United Kingdom Books


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United Kingdom Books sorted by Average customer review: high to low .

United Kingdom
The Place of Enchantment: British Occultism and the Culture of the Modern
Published in Paperback by University Of Chicago Press (2007-03-01)
Author: Alex Owen
List price: $22.50
New price: $18.84
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Average review score:

Post-modernist Reading of the fin-de-siecle Occult Movements
Helpful Votes: 12 out of 12 total.
Review Date: 2004-10-29
While some further elaboration on his theoretical background and how it is applied to his analysis would be welcome, I can't say I've found a better reading of this period in Occultism. The highlight is certainly the chapter on Aleister Crowley in the Desert which gives the reader the most succinct treatment of The Beast's career that one could ask for in 35 pages. Structurally, the book is divided well between chapters, enabling the scholar looking for a particular tidbit to access without having to read the other parts for context, although anyone interested in one of the chapters would be well rewarded to read all (if not simply for pleasure in Owen's excellent narrative and careful consideration of his subject).

Dave

Good overview
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2005-10-08
This is a fair to good overview of the people & the period, although I think Owens makes over much of her "women's rights" notions. It is well researched & footnoted. Owens could have done much more on the influence of the GD at the turn of the century.

Rational Spirit and the Modern
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2005-01-04
An exceptionally fine piece of work. Owen's use of sources is excellent - published and unpublished accounts of magickal workings and the documents of occult orders. Her understanding of magickal subjectivity and the reflexivity of modernism is very insightful. Her argument that occultism was central to the formation of modernity is brilliant - in opposition to the usual idea that modernism was opposed to spirituality.I'd reccommend reading Joy Dixon's fine "Divine Feminine", Judith Walkowitz' "City of Dreadful Delights" and Leon Surette's "Birth of Modernism" as well.

United Kingdom
Pride And Perjury
Published in Hardcover by Harpercollins Pub Ltd (2000-04)
Authors: Jonathan Aitken and Aitken
List price: $35.00
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Average review score:

A Lesson in Life
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-17
This book certainly teaches a lesson about politics and the newspapers in Britain. It is hard to believe what the people in the book went through and what might be behind the motives of such a story. I highly recommend this book.

Both a Political and Devotional Book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2001-01-11
This book by Jonathan Aitken is the most fascinating book I have read in the last year. And it is surely the most fascinating book I've ever read by a politician. It is a book about a arrogant politician who falls down and comes into prison. But while his reputation goes downhill, his spiritual health goes uphill. And as a journalist my cheeks colored red, both of tension and of shame about my own profession. I hope many other politicians will come to the same sort of renewing experience (apart from being hunted by the press...).

How an exceptional politician was brought to his knees.
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2001-12-30
If you think that God is a concept for the inadequate, this book reveals how the reality of God took over the life of an exceptional politician. Attacked by the press but ruined by his own lies and arrogance a proud man found that rebuilding was only possible from a base of true humility. I found this book easy to read and inspirational. Jonathan's faith convinced me that he is not a man to be despised, as the press depicted him, but a man blessed, initially by good looks intelligence and power but who was stripped and humiliated until he saw a new road he had to take in the service of Jesus. To read of his unashamed confession that Jesus is Lord of his life and that true power, to recover, and live in it's truest sense, comes from that relationship alone. This book may make you review your opinion, about Jonathan, and God.

United Kingdom
Profiles
Published in Paperback by Harpercollins (1990-09)
Authors: Kenneth Tynan and Kathleen Tynan
List price: $14.95
Used price: $5.07
Collectible price: $14.95

Average review score:

THE BEST WRITER ON THE ART OF THEATRE
Helpful Votes: 13 out of 13 total.
Review Date: 2001-05-01
Just as James Agee (deceased) and Pauline Kael (alive, but retired) remain the best writers on the Art of Film, so Kenneth Tynan (again, deceased) is still the best writer on the Art of Theatre. Tynan wrote so beautifully and wittily and lovingly about the stage and the people who inhabit it and he was also responsible in a major way for the success of the National Theatre of Great Britain along with his friend and professional partner, Laurence Olivier. (an essay on Olivier is one of the high-points of this book.) It was Tynan who "discovered" Harold Pinter, who "made the career" of John Osbourne and was a major factor in reviving the career of Noel Coward, after years of neglect: as Literary Manager of the National, it was Tynan who urged a revival of Coward's classic "Hay Fever."

