For the first time in British history, our culture and politics are now often in the hands of inverted elites: well-born, privately educated men (mostly) who affect populist attitudes.
Like many people Carla McKay thought that yoga sounded a bit too good to be true, and a bit to happy, and to bit too much for skinny yummie mummies. Things changed, however, when a friend persuaded her to give it try for a laugh after she separated from her husband.
In this hard-hitting book Britain's leading public-health expert Professor Dr John Ashton describes how we can make Britain safe again.
An entertaining new book by psychiatrist Theodore Dalrymple about the blind spots of our mind in general and those of eminent people in particular.
Throughout her life, until her untimely death in 1997, Diana frequently gave interviews and shared her thoughts with many people. In this... Læs mere
How Ada Lovelace, Lord Byron's daughter, became the world's first computer programmer in 1842 and would have started the digital age.
A riveting, intelligent spy-mystery set in London and France involving the Russian President, drawn on the secret-service knowledge of former high-ranking diplomat Joseph Clyde.
After the beheading of Charles I, who kept the monarchy together against the tide of turbulence that came with Cromwell? This riveting biography of Henry Jermyn casts... Læs mere
A British terrorist is being held by the Chinese - Tony Underwood is sent to investigate and soon is on to a plot with terrifying consequences.
The massively publicised guide to anti-aging from the bestselling author of Two Lipsticks and a Lover.
Darker than The Bridge and The Killing, the bodies start piling up for Martin Peters, a former Punk and now a British detective in the Berlin police force.
A primer on modern China by a leading expert.