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£16.99
After thirty years of messy mothering, Louisa’s daughters can finally look after themselves. Or so she thought. Because suddenly, they’re back – apparently for good. Meg’s second-guessing her marriage. Jo’s career hangs in the balance. Amy has inexplicably quit university. None of them empty the dishwasher. Louisa knows it’s time for some life lessons. She adores her girls, but if she’s ever going to get her (sex) life back, they’ll have to grow up – and go. But maybe they’re not the only ones with lessons to learn. And Louisa might just discover that her daughters have something to teach her about being an adult too.
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£16.99
Hungry? New to the kitchen? Bored of beans on toast? Every student needs to fill their bellies as well as their brains. ‘The Student Kitchen’ is filled with 70 super-satisfying, budget-friendly recipes for novice cooks and hungry 21st-century students. From plant-based dishes to air-fryer-friendly feasts, and simple slow cooks to ingenious microwave meals, this unintimidating yet comprehensive cookbook will teach you to navigate the kitchen and make cooking delicious, nutritious, budget-friendly meals as simple as can be.
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£20.00
In the shattered aftermath of Cambodia’s civil war, temples that had stood for centuries were found ransacked, sacred sculptures hacked from pedestals, towering statues of Hindu gods and priceless relics of the Khmer Empire vanished. At the centre of this vast plunder, British expat Douglas Latchford, whose decades-long obsession fuelled one of the most audacious cultural thefts of modern times. From the Killing Fields to the marble galleries of New York and London and the private collections of the rich and famous, this book unravels a story of power, greed and corruption, and questions what you take from a nation when you steal its past. Drawing on years of investigation and exclusive access to the stories’ key players, Matthew Campbell reveals how the treasures of one of the world’s greatest civilizations were stolen, sold, and finally found.
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£16.99
Jo and Dave haven’t had a holiday in years. They’ve had other things on their plate: failed IVF, the death of Dave’s mother, doing up the bathroom. So when Dave’s flashy brother Teddy offers to fly in from Dubai and take them – along with his gorgeous young girlfriend and their curmudgeonly father – to a beachfront resort in the Med, the couple can hardly refuse. But while romance might be on the cards for some, Jo and Dave soon find that tensions don’t disappear in paradise. In fact, they might just get worse.
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£7.99
Immerse yourself in the colorful world of one of the most iconic artists, Frida Kahlo, and make your own Kahlo-inspired artworks!Join Laura Page on a spectacular adventure through the powerful paintings of Frida Kahlo, a revolutionary artist who used her work as a way to express her feelings of pain and frustration.Get to know Kahlo’s self-portraits and what they meant to her through her own words. Create your own Day of the Dead papier-mâché mask, grow some roots and start an illustrated journal to record your thoughts and dreams. Packed with make-and-dos and creative activities, Meet the Artist: Frida Kahlo is perfect for encouraging and inspiring budding young artists.
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£10.99
It’s 2067 at Palm Meridian Retirement Resort, Florida, and the last day of Hannah’s life. Tomorrow, as the sun burns the dew off the lawns, she’ll close her eyes for the very last time. But she won’t be going quietly. Tonight, Hannah’s throwing an end-of-life party: the drinks are on ice, and the palm trees are strung with lights beneath technicolour skies. And though Hannah has less than 24 hours left, she’s holding out for one last, impossible thing. Amongst the guest list is Hannah’s long-lost love Sophie – the woman who Hannah can’t forget, even after 40 years. Hannah has to give her greatest love one last try. Soon, the party is in full swing. Hannah waits nervously, unaware that before her last ever dawn breaks, a devastating secret will come to light. If Sophie shows, how can Hannah say goodbye all over again? And is there enough time to fix the past?
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£7.99
Cats come in all shapes, colours, and sizes – but which of them is the biggest? Tiny kitten, Pippa, loves to explore slippers. Paisley the Persian cat loves cardboard boxes, and Dave the Devon Rex is DEFINITELY not related to the T. rex. Each of these cats is special in their own way, but only one of these lovable fluffballs can be the BIGGEST. Purr-fect for cat-lovers, this playful story features a gatefold surprise at the end.
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£7.99
Meet Waffles and Julius. Waffles loves hugs .Julius does not. Waffles would love a hug right now. Will Waffles get a hug?
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£7.99
Lift the flaps to help Fred put on his space helmet and spin the wheels to steer his rocket safely to the moon. With a playful rhyming text, perfect for reading aloud, children will love helping Fred by bringing this interactive story to life.
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£22.00
Summer, 1940. Winston Churchill watches in horror as France falls to the Germans in just six weeks, completing the Nazi conquest of mainland Europe. He faces an urgent question: what will happen to France’s mighty navy? Under German control it presents a major threat to Great Britain, and could mark a point of no return. With the Nazis closing in and time running out, Churchill ordered Operation Catapult. By the end of one of the most agonising but necessary military operations of the war, a large part of the French navy would be destroyed and nearly 1,300 French sailors would be dead, a number which would haunt all involved for the rest of their lives. Based on extensive new archival research, rediscovered eyewitness accounts and reflections from the private papers of the key protagonists, ‘A Hateful Decision’ tells the full story of the British attack on the French navy at Mers el Kébir, on 3 July 1940.
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£22.00
What do we leave behind when we move to a new place – and what do we carry with us, physically and emotionally, wherever we land? Here are the voices of people who have come to Britain to make a new life: a Czech-Roma lawyer in Reading, an Iranian taxi driver in Shropshire, a Sierra Leonean actor in Northampton, a Romanian police officer in Edinburgh. Colin Grant has travelled the country and listened to their stories – foundational tales of arriving in a new land, along with rarely spoken stories of love and loss. Together, these accounts ask questions about assimilation, identity, belonging and the emotional cost of migration in twenty-first-century Britain.