This collection of 50 essays is absolutely essential reading for anyone who has a love of theatre or simply of celebrity and star power. No one writing today writes as well as Tynan did nor consistently shows his affection for Show Business. If you regularly read today's so-called critics, you come away with the feeling that they become INSULTED that plays they dislike were actually produced!

I highly recommend this book. It is passionate, charming and, at times, really funny stuff. But, please, do yourself a favor and haunt every used book shop you know to find a copy of Tynan's out-of-print collected theatre reviews from the U.S. (he wrote for "The New Yorker") and England called CURTAINS. It is absolutely the best book of criticism you'll ever read.

Brilliant and funny
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 1999-06-14
Enormously entertaining and the writing is to die for. Epstein regards Tynan as a lightweight and in a way I guess he is, but a skilled lightweight is still a thing of beauty and Tynan IS skilled. I stared underlining favorite passages but had to stop because I was underlining almost everything.

Fireworks galore!
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 1999-08-26
Tynan was one of the century's great journalists, capable of capturing a performer in two paragraphs, yet equally adept at longer essays, several of which are collected here. The pieces on Stoppard and Louise Brooks are particularly fine. The reviewer below is right: the writing is to die for; but, compared to Epstein, Tynan is a super-hevyweight, with ten times the force and prose-potency.

United Kingdom
The Queen's Necklace: Marie Antoinette and the Scandal that Shocked and Mystified France (Phoenix Press)
Published in Paperback by Phoenix Press (2004-09-01)
Author: Frances Mossiker
List price: $12.95
New price: $9.25
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Average review score:

An 18th Century true crime whodunnit
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-13
Copies of this book are on sale in the gift shop at the Palace of Versailles. That's saying something for a book published, in English, in 1961. I figured there must be a reason and I was right. This fascinating page-turner is equal parts social history, shadowy mystery, and riveting tale of intrigue. The story is told primarily through masterfully translated excerpts from contemporary source materials--diaries, memoirs, autobiographies. In all honesty I rarely read books this long anymore, but this did not seem long at all. Finally, this title will expand your vocabulary--I guess readers were familiar with more words in 1961!

History and Heredity
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-16
The Queen's Necklace is a remarkable book. As an avid reader of French Revolutionary history, I was initially daunted by its 500+ pages, but the style of writing with it's excerpts from period memoirs, made it eminently readable. I found myself unable to stop reading. The use of the memoirs, particularly when they contradict each other so strongly, presents the reader with the opportunity to weigh each version and use them to "read between the lines" to obtain the story - or in some cases, "a" story - by the memoirs' authors themselves.

It was a delightful read with virtually no connection to the movie of the same name. What a wasted opportunity that was! The real story is the stuff of movie making, had the writer and producer used this book, the film might have been a hit. Sophia Coppola, with her "Marie Antoinette" film could have benefitted from this book as it accurately presents Marie Antoinette at a time when her fate had already been decided in the minds of the public by libelous pamphleteers and the actions of such self-interested, self-involved charlatans as Madame La Motte-Valois, the central character in this story.

I was fortunate to be able to see the San Francisco Legion of Honor exhibit on Marie Antoinette and the Grand Trianon as I was reading this book. It served to reinforce what a great book this is.

