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Syndrome K - Christian Jennings - Bog - The History Press Ltd - Plusbog.dk

RMS Titanic: Made in the Midlands - Andrew P. B. Lound - Bog - The History Press Ltd - Plusbog.dk

Atlantic - R A S Hennessey - Bog - The History Press Ltd - Plusbog.dk

Guide to the Crew of Titanic - Gunter Babler - Bog - The History Press Ltd - Plusbog.dk

Difference Is Born on the Lips - Michael Handrick - Bog - The History Press Ltd - Plusbog.dk

Difference Is Born on the Lips - Michael Handrick - Bog - The History Press Ltd - Plusbog.dk

In this shockingly raw but beautifully written book, Michael Handrick unpicks the toxic narratives and myths built up by society of what it means to be a man, gay and working class. Moving through time and memory, from a rural council estate surrounded by snowdrop-filled forests, to searching for his sense of self across London, Italy, America and beyond, he explores how his struggles with mental health and abuse were compounded by stigmas around class, masculinity and sexuality. At this point in history, despite having more equal rights and media representation than ever before, the gay community is suffering a mental health epidemic. In a 2018 survey, Stonewall found that half of respondents had experienced depression, while other research shows 49 per cent of gay men have suffered from domestic abuse and 26 per cent have experienced rape, physical violence or stalking by an intimate partner. As he embarks on a journey to understand the root causes of the toxicity in our society, Handrick finds that the beginnings of the abuse, trauma and mental health crises faced by gay men, and the silence that surrounds them, remain unresolved. Difference is born on the lips, but it is society that shapes those words and actions. The mental health issues gay men live with, the abuse they go through, the stigma, prejudice and discrimination they face do not exist in a vacuum. They are created and catalysed in our societies. Difference is Born on the Lips is a call to come together and create a new conversation, and confront the systemic inequalities that the queer community should never have had to live with.

DKK 173.00
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The Little History of Galway - Colm Wallace - Bog - The History Press Ltd - Plusbog.dk

Voices from History: Essex Land Girls - Dee Gordon - Bog - The History Press Ltd - Plusbog.dk

Blitz Families - Penny Starns - Bog - The History Press Ltd - Plusbog.dk

Cruise America - Peter Rushton - Bog - The History Press Ltd - Plusbog.dk

The Great Filth - Stephen Halliday - Bog - The History Press Ltd - Plusbog.dk

In Titanic's Shadow - David L. Williams - Bog - The History Press Ltd - Plusbog.dk

VCs of the First World War: Spring Offensive 1918 - Gerald Gliddon - Bog - The History Press Ltd - Plusbog.dk

The Korean War - Stephen F Kelly - Bog - The History Press Ltd - Plusbog.dk

Miles M.52 - Captain Eric Brown - Bog - The History Press Ltd - Plusbog.dk

The Struggle for Democracy - Roger Mason - Bog - The History Press Ltd - Plusbog.dk

Dwellbeing - Claire Bradbury - Bog - The History Press Ltd - Plusbog.dk

All the Countries We've Ever Invaded - Stuart Laycock - Bog - The History Press Ltd - Plusbog.dk

The Little Book of England - Stuart Laycock - Bog - The History Press Ltd - Plusbog.dk

