Broken Sword 1 - Shadow of the Templars: Director's Cut
Games and Entertainment
App
Paris in the Fall… a brutal murder at the Palais Royale. When Nico Collard is invited to interview...
The Grimaldis of Monaco: Centuries of Scandal, Years of Grace
Book
The Grimaldis of Monaco tells in full the remarkable history of the world's oldest reigning dynasty....
A Spencer Love Affair: Eighteen Century Theatricals at Blenheim Palace and Beyond
Book
A Spencer Love Affair is the true story of the love affair and marriage between the 4th Duke of...
Apollo's Angels: A History Of Ballet
Book
Apollo's Angels is a major new history of classical ballet. It begins in the courts of Europe, where...
Knowledge of Life
Georges Canguilhem, Stefanos Geroulanos, Daniela Ginsburg and Paola Marrati
Book
As the work of thinkers such as Michel Foucault, Francois Jacob, Louis Althusser, and Pierre...
Masters of Empire
Book
In Masters of Empire, the historian Michael A. McDonnell reveals the vital role played by the native...
Catherine the Great
Book
The daughter of an impoverished aristocrat, Catherine was married aged 16 to Grand Duke Peter, heir...
The Paris Portrait (A Fabiola Bennett Mystery #3)
Book
Fabiola stumbles upon a clue that indicates a royal portrait went missing almost two hundred years...
Historical Mystery Art History Dual Timeline
18th century Paris was a place of great uncertainty - and this book has echoes of Dickensian London. It’s so much more than that though. Not only do we get some wonderful descriptions of the sights, sounds and smells of Paris at the time, we also get to look at Edward Carey’s beautiful pictures. I say beautiful, they’re pictures that portray people in their sometimes beautiful ugliness (that’s a thing, right?).
The life that Little lives! I hadn’t known any of the background of Madame Tussaud, and to be honest, with the way her formative years went, I’m astonished that she survived to old age. The Paris of the French Revolution was a dangerous place, and Little had come to know some dangerous people.
I don’t want to say anything else. It would be a shame for me to reveal any of the (what were to me) big surprises. This is a startling, moving, frustrating, emotional, bizarre, glorious journey through the French years of Madame Tussaud’s life. It was recommended to me by book blogger @yearsofreading, and I’m so glad I listened to her. Now I recommend that if you haven’t read this book, and you’ve read my review this far, go out and read it. You won’t regret it!
Germany and the Holy Roman Empire: Volume II: The Peace of Westphalia to the Dissolution of the Reich, 1648-1806
Book
Germany and the Holy Roman Empire offers a striking new interpretation of a crucial era in German...