Charles Pelham Villiers: Aristocratic Victorian Radical
Book
This book provides the first biographical study of Charles Pelham Villiers (1802-1898), whose long...
Politics - A Complete Introduction: Teach Yourself
Book
This is your go-to guide to politicsAs the UK gears up for a snap general election on the back of a...
The Privatisation Classes: A Pictorial Survey of Diesel and Electric Locomotives and Units Since 1994
Book
Post Privatisation Diesels and Electrics is an album of photographs taken by David Cable, a...
Saving the Market from Itself: The Politics of Financial Intervention
Book
The 2007-9 financial crisis threatened economic disaster on a scale not seen since the Great...
The Commodity of Care: Politics and Poor Nursing Care
Book
Carol Dimon analyses why poor nursing care is still occurring within care homes and hospitals in the...
Let Us Face the Future: British Art 1945-1968
Andrew Riley, Giner Salvador and Richard Riley
Book
The title, Let Us Face the Future, comes from the Labour Party's slogan for their 1945 electoral...
Awix (3310 KP) rated Agent of Chaos in Books
Apr 1, 2019 (Updated Apr 2, 2019)
Obviously the book is unintended comedy gold for UK readers nowadays, but as something you might actually want to read for pleasure, or for any other reason, it is quite hard work: the plot is hackneyed, the characterisation thin, and much of the book is taken up with lengthy discussions of chaos and order and anarchy and so on. This has given the book a cult following, although I think it depends on how old you are when you first read it. If you're not into radical philosophy and not amused by the doings of Boris Johnson, there's not much else here to enjoy.
Urinetown: the Musical
Book
In a Gotham-like city, a depletion of the Earth's water supply has led to a government-enforced ban...
Public Enquiries: Park Lek and the Scandinavian Social Turn
Book
Public Enquiries is the culmination of a multidisciplinary research project that operated through a...
High Dive
Book
Read an exclusive blog by the author on the elusive sense of place In September 1984, a man...