A Dangerous Game - Luise Urban - Bog - The History Press Ltd - Plusbog.dk

RMS Olympic - Mark Chirnside - Bog - The History Press Ltd - Plusbog.dk

RMS Olympic - Mark Chirnside - Bog - The History Press Ltd - Plusbog.dk

Launched as the pride of British shipbuilding and the largest vessel in the world, Olympic was more than 40 per cent larger than her nearest rivals: almost 900ft long and the first ship to exceed 40,000 tons. She was built for comfort rather than speed and equipped with an array of facilities, including Turkish and electric baths (one of the first ships to have them), a swimming pool, gymnasium, squash court, á la carte restaurant, large first-class staterooms and plush public rooms. Surviving from 1911 until 1935, she was a firm favourite with the travelling public – carrying hundreds of thousands of fare-paying passengers – and retained a style and opulence even into her twilight years. During the First World War, she carried more troops than any other comparable steamship and was the only passenger liner ever to sink an enemy submarine by ramming it. Overshadowed frequently by her sister ships Titanic and Britannic, Olympic’s history deserves more attention than it has received. She was evolutionary in design rather than revolutionary, but marked an ambition for the White Star Line to dominate the North Atlantic express route. Rivals immediately began trying to match her in size and luxury. The optimism that led to her conception was rewarded, whereas her doomed sisters never fulfilled their creators’ dreams. This revised and expanded edition of the critically acclaimed RMS Olympic: Titanic’s Sister uses new images and further original research to tell the story of this remarkable ship 80 years after her career ended.

DKK 340.00
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Jowett 1901-1954 - Noel Stokoe - Bog - The History Press Ltd - Plusbog.dk

Jowett 1901-1954 - Noel Stokoe - Bog - The History Press Ltd - Plusbog.dk

The Jowett Motor Manufacturing Company was founded in Bradford in 1901 by Benjamin, Ruth and William Jowett. Their first product was a V-twin engine which proved to be successful in various cars. In 1906 a prototype car was built using a new design of engine. The first of a long line of Jowetts was born! After a few years of tinkering, the car was ready for production. While few Jowetts were made during the First World War, expansion took place during the war and production restarted in 1920. By 1927, over 3,000 Jowetts were leaving the factory per year with their owners enjoying reliable, economical motoring. By the end of the Second World War, Jowett had modified the pre-war commercial and re-named it the Bradford. The van was a success and helped keep the company busy while it readied itself for production of the Javelin, a unitary construction saloon with a flat-four engine. More successes followed and they led to the Jupiter sports model being developed by ERA. But the company was in trouble by the early 1950s. Not enough sales of the Javelin and development costs of new models led to the sale of the factory in early 1954. A few Jupiters were made out of spare parts but the end was in sight. Spare parts continued to be supplied till 1963 and this led indirectly to a relatively large number of cars surviving. Today they are catered for by the longest running one-make car club in the world, the Jowett Car Club, which was founded in 1923.

DKK 183.00
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The Story of Hull - Richard Gurnham - Bog - The History Press Ltd - Plusbog.dk

The Story of Hull - Richard Gurnham - Bog - The History Press Ltd - Plusbog.dk

Hull was first built as a port by the Cistercian monks of Meaux Abbey, to export wool from their rapidly expanding sheep flocks. Before the end of the 13th century Hull had been acquired by Edward I, who developed it as a royal port, and from then on Hull has been one of the country’s most important ports. The port makes Hull a highly defensible strategic position. In the 16th century Hull’s defiance of King Charles I helped drag the country into civil war, while on Town Taking Day, celebrated in Hull for more than a century after the event, Hull’s foiling of a Catholic plot lost James the whole of north England. Hull established a reputation as a centre of Puritanism, condemning theatre-going, gambling, drinking and idleness. The saying ‘From Hull, Hell, and Halifax, Good Lord deliver us’, indicated the ferocious treatment vagrants could expect in the town. For Hull’s puritans, poverty and sin were very closely related and often required similar treatment. By the time of Queen Victoria’s accession Hull was six times as large as it had been in 1700, but after the First World War Hull lost its place as the third largest port in the country, and since the Second World War, in which more than 90 per cent of all Hull’s houses were either damaged or destroyed, Hull could recover only slowly. More recently, unemployment is still about twice the national average, and terrible flooding in 2010 left parts of the city uninhabitable. Nevertheless, Hull remains one of the country’s largest and most important ports and this history of its trade, religious and political controversy, architecture, pirates and de la Poles is well researched, beautifully illustrated, and sure to please both Hull’s inhabitants and visitors alike.

DKK 192.00
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