Autobiography: historical, political and military Books
iUniverse Remember Me A Holocaust Survivors Story
£16.62
iUniverse In This Mans Army
£13.97
£16.95
£12.60
Movement Publishing Moon Man: The True Story of a Filmmaker on the CIA Hit List
Book SynopsisMoon Man is Bart Sibrel''s revealing memoir recalling his harrowing journey investigating what really happened during America''s famous "Apollo" missions. It features truly hair-raising and life-threatening encounters with agents from the US government''s secret agencies. Sibrel''s memoir divulges, for the very first time, his real-life espionage adventures while uncovering one of the CIA''s greatest secrets, including Sibrel''s discovery of privately recorded audio of an Apollo astronaut plotting his assassination by the CIA, which would not be necessary if the Apollo missions were real.Moon Man also exposes, for the very first time, the official CIA Code-Name for the real Apollo project, the military base where the first fake Moon landing was filmed, as well as the names of fifteen US government scientists and officials who were recorded in attendance for the first Moon landing falsification, some of whom are still alive today. This highly revealing information was provided to Sibrel by the Chief of Security of this secretive military base, who finally confessed his regrettable participation in this despicable government fraud on his deathbed.Bart Sibrel is an award-winning filmmaker, writer, and investigative journalist, who has produced television programs and documentaries for over thirty-five years. He has been employed by two of the three major US networks, worked as a television news reporter, and has produced segments for ABC, NBC, and CBS. Sibrel regularly speaks as a guest commentator regarding the Moon landing fraud, and has appeared as such on NBC, FOX, CNN, and HBO to discuss his films "A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Moon" and "Astronauts Gone Wild".Bart Sibrel grew up as a devout supporter of the supposed Moon landings, yet over the years, gradually began to recognize their unfortunate falsification. In Sibrel''s mind, the claim that astronauts walked on the moon on the very first attempt with antiquated untried 1960s technology, when today with five decades of more advanced technology the US can only send astronauts one-thousandth the distance to the Moon, simply defies logic. Sibrel is convinced that until the Moon landing fraud is exposed, the governments of the world will continue deceiving the people under their care until their eventual demise.Sibrel.com
£19.99
Random House USA Inc Thank You for My Service
Book Synopsis
£22.40
FriesenPress The Black Suitcase
£12.33
£18.52
£14.58
Grand Central Publishing The Stable Boy of Auschwitz
Book Synopsis
£13.29
£13.29
University of South Carolina Press Making Government Work
Book SynopsisThis book describes a career politician's pragmatic remedies for broken government, drawn from a half-century of political leadership experience.""Performance is better than promise"" has long been the motto of Ernest F. ""Fritz"" Hollings, former governor of South Carolina and 6-term U.S. Senator. In this political autobiography of his 50-year career in public service, Hollings takes to task our flawed political machine and pulls from his own experiences compelling - and often colorfully candid - accounts how one makes government work in spite of itself. Confrontational at times toward those individuals and issues he cites as to blame for deadlocking government and putting America ""in the ditch"", Hollings proves through his crystal clear prose he is deeply committed to improving our system of government, strengthening regulations on free trade, countering dependence on wooing campaign contributions, and enhancing our communication and education systems to better compete in an information-driven global market. Hollings details specific instances from his past of moments when bold leadership and smart use of resources and authority led to positive differences in the lives of Americans. It is his mission through this volume to reinvigorate a floundering system and call good people and good ideas back into the service of America's future.
£26.06
Hats Off Books Four Short True Stories of a French Family
£10.44
Penguin Putnam Inc My Share of the Task: A Memoir
£25.64
Book Jungle The Strenuous Life (1900)
£19.90
Xlibris Us Reflections on Sage Lake
£14.95
Cosimo Classics My Inventions: The Autobiography of Nikola Tesla
£11.15
Cosimo Classics My Life: A Record of Events and Opinion
£24.99
Cosimo Classics My Inventions: The Autobiography of Nikola Tesla
£22.52
Wilder Publications Autobiography of Theodore Roosevelt
£20.54
Akasha Classics The Personal Memoirs of U.S. Grant, Vol 2.