The Scam of the century
Helpful Votes: 12 out of 12 total.
Review Date: 2005-03-31
In 1785 The Queen's Necklace scandal broke over France. Queen Marie Antoinette was alleged to have bought a diamond necklace worth over 1.6 million franks and refused to pay for it, and had Cardinal Prince Rohan, a long time courtier out of favour, arrested for it along with his accomplices the Countess de la Motte-Valois and the famous mystic Count Cagliostro.

This book is a series of fascinating first person accounts of how the necklace swindle occurred and the trial that followed it. Most of the people involved in the scandal wrote their memoirs and virtually all the court related documentation is still available in France in archives. This book is a compilation of these memoirs and legal statements made by all the parties involved in this crime which opened the monarchy and France to the fury of the revolution.

The author does not impose her own interpretation of the events on the reader, but does provide explanations to the backgrounds of the people involved and the social and political niceties of the time that explain why people acted as they did.

This book is a lively account of this important French scandal that, because of the first person accounts, reads like a novel. If the story wasn't true it would be hard to credit such a cast of interesting characters, with their extravagant and wildly different backgrounds, coming together like this to play a crucial role in the downfall of the French Monarchy. Its also very interesting to compare this book to what is portrayed in the movie of the same name. There are a number of very significant differences!

United Kingdom
READER'S DIGEST: A GARDEN FOR ALL SEASONS.
Published in Hardcover by Readers Digest Association (1991)
Author: John., and Kenneth A. Beckett. Kelly
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Average review score:

Great Year Round Gardening
Helpful Votes: 16 out of 16 total.
Review Date: 1999-02-25
I found this book to be highly helpful for a new gardener. It not only shows combinations, but gives lots of year round tips. A friend brought it to me to browse, I was so impressed I had to buy the book for myself. I also told a few friends - that this is definitely the "1" book you want to have in your gardening library. I can't wait for mine to come, I'm sure my friend is anxious to have hers back.

Outstanding Four Season Gardening Book, A Must For Pacific Northwestern Gardeners
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2005-10-04
This book is written for gardeners in England. For those of us in the Pacific Northwest the plants suggested are perfect. They are readily available and many do their best here. Every gardener in Seattle, Vancouver BC and Portland OR should buy this book. For gardeners in other parts of the USA it will not be pefect but still well worth reading.

The technique of layering the garden with plants that have interest in more than one season and the wonderful combinations can be applied to plants that will thrive in your climate zone. There are suggested combinations and vignettes throughout the book for all seasons. There are detailed sections on key plants throughout also. Clematis, Heather, Dwarf Conifers and many more get the spotlight.

This book is full of outstanding color photos. They are beautiful as well as instructional. Many of the plants are shown in more than one season so you can see not just what the blooms are like but the fall or winter color too.

This book makes it easy to have a garden that is just as interesting in December as it is in May.

one of the best
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2006-01-25
i have hundreds of gardening books and this is one i love, love, love. i will pick it up every season of the year to get ideas.

United Kingdom
Regency Design 1790-1840
Published in Hardcover by Harry N. Abrams (1993-05-10)
Author: John Morley
List price: $150.00
New price: $223.76
Used price: $95.00

Average review score:

Extraordinary reference and eye candy
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-03
This is the top design book I own.

The layout makes the most of the book's large (11" x 14") format. There are many full-page illustrations, and other illustrations are generously sized. Many are breathtaking. The book is just chock-full of large, brilliant illustrations.

The text in this book is easy to read - other reference books seem meant for academics. It is incredibly thorough and interesting.

I ordered a used copy of this book, and it was still close to $200 - I think this is the most expensive book I own. But the cost was well worth it in terms of enjoyment and design ideas (for an amateur interested in design history).

Lush, gorgeous feast of colour and beauty as only the Regency could provide
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-09-17
All my congratulations to John Morley - he has provided an enormous volume - full of lush illustrations, good background information and a great browsing volume of Regency Design

Following what is popularly known as teh extended regency, or late Georgian period John Morley uses the period of 1790-1840 which covers the end of George III's reign (and the regency period of 1811-1820), the reign of King George IV, William IV and first few years of Victoria. This early part of the century is the start of the great industrial years, the increasing population in Britain, and increasing wealth.

