Culturally significant, this work has been preserved to reflect its original form, including copyright references and library stamps. It serves as a valuable resource, contributing to the knowledge base of civilization. Scholars have recognized its importance, ensuring that readers engage with a faithful reproduction of the artifact, which highlights its historical context and relevance.
William Hole Books






Albion's Glorious Ile: Northamptonshyre to Westmorlande
- 16 pages
- 1 hour of reading
An historical colouring book with a twist, following in the lost traditions of hand-colouring maps. Volume 4 - Northamptonshyre to Westmorlande
Albion's Glorious Ile: Cornwal to Worestshyre
- 16 pages
- 1 hour of reading
An historical colouring book with a twist, following in the lost traditions of hand-colouring maps. Volume 1 - Cornwal to Worestshyre
Albion's Glorious Ile: Shropshire to Buckinghamshyre
- 16 pages
- 1 hour of reading
An historical colouring book with a twist, following in the lost traditions of hand-colouring maps. Volume 2 - Shropshire to Buckinghamshyre.
Albion's Glorious Ile, 4 Vols.
- 64 pages
- 3 hours of reading
An historical colouring book with a twist, following in the lost traditions of hand-colouring maps. This beautifully-produced colouring book presents a collection of thirty county maps of England and Wales.
Albion's Glorious Ile: Middlesex to Huntingdonshire
- 16 pages
- 1 hour of reading
An historical colouring book with a twist, following in the lost traditions of hand-colouring maps. Volume 3 - Middlesex to Huntingdonshire
Kidnapped - Complete & Unabridged
- 320 pages
- 12 hours of reading
Set in Scotland in 1751, Kidnapped tells of how young David Balfour, orphaned, and betrayed by his uncle Ebenezer who should have been his guardian, is kidnapped, and falls in with Alan Breck, the unscrupulous but heroic champion of the Jacobite cause. The novel revolves around their friendship and their differences, suggesting a metaphor for Scotland itself. Modern critics see the novel as more than a boy's adventure yarn; at the heart of it lies what Henry James described as the 'really excellent' chapters of the flight in the heather that raise the novel to greatness. The illustrations by William Hole are from the first edition, with an Afterword by Ned Halley.