£21.53
Cosimo Classics Living My Life, in Two Volumes: Vol. I
£20.54
www.bnpublishing.com Seven Pillars of Wisdom: A Triumph
£31.49
www.bnpublishing.com The Autobiography of Theodore Roosevelt
£18.99
Iap - Information Age Pub. Inc. Personal Memoirs of General Ulysses S. Grant
£22.90
Iap - Information Age Pub. Inc. The Autobiography of Benjamin Franklin
£20.50
Ezreads Publications, LLC The Autobiography of Ben Franklin
£11.24
Cosimo Classics My Inventions: The Autobiography of Nikola Tesla
£17.58
Cosimo Classics Living My Life (Two Volumes in One)
£36.99
SMK Books The Story of my Life: Helen Keller
£16.59
Greenbook Publications, LLC The Autobiography Of Ben Franklin
£17.09
Strategic Book Publishing Saving Grace at Guantanamo Bay: A Memoir of a Citizen Warrior
£14.05
University of Tennessee Press Race, Rape, and Injustice: Documenting and Challenging Death Penalty Cases in the Civil Rights Era
Book SynopsisThis book tells the dramatic story of twenty-eight law students—one of whom was the author—who went south at the height of the civil rights era and helped change death penalty jurisprudence forever.The 1965 project was organized by the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund, which sought to prove statistically whether capital punishment in southern rape cases had been applied discriminatorily over the previous twenty years. If the research showed that a disproportionate number of African Americans convicted of raping white women had received the death penalty regardless of nonracial variables (such as the degree of violence used), then capital punishment in the South could be abolished as a clear violation of the Fourteenth Amendment’s Equal Protection Clause.Targeting eleven states, the students cautiously made their way past suspicious court clerks, lawyers, and judges to secure the necessary data from dusty courthouse records. Trying to attract as little attention as possible, they managed—amazingly—to complete their task without suffering serious harm at the hands of white supremacists. Their findings then went to University of Pennsylvania criminologist Marvin Wolfgang, who compiled and analyzed the data for use in court challenges to death penalty convictions. The result was powerful evidence that thousands of jurors had voted on racial grounds in rape cases.This book not only tells Barrett Foerster’s and his teammates story but also examines how the findings were used before a U.S. Supreme Court resistant to numbers-based arguments and reluctant to admit that the justice system had executed hundreds of men because of their skin color. Most important, it illuminates the role the project played in the landmark Furman v. Georgia case, which led to a four-year cessation of capital punishment and a more limited set of death laws aimed at constraining racial discrimination.
£27.71
Mill City Press, Inc. Fifteen Minutes Ago: A Vietnam War Memoir
£29.26
Haymarket Books Angela Davis: An Autobiography
Book Synopsis“An activist. An author. A scholar. An abolitionist. A legend.”—Ibram X. Kendi features an expansive new introduction by the author.—Angela Y. Davis is a powerful and commanding account of her early years in struggle. Davis describes her journey from a childhood on Dynamite Hill in Birmingham, Alabama, to one of the most significant political trials of the century: from her political activity in a New York high school to her work with the U.S. Communist Party, the Black Panther Party, and the Soledad Brothers; and from the faculty of the Philosophy Department at UCLA to the FBI's list of the Ten Most Wanted Fugitives. Told with warmth, brilliance, humor and conviction, Angela Davis’s autobiography is a classic account of a life in struggle with echoes in our own time.
£16.14
Authorhouse UK Daughter of Laharna
£18.52
Metal-Inex Inc Mein Kampf
£28.88
Hillcroft Bay Press It Takes a Woman a Life Shaped by Heritage Leadership and the Women Wh
£14.03
Green Writers Press Horse-Drawn Yogurt: Stories from Total Loss Farm,
Book SynopsisTotal Loss Farm in Guilford, Vermont, was and is a wordy place. Its hilly acres and flimsy buildings provided a refuge from a riven country, a place to grow paragraphs and stanzas, among the tilled rows of the market garden. Peter Gould's first novel Burnt Toast was a youthful exploration of this mythic turf. Peter left the farm to pursue love and work. In Horse-Drawn Yogurt, Peter returns to offer his take on how we lived in times that seem exotic, yet oddly familiar, in this second edition, with three new stories and an introduction by Vermont author Bill Schubart. Gould is eloquent, whimsical, critical, musical, magical, and tender. The new stories in this second edtion are gems with additional line drawings by the author.