What I loved best about this book is its easy reference. It is divded into four sections, Parks and Gardens, Exterior Architecture, interior decoration, and Furniture. Within each section looking at the formative incluences, styles, and how they manifested.

Each chapter has good explanatory commentary, and is well illustrated. The only other book I can really compare this to is one I have read by Steven Parrisen which also done excellent works on Regency architecture. This book covers a great deal more in one volume which I felt allowed a broader depth of understanding of the style. It would be really nice to include two other sections (I think) one of food, and one of clothing. I daresay to do that there would be a great deal more to have to add as well and this book would need to double in size.

Nice reference book, good for browsing through too.

Regency Design
Helpful Votes: 11 out of 12 total.
Review Date: 2000-09-26
John Morley's Regency Design offers a wealth of information for anyone seeking an indepth resource on the Regency Style. The organization of the information makes it easy for the reader to follow and locate specific areas of interests. Parks, Gardens, Exterior Architecture, Interior Design and Furniture are all included with generous amount of illustrations. Morley's Regency Style is now in my company's design library as the recommended sourch for Regency Style research. I highly recommend this book for design professionals, instructors and anyone interested in the study of classical styles.

United Kingdom
Remotely Controlled: How Television is Damaging Our Lives
Published in Paperback by Ebury Press (2007-02-01)
Author: Aric Sigman
List price: $14.95
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Average review score:

Amazing!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-11-11
I recently ran across Dr. Aric Sigman's book, Remotely Controlled: How Television Is Damaging Our Lives. I picked up a copy from Amazon and started reading. I was blown away! I found Dr. Sigman's book to be one of the best-researched and most-compelling books I've ever read!

Dr. Sigman exposes in detail the many dangers that television presents to human beings, not just to society in general, but also to individuals' health and well-being. He points to links between television and ADHD, depression, violence, apathy, obesity, sexual dysfunction, and many other woes. Dr. Sigman also explains how television stunts brain development and destroys cultural identity. And the adverse effects are not just from harmful programming either. Some of the damage actually comes from the medium itself (so there is no such thing as 'safe programming').

After reading Dr. Sigman's book, I cut television completely out of my daily life, and I radically curtailed the viewing habits of my toddler (it is impossible for me to completely eliminate his exposure).

I highly recommend this book to any person, and especially to parents of young children. Dr. Sigman not only points out the damage that TV is doing to us, but provides real-world alternatives to prevent and solutions to repair some of the damage. This is one of the most important books you will ever read.

spellbinding
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-21
Sigman answers those who say: "I grew up with TV and it's done me no harm" by showing that TV today is very different to the TV we grew up with. The techniques used to grab and hold viewers' attention, as they must in this very competitive arena, are very different today and can be harmful to a child's developing brain. The problem is not merely the content, or the fact that it engenders a sedentary lifestyle. He explains that when watching TV the brain's frontal lobes go into idle, which is very relaxing for an adult, and what makes TV so addictive. However, it reduces the time a child's developing brain has for using and strengthing these important links in that area of the brain which has to do with attention span and impulse control.

Brilliant book
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2007-04-12
Very good book. Hopefully, what "Supersize Me" said to Americans regarding our unquestioning consumption of junk food, this book will speak to regarding our unquestioning adoption of TV and other new media.

So-called media experts have been constantly rewarded for trumpeting the latest in devices and the "gains" they bring. But they overlook the cumulative effect each new device brings. More alarmingly, the author points out negative effects showing up in our children's behavior that can be traced to TV. Causal relationships are starting to appear linking TV/games and ADD/ADHD, depression, cognitive development, and more. This issue alone should be cause for alarm. Experienced educators have long been able to pick between their students who are TV-saturated and those who aren't.

