United Kingdom Books
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Used price: $1.17

Wow!!!Review Date: 2008-08-18
10 Stars reallyReview Date: 2006-06-20
Spitfire, Flying LegendReview Date: 2002-06-26
Beautiful photography of restored Spitfires.Review Date: 1998-03-13
Collectible price: $74.98

Get to know the man behind the mysteries.Review Date: 1999-02-24
very informative on the sportReview Date: 1998-10-20
True insight into the man behind the worksReview Date: 1999-01-19
A must-read for Dick Francis fans.Review Date: 1998-05-23


Miscues and misdirections in a stately homeReview Date: 2008-11-10
As always with a Wodehouse story this is a wonderful comic romp guaranteed to take the reader from where ever they are to that wonderful Wodehouse fantasy land where all Americans are rich, butlers have never superhuman powers (which they can use for either good or ill), and true love conquers all.
Runnin' HighReview Date: 2007-12-18
All of the troubles and concerns of these characters intertwine when Stanwood is meant to visit Lord Shortlands at his castle. However, his Hollywood paramour has just arrived in London, and he doesn't want to leave her. Mike Cardinal agrees to visit the castle pretending to be Stanwood so that he can woo Teresa, with her and her father the only ones in the know. But when Mervyn Spink (Lord Shortland's conniving butler) catches on, he springs a plot of pretense of his own involving the real Stanwood Cobbold. As the story progresses, more and more lies need to be told until the reader is uncertain as to how any of this can be wrapped up with all characters satisfied.
"Spring Fever" is a classic comic novel from P.G. Wodehouse. It is a time capsule of a particular era and a portrait of the strictures of British high (although a little cash-strapped) society. Its humor manages to transcend time and tradition, making Wodehouse's writing truly timeless.
Nearly Blandings CastleReview Date: 2007-08-08
Those would be major problems for most writers, but they are merely small oversights for Wodehouse, since this book yet contains some of his best sustained scenes and most quoted lines. Wodehouse liked it well enough to rehash it as The Old Reliable in 1951. It's almost a Blandings Castle novel, with Lord Shortlands instead of Emsworth, but with far more dialogue, as if written for the stage. Even after the main characters exit to the altar or registry, there are enough loose ends left to fill another novel, which likely suggested The Old Reliable. Not top drawer PGW, but a readable light novel just the same.
A true WodehouseReview Date: 1998-06-22

"Princeton is a pseudo-Gothic Cotswold..."Review Date: 2006-10-31
Overall, the book is one of the most interesting spy books I've ever read. It's basic, down-to-earth and showed MI-5 to be a disaster mainly as a result of activities by a few elite, upper-crust, rich, idealistic Oxford/Cambridge (Oxbridge)University homosexuals! All this started in the 1930's and moved into the 50's. What a mess!
It also displays the courage of several men, mainly Peter Wright, to find the truth and act on it. Peter's boss, the head of MI-5, was a spy for Russia, but Peter was relentless in his effort to expose this fact.
If you like spy books you have got to get this one.
Inside the British Secret ServiceReview Date: 2002-07-10
This is an interesting book that can't be summarized in a few paragraphs. It is definitely worth reading for the details on government activities in a "democracy". Watergate was a notable failure of such activities. Do these activities continue? Of course!
Pages 158-9 tell of his proposal for a "Bolshevik model" for former colonial countries: let a political party control the army and secret police so that neither the army or another political party could gain control of the government. He pointed out that only those newly created countries that adopted this principle have escaped military dictatorships and civil war.
Does the above advice seem to cynical and radical? But our Establishment DOES control the army and secret police so that neither the military or a populist political party (one not controlled by corporate interests) can gain control.
Yet the classic solution for democracies, from Aristotle to Machiavelli to our Founding Fathers was well-armed citizens and their militia. It has worked well for over over a century, and the idea still survives today.
PETER WRIGHT IS DEAD!Review Date: 2002-01-30
(not a review - please read carefully)Review Date: 1999-04-05
for "spycatcher" by peter wright, you have on the same screen an interview with peter wright. unfortunately for you, Peter Wright-who=wrote-spycatcher DIED a few years ago. He is an ex-spycatcher (cue dead parrot sketch). So please REMOVE your "interview-with-DIFFERENT-PeterWright" link from the spycatcher book page.
I hope this note is sufficiently clear, if not, email me at bg283@ncf.ca thanks, bts
And by the way, I would very much like to write a review of "spycatcher", it is an excellent book, but please take the "interview" link out of the page for this book.... thanks, bts

