We've published some great titles recently but, as The Jam said, this is the modern world, and they're not just available in hard format. Ohhh no. They're also available in ebook format.
The Words Of Our Time, by John Shosky: A book of the most influential speeches given since the new millennium, capturing contemporary and powerful expressions of ideas and reasoning. These speeches define our present history and will be used by historians to understand us in the years and centuries to come. These are the words of our time.
Bodyguard, by Craig Summers: Craig had one of the most dangerous jobs in television. His task? Keeping adventurous celebrities alive. Bodyguard tells the unknown stories behind some of the biggest news and sports events of our time, from the inside out. This is not just another book about life in the danger zones; it is much, much more.
Wayne Rooney: Boots of Gold, by John Sweeney: Irreverent, hilarious and surprising, Boots of Gold is a tarts-and-all biography of England's most famous sportsman and the iniquities of some of those who have sought their pound of flesh.
Whatever Next?, by Earl Ferrers: In this charming and poignant memoir, the 13th Earl Ferrers – Robert Washington Shirley, farmer, businessman, politician, husband and father – reflects on a life very well lived.
Tango 190: The David Rathband Story, by David Rathband: Tango 190 is the late David Rathband’s own, very personal account of his wounding by gunman Raoul Moat in the summer of 2010.The story becomes even more poignant in the light of PC Rathband’s death and his ultimate failure to recover mentally from what had happened to him, despite his heroic efforts.
Under Every Leaf, by William Beaver: This book fills the gap in our knowledge of Victorian intelligence, telling the story of the Intelligence Division of the War Office from 1856 to 1909 – when MI6 was founded – and the hidden role that the Intelligence Division played in acquiring Britain's vast empire without a major European or Asian war.
Immortality, by Stephen Cave: Who wants to live forever? According to Stephen Cave, we all do – every single one of us. Ranging across continents and cultures, from ancient Egypt to cutting-edge laboratories, Immortality raises the curtain on what compels us humans to keep on going.