As Dr. Sigman points out, the next generation of technological elite will not be the children we see hyperfocusing on the latest celphones, PDAs, or video games. It will be the children whose parents have the skills to critically evaluate the devices they bring into their home. The "digital divide" isn't a gap between the rich and poor, but rather between the ones who truly understand how technology effects them, and those who don't.

United Kingdom
Res Gestae Christiani: My Time as the President of the Cambridge University Korean Society 2002-2003
Published in Paperback by The Hermit Kingdom Press (2006-06-25)
Author: Christian Kim
List price: $17.99
New price: $13.49
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Average review score:

A Leader in the Korean Community
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-06-08
This book written by one of the prominent leaders of the Korean community is great! Koreans have been struggling for many years to empower ourselves and it's great that there is a person out there who is willing to sacrifice himself to empower Koreans.

Needed book!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2006-06-20
There is a lot of racism against Korean's in Cambridge University. Most of this racism seems to emanate from French students, who appear to have an irrational hatred of Korean's. A good example would be when a group of Korean's came to my College bar to watch South Korea play against France in the World Cup. The Korean's were told repeatedly to shut up by a group of French students whenever they cheered for South Korea (known as the red devils). The French students were very aggressive towards the Korean's, especially after Park Ji Sung scored the equalizer. I hope that France gets knocked out of the World Cup in the group stage.

It is a shame that Christian Kim was asked to leave Cambridge since he did a lot of good work as president of the Cambridge University Korean Society. Racist attacks against Korean's fell during Christian Kim's presidency, however they are now on the rise. I feel that this is a very important book in the fight against anti-Korean racism. All korean's in Cambridge need to read this book.

Great Anticipation!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2006-06-08
I have been looking forward to reading this book by Christian Kim. I have read his other books and find them quite impressive. He is insightful and understands social dynamics of today. I would recommend all books by Christian Kim.

United Kingdom
Roman Military Equipment (Shire Archaeology)
Published in Paperback by Hyperion Books (1989-12)
Authors: J. C. Coulston and M. C. Bishop
List price: $25.00
Used price: $16.03
Collectible price: $50.00

Average review score:

THE definitive work on Roman military equipment
Helpful Votes: 16 out of 18 total.
Review Date: 2006-09-07
I have both the first and the current editions of this utterly invaluable book. It is undoubtedly the best and most detailed discussion of Roman military equipment available and it is a "must read" for anyone interested in the subject, be he or she an historian, re-enactor, artist or whatever. I would give this book six stars, but there are only five available.

THE Book to have
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2007-04-03
I am a Roman era re-enactor and I absolutely loved this book! Not only did in inform me with details I didn't know, but also informed me with what was wrong with my impression.

This is a must have for any Roman era enthusiast!!

My Brother Liked It
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 12 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-09
My brother is a big history and punic wars buff, and he really enjoyed it. From what I looked at the illustrations were amazing and the book seemed well written.

United Kingdom
Salisbury: Victorian Titan (Phoenix Press)
Published in Paperback by Phoenix Press (2006-10-30)
Author: Andrew Roberts
List price: $19.95
Used price: $79.99

Average review score:

Salisbury: Big Book, Big Subject, Big Author
Helpful Votes: 12 out of 14 total.
Review Date: 2000-07-29
This is not just a book of immense intrinsic value. It's a book of real historical importance as one of two biographies of Salisbury published recently which entirely reassess his standing as one of the leading English statemen of the latter part of the nineteenth century, ranking alongside Gladstone and Disraeli.

It seems incredible in view of the plethora of studies on Gladstone and Disraeli that it's been half a century since any historian has made a full-scale re-evaluation of the life of Robert Cecil, third Marquess of Salisbury, three-times Prime Minister and architect of Queen Victoria's glittering Empire.