Collectible price: $35.00

Fine Portrait of a Great Landscape PainterReview Date: 2000-07-02
If you enjoy reading about eccentrics...Review Date: 2001-02-16
Brilliant account of one of England's best paintersReview Date: 1998-09-28
A fine biography of a great painter by a fine writerReview Date: 1998-01-27

A view beyond the VeilReview Date: 2002-04-09
Where are they now?Review Date: 2001-08-20
What I found significant was S. Mumm's inability to get information after, if I am correct, 1915. It appears that these creative women were followed by those less inspired and perhaps more inhibited. I found it tragic.
As a young teen I was inspired by the writings of Mother Kate SSM and her efforts in the slums of London. The early efforts of these women lead to changes in education and nursing and inspired women to achieve outside the confines of the Victorian household. However, that dream appears to have been clouded and eventually lost. Few if any of the orginal Anglican women's orders kept that first creative life and inspiration. That is unfortunate.. but perhaps not.. perhaps they have finished their work or need to hear the sound of the trumpets again.
Pioneering accountReview Date: 2001-09-17
As she herself admits, Mumm skimps on the theology behind Anglican sisterhoods, dwelling instead on their missions, internal politics, and conflicted relationships with the Protestant mainstream. Contrary to what may be the expectations of some, Mumm finds that "first-wave" Anglican sisters did not necessarily join religious communities out of deep piety; instead, they saw the communities as the best route to careers in fields like administration, teaching, nursing, and social work. Thus, at least in the beginning, the impulse behind such communities could well be dubbed quasi-feminist. By contrast, "second-wave" sisters were far more likely to join out of strictly religious considerations, something that put them into conflict with older members of the community. Not surprisingly, this rise in purely religious vocations coincided with the spread of secular career opportunities for women. Mumm also finds that these sisterhoods were far more successful than their male counterparts, in terms of dedication and pure longevity, and that their missions to the poor have been seriously undervalued by previous scholars of Anglo-Catholic history. Finally, Mumm does a good job laying out the basic Protestant objections to the sisterhoods, which range from the sexist (women were "unfitted" for such independence) to the sexual (sisterhoods were anti-family and anti-marriage).
The only problem with the book is one that was beyond Mumm's power to rectify: many sisterhoods either left no records or refused to allow her access to them. Readers may therefore wonder about the extent to which her sample was actually representative. Nevertheless, this is a minor quibble about an important piece of scholarship.
Ahead of Their TimeReview Date: 2000-06-03
Instead, Susan Mumm sets out to examine the phenomenon of a movement situated in an age and time of few opportunities for women, a movement run and directed by women, which offered them more than ample scope to found and direct important institutions, to live independent of the control of men and of families, to decide upon their own lifestyle and establish a corporate life which fostered individuality, education and creativity. Susan Mumm describes surprisingly enlightened practices among Anglican Religious -- members ecouraged to keep up with their reading and their own interests, communities which invested on behalf of each entrant in case she should ever decide to leave, so that an annuity might be provided... Anyone acquainted with a religious order knows how unique each individual in that community is, contrary to common stereotypes: this book is utterly fascinating in that it sketches out how enlightened the administration of Anglican Religious life in the nineteenth century really was. Quite an education! And extremely readable.

