Humour

  • Deep thoughts from a shallow grave

    £16.00

    A gloriously dark book filled with funny illustrations about life and death

  • Red side story

    £20.00

    Imagine a world where your position in society depended on what bit of the colour spectrum you could see. This is the world inhabited by Eddie Russett (red, middle-level) and Jane Grey (monochromatic, lowest in society). Eddie and Jane must negotiate the delicate Chromatic politics of society to find out what the ‘Something that Happened’ actually was, how society got to be this way, and crucially, is there Somewhere Else beyond their borders – and if there is, could there be Someone Else, too, someone whose unseen hand has been guiding the fortunes and misfortunes of the nation for the past 500 years? It’s a tale of a young couple’s thirst for justice and answers in an implacably rigid society, where the prisoners are also the guards, and cages of convention bind the citizens to only one way of thinking – or suffer the consequences.

  • Me vs brain

    £10.99

    Hello there! Hayley Morris here. Or you might know me as the Brain Girl, and don’t be fooled – it’s not because I’m outrageously smart. Just an avid overthinker. In this book, I’ve overthought absolutely everything so you don’t have to. I’ll be talking about dating to discharge, mental health to menstrual cups. I might not be able to banish your anxiety or make you feel 100% comfortable in your skin, but I hope I can at least give you a break from the constant brain chatter and we can rejoice and laugh at how similar we actually all are.

  • Words from the heart

    £12.99

    Whether it’s the distress of a bad haircut (age-otori) or longing for the food someone else is eating (groaking), the pleasure found in other people’s happiness (confelicity) or the shock of jumping into icy water (curglaff), there are real words to pinpoint exactly how you feel and Susie Dent, Queen of Countdown’s Dictionary Corner and lexicographer extraordinaire, is going to help you find them. Here are 1001 terms everyone needs, whether it’s the best kind of hug (cwtch), the relief found in swearing (lalochezia), or the ability to endure till the end (pertolance). It’s time to rediscover the lost positives of language; find out how a stork gave us the word for the love between parent and child, and who the first maverick was.

  • 20 bunnies at bedtime

    £7.99

    Once upon a bouncy bed . . . What’s the best way to help little ones fall asleep? By counting super fluffy bunnies, of course! With hopping, jumping and leaping bunnies on every page, and a fun story showing children how to count from one to twenty, this cute and cuddly counting board book is set to become every child’s new favourite.

  • How to survive history

    £10.99

    A humorous and information guide to surviving history’s most challenging threats, from outrunning dinosaurs to making it off the Titanic alive.

  • The tourist

    £22.00

    What Goes on Tour, Stays on Tour?Until Now!

  • The rest is history : SIGNED

    £18.99

    From the chart-topping podcast The Rest is History, a whistle-stop tour through the past – from Alexander the Great to Agatha Christie, the Wars of the Roses to Watergate. The nation’s favourite historians Tom Holland and Dominic Sandbrook take on the most curious moments in history, answering the questions we didn’t even think to ask: Did the Trojan War actually happen? What was the most disastrous party in history? Was Richard Nixon more like Caligula or Claudius? How did a hair appointment almost blow Churchill’s cover? Why did the Nazis believe they were descended from Atlantis? Whether it is sending historical figures to Casa Amor in a series of Love Island, ranking history’s most famous eunuchs and pigeons (including Winky, the unsung hero of the Second World War), or debating the meaning of greatness, there is nothing too big or too small for Tom and Dominic to unpick.

  • Britain’s best political cartoons 2023

    £16.99

    Bringing much-needed humour to another chaotic year in politics, ‘Britain’s Best Political Cartoons 2023’ offers a tour of the most high-profile, notorious and absurd news stories of the year, as seen through the eyes of our nation’s finest satirists. This collection features the work of Peter Brookes, Steve Bell, Morten Morland, Nicola Jennings, Christian Adams, Dave Brown, Brian Adcock and many more, alongside captions from Britain’s leading cartoon expert. The result is a sharply observed, stunningly creative and side-splittingly funny guide to another year like no other.

  • Glutton

    £20.00

    From a young age, Ed Gamble’s immaculate bibs and extremely dirty nappies hinted at his capacious appetite. Before he could walk, Ed already knew that he preferred poached salmon to puree, that celery was a calorie-sapping waste of time, and that mashed potatoes should be made with lashings of butter. Whilst he might ordinarily have been upset by the calls of ‘precocious little sh*t’ coming from his family, he was too busy stuffing his gob and staging rebellions against the patronising list of misery that is a children’s menu. In ‘Glutton’, Ed shares a relatable buffet of experiences and stories from a life lived through food.

  • Things to make and do

    £9.99

    Are you struggling to pay the bills and keep your children entertained in a cost of living crisis? Or are you simply worried that your children are spending too much time glued to numerous screens, watching endless asinine nonsense? Dung Beetle provide an answer, with a book that can keep children and adults happily and rewardingly occupied for many hours, using simple inexpensive and readily available materials. We present a set of 20 thought-provoking toys that can be made from simple objects around the house.

Nomad Books