Clarke Alan Book order






- 2021
- 2018
Prince Albert Victor is heir presumptive to the British throne. Handsome and good-hearted, he is regarded as disastrously inadequate to be the king. By contrast, a renowned intellectual, Jem Stephen is a golden boy worshipped by all. He is appointed as Prince Albert's tutor - the relationship that will change both of their lives.
- 2016
Like so many youngsters in the 1950s and 1960s Alan Clarke was a keen railway enthusiast and spnt a number of years out and about with his ABC Combined Volume and his camera at various rail related locations up and down the country.
- 2015
The Reluctant Special
- 194 pages
- 7 hours of reading
Ged Rogers is a bank clerk in his mid-forties who is forced to re-assess his career after the pruning of staff at the branch of his bank. Rather than accept relocation to another branch he resigns. During the interim period while looking for a new job he takes on the role of a Special Constable. However he soon discovers that it is not a role that suits him but before he can call a halt to his probation period he is selected by his commanding officer to undertake an undercover role to determine a fraud that is apparent at the policeman's brother's bank. Ged, feeling more confident about this clandestine role, accepts. The trail of fraud that he uncovers is far in excess to what was expected and, having survived an attempt on his life and a series of terrifying adventures, eventually leads to the downfall of the British Government.
- 2010
Alan Clark: A Life in his Own Words
- 800 pages
- 28 hours of reading
Some of the most talked about books of recent years, Alan Clark's diaries provide a witty and irreverant insider's account of political life in Britain. Now in one volume.
- 2009
Equips trainee teachers in the lifelong learning sector with the necessary skills, knowledge and understanding to meet the requirements of the minimum core ICT.
- 1991
The Donkeys
- 224 pages
- 8 hours of reading
On 26 September 1915 twelve British battalions - a strength of almost 10,000 men - were ordered to attack German positions at Loos in north-east France.