20th November, 2024 in Transport & Industry
What could be the role of a writer in fostering advocacy and encouraging change? Journalism may have an immediate activist approach, helping to shape and change public opinion, but what about books about the environment? The example of the late L.T.C Rolt, influential in the revi…
9th July, 2024 in Transport & Industry, Trivia & Gift
I love finding out about what motivates people and how the journey of their lives has unfolded. I am nosey and make no apology for it. Mind you, these are things you certainly require as a journalist; an almost manic need to dig away until you get what you need, which is generall…
19th January, 2024 in Local & Family History, Transport & Industry, Women in History
This is the last book in the trilogy that started with my great great grandmother, Hannah Hall in the 1820’s as she re-located with her family to a new coal mine opening up in Hetton-le-Hole, County Durham. No-one at that time could have known the importance of that move. By 1822…
15th November, 2023 in History, Trivia & Gift
In 1895 there appeared an anonymous private booklet of the charades and theatrical conundrums written by the Austen family for their own entertainment. This offers yet another glimpse of the delightful Christmases the Austens enjoyed in their home, particularly at Steventon. Char…
19th April, 2023 in History, Trivia & Gift
To celebrate the coronation of King Charles III, here’s a roundup of some of our royal titles. The Throne by Ian Lloyd ‘An entertaining jog through 38 coronations.’ Daily Telegraph Get the best seat in the abbey. From the crowning of Charles III, thirty-nine coronations have been…
8th February, 2023 in Trivia & Gift
Here are some taster images from prettycityparis, the stunning photography, lifestyle and travel guide to Paris by author and photographer Siobhan Ferguson. Unless stated, all images © prettycityparis
25th January, 2023 in Transport & Industry
Humans are natural puzzle solvers; we make sense of the world around us by seeking out similarities in the labyrinth of patterns and information that we receive. This is why we are drawn to symmetry and why it’s so pleasing to view in photography. Over the past 8 years I’ve been…
24th November, 2022 in Transport & Industry
It is now 100 years since Great Britain’s railways were drawn together into four companies. They were known as the ‘Big Four’, but why? In 1804 Richard Trevithick pioneered steam traction that was mobile on metal rails. Since the 1700s, wagonways had been used to feed mines and o…
5th October, 2022 in Transport & Industry
In The Last Ten Years, author Brian J. Dickson presents stunning colour photographs from the collections of three enthusiasts of the Seafield Railway Club in north London. Meeting regularly at New Southgate station to record the steam-handled traffic, their focus was initially on…
17th June, 2022 in Trivia & Gift
Bookshop Day takes place annually on the second Saturday of October. In honour of this, our staff have shared some of their favourite bookshop recommendations. Chrissy, Editorial Manager Lionsheart Bookshop in Woking @lionsheartbookshop. Mark, Commissioning Editor One Tree Books,…
25th March, 2022 in Transport & Industry
The history of canals and river navigations in the British Isles is long, complicated, and continuing, and thus hard to summarise. Joseph Boughey, author of British Canals: The Standard History has selected six historical developments in which there have been confusions and varie…
6th January, 2022 in Transport & Industry, Trivia & Gift
Living and travelling in converted vehicles has become increasingly popular in the UK in recent years and the coronavirus pandemic has only increased the trend further. Life on the road can offer an incomparable sense of freedom and community, with endless opportunity for ne…
29th November, 2021 in Transport & Industry, Trivia & Gift
Ever since the publication of my book Britain’s Toy Car Wars: The War Of Wheels Between Dinky, Corgi & Matchbox, I’ve been pondering on collecting old diecast toy cars and lorries again. It’s proved hard to resist, an impulse hard-wired in over more than 50 years. I…
26th November, 2021 in Local & Family History, Transport & Industry
Just how did Birmingham, a city that lies near the geographic centre of England, go global? A trip around the city’s canals may hold the answer, writes author Simon Wilcox. If no-one else knew it at the time, a local poet and innkeeper called John Freeth certainly knew. However m…
29th September, 2021 in Transport & Industry
Back in 2009, Fred Jourden and Hugo Jézégabel couldn’t find any that fitted their specifications – so they decided to make their own. Leaving their 9–5 jobs they set up Blitz Motorcycles in Paris, creating a garage where they would build only the most beautiful and unique motorcy…
19th May, 2021 in Transport & Industry
