Explore the latest books of this year!
Bookbot

Bill Laws

    Old English Farmhouses
    Traditional Houses of Rural France
    Real ale : recipes, history & snippets
    Fifty Railways that Changed the Course of History
    Fifty Plants that Changed the Course of History
    ARTISTS GARDENS
    • 2024

      The Curious History of Vegetables

      • 256 pages
      • 9 hours of reading

      Delving into the cultural and historical significance of vegetables, this book traces the journey of various types, including the Maris Piper potato and the Couch Potato phenomenon. It examines how these vegetables have shaped diets, culinary practices, and even societal trends over time. Through engaging narratives and insights, readers will discover the impact of these humble foods on history, health, and identity, highlighting their importance beyond mere sustenance.

      The Curious History of Vegetables
    • 2019

      Potato

      • 128 pages
      • 5 hours of reading

      We LOVE potatoes, and why not? At only 100 calories per spud, they're an incredible source of vitamins and minerals (they pack more vitamin C than tomatoes and oranges), and contain 60 different kinds of phytochemicals and vitamins in their skins and flesh. They are also one of the most popular of foods, whether it’s a bowl of buttery mash, a cone of salty chips at the seaside or a baked spud with melting cheese on top. But perhaps the most amazing thing about potatoes is how useful they are This book looks at every aspect of this humble vegetable, from its origins and how it spread around to world, to how to grow them, cook and eat them. From comfort food to eye watering poteen, we can also use them to clean silverware, remove rust, shine shoes, create a decorative stamp and alleviate arthritis, heartburn, and even cure scurvy!

      Potato
    • 2019

      Following the fateful announcement in 1939 that Britain was again at war, a hastily formed Home Guard prepared for a final stand against invasion, Covert Auxiliary Units were instructed to 'lay low then kill off important Germans', and schoolboy Henry Moss was dispatched to hide Aconbury church's silver. It was all change in Herefordshire. With men off fighting, women stepped in, making munitions, working in farming and forestry as members of the Land Army and Timber Corps, and joining the WAAFs, Wrens and ATS. In came evacuees and refugees, foreign soldiers and POWs. Moments of fear and tragedy - the loss of Ken Hursey's family to a runaway bomb at Rotherwas, or the unimaginable journey of Eddie Dzierza - were interspersed with lighter a group of wounded GIs demonstrating the jitterbug in the middle of the Hoarwithy Road, or the Tupsley Home Guardsman who hit his own house during mortar training. Herefordshire's Home Front in the Second World War offers a rich insight into all aspects of life in Herefordshire in wartime, through memories and photographs gathered by the county reminiscence group, Herefordshire Lore, and with important new research into the county's conscientious objectors by Dr Elinor Kelly. Bill Laws is the author of twenty titles on subjects ranging from rural architecture and a social history of walking, to gardens and local history. He helped found Herefordshire Lore in 1989.

      Herefordshire's Home Front in the Second World War
    • 2013

      Fifty Railways that Changed the Course of History is a fascinating, beautifully presented guide to the train lines and rail companies that have had the greatest impact. Entries range from the Metropolitan Line, the world's first underground railway, to the Pacific Railroad, the first transcontinental railroad in North America.

      Fifty Railways that Changed the Course of History
    • 2010

      Exploring the fascinating history of household inventions, this book reveals the unusual stories behind everyday items that shape our living spaces. It delves into the origins of features like dado rails, power showers, and fitted kitchens, while highlighting intriguing tales such as the tragedies of Leo Baekeland's plastics and the impact of the penny post on front doors. With insights into how historical events influenced modern design, readers will gain a newfound appreciation for the details of their homes.

      Home Truths: An Alternative History of Every House
    • 2010
    • 2008
    • 2005

      'Artists' Gardens' celebrates the work of 20 artists from around the world, ranging from Renoir to Patrick Heron, and explores the close links between the artists, their works and their gardens and local landscapes.

      ARTISTS GARDENS
    • 1991