Carla Capalbo's award-winning, richly illustrated cookbook and travel guide to the food and natural and organic wines of Georgia, with extensive contact details.
A vivid account of Bohemian Paris at the birth of Cubism and other movements, with Modigliani as hero among other artists and writers now legends.
One of the great classics of modern art: Gauguin's own account of his time in Tahiti, in its original version.
A new edition of the original biography of the robin, Britain’s favourite bird, full of surprises and wit and with added postscript on recent ornithological advances.
Part unconventional biography, part travelogue tracing the profound influence on how we look, live, work and think of Victorian critic, artist, activist and environmentalist John Ruskin.
One of the most eccentric, informative guidebooks about Britain, on road A272, which travels through South East England, written by Dutch couple the Boogaarts, with photography.
An illustrated history, by plant scientist, botanist and horticulturist David Ingram, of the gardens at Brantwood, England – begun by John Ruskin and his cousin Joan Severn and continued today by Sally Beamish.
Antony Cleminson's drawings of European and Middle Eastern buildings and urban settings, draughtsmanship with both an engineer's and a historian's understanding. Printed on Ingres paper.
One of the greatest political essays in English history, and a revolutionary critique of economics and society.
A travel guide to the quartiers, markets, parks, restaurants, playgrounds and local entertainments, and the daily life, of Paris, with full practical information and photographs.
The definitive biography of Aubrey Beardsley, one of the defiining figures of the fin-de-siècle, by acclaimed author Matthew Sturgis.
The pioneering biography of Beardsley by his original discoverer, Oscar Wilde's friend Robert Ross. Close copy of the original edition, complete with the illustrations, advertisements and catalogue raisonné by Aymer Vallance.