£14.20
John Blake Publishing Ltd Diamonds At Dinner: My Life as a Lady's Maid in a 1930s Stately Home.
Book SynopsisThe year was 1935: the twilight of the English aristocracy. It was a time of wealth and glamour; of lavish balls and evening gowns; of tiaras and a Coronation. As personal maid to Lady Coventry, Hilda had a unique insight into the leisured life of one of Britain's most noble families. In her fascinating memoir of life upstairs and down, Hilda takes us back to a gilded era which would be brutally swept away by the Second World War. Hers is a very personal story of being transplanted from a tiny house with no bath or hot water to an eighteenth-century Neo-Palladian mansion surrounded by parkland landscaped by Lancelot 'Capability' Brown. But it is also the remarkable story of the family whose service she entered - and that of Croome Court itself: during World War Two, it housed the Dutch Royal Family - who had fled the Nazi occupation - and it was also home to the top-secret RAF base where radar was developed. This is Hilda's story.
£13.26
John Blake Publishing Ltd Notes From a Small Military
Book SynopsisStumbling from a university anarchist meeting into a career in the army, Chip Chapman is aware of how consciously incompetent he is. The Royal Military Academy Sandhurst confirms his worst fears. He is eventually let loose on 6 Platoon of 2 PARA and, via the Falklands War, manages to elevate himself to a position of conscious competence and save his career. Snapshots on all aspects of military life, and government decision making, show the military at work and play. This hilarious, touching, informative and thought-provoking insight into a generation of soldiering in the late 20th century and beyond is set against the drumbeat of the social, cultural, legal and educational rhythms of the age, and the change from the certainties of the Cold War to the nihilism of 9/11. Chip Chapman eventually manages to somehow climb the greasy pole to become a General. With echoes of David Niven's The Moon's a Balloon, Lesley Thomas' Virgin Soldiers and the travelogues of Bill Bryson, Chapman captures the rawness, spirit and fortitude of the soldier and soldiering in both peace and war.
£14.11
£18.58
Grosvenor House Publishing Ltd Roses Down the Barrel of a Gun: Georgia: Love and Revolution
Book SynopsisGeorgia 2001. "Your mission, Jo, should you choose to accept it, is to find out what young Georgians want," said the man from the Foreign and Commonwealth Office, or words to that effect. "We're keen to know what will happen when President Shevardnadze moves on." Jo Seaman went to the South Caucasus as director of the British Council in Georgia at a time of political uncertainty and turmoil. In attempting to fulfill her mission of cultural diplomacy she rubs shoulders with ballerinas and border guards, ambassadors and activists, ministers and musicians, despots and dodgy officials. Jo's intimate descriptions of a culture only relatively recently emerged from the shadow of the Iron Curtain are underpinned with a genuine warmth and compassion for the Georgian people. A consummate diplomat, Jo needs all her skills as she ventures out into the fraught and often amusing sphere of international relations, and is drawn into the heady events of the Rose Revolution. And life at home is far from uneventful...Trade Review"Wow, what a story!; Roses down the Barrel of a Gun is an incredible memoir of one British woman’s experience working and living in a tumultuous Georgia. In addition to not knowing much about Georgia, I’m also unfamiliar with the work carried out by foreign embassies and initiatives like the British Council. I enjoyed finding out about the exhibitions and performances and I think that this book highlights the vital importance of the arts to society. The book is a fascinating insight into a country that I knew little about and I highly recommend this book." LoveReading (the UK’s leading book recommendation website); “Are you looking for a masterclass in running an office in a foreign country with 18 hour-per-day power cuts and random gunfire in the street; or a love story with tears and laughter; or tales of a Revolution which might have ended in a bloodbath – but didn’t? If so, read this book! It’s not fiction. It all happened!!!” Chris Lakeman Fraser;“A beautifully crafted tale that intertwines the true story of a little reported revolution, the workings of British diplomacy, and a good old-fashioned love story. A great read.” Adrian Paul;
