Search results for ""author philip""
Dorling Kindersley Verlag Kompakt Visuell Religionen der Welt
£17.95
Prestel Shigeru Ban Architects: Swatch and Omega Campus
Completed in 2019, the Swatch and Omega Campus in Biel (Bienne), Switzerland, is a magnificent example of technology, design, and environmental sustainability working in concert to create a space that promotes the health of users and the planet. This book illustrates every aspect of the project, including drawings, plans, and numerous interior and exterior photographs. Pritzker Prize-winning architect Shigeru Ban has experienced firsthand the trauma of natural disasters, which he has addressed in numerous emergency-relief projects. With the Swatch and Omega campus, Ban demonstrates how sustainable architecture can benefit industry as well, and why he promotes timber as the planet’s only truly renewable resource. Philip Jodidio introduces readers to the buildings’ ingenious and cutting-edge features—a serpentine, cocoon-like facade that echoes the playful elements of the Swatch brand; a gridshell roof structure consisting of thousands of precisely interlocking timber pieces. The Omega buildings with their clean straight lines are equally innovative and express the contrast between the two related brands. A feat of forward-thinking architecture, this corporate headquarters represents a benchmark for future building projects around the world.
£40.50
Prestel Cairo: Renewing the Historic City
This book reveals how the Aga Khan Development Network and its Historic Cities Programme transformed an area of Cairo's urban blight into a dynamic public space. Once a city of verdant gardens and parks, Cairo in the 1980s was severely overcrowded, economically struggling, and many of its inhabitants lived in unsanitary conditions. Historic Cairo, a World Heritage Site centered on the original Fatimid settlement of Cairo, has presented a challenge to conservationists and urban planners over the years as they have sought to protect the city's heritage while it remains a living city. Understanding how the process of decline could be reversed by restoring monuments and building a new park, the Aga Khan Development Network (AKDN) set about revitalizing the Darb al Ahmar area and creating Al Azhar Park. This book features numerous scholarly contributors and authors who participated in the program, and shows how the conservation effort paid off in countless ways.
£49.50
Nomos Verlags GmbH Der Ethische Standpunkt
£71.10
Nomos Verlagsgesellschaft Hinweisgeberschutz Und Datenschutz: Datenschutzrechtliche Implikationen Bei Einrichtung Und Betrieb Einer Internen Meldestelle Nach Dem Hinschg
£140.86
Verlag Österreich GmbH HinweisgeberInnenschutzgesetz HSchG
£68.28
Naumann & Göbel Verlagsg. Schatzjäger Logikrätsel Idaho Quatercroft
£10.11
Campus Verlag GmbH Marketing 40 Der Leitfaden fr das Marketing der Zukunft
£40.50
Carlsen Verlag GmbH Wilde Mamas Ein Sachbilderbuch ab 3 Jahren ber tierisch tolle Mamas
£14.00
Propyläen Verlag König der Welt
£53.10
Suhrkamp Verlag AG Bedingungsloses Grundeinkommen Grundlagentexte
£23.40
Suhrkamp Verlag AG EntDemokratisierung der Demokratie
£18.00
Schneiderbuch Bell und Fletsch Auf falscher Fhrte
£12.00
Rowohlt Taschenbuch Kalter Frieden
£11.00
Rowohlt Taschenbuch Verlag GmbH Wolfshunger
£14.75
Rowohlt Taschenbuch Die Prager Orgie Ein Epilog
£10.00
Carl Hanser Verlag 99 Variationen eines Beweises Spielarten der Mathematik
£22.50
Barth O.W. Die drei Pfeiler des Zen
£37.80
Droemer HC Natürlich alles künstlich
£16.20
dtv Verlagsgesellschaft Atlas der nie gebauten Bauwerke
£27.00
C.H. Beck Joseph Beuys
£26.96
Anatiposi Verlag Christ in Song: Hymns of Immanuel
£79.90
Hueber Verlag GmbH River of Dreams Lektre Englisch Stufe 5 9 Klasse
£14.00
Klett (Ernst) Verlag,Stuttgart Tiger by the Tail
£9.75
Delta Publishing by Klett Tiger by the Tail: Reader with audio and digital extras
£10.59
Cornelsen Verlag GmbH Access Band 3 7. Schuljahr Schulbuch Kartoniert
£22.50
£22.50
The Library of America Philip Roth: Novels 1973-1977 (LOA #165): The Great American Novel / My Life as a Man / The Professor of Desire
£29.12
Text Publishing Australia In Arms: The Story of Gallipoli
£8.99
Weldon Owen Children's Books Escape the Mummy's Tomb
Make a thrilling escape from an ancient Egyptian tomb using logic, problem-solving and critical thinking. BEWARE! You are about to enter an escape book, a book in which you could become trapped - forever. It is an escape room in the form of a book. It is 1300 BCE in the Valley of the Kings and you've fallen into the shaft of a long forgotten tomb. Egyptian gods guard an important mummified pharaoh. The tomb is enshrined in magic and mystery and protected with traps and curses. Stay calm, use your wits and consult the Eye of Horus wheel on the front cover. If you make the correct choices, you will make your escape!