Used price: $14.95

Extraordinary and MovingReview Date: 2008-05-09
Why Blake MattersReview Date: 2004-06-10
If Blake were alive today I think he would rant against the scholars rather than Empire. The scholars have laid claim to the poet's place in society and the only empire that exists today is the academic empire. Just look at the way a college campus expands and swallows up all the property around itself! It is the scholars who attack men of inspiration and genius because they need to promote poetry as something that can be taught and explicated.
Blake does seem mad when he talks about speaking with angels and spirits but he probably did possess the faculty of a visionary imagination which caused him to express such reverence for the world of imagination, even to the extent of preferring it to the natural world. It reminds me of a quote from Rimbaud, "I came to find my mind's disorder sacred".
Body ElectricReview Date: 2007-08-05
Still, he was one of the men who lived for and frequently in the electric blessing that changes everything, that power, gift, the angels, like Cupid, seem to bestow as they choose. Blake was a vehicle.
He was the great Outsider artist. He was a Hero of poor England. Thank God for Blake who said, "I live in a hole here, but God has a beautiful mansion for me elsewhere." He was authentic, poor and a real man. Everyone should know how he died singing Hallelujahs and hymns of praise.
Bentley's Generous ActReview Date: 2001-06-25

Collectible price: $39.95

Murder in a Notting Hill dollhouseReview Date: 2002-03-05
Mr. Kennedy makes it clear that the crimes are not the only issue here. The major issue is the miscarriage of justice and the further injustice that this mistake has never been officially acknowledged by the British authorities. Poor Mr. Evans, his mother and sisters who lived nearby.
The account of the murders
of Beryl Evans and baby Geraldine is thoroughly presented. There is too much consideration for the feelings of the police
and judge. Ultimately, the question of how these lawmen could have ignored certain evidence, and tampered with the existing
evidence, becomes paramount. In this book, the authorities, even more than Mr. Christie, become the guilty party. Mr. Kennedy
does a respectable job of finding excuses for them (as indeed they seem to have found for themselves) in the basic fact that
Mr. Evans, a chronic liar and emotionally confused, confessed twice to the crimes but the tampering of evidence makes lame
any justification for this misjustice. It is maddening and incomprehensible and upstages Mr. Christie, whose story is another
book in itself, totally.
It is no small point that the inside cover of this book is a map of Notting Hill in the 1950s.
The neighborhood where Mr. Christie, the Evans's, Mr. Evans's mother and sisters lived, as well as where Christie's other
victims frequented, seems to play a part in understanding the emotional pitch of these people and their lives, presenting
a banal but murky background to the horrors that took place.
This is an excellent true crime account. It fascinates
and enrages the reader and serves to clear the name of an innocent man who could hardly have understood what was happening
to him. The fact that one wonders about the souls of these unfortunate people, victims, criminal and lawmen, is the greatest
achievement of this book.
Brilliant expose of miscarriage of justiceReview Date: 1998-01-18
spellbindingReview Date: 1999-06-03
Excellent!Review Date: 1998-10-18

Used price: $0.96
Collectible price: $18.00

One of the funniest memoirs I have readReview Date: 2008-01-05
O'Farrell tells of the looks he gained in working class pubs by lunk headed Sun readers when he tentatively voiced his opposition to the Falkland's war. His guilty admission after the Brighton bomb that he wishes Thatcher had actually kopped it. The wishful, naive optimism on the eve of every general election only to wake up with a head pounding hangover and the Tories in power -again! The brutal asceticism and self-abnegation that prevented him from enjoying pretty much anything.
Nowadays, O'Farrell has done a New Labour type maturation himself - he lives a comfortable life as a metropolitan Guardian columnist and broadcaster. New Establishment as it were. But he can still laugh at the grim old days. The Conservatives might have won all the elections in the 1980s - but Labour trounced them at the humour polls. Very funny.
The eighties are over - thank heavenReview Date: 2003-05-29
If you don't laugh, you'd have to cry...Review Date: 2002-11-14
But did they?Review Date: 2002-02-08
Over the years his radical edge is softened by age and cynicism. The vegetarian succumbs to the bacon sandwich. The dedicated capaigner pays the au pair to deliver his election leaflets. The words of the chant have changed - 'What do we want? A winter flowering clematis! When do we want it? Before we lay the patio!'
Is it similar changes which made the Labour Party electable again?
His description of the unforgettable election night of 1997 is the highlight. The defeat of Michael Portillo described as dramatically as the scoring of a winning goal in the Cup Final. Could we ever get?
But did things really get better?


THE MOST INTERESTING HISTORY LESSON I HAVE HADReview Date: 1999-03-08
Breath-taking!Review Date: 1999-07-19
** FABULOUS **Review Date: 2000-12-08
The Audio VersionReview Date: 2000-03-06
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