And yet he was a man arguably of greater intellect than either of these two other late Victorian "giants". Disraeli wrote rather affected, stylized novels; Gladstone turned out unreadable religious tracts. Salisbury, on the other hand, produced stimulating and pithy articles in the Saturday and Quarterly Reviews and delivered parliamentary speeches at least as memorable as those of the other two statesmen.

But few historians have really come to grips with Salisbury in recent times. One had to look into Barbara Tuchman's epic "The Proud Tower" to find a chapter that did justice to the colorful, quirky patrician figure who performed sometimes dangerous chemical experiments in his spare time, was one of the first to introduce electricity into his home, rode around on an enormous tricycle and who was always ready to chat to strangers, even lunatics.

Perhaps historians have been too ready to downgrade Salisbury's standing because of his inherent conservatism in the domestic field, his endeavors to preserve the status quo. And as to his being a main architect of Empire, this all-too-readily clashes with the modern, probably justified aversion to that theme.

This book was commissioned by the present Marquess of Salisbury. It says a lot about the open-mindedness of the Cecil family that historian Andrew Roberts was given the task. Anyone who has read his wonderfully debunking "Eminent Churchillians" knows Roberts as an historian of the utmost integrity, incapable of pulling punches. And he pulls none in his biography of Salisbury, whom he paints on a broad canvass, "warts and all". But Roberts's admiration and affection for his subject is never in doubt. The result is a big book about a very big statesman by a young, big, historian.

The Queen's Last Minister
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2000-09-08
Victoria and Salibury; two true Titans who, the former, giving her name to the century, and the latter, who helped create the formidable empire which was both reviled and regaled. This book is in the great tradition of "Life and Times" biographies. Mr. Roberts is to be commended for the scope and structure of slowly but with anticipation revealing the aspects of a fascinating man. The chapters on the Boer War and the Realpolitik diplomacy of the African continent are just two elements that should be read for years to come. From a shy and bookish child to the political standard bearer of the Tory Party, this book shows a man with conviction, often callous to some but with foresight which comes through in the epigrammatical style of Salisbury's prose. Thank You Andrew Roberts for your wonderful book.

Superb biography of ruthless Empire-builder
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 2001-07-31
Andrew Roberts has produced a superbly written and wonderfully exciting biography of Lord Salisbury, three times Queen Victoria's Prime Minister. In his fifty-year career, Salisbury won over Disraeli, destroyed Lord Randolph Churchill, charmed Queen Victoria, wrecked Gladstone's hopes for Irish Home Rule, and saw off Bismarck. The book is based on Salisbury's archive at Hatfield House, and on the papers of more than 140 of his contemporaries.

Roberts records Salisbury's many contradictions. He supported "the right of a minority of Americans to secede from a Union, but not a majority of Irishmen." He opposed socialism as mere confiscation, but upheld the actions of his ancestor, the First Earl, who had confiscated much of Ulster's land between 1607 and 1609, then selling it to City and Scottish businessmen.

He wrote eloquently against intervention in other countries' domestic affairs. "The Assemblies that meet at Westminster have no jurisdiction over the affairs of other nations. Neither they nor the Executive, except in plain defiance of international law, can interfere with the brigandage of Italy, or the persecutions in Spain, or the teachings of the schools in Schleswig-Holstein. What is said in either House about them is simply impertinence ... It is not a dignified position for a Great Power to occupy, to be pointed out as the busybody of Christendom." And, "there is no practice which the experience of nations more uniformly condemns, and none which governments more consistently pursue."

Indeed, his Governments annually waged colonial wars in Asia and Africa, adding 2.5 million square miles and 44 million people to the Empire. His war against the Boers was particularly shameful: he claimed that Britain had sovereignty over the Transvaal, although the British Government had ceded this in the 1884 Pretoria Convention. (Roberts grants that Salisbury was `on exceedingly tricky ground legally'.) As Salisbury admitted, "If our ancestors had cared for the rights of other peoples, the British Empire would never have been made."


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