What If?: The Architecture and Design of David Rockwell
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Widely admired for his sophistication, creativity and exuberance, David Rockwell is one of the...

The Spanish Ambassador's Suitcase: Stories from the Diplomatic Bag
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The Spanish Ambassador's Suitcase is a hilarious new collection of diplomatic tales by Matthew...

El Lissitzky
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El (Eleazar) Lissitzky (1890-1941) was a vital force in the revolutionary period in Russia. Having...

Steven Holl
Robert McCarter and Steven Holl
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Comprehensive monograph on one of America's greatest living architects by award-winning author and...

Valuable Content Marketing: How to Make Quality Content Your Key to Success
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WINNER: 2016 Marketing Book of the Year; Small Biz Book Awards. From websites, white papers and...

A Good Man is Hard to Find and Other Stories
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ONE OF THE GREATEST AMERICAN SHORT STORY COLLECTIONS In 1955, with this short story collection,...

Rip Kirby: Volume 5
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* The fifth volume of the Harvey Award-nominated Rip Kirby features the incredible art of John...

One Direction: Where We are (100% Official): Our Band, Our Story
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Calling all One Direction fans! This is the only official book from 1D, charting their journey over...

The Food Book Mini: A Journey Through the Great Cuisines of the World
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Lonely Planet: The world's leading travel guide publisher* A journey through the great cuisines of...
Hamnet is an imagining of what could have happened to Shakespeare’s son - even in the parish records it doesn’t say what his cause of death was. Maggie O’Farrell makes this version completely plausible though: plague should have been a real threat at this time. It killed indiscriminately: young and old, rich and poor, weak and strong. They were all vulnerable to illnesses with no cures. I’m something of an emotional reader at the best of times, but as Agnes, Hamnet’s mother, was preparing her son for burial, I was crying in to my breakfast. My 16 year old son looked at me over the top of his bacon butty and said:”Another sad bookthen, Mum?”, and shook his head. To read of a mother and her dead son, and see my 13 and 16 year old sons merrily tucking in to their bacon sandwiches, may not have been the ideal time to be reading this.
This is the kind of book that makes you really look at how precarious life was in those times, and how lucky we are today to have so few worries on this scale (Covid-19 aside!).
The writing is so beautiful, so descriptive and emotive: it picks you up and sets you down squarely in Elizabethan Stratford, making you feel exactly how Agnes must have felt. Honestly, it broke my heart to read of her pain.
If you haven’t read this yet, you’re in for a treat. This deserves ALL the awards.