Showing 1–9 of 29 results
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A Boy Called Yank
£8.50An exploration of friendship and adventure. An unforgettable coming-of-age story of small-town adolescence and universal experience. Thirteen-year-old Conor Cleary lives with his mother in a cottage in County Fermanagh, Northern Ireland. With little contact with the outside world and nothing much to do, life is uneventful. Until one day the United States Army are posted in Fermanagh on their way to fight in mainland Europe during the Second World War, and Conor’s life changes forever. DAVID MCCANN is a film maker and producer of two short films set in 1920s Ireland titled Sgt Collins RIC & The Green Fella. He has worked as a hospital porter and an Irish Police Officer in the Garda Reserve. He lives in Enniskillen, Northern Ireland.
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Academy For Witches And Wizards: Book One – The Beginning
£9.50The three boys crept up the long wooden staircase, noting that it twisted and turned. They reached the top and stood in front of the wooden door to the hidden room. The noise within the hidden room had stopped since the boys had begun climbing the staircase. There was just a deathly silence now. The boys stopped halfway up the stairs and looked at each other. “Are we ready for this?” Welcome to the Academy for Witches and Wizards! Join eleven-year-old Nicholas and his loyal friends, Jamie and Mark, as they embark on an extraordinary adventure at a hidden magical Academy for Witches and Wizards, crafted by the legendary wizard Blaze. Nestled in a breathtaking valley, this enchanting school brims with secrets, from its winding labyrinth of tunnels to a mysterious hidden room shrouded in dark enigmas. As they dive into their magical studies, a looming threat surfaces: the cunning Dark Wizard, Omen Willow. With friendships tested and bravery forged in the heat of peril, Nicholas and his friends must navigate unexpected twists and face formidable magical challenges. Will they unravel the Academy’s ancient secrets and confront the encroaching darkness, or will they fall victim to the sinister forces at play? S.J. MORRIS is an English writer, social worker, and the author of the popular children’s book Mub and Grub and their Amazing Adventure.
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Blackthorn Hill
£8.99Where death is just the beginning. On a warm September night in 1867 three women give birth to healthy sons in the village of Medcott. As the boys grow so does their friendship. On the day they turn thirteen, the boys venture out of their village in the hope of catching a glimpse of the inhabitants of an isolated convent high on Blackthorn Hill. They follow what they believe to be a nun, but as they approach the small dark figure an inexplicable force prevents them seeing its face. It then delivers a cryptic message before vanishing into thin air. Overwhelmed by fear they swear never to tell a soul. Thirty-five years later and far beyond the reach of Medcott the dark figure returns, and one by one they discover a terrifying legacy that connects them all to Blackthorn Hill. MARK HOWARD grew up in the small West Sussex village of Cocking in the 1970s. As a child, he was a daydreamer with a vivid imagination, a superstitious mother, fears of what lay within the darkness and a passion to tell stories. He spent thirty years working in photography and visual media. His mother’s fearful beliefs still see him salute a lone magpie to ward off a sinister omen. He is married to Yvie and has two grown up children and now lives in Littlehampton. Blackthorn Hill is his debut novel.
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Blame
£8.99A troubled university lecturer raging against the establishment and the plight of his students wages a war of terror on the city where he lives and works. Joseph Darby has been a sociology of culture lecturer for twenty years. And never has he felt so enraged and disillusioned by the self-inflicted behaviours of the students he is trying to teach. On his desk, among the completed essays with red pen comments and a circled grade, is his own work. A manifesto with the title: **The Wasted Youth** In the city’s biggest cinema a terrible crime has been committed. A bomb has exploded in screen room four. Among the dead are students from the university. Cue the arrival of DCI Colin Mills and DI Kate Dee. Experienced detectives assigned to the bomb squad. As they begin to untangle the horror of the cinema bombing, two other devices are detonated at other venues populated by students. As the university city is gripped by terror, they face a race against time to connect the crimes, understand the motive, and catch the bomber before more innocent people are killed. EDWARD BURLEY has always been fascinated by human behaviour. What makes people do what they do? He could think of no better place to explore this question than in the world of crime fiction. Edward lives in the West Country with his wife, two children and healthy guitar collection.
