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  • av Jeffrey Frank
    224,-

    A bestselling presidential historian returns with the first full account of the Truman presidency in nearly thirty years, revealing how so ordinary a man rose to the extraordinary challenge of leading America through one of the most pivotal decades of the 20th century.

  • av Alan Judd
    260,-

  • av Alan Judd
    160,-

  • av Leah Scheier
    144,-

    A poignant romance for fans of Jennifer Niven and Gayle Forman, about what happens when your best friend is also your first love…and your first loss.

  • av Katherine Bradley
    145,-

  • av Catherine Emmett
    203,-

  • av Beach
    203,-

    An explosively funny retelling of Clement C. Moore's classic poem 'The Night Before Christmas' from the bestselling creator of the Blazing Bottom series.

  • av Catherine Emmett
    131,-

  • av Nina Millns
    160,-

    A celebration of friendship, a story of survival, and a fight against the notion that some girls were destined to quietly disappear

  • av Beach
    128,-

    An explosively funny retelling of Clement C. Moore's classic poem 'The Night Before Christmas' from the bestselling creator of the Blazing Bottom series.

  • av J. Elle
    154,-

  • av Karen Tumulty
    253,-

  • av John Nichol
    333,-

    A moving account of how and why the tomb of the Unknown Warrior came about, by best-selling author and ex-serviceman John Nichol.

  • av EVA RICE
    232,-

  • av Aiwanose Odafen
    232,-

  • av Alice Roberts
    333,-

    A sweeping and gripping new history of the decline of the Roman Empire and the dawn of the Catholic Church by number one bestselling author Professor Alice Roberts. Domination is an evocative and compelling search to answer the question: who spread Christianity, how, and why?

  • av Peter Grimsdale
    160,-

  • av EVA RICE
    145,-

  • av Aiwanose Odafen
    145,-

  • av John Nichol
    160,-

    A moving account of how and why the tomb of the Unknown Warrior came about, by best-selling author and ex-serviceman John Nichol.

  • av Charlotte Leonard
    145,-

  • av Aiwanose Odafen
    160,-

    From Aiwanose Odafen, the author of Tomorrow I Become a Woman, a new moving novel that charts three women's shifting relationships against a modernising, volatile Nigeria in the 1990s and beyond.

  • Spar 29%
    av Monica West
    180,-

  • Spar 15%
    av Marissa Stapley
    205

  • av Jeffrey Frank
    210,-

    Years of backstabbing and betrayal start to catch up with one of Washington’s elite opinion writers, “a character that deserves to jump outside the Beltway and enter the language like ‘Uncle Tom,’ ‘Peter Pan,’ or ‘Scrooge.’” (Ron Charles, Christian Science Monitor). During a cocktail party, George H. W. Bush encourages Brandon Sladder, the prominent Washington columnist, to write his memoirs. Sladder has, after all, known just about everyone of importance. From talking on intimate terms with world leaders, being a witness to enormous change, and expressing his weighty opinions on matters of state, he believes that his own story could add so much more than a footnote to our age. But what is meant to be a look back at his life and our times turns out to be far more revealing. The Columnist is Sladder’s attempt to burnish his image for posterity. What emerges is something else: the misadventures of an irresistibly loathsome man—self-important, social climbing, dangerously oblivious, “an unforgettable character who is lovably hateable” (Susan Orlean, author of The Library Book) and one of the most memorable rogues in contemporary fiction. The Columnist is a dead-on, elegantly written portrait of the media and politics of the second half of the twentieth century—“It’s Balzac as word-processed by Philip Roth, only, for my two cents…funnier…[A] great American novel” (Christopher Buckley, author of Thank You for Smoking).

  • av Paul Steinhardt
    260,-

    *Shortlisted for the 2019 Royal Society Insight Investment Science Book Prize* One of the most fascinating scientific detective stories of the last fifty years, an exciting quest for a new form of matter. “A riveting tale of derring-do” (Nature), this book reads like James Gleick’s Chaos combined with an Indiana Jones adventure.When leading Princeton physicist Paul Steinhardt began working in the 1980s, scientists thought they knew all the conceivable forms of matter. The Second Kind of Impossible is the story of Steinhardt’s thirty-five-year-long quest to challenge conventional wisdom. It begins with a curious geometric pattern that inspires two theoretical physicists to propose a radically new type of matter—one that raises the possibility of new materials with never before seen properties, but that violates laws set in stone for centuries. Steinhardt dubs this new form of matter “quasicrystal.” The rest of the scientific community calls it simply impossible. The Second Kind of Impossible captures Steinhardt’s scientific odyssey as it unfolds over decades, first to prove viability, and then to pursue his wildest conjecture—that nature made quasicrystals long before humans discovered them. Along the way, his team encounters clandestine collectors, corrupt scientists, secret diaries, international smugglers, and KGB agents. Their quest culminates in a daring expedition to a distant corner of the Earth, in pursuit of tiny fragments of a meteorite forged at the birth of the solar system. Steinhardt’s discoveries chart a new direction in science. They not only change our ideas about patterns and matter, but also reveal new truths about the processes that shaped our solar system. The underlying science is important, simple, and beautiful—and Steinhardt’s firsthand account is “packed with discovery, disappointment, exhilaration, and persistence...This book is a front-row seat to history as it is made” (Nature).

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