Search results for ""Author Ken Worpole""
Taylor & Francis Ltd Modern Hospice Design: The Architecture of Palliative and Social Care
• New edition of this successful book comprehensively updates its timely and important coverage of good quality palliative care. • Includes new chapters and new in-depth case studies, complete will full colour illustrations, • Wide readership comprising of: architects and interior designers, estate and facility managers involved in hospice design, healthcare professionals, hospital administrators and Heathcare Trust Boards.
£31.99
Five Leaves Publications Dockers and Detectives
£9.36
Taylor & Francis Ltd Modern Hospice Design: The Architecture of Palliative and Social Care
• New edition of this successful book comprehensively updates its timely and important coverage of good quality palliative care. • Includes new chapters and new in-depth case studies, complete will full colour illustrations, • Wide readership comprising of: architects and interior designers, estate and facility managers involved in hospice design, healthcare professionals, hospital administrators and Heathcare Trust Boards.
£130.00
Lawrence & Wishart Ltd Staying Close to the River: Reflections on Travel and Politics
Ken Worpole reflects on memories of friends and places he has known and loved. Through a series of letters, this book takes readers to the source of things, charting a route through four generations of family life, the political progress of the left, the cities of the world and human fallibility. The book is a testimony to the art of detailed evocation and observation, whether sweating on the road to Tuscany, meditating on the pain of strenuous cycling or discussing the arrival of "Dallas" on Russian TV. Ken Worpole is the author of "Dockers and Detectives", "Saturday Night or Sunday Morning? From Arts to Industry - New Forms of Cultural Policy" with Geoff Mulgan and "Towns for People: New Issues in Urban Policy".
£15.18
The Swedenborg Society New Jerusalem: The Good City and the Good Society: 2017
£10.43
Little Toller Books No Matter How Many Skies Have Fallen: Back to the land in wartime England
On 'Lady Day', March 1943 a group of Christian pacifists took possession of a vacant farm in Frating, a hamlet on the Essex Tendring Peninsula. There they established a working community, inspired by their association with The Adelphi journal, where D.H.Lawrence, John Middleton Murry, Vera Brittain, Iris Murdoch, George Orwell and others shared ideas for the future with European religious radicals such as Nikolai Berdyaev, Martin Buber and Simone Weil. Frating Hall Farm provided a settlement and livelihood for individuals and families (as well as a temporary sanctuary for refugees and prisoners-of-war), and over time became a successful arable and livestock land-holding of more than 300 acres. Scorned initially by their neighbours for their anti-war views, the Frating community won respect not only through their farming achievements, but having established a touring theatre company and choir, for bringing new life to the villages and churches around them. The lost story of Frating Hall Farm is based on the reminiscences of those who grew up on the farm, together with photographs, letters and organisational records, never before seen or published. The book is a kaleidoscopic history of a farm during its eleven-year occupation, and an enquiry into the passionate religious and political ideals of the back-to-the-land movement in wartime and post-war rural England.
£15.00
Hoxton Mini Press The Isle Of Dogs: Before the Big Money Moved In
£17.95