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Faber And Faber Ltd.

    The Clique
    Das Geheimnis der Weihnachtstage
    Galaxies like grains of sand
    One Man's Meat
    Low Intensity Operations
    Krieg im Himmel
    • Low Intensity Operations

      • 220 Seiten
      • 8 Lesestunden
      3,9(13)Abgeben

      Low Intensity Operations is an important, controversial and prophetic book that has had a major influence on the conduct of modern warfare. First published in 1971, it was the result of an academic year Frank Kitson spent at University College, Oxford, under the auspices of the Ministry of Defence, to write a paper on the way in which the army should be prepared to deal with future insurgency and peacekeeping operations. Its findings and propositions are as striking as when the work was first published. 'To understand the nature of revolutionary warfare, one cannot do better than read Low Intensity Operations... The author has had unrivalled experience of such operations in many parts of the world.' Daily Telegraph 'A highly practical analysis of subversion, insurgency and peacekeeping operations... Frank Kitson's book is not merely timely but important.' The Economist

      Low Intensity Operations
    • For lovely Julia Harton, unhappily married to a brutally successful pet food executive, a dramatic death in the fairground seems to provide a deliciously easy means of escape. But for Inspector Purbright, it is the harbinger of a bizarre and increasingly nasty case. Mysteries abound, including the precise truth behind the initials RIP, the role of Happy Endings Inc, and, not least, the exact contents of certain tins of dog food.Flaxborough is a quiet market town in the east of England, discreetly prosperous, respectable, brimming with the provincial virtues. But beneath the bland surface, strange passions seethe. The little foibles of its citizens afford more than ample scope to the wisdom and pertinacity of Inspector Purbright. First published in 1977, One Man's Meat is the ninth novel in the Flaxborough series and displays Watson's characteristic dry wit and striking observation.'Sharp and stylish and wickedly funny.' Literary Review'Flaxborough, that olde-worlde town with Dada trimmings.' Sunday Times

      One Man's Meat
    • In Galaxies Like Grains of Sand, Brian W. Aldiss tells the tale of mankind’s future over the course of forty million years. Each of these nine connected short stories highlights a different millennia in which man has adapted to new environments and hardships.

      Galaxies like grains of sand
    • In der Beresford Lodge findet während einer Weihnachtsfeier ein Mord statt, als Malcolm Warren am Morgen eine Leiche entdeckt. Der Verdacht fällt auf die Gäste und die Familie des Klienten. Als ein zweiter Mord geschieht, wird Warren zum unfreiwilligen Ermittler. Ein spannender Cosy Crime aus der „Golden Age“ Ära.

      Das Geheimnis der Weihnachtstage
    • 'We're a group, like in Mary McCarthy', says one of the girls in the Clique. On the other hand, their style may remind you more of Evelyn Waugh's Bright Young Things. And their know-all panache has a touch of J. D. Salinger's quiz-kid Glass family. But The Clique is unmistakably a satire for its own time. Gunby Goater, an up-and-coming reporter, 'hot or at any rate warmish' from the provinces, arrives in Fleet Street, keen for a taste of the fabulous Sixties. His assignment at the deathbed of the Last Great Englishman leads him into a series of adventures with the Clique, who alternately humiliate and delight him. From the author of The Man Who Rode Ampersand, The Clique is a novel of exuberant wit trained sharply, though not without affection, upon a variety of phonies, conmen, topers and hacks.

      The Clique