£10.79
Neem Tree Press Limited Cows Can't Jump
£8.23
Salmon Poetry Early/Late: New & Selected Poems
£10.00
Bloomsbury Publishing (UK) The Undertaking Oberon Modern Playwrights S
Award-winning playwright Philip Osment's sad, touching and sometimes comic story of five friends who journey into the Irish countryside to scatter the ashes of Henry, who has died of AIDS.
£11.24
John Libbey & Co Widening the Horizon: Exoticism in Post-War Popular Music
During the 1950s and early 1960s, the musical exotica produced by performers such as Les Baxter, Martin Denny, and Arthur Lyman enjoyed international success. Widening the Horizon is the first in-depth analysis of the music and its cultural context.
£16.99
Mortons Media Group The Beeching Legacy: 4: Cambrian Lines, North Wales and Wirral
£20.00
Bloodaxe Books Ltd The Water Table
Winner of the T.S. Eliot Prize 2009. A powerful and ambiguous body of water lies at the heart of these poems, with shoals and channels that change with the forty-foot tide. Even the name is fluid - from one shore, the Bristol Channel, from the other Mor Hafren, the Severn Sea. Philip Gross' meditations move with subtle steps between these shifting grounds and those of the man-made world, the aging body and that ever-present mystery, the self. Admirers of his work know each new collection is a new stage; this one marks a crossing into a new questioning, new clarity and depth.
£9.95
C Hurst & Co Publishers Ltd The Empire's New Clothes: The Myth of the Commonwealth
In the wake of Brexit, the Commonwealth has been identified as an important body for future British trade and diplomacy, but few know what it actually does. How is it organised and what has held it together for so long? How important is the monarch’s role as Head of the Commonwealth? Most importantly, why has it had such a troubled recent past, and is it realistic to imagine that its fortunes might be reversed? In The Empire’s New Clothes, Murphy strips away the gilded self-image of the Commonwealth to reveal an irrelevant institution afflicted by imperial amnesia. He offers a personal perspective on this complex and poorly understood institution, and asks if it can ever escape from the shadow of the British Empire to become an organisation based on shared values, rather than a shared history.
£25.00
C Hurst & Co Publishers Ltd Reporting the Retreat: War Correspondents in Burma
The British defeat in Burma at the hands of the Japanese in 1942 marked the longest retreat in British army history and the onset of its most drawn-out campaign of World War II. It also marked the beginning of the end of British rule, not only in Burma but also in south and south-east Asia. There have been many studies of military and civilian experiences during the retreat but this is the first book to look at the way the campaign was represented in the Western media: newspapers, pictorial magazines, and newsreels. There were some twenty-six accredited war correspondents covering the campaign, and almost half of them wrote books about their experiences, mostly within a year or two of the defeat. Their accounts were censured by government officials as being misinformed and sensationalist. More recent historians, on the other hand, have criticised them for being too patriotic and optimistic in their coverage and thus giving the public an unrealistic view of how the war was progressing. Philip Woods returns to the original sources to asses the validity of these criticisms.His is the first re-evaluation of the war correspondent's role in Burma and as such will be of great value to students of journalism and media.
£20.00
Collective Ink Yom Kippur Party Goods
Philip Gold, an accomplished writer, journalist, scholar, wandered forty years before returning to the Judaism he'd left behind. But he didn't return so much as bring back the seeds of a new kind of Judaism with him. YOM KIPPUR PARTY GOODS is much more than a personal tale, a memoir of pain and seeking told with humor and grace. It's also for everyone who's tired of going hungry in the supermarket of modern spirituality, who finds (over) organized religion irrelevant or distasteful, and who is looking to find - or create - something personal that might also speak to others. You don't have to be Jewish to read this or need this. Just be a human being who wants something more. For yourself For your world. For your God.
£12.82
Profile Books Ltd Counting Sheep: A Celebration of the Pastoral Heritage of Britain
Sheep are the thread that runs through the history of the English countryside. Our fortunes were once founded on sheep, and this book tells a story of wool and money and history, of merchants and farmers and shepherds, of English yeomen and how they got their freedom, and above all, of the soil. Sheep have helped define our culture and topography, impacting on everything from accent and idiom, architecture, roads and waterways, to social progression and wealth. With his eye for the idiosyncratic, Philip meets the native breeds that thrive in this country; he tells stories about each breed, meets their shepherds and owners, learns about their past - and confronts the present realities of sheep farming. Along the way, Philip meets the people of the countryside and their many professions: the mole-catchers, the stick-makers, the tobacco-twisters and clog-wrights. He explores this artisan heritage as he re-discovers the countryside, and finds a lifestyle parallel to modern existence, struggling to remain unchanged - and at its heart, always sheep.
