21 Nov, 2024 | Admin | No Comments
Diddly Squat: Home to Roost by Jeremy Clarkson: 'Thanks to the government, British farmers are screwed'
Clarkson’s rallying cry to all farmers that dispels any notion of farmer’s having an easy life.
This week, Prue Leith answers our questions, what’s she reading now, what would she take to a desert island, what gave her the reading bug, and what book left her cold?
In his new memoir, Al Pacino reveals the highs and lows of fame, fortune and filming the Godfather with Marlon Brando.
In his new memoir, Al Pacino reveals the highs and lows of fame, fortune and filming the Godfather with Marlon Brando.
7 Nov, 2024 | Admin | No Comments
England by John Lewis-Stempel: How to save the countryside … help farmers, don't rewild, and DO shoot
			
Christopher Hart reviews John Lewis-Stempell’s defence of farming and the countryside.
1 Nov, 2024 | Admin | No Comments
My dad's toes were cut off one by one…and then his body dissolved in acid by gangsters. After a childhood like that, tackling Hawaii's infamous Pipeline wave was a walk in the park
			
How could a cocky blond 20-year-old upstart from Australia be about to win the most prestigious surfing competition in the world: the 1978 Banzai Pipeline Masters in Hawaii?
25 Oct, 2024 | Admin | No Comments
In Season for 40 Years by Sally Clarke: The most important woman in Lucian Freud's life…or at least the one who kept him fed
			
Constance Craig Smith reviews Sally Clarke’s new book which celebrates the 40th anniversary of her restaurant, Clarkes. A book filled with famous names, anecdotes and history.
13 Oct, 2024 | Admin | No Comments
Gray Matters by Theodore H. Schwartz: Natasha Richardson, JFK and Abraham Lincoln all suffered catastrophic brain injuries. But in a fascinating new book, a top surgeon asks… COULD THEY HAVE BEEN SAVED?
			
Abraham Lincoln, JFK and Natasha Richardson all lost their lives due to shocking brain injuries, but this new book delves into whether they could have been saved.
4 Oct, 2024 | Admin | No Comments
He was so beautiful that women stared, and his legs were reckoned a wonder of the world. But was the Duke of Buckingham… THE KING'S LOVER, LOYAL FRIEND – OR POISONOUS PERVERT?
			
His legs were considered a wonder of the world and many thought his ambition led him to poison James I, but Lucy Hughes-Hallett reveals the truth about George Villers.
30 Sep, 2024 | Admin | No Comments
The GORY greatness of Henry V: The King burned his friends alive and political rivals were hung, drawn and quartered. But historian Dan Jones says he wasn't cruel … just pragmatic
			
To many he was a ruthless and excessively harsh ruler. But Kathryn Hughes discovers that Henry V was actually just a product of his age and instead of being cruel, he was in fact pragmatic.

