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Geoffrey Moorhouse

    Geoffrey Moorhouse è stato un giornalista e autore inglese le cui opere traevano spesso ispirazione dai suoi vasti viaggi. La sua scrittura si distingue per un'acuta osservazione e un'attenzione ai dettagli, trasportando i lettori in terre lontane e nelle profondità della storia. Moorhouse ha fuso perfettamente giornalismo e letteratura, esplorando argomenti diversi che vanno dai racconti di viaggio alla storia Tudor. Il suo stile unico e la sua capacità di dipingere ritratti vividi lo rendono un narratore avvincente.

    OM
    Sydney : the story of a city
    Apples in the Snow
    Great Harry's Navy
    The Pilgrimage of Grace
    To The Frontier
    • To The Frontier

      • 285pagine
      • 10 ore di lettura

      This Book Studies The Frontier Tribesmen And Oriental Art, The Deep Piety Of Muslims--And The Torture That Is Committed In The Name Of Islamic Government Today. It Is Full Of Vivid Word Pictures, Full Of Atmosphere. The Author Travelled Up Through Sind, Baluchistan And The Punajb To The North-West Frontier Province Of Pakistan. Without Dustjacket.

      To The Frontier
      4,0
    • The Pilgrimage of Grace

      • 432pagine
      • 16 ore di lettura

      Protesting the king's betrayal of the "old" religion, his new taxes, and his threat to the rights of landowners,  the poor and the powerful united against Henry VIII, raising an army of 40,000. Under the influence of the charismatic, heroic figure of Robert Aske, most of the Northern nobility joined the rebellion and gathered for battle at Doncaster where they would have outnumbered the king's soldiers by 4 to 1. But Aske was persuaded by the king's men to abandon military force and negotiate terms in London. Once there he was arrested, charged with treason and hanged in chains.

      The Pilgrimage of Grace
      4,1
    • Great Harry's Navy

      How Henry VIII Gave England Seapower

      • 372pagine
      • 14 ore di lettura

      Ground-breaking history of how King Henry VIII created England's navy

      Great Harry's Navy
      3,4
    • Apples in the Snow

      A Journey to Samarkand

      • 129pagine
      • 5 ore di lettura

      Starting near the roof of the world on the Soviet Union's border with China, Geoffrey Moorhouse's journey through Central Asia winds across mountains, steppes and desert as well as the path of the retreating Red Army before reaching Tamburlaine's tomb in Samarkand. In this sequel to his award-winning book 'To the Frontier', he blends the dramatic history of this wild region with an absorbing, vivid portrait of its present.

      Apples in the Snow
      3,5
    • Sydney : the story of a city

      • 296pagine
      • 11 ore di lettura

      Sydney's harbor establishes it as one of the most attractive modern cities, but its beginnings suggest something different. In 1770, the British Parliament saw the area as a solution to England's overcrowded prisons. On arriving at the harbor, the first "convicts" found themselves in one of the hottest climates in the world, and were greeted by aboriginal natives whose curiosity was matched only by their desire for the newcomers to leave. Sydney is a place where gravestones have such inscriptions as "Be ready mates, that's all!," where people wear shorts and sandals to one of the most renowned opera houses in the world, where the working man fights for what he's got and never backs down. Geoffrey Moorhouse brilliantly describes the city, its appetites, and its character-from its colonial beginnings to its becoming the host city of the 2000 Olympics. His curious knowledge, remarkable insight, and marvelous storytelling capture Sydney's warmth, texture, resilience, and loyalty.

      Sydney : the story of a city
      3,6
    • OM

      An Indian Pilgrimage

      • 256pagine
      • 9 ore di lettura

      This travel book is the story of a three-month pilgrimage through Southern India, highlighting man's spiritual struggle to rise above wretchedness. The book is an account of Geoffrey Moorhouse's time spent in ashrams, his meetings with gurus, his testimony of a miracle performed by the reincarnated Satya Sai Bab and his visits to the dwindling Jewish community in Cochin. By the author of "The Other England", "Against All Reason", "Calcutta", "The Missionaries", "The Fearful Void", "The Best-Loved Game" (1979 Cricket Society Award), "India Britannica", "Lord's", "To the Frontier" (Winner, Thomas Cook Award for Best Travel Book), "The Imperial The Rise and Rise of New York" and "At the St George and other Essays on Rugby League".

      OM
      3,3
    • Prag

      • 200pagine
      • 7 ore di lettura
      Prag