£9.99
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Ageing Labour Forces: Promises and Prospects
This provocative book considers the changing status of older workers, the evolution of public policy on age and work and the behaviour of employers. It attempts to answer the critical question: in an ageing society, can older workers look forward to the prospect of longer working lives with choice and security and make successful transitions to retirement? Ageing Labour Forces challenges the current stance of many governments and observers concerning policies to extend working lives. It utilises perspectives and case studies from public policy, employment policy and the attitudes and behaviour of older people. Philip Taylor argues that older workers have been at the forefront of industrialized society's efforts to respond to the crisis facing social welfare systems and the economic threats associated with population ageing. Their involvement has forced the restructuring of economies, adjustments to social welfare systems as well as redefinitions to the actual concept of old age. Containing contributions from leading researchers in a number of countries, this work will appeal to academics and researchers interested in work, ageing and public policy as well as labour economics.
£95.00
Boydell & Brewer Ltd Samuel Wesley: The Man and his Music
A vivid picture of the public and private life of a professional musician in late eighteenth- and early nineteenth-century London. This well-documented life of Samuel Wesley gives a vivid picture of the life of a professional musician in late eighteenth and early nineteenth-century London. Wesley was born in 1766, the son of the Methodist hymn-writer CharlesWesley and nephew of the preacher John Wesley. He was the finest composer and organist of his generation, but his unconventional behaviour makes him of more than ordinary interest. He lived through a crucial stage of English musicfrom the immediately post-Handel generation to the early Romantic period, and his large output includes piano and organ music, orchestral music, church music, glees, and songs. He also taught and lectured on music, and was involved in journalism, publishing, and promoting the music of J. S. Bach. This book draws on letters, family papers, and other contemporary documents to offer a full study of Wesley, his music, and his life and times. PHILIP OLLESON is Professor of Historical Musicology at the University of Nottingham. He has edited The Letters of Samuel Wesley: Professional and Social Correspondence, 1797-1837, is the joint author (with Michael Kassler) of Samuel Wesley (1766-1837): A Source Book, and has written extensively about other aspects of music in England in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries.
£90.00
Little, Brown Book Group Artemis
She's a stone cold killer, a rebel and a librarian ...Raised on the library planet of Rebus, Artemis McIvor has a love of books in a future where reading is a lost art. Unfortunately, she's also been imprisoned for a string of brutal murders she didn't commit. Not that she hasn't killed people. She just didn't kill these people.A war is coming and Artemis will find that her talents will be in high demand. But she has debts to pay and when they come due she will have a choice: fight for her freedom, or die a slave.
£9.37
Little, Brown Book Group Debatable Space
Flanagan (who is, for want of a better word, a pirate) has a plan. It seems relatively simple: kidnap Lena, the Cheo's daughter, demand a vast ransom for her safe return, sit back and wait. Only the Cheo, despotic ruler of the known universe, isn't playing ball.Flanagan and his crew have seen this before, of course, but since they've learned a few tricks from the bad old days (being particularly bad if you happen to have been one of the myriad sons or daughters the Cheo let die rather than give in to blackmail) and since they know something about Lena that should make the plan foolproof, the Cheo's defiance is a major setback. It is a situation that calls for extreme measures. Luckily, Flanagan has considerable experience in this area. . .
£8.71
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC Duck!
A modern re-imagining of Hans Christian Anderson's tale, The Ugly Duckling.
£10.45
Bloomsbury Publishing (UK) Palace of Fear Oberon Modern Plays
A play combining fanstasy and realism about two children coping with their mother's depression and learning how to overcome their own fears. The Palace of Fear was developed in primary schools and toured Leicester schools in 2004.
£9.67
Ryland, Peters & Small Ltd Crystal Connections: Understand the Messages of 101 Essential Crystals and How to Connect with Their Wisdom
Bestselling author and crystal expert Philip Permutt offers the essential guide on how to take advantage of the powerful properties of crystals and how to apply their healing energies. Crystal Connections is a detailed, accessible and fully illustrated guide to harnessing the magic of crystals, written by one of the world’s leading crystal healers. While there are many books on crystals, this one is directed at communicating and understanding the messages within them. Discover crystals as living beings and how they not only help to heal us but also affect how we feel and influence our responses to the wider world. They can support us when we feel down or need a helping hand, or boost our natural abilities when things are going well. Crystals improve the quality of our lives. Learn how to recognize and connect with the energy of your crystals, work with them in dowsing, divination and healing practices, how they relate to chakras, how to cleanse and look after them, and much more. Also included is a full-colour crystal finder section featuring 101 of the most important crystals.
£14.99
Profile Books Ltd Surviving the Daily Grind
We spend a lot of our time at work and would be depressed with nothing to do. But when it gets to Monday, many of us are already longing for the weekend and the prospect of escape. How did work become so tedious and stressful? And is there anything we can do to make it better?Based on his popular Economist Bartleby column, Philip Coggan rewrites the rules of work to help us survive the daily grind. Ranging widely, he encourages us to cut through mindless jargon, pointless bureaucracy and endless meetings to find a new, more creative - and less frustrating - way to get by and get on at work.Incisive, original, and endlessly droll, this is the guide for beleaguered underlings and harried higher-ups alike. As Rousseau might have said: Man was born free, but is everywhere stuck in a meeting. If you''ve ever thought there must be a better way, this is the book for you.
£10.99