading repeatedly get those he wrote and seriously consider those others to which he has contributed.
At one time, Chappell published a self produced magaxine format series concerning the British Army in the Twentieth Century. Unfortunately they are no longer in print.

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ContentsReview Date: 1998-07-04
Getting to know LewisReview Date: 1999-10-26
Personal memoirs about C.S. LewisReview Date: 1998-03-14


A must for those interested in devised theatre.Review Date: 2000-09-25
excellentReview Date: 2006-03-04
Excellent insight into an original creative process.Review Date: 1999-11-20

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Well ChartedReview Date: 2008-06-02
Many general histories of Churchill speak in passing of the domestic trials imposed after the purchase of the family's most important home, Chartwell. Reading this book gives one a keen understanding of what Mrs. Churchill endured as Chartwell and its grounds were slowly, slowly brought into good shape.
If you have a friend who is interested in English landscaping and gardens, this is a book to consider. If that friend also is an admirer of Sir Winston, then it is a must purchase.
a grand readReview Date: 2008-07-03
As complete a history as you are likely ever to seeReview Date: 2008-08-28


Excellent reading on "sub-Roman" Britain.Review Date: 2002-04-04
Friends (Cymry) and Romans.....Review Date: 2001-12-27
Dark's study covers the provinces not immediatly subdued by the Angle and Saxon mercenaries the Romans hired to "protect" Britannia before 400 A.D. Non-Anglo-Saxon Britain included the nothern and central areas of the island, plus Cornwall and Wales. Dark says the inhabitants of this area maintained an 'Antique Roman Society' which combined political, economic and other aspects of pre-Roman and Roman eras.
Dark has assembled an enormous amount of information gleaned from recent historical studies (text anayses) and archeological studies as well as other sources. He asks, "What is Roman". After he lists and defines the characteristics most scholars agree are "Roman" he shows how material evidence supports the notion that the Roman Britannia survived what has been described as a barbaric Celtic era. One the other hand, he says, "the polities of Britain, tribes, civitates, or kingdoms, remained stable from the Pre-Roman Iron-Age to the sub-Roman period....the general picture is of overall continuity but not a static system...the conventional picture of the fifth-to-seventh-century 'Celtic West' as a reversion to Iron-Age cultural and political organization is mistaken."
This is an excellent book, quite readable, and loaded with footnotes for those who wish to go further.
"Change versus Continuity"Review Date: 2001-05-09
With all this going on, it's easy to forget that there was a great deal of continuity here, as well. Kenneth Dark, in this excellent scholarly tour de force, reminds us of that little fact. He argues that the political structure of post-Roman Britain was made up of Roman civitates (cities--used as the basic unit of administration by the Roman Empire, almost like a state in the US) which, with the end of Roman authority, elevated themselves to the status of kingdoms. These civitates were themselves based on the Celtic tribes that the Romans had conquered centuries before--rather than take time and energy to create a new aristocracy (which would no doubt even further alienate the newly conquered Britons), they simply adopted the old tribal aristocracy as imperial apparatus, like so many other hegemonic empires. Kenneth Dark shows the survival of Roman traditions and culture through the "Dark Ages," and points out that many of the traits we think of as a "reversion to native Celtic customs" may, in fact, have been the natural trajectory of the way Roman culture was heading in Late Antiquity.
Though Kenneth Dark may overstate his case, it is a case that perhaps needs to be overstated. The study of post-Roman Britain, I think, has lost its equilibrium in the "Change versus Continuity" debate, making this book a valuable counter-weight. I heartily recommend it to anyone interested in that murky historical gloss from the end of Roman rule, to the beginning of the Anglo-Saxon kingdoms.
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The book's real strength lies in how it can in fact bring the reality of slavery back, to confront western culture with it as something that still lingers, but with an almost Freudian degree of mass-denial. Slavery in the US existed longer than it hasn't, the economic ripple-effect alone should be self-evident. We are still in the wake of this dark era in our culture; Wood puts us on the therapist's couch and makes us remember, rather than suppress, these memories.