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Fallon
£8.99An old man, still grieving the loss of his beloved wife, welcomes his nine year old granddaughter into his home. After putting her to bed, whilst sitting in his study, the old man gazes wishfully at a picture of his deceased wife in her younger days. His mind drifts back to when they first met, Cairo 1916 and the beginning of an exciting adventure. Join Jonathan Fallon and a small band of heroes as they try and stop a dastardly plot to change the course of the First World War in the soaring heat of the desert ~ a dazzling story of derring-do, romance and love spanning three generations. ROBYN SMYTHE is a Scottish writer. Born in the Sixties in Fife, he was educated at Madras College secondary school where he wrote his first full length story. More than three decades later, after a varied working life that has involved being a lifeguard and Post Office clerk, he finally found the time to write Fallon, his debut novel. He is married with two teenage girls and is currently working on a second Fallon novel, Familia Super Omnia.
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Grumps
£7.50A Children’s Story in 7 Nights The much-loved Glyn Davies story, updated for a whole new generation of readers with an exciting new interior design and cover look. Arthur Pickering used to be in the army. Now, he is a dedicated and fearless school-crossing lollipop patrolman. Arthur likes his job and dislikes bad manners and bullies. With his mischievous sense of humour and his little black book of misdemeanours, he is loved by some and feared by the rest. GLYN DAVIES is an English writer and a former truck driver who grew up in the 1950’s, and was brought up on the television programmes of Mr Pastry, The Marx Bros, Laurel & Hardy, Charlie Chaplin & many more. He is the author of several children’s books including Santa’s Disastrous Delivery, Santa Returns, Trevor The Tractor, and Phartman. He has three grown up children and grandchildren and lives with his wife not far from the sea in Lincolnshire.
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Guttabug and the River Treasure
£8.50Guttabug and the River Treasure is English writer Samantha Parry’s enchanting picture book debut, illustrated by Amy Elizabeth. Guttabug lives in Moodool Land with best friends Muddle Duddle, Ding Dong and Smoldie Oldie. Together, they search for treasure, collect rubbish and grow things, appreciating everything about each other that is different…well, almost all the things. Guttabug and the River Treasure is a charming tale of river life adventure and an entertaining message about difference and tolerance. SAMANTHA PARRY is an English writer who lives in Queensland. She grew up in Hertfordshire, England, and now writes and travels between Australia and the UK. An avid mudlarker, Sam is married with children and grandchildren.
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Holy Disorder
£12.99Title: Holy Disorder Author: Geoff Smith Genre: Literary Fiction Format: 386 pages, Paperback Published: September 2022 by RiverRun, an imprint of Foreshore Publishing, London. Language: English ISBN: 978-1-7395930-1-8 The journey of an ordinary man, from working class lad seeking both purpose and understanding in 1960’s Manchester, to becoming chaplain to a bishop, and of the sad, inevitable and possibly irreversible decline of the Church. Holy Disorder is Geoff Smith’s first literary work, a semi-autobiographical novel that has the potential to establish itself as an English classic. With empathy, clarity, and perspicuity, and writing that is raw, real, and honest, Smith chronicles the journey of a working-class lad from seeking both purpose and understanding in 1960’s Manchester, a city rocked by the crimes of Moors Murderers Ian Brady and Myra Hindley, to becoming chaplain to a bishop. Smith’s rendering of his protagonist’s spiritual, sexual, and moral struggle provides thought-provoking as well as emotional and spiritual impact through its social commentary, and reflections on humanity and of the sad, inevitable and possibly irreversible decline of the Church. GEOFF SMITH was ordained in 1969 in Sheffield and has been a curate, a vicar and a cathedral canon. Holy Disorder is drawn from the authors first hand experience of his work in the Church of England.
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In the Foothills of the Himalayas
£12.00A powerful historical eco-thriller tells the story of a courageous young woman who puts her life at risk to save her native land from destruction. Born in the Raj era under British rule, Vidhya grows up observing her father fight for a free India. She witnesses catastrophic flooding as a result of deforestation by order of a powerful English company, and begins to understand the importance of preserving the forest. When Vidhya uncovers a conspiracy that puts her in great jeopardy, she courageously leads a group of women on a non-violent protest and they embrace the trees. But at what cost? DR SARAH HUSSAIN is a Huddersfield based author and educator. Her novella, ‘Escaped from Syria’ was a winner finalist in the People’s Book Prize Award. In 2018 she won the Ms Shakespeare competition in Yorkshire and TITLE commissioned to write a monologue, which was performed on International Women’s day. She was shortlisted in a competition run by The University of Huddersfield, and her short story, ‘You will be free one day, my dearest India’, is included in the anthology ‘Trouble’, published by Grist. Furthermore, it was ‘highly commended’.