Reportage & collected journalism

  • In Wartime

    In Wartime

    £10.99

    Seasoned war reporter Tim Judah’s account of the human side of the conflict in Ukraine is an evocative exploration of what the second largest country in Europe feels like in wartime. Making his way from the Polish border in the west, through the capital city and the heart of the 2014 revolution, to the eastern frontline near the Russian border, he brings a rare glimpse of the reality behind the headlines. Along the way he talks to the people living through the conflict – mothers, soldiers, businessmen, poets, politicians – whose memories of a contested past shape their attitudes, allegiances and hopes for the future.

  • New Odyssey

    £12.99

    Europe is facing a wave of migration unmatched since the end of World War II – and no-one has reported on this crisis in more depth or breadth than the Guardian’s migration correspondent, Patrick Kingsley. Throughout 2015, Kingsley travelled to 17 countries along the migrant trail, meeting hundreds of refugees making epic odysseys across deserts, seas and mountains to reach the holy grail of Europe. This is Kingsley’s unparalleled account of who these voyagers are, why they keep coming and how they do it.

  • Lunch With The FT

    £14.99

    From film stars to politicians, tycoons to writers, dissidents to lifestyle gurus, ‘Lunch with the FT’ is a selection of classic interviews conducted in the unforgiving proximity of a restaurant table. The list of people who have had lunch with the FT since 1994 read like an international who’s who of our times. Meet the rich and famous, the weird and the brilliant, the brave and the virtuous, brought to you by the Financial Times’ global network of columnists and correspondents.

  • Most Of Nora Ephron

    £9.99

    A comprehensive anthology of Nora Ephron at her funniest and most acute, here are her writings on journalism, feminism, and being a woman; on the importance of food (with herfavourite recipes), and on the bittersweet reality of growing old.

  • Dispatches

    £10.99

    A seminal classic of war reportage.

  • Seeing Things As They Are

    £25.00

    Celebrated for his novels and essays, George Orwell was a journalist first and is known as one of our very best commentators. Confronting social, political and moral dilemmas head-on, he was fearless in his writing, a champion of free speech, a defender against social injustice and a sharp-eyed chronicler of the age. This book tells his story.

  • Is It Really Too Much To Ask

    £20.00

    Jeremy Clarkson had a dream: a world where the nonsensical made sense, the idiotic was abolished and the sheer bloody brilliant was embraced. In this book, our hero embarks on a quest to set the world to rights – again.

  • Lunch With The FT 52 Classic Encounters

    £20.00

    From film stars to politicians, tycoons to writers, dissidents to lifestyle gurus, ‘Lunch with the FT’ is a selection of classic interviews conducted in the unforgiving proximity of a restaurant table. The list of people who have had lunch with the FT since 1994 read like an international who’s who of our times. Meet the rich and famous, the weird and the brilliant, the brave and the virtuous, brought to you by the Financial Times’ global network of columnists and correspondents.

  • On the Front Line

    £16.99

    Veteran Sunday Times war correspondent, Marie Colvin was killed in February 2012 when covering the uprising in Syria.

    On the Front Line is an Orwell Special Prize winning journalism collection from veteran war correspondent Marie Colvin, who is the subject of the movie A Private War, starring Rosamund Pike and Jamie Dornan.

  • I Remember Nothing & other reflections

    £7.99

    If there is any solace in growing older, it is that you will find yourself guffawing in hysterical recognition at the situations Nora Ephron describes, from the impossibility of trying to remember people’s names at parties, to struggling with new technology.

  • Nothing To Envy

    £9.99

    A spectacularly revealing and harrowing portrait of ordinary lives in the world’s least ordinary country, North Korea. Newly updated in 2013

Nomad Books