£15.84
Michael O'Mara Books Ltd Gurkha Brotherhood: A Story of Childhood and War
Book Synopsis‘Sometimes my mind reaches back beyond the fear and the arid landscapes of war, to memories of childhood that fill me with happiness and laughter.’___________‘A humane and gripping book which proves beyond doubt why the Gurkhas are known as such formidable warriors.’ – Sir Ranulph Fiennes___________This is a searingly honest memoir by Kailash Limbu, a serving Gurkha soldier who undertook five tours of active service in Afghanistan. Kailash Limbu was in the front line of the fighting in Helmand Province. On dangerous resupply missions and on offensive patrols that took them to the heart of the ‘killing zone’, he and his men came under frequent attack from Taliban fighters.He talks of other operations in which he has served – and, perhaps most movingly, of the other Gurkha soldiers – the united band of brothers – with whom he serves and on whom he relies every day.On many occasions he has feared he would not live to see the end of the day – and, inevitably, he lost several friends and colleagues from the close-knit Gurkha brotherhood. His means of coping with the trauma of conflict was to travel back in his mind to his childhood in a remote Himalayan village in Nepal. But even amid the simplicity of mountain life, danger and tragedy lurked.In this compelling narrative Capt Limbu celebrates his Gurkha heritage, relates remarkable stories of courage (his own and others’), and confronts demons that have shaped but never broken him. The result is a record of war and peace that is rare in its honesty and humility.
£18.00
Lume Books The Quiet Soldier
£13.26
£14.11
Lume Books Next Stop Execution: The Autobiography of Oleg Gordievsky
Book SynopsisOleg Gordievsky was the highest ranking KGB officer ever to work for Britain.For eleven years, from 1974 to 1985, he acted as a secret agent, reporting to the British Secret Intelligence Service while continuing to work as a KGB officer, first in Copenhagen, then in London. He provided Western security organizations with such a clear insight into the mind and methods of the KGB and the larger Soviet government that he has been credited with doing more than any other individual in the West to accelerate the collapse of Communism. In this thrilling memoir, Gordievsky lays out his extraordinary, meticulously planned escape from Russia, a story that has been described as 'one of the boldest and most extraordinary episodes in the history of spying.' (Ben Macintyre - The Times) Peopled with bizarre, dangerous and corrupt characters, Gordievsky introduces the reader to the fantastical world of the Soviet Embassy, tells of the British MPs and trade unionists who helped and took money from the KGB, and reveals at last what the author told Margaret Thatcher and other world leaders which made him of such value to the West. Gordievsky's autobiography gives a fascinating account of life as a secret agent. It also paints the most graphic picture yet of the paranoid incompetence, alongside the ruthless determination, of the all-encompassing and sometimes ridiculous KGB.Trade Review'Gordievsky's extraordinary courage, mental toughness and self-possession are heroic.' - THE SPECTATOR
£16.14
Little, Brown Book Group The Pilgrim Princess: A Life of Princess Volkonsky
Book SynopsisThis biography brings to life, through its subject's vibrant personality, a romantic period of enduring fascination. Princess Zinaida Volkonsky was a member of one of Russia's oldest families, became a maid of honour to the Dowager Empress and at court was soon noticed by Tsar Alexander I whose mistress she became and with whom she maintained a deep and lifelong friendship.Married to one of the Tsar's aides-de-camp, she travelled across Europe during the German and French campaigns, when she met Goethe. In the 1820s as the hostess of one of the most influential literary and musical salons in Moscow, where Alexander Pushkin was a leading guest, Zinaida became the glamorous hostess who later inspired Tolstoy.Zinaida inherited a strong tendency to depression. A lifelong search for spiritual answers eventually brought her to the Roman Catholic church and to a new life in Rome. Here, she at first created another salon, entertaining among many Stendhal, Rossini, Donizetti, Glinka and Sir Walter Scott. It was in her garden that Nikolai Gogol, worked on part of his great novel, Dead Souls.Trade ReviewVibrant and passionately human * Times Literary Supplement *
£22.52