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Michael Clayton

    He Leadeth Me: Into the Uncharted Territories of Personal Faith
    Juniper
    The Chase
    Police Dog Heroes
    Hunting The Hooligans
    A Short History of Foxhunting
    • 2023

      Through personal stories and scriptural insights, the book illustrates how individuals can discover their divine calling by relying on Jesus and the Word. It emphasizes the importance of God's mercy, power, and truth in nurturing a strong faith, especially during life's most challenging moments. The narrative encourages readers to embrace their spiritual journey with confidence and resilience.

      He Leadeth Me: Into the Uncharted Territories of Personal Faith
    • 2022

      Journalist and editor Michael Clayton worked his way up from local newspaper to BBC war correspondent, with radio and magazine experience inbetween. From working at the sharp end of the action in Vietnam, to the violence of the Troubles in Belfast and the tragedy of the East Pakistan revolt, Clayton is well placed to compare the varying challenges of journalism on different media platforms. The rivalry between the BBC and ITV, the bravery of war cameramen, dealing with corrupt officials on assignments, the TV preference for close-to-the action film as opposed to insightful reports of the effects of conflict: Clayton experienced it all. His insights into the ethos of the BBC, the colourful characters he reported and filmed alongside, and his resulting views of humanity, war and crime - Clayton's journalism autobiography is honest, wry and full of insight.

      My Life in the News
    • 2018

      Lady of the Chase

      • 224 pages
      • 8 hours of reading

      When a rare opportunity to buy some unique diaries at auction arose recently, a hunting enthusiast seized on the opportunity. By now offering them up for publication, he has opened up, via the diarist, a whole world of hunting and its characters from 1930 for the next half century. Daphne Moore is known to many in the hounds fraternity for her expert reports in Horse and Hound magazine over many decades. Aristocratically turned out and well-spoken, her appearance belied her circumstances. She lived on a shoe-string off her reporting, followed the pack on foot and in her younger days even cycled many miles to get there and back. Remarkably, after producing a professional report of each days' hunting, she then turned to writing up - and illustrating in charming watercolours - her own diaries.

      Lady of the Chase
    • 2016

      Police Dog Heroes

      • 304 pages
      • 11 hours of reading

      The history of Britain's first police dog unit and their brave exploits.

      Police Dog Heroes
    • 2016

      Tracking the Hooligans

      • 296 pages
      • 11 hours of reading

      Explore the history of football violence on the UK's rail network.

      Tracking the Hooligans
    • 2016

      Michael Clayton enjoyed a fascinating career as a professional journalist on Fleet Street. However, the highlight of his career was his work as an editor and journalist in the field of horses, and with hunting horses in particular. This is his autobiography in horses: his boyhood work in local stables, his first post as a cub reporter, leading eventually to his appointment as editor of Horse and Hound magazine. Here he talks frankly about his involvement with the Royal family and their horses, his roving hunting brief, the development of new safety standards in riding, and all the key characters of the equine world whom he got to know first-hand. He worked as a reporter of horse-racing, show-jumping, carriage driving (disastrous!) and with almost all the hunts of Britain, Ireland and the USA. Michael also recalls the time of the hunting ban, among other key moments

      The Ride of My Life
    • 2016

      Birmingham's Front Line

      • 264 pages
      • 10 hours of reading

      The inside story of Birmingham CID's fight against crime in the '70s and '80s.

      Birmingham's Front Line
    • 2015

      Hunting The Hooligans

      • 304 pages
      • 11 hours of reading
      4.2(14)Add rating

      By the mid-1980s, football hooliganism in the UK was endemic. The thugs were rampant, crowds were falling and the Government was near despair. Among the worst gangs in the country was a crew of thieves and thugs who followed Birmingham City FC. They looted shops, ransacked pubs and butchered rival fans. They called themselves the Zulu Warriors. In 1987, West Midlands Police set up a secret unit to infiltrate the gang and bring them down. Operation Red Card was born.

      Hunting The Hooligans
    • 2013

      Juniper

      • 208 pages
      • 8 hours of reading

      Set against a backdrop of centuries-old Native American curses, the story unfolds in Juniper, a town rife with unexplained deaths and political corruption. It weaves a complex narrative featuring a torrid love affair, an old friend escaping the mob, and a diverse cast of eccentric locals. Themes of gender and racial bigotry intertwine with international crime and terrorism, while whispers of organ harvesting and an ancient superstition about a werewolf add an eerie tension to the unfolding drama.

      Juniper
    • 2013

      Few people hunting today are really aware of the history of their sport. Most accounts of the subject tend to be somewhat dry and academic. So, in an easy and entertaining manner, here is a concise version of how this much-misunderstood sport has survived and flourished through centuries of change, to the benefit of the fox and its environment.* Concise chapters gallop through the history of hunting from 1066 to the present day, interspersed with snippets of hunting verse and song* Index of foxhunting packs in the UK and US* Specially-commissioned line illustrations of hunting scenes by Alistair Jackson

      A Short History of Foxhunting