When a modern car goes into the garage with an engine misfire or warning light glowing on the dashboard, the technician will plug in a diagnostic computer. This will display one or more fault-codes which identify the problem and advise which component needs to be replaced; often…
6th May, 2021 in Local & Family History, Transport & Industry
Spanning 150 years of South Shields’ changing fortunes, A Tyneside Heritage is a pioneering work of interwoven local and family history. After the nineteenth-century boom years of coal exporting and shipbuilding for global markets came the First World War and then the mass unempl…
27th April, 2021 in Society & Culture, Transport & Industry
Since being born on a Thames houseboat many moons ago the river has cast a spell across my soul; its soft lappings, its secret islets, its wildly changing moods – reckless and brave one minute, mournful and dissipated the next. My new book, Water Gypsies, is inspired of cour…
16th March, 2021 in Society & Culture, Trivia & Gift
We spoke to Yens Wahlgren, author of The Universal Translator, about his love for constructed languages. You describe yourself as a xenosociolinguist, could you tell us what that means? Well, it’s a made up academic-sounding discipline for the study of how languages from outer sp…
11th November, 2020 in Military, Transport & Industry
11 November 2020 marked the centenary of the burial within Westminster Abbey of the Unknown Warrior. This was a British soldier who was killed in the First World War, someone who was originally buried in or near one of the many battlefields of the Western Front. The idea of comme…
4th November, 2020 in Society & Culture, Transport & Industry, Women in History
Life was difficult for women from the coalfields during the 19th and early 20th centuries. Those girls who were daughters of miners understood some of the difficulties, but it was still their ambition to marry into the industry and take on the responsibility for looking…
13th December, 2019 in History, Trivia & Gift
The festive season is upon us, and to celebrate we asked some of our authors about the figures from history they’d be interested in chatting to over Christmas dinner, and the Christmases past that most appeal to them… Which figure from history would you invite over for Christmas…
4th December, 2019 in History, Society & Culture, Trivia & Gift
A roast boar’s head along with roast goose and swan would have been the centrepieces of the Christmas dinner table in Norman castles. This rich meal would have been followed by bowls of dates, figs, apricots, raisins and pistachio nuts. These sweet treats would have been expensiv…
12th November, 2019 in Transport & Industry
The history of technology is full of myths and half-truths about who invented what. One of the real problems is to define exactly what we mean by ‘invented’. For example, do we mean: The first time an idea was suggested? The first time working drawings were produced? The first ti…
18th July, 2019 in Transport & Industry
From the 1950s onwards, the boom in car ownership soared and the static caravan offered people their very own ‘cottages’ by the sea or in the countryside. Here author Andrew Jenkinson shares 10 facts about Britain’s favourite holiday homes. 1. In the early 1900s, the…
17th May, 2019 in Aviation, History, Trivia & Gift
It has been over 50 years since the space race and NASA’s sprint for the moon with the Apollo Missions. Here author Norman Ferguson reveals ten facts you may not know about this giant leap for mankind… 1. The first astronauts to fly in a Saturn V went to the Moon Apollo 8 was i…
27th March, 2019 in Local & Family History, Transport & Industry
Granite is the hardest of building materials. In the North East of Scotland it has been used for centuries – for stone circles, burial cairns and later for castles. Even large parts of the great cathedral of St. Machar in Old Aberdeen were built from granite. The hard nature of t…
26th February, 2019 in Archaeology, Transport & Industry
Leading civil engineer and Tideway’s Strategic Projects Director Phil Stride reveals an inside look at how the ‘Super Sewer’ was planned, designed, approved, funded and is being built in his new book The Thames Tideway Tunnel: Preventing Another Great Stink, which provides…
14th January, 2019 in Local & Family History, Transport & Industry, Women in History
Back in 1984, when I began tracing my own family story, there was excitement in learning to use census records to discover where my ancestors were living. There was also satisfaction in locating them in baptisms, marriages and burials in parish records. I soon realised however th…
27th November, 2018 in History, Society & Culture, Trivia & Gift
In a bid to get more ‘ordinary’ people to use the newly-formed Post Office, the Penny Post was introduced by Sir Henry Cole, a senior civil servant, in 1840. Just three years later, Sir Henry also had the bright idea of creating a Christmas card which people could post to their f…