Search results for ""phoenix press""
Phoenix Press The Left in disarray
£12.00
Phoenix Press Remain and rebel: A socialist manifesto for Europe
£6.05
Phoenix Press Socialism Makes Sense: An unfriendly dialogue
£6.72
Phoenix Press The Two Trotskyisms Confront Stalinism
£19.99
Phoenix Press Gramsci in context
£7.38
£8.71
Phoenix Press The Vestas Jobs Battle
£6.13
Phoenix Press Corbynism: what went wrong?
£6.05
£5.39
Phoenix Press 1919: Strikes, struggles, and soviets
£6.05
Phoenix Press The Miners' Strike 1984-5: Class Against Class
£9.36
£6.72
Phoenix Press The Portuguese workers revolution 19745
£6.13
Phoenix Press Sylvia
£5.39
Phoenix Press Build Back Socialist
£4.72
£6.72
Phoenix Press In an Era of Wars and Revolutions: American Socialist Cartoons of the Mid-Twentieth Century
£9.36
Phoenix Press In Defence of Bolshevism
£10.04
Phoenix Press Why Socialist Feminism?
£6.72
Phoenix Press What is Capitalism? Can it Last?: A Book of Readings
£6.72
Phoenix Press Working-Class Politics and Anarchism
£6.72
Phoenix Press Why Trade Unions Should Not Support the Morning Star
£5.36
Phoenix Press Effective Trade Unionism
£6.72
Phoenix Press Arabs, Jews, and socialism: The socialist debate in the 1980s and 90s on Israel and Palestine
£6.72
Phoenix Press Can Socialism Make Sense?
£12.00
Phoenix Press Marxist ideas to turn the tide
£6.72
Phoenix Press Critical Notes on Postcolonial Theory
£6.13
Phoenix Press The Russian Revolution: when the workers took power
£12.00
Rogue Phoenix Press Murder in Red Rock Canyon
£8.47
Stone Phoenix Press The Breaking of Me
£12.00
Rogue Phoenix Press D.O.L.L.S.: Desirable Older Ladies Love Specialists
£11.65
Stone Phoenix Press The Rogue's Fate
£12.99
Amethyst Phoenix Press Donnell's Sultry Treat: Seven Giants Series: Book Four
£12.12
Rogue Phoenix Press Harris Reckless Heart
£13.18
Phoenix Press Ltd UK The Jolly Bloodbath: US Version
£13.92
Phoenix Press Ltd UK Might As Well Be Dead
£13.92
Progressive Rising Phoenix Press Mr. Owl and the Little Boy
£19.95
Progressive Rising Phoenix Press Collection of my Favorite Quotations
£26.95
Sheffield Phoenix Press Ltd Ecclesiastes
£70.92
Progressive Rising Phoenix Press, L The Quester Trilogy
£30.56
Progressive Rising Phoenix Press, L The Portal of Alesia
£14.95
Progressive Rising Phoenix Press, L The Final Quest
£14.95
Progressive Rising Phoenix Press, L Collection of my Favorite Quotations
£17.95
Progressive Rising Phoenix Press, L The Unexpected Quest
£14.95
Progressive Rising Phoenix Press, L Mr. Owl and the Little Boy
£10.95
Orion Publishing Co The Muslim Discovery Of Europe
'The book covers every side of Muslim life . . . a remarkable collection of new information, which will be of deep interest to students of European history' R.W. Southern, NEW YORK REVIEWTurning the traditional focus of western scholarship on its head, Professor Bernard Lewis, author of THE MIDDLE EAST (Phoenix Press) and one of the world's foremost experts on Islamic history, examines the sources and nature of Muslim knowledge of the West. His lively book explores the subtle ways in which Europe and Islam have influenced each other over seven centuries, retelling familiar historical events such as the battle of Lepanto and the siege of Vienna from an Arab perspective. Quoting from Islamic writers and scholars, he recounts their reactions to the West, their impressions of Western gardens, paintings, parliaments, hygiene, manners, and even the necklaces of western women.
£16.99
Bloodaxe Books Ltd Collected Later Poems 1988-2000
R.S. Thomas (1913-2000) is one of the major poets of our time, as well as one of the finest religious poets in the English language and Wales’s greatest poet. This substantial gathering of his late poems shows us the final flowering of a truly great poet still writing at the height of his powers right through his 70s and 80s. It begins with his autobiographical sequence The Echoes Return Slow, which has been unavailable for many years, and goes up to Residues, written immediately before his death at the age of 87. These powerful poems – about time and history, the self, love, the machine, the Cross and prayer – cover all of his major areas of questioning. This is R.S. Thomas in a winter light, his fury concentrated on the inhumanity of man and modern technology, his gaze absorbed by the God he felt in Nature, but finding nourishment in 'waste places'. At the same time he writes with resigned feeling and immense insight, as well as grim humour and playful irony, of isolation, ageing, marriage and 'love’s shining greenhouses'. For Thomas, 'Poetry is that / which arrives at the intellect / by way of the heart.' Collected Later Poems 1988-2000 is the sequel to R.S. Thomas’s Collected Poems 1945-1990 (Dent, 1993; Phoenix Press, 1995), which only covers his collections up to Experimenting with an Amen (1986). It reprints in full the contents of R.S. Thomas’s last five collections, The Echoes Return Slow (Macmillan, 1988: unavailable for many years), and Bloodaxe’s Counterpoint (1990), Mass for Hard Times (1992), No Truce with the Furies (1995) and the posthumously published Residues (2002). It was a Poetry Book Society Recommendation. It was followed in 2013 by Uncollected Poems and in 2016 by Too Brave to Dream.
£18.00
Bloodaxe Books Ltd Uncollected Poems
R.S. Thomas (1913-2000) is a major writer of our time, one of the finest religious poets in the English language and one of Wales's greatest poets. His output was prolific: over six decades he published some 25 individual collections of poems, as well as several volumes of prose. A substantial number of his poems, however, have hitherto remained uncollected, and often elusive - poems published in newspapers, magazines and journals (many of them obscure), as well as in private or limited editions. Uncollected Poems - published to mark the centenary of Thomas's birth - brings together for the first time a rigorous selection of the best of these. The fruit of several years' research by Tony Brown and Jason Walford Davies, the volume makes available work which spans the whole of Thomas's career - from an early sonnet to his first wife, M.E. Eldridge (included in his first, unpublished, collection Spindrift in the late 1930s) and an early Iago Prytherch poem published in the Dublin Magazine, to poems which are powerful expressions of the metaphysical meditations of his later years. R.S. Thomas's Uncollected Poems takes its place alongside Collected Poems 1945-1990 (Dent, 1993; Phoenix, 2000), Selected Poems (Penguin, 2003) and Collected Later Poems 1988-2000 (Bloodaxe Books, 2004). It gives readers of R.S. Thomas's work access to much new and fascinating material. Uncollected Poems is a companion volume to R.S. Thomas's Collected Later Poems 1988-2000 (Bloodaxe Books, 2004), the sequel to Collected Poems 1945-1990 (Dent, 1993; Phoenix Press, 2000), which only covers his collections up to Experimenting with an Amen (1986). Collected Later Poems 1988-2000 reprints in full the contents of R.S. Thomas's last five collections, The Echoes Return Slow (Macmillan, 1988: unavailable for many years), and Bloodaxe's Counterpoint (1990), Mass for Hard Times (1992), No Truce with the Furies (1995) and the posthumously published Residues (2002). There is no overlap between the two Bloodaxe editions: none of the poems in Residues, uncollected at the time of his death in 2000, is included in Uncollected Poems.
£15.00