|
Playtime-Books.com...
"We, the dedicated,
committed individuals that make up the playtime books team, in order to
create something of real and lasting value, vow we
will figure out a way of offering more variety, more
entertainment, more service excellence and more of everything that
our customers are likely to want by 2009. We agree that neither
nature, man nor beast shall prevent us from achieving our stated
goal."
Alan
Twigg.
|
|
|

|
They wanted to be
throwing baseballs, not hand grenades, shooting .22s
at rabbits, not M-1s at other men. But when the test
came, when freedom had to be fought for or abandoned,
they fought. They were soldiers of democracy. They
were the men of D-Day.
When Hitler declared war on the United States, he bet
that the young men brought up in the Hitler Youth
would outfight the youngsters brought up in the Boy
Scouts. In this magnificent retelling of the war's
most climatic battle, acclaimed World War II historian
Stephen E. Ambrose tells how wrong Hitler was. |
|

|
Although Stonewall
Jackson is dead, Confederate morale is high. Will and
Mac, the two eldest Brannon sons, are in the ranks of
the Stonewall Brigade and Jeb Stuart's cavalry. As
Jackson's former corps marches up the Shenandoah
Valley, Lee's army follows, and they eventually clash
at Gettysburg. Will is kept in the thick of the combat
around Culp's Hill, while Mac sees action with the
Southern cavalry at Hanover. Both are swallowed up in
the melee of the fighting, and neither emerges
unscathed.
|
|

|
With a ya boo sucks to you
fritzy, hot tiddly tumble and no more
persian rugs, it's off to Western Front 1917.
Captain Blackadder, hero of Mboto Gorge, joined the British Army
when it was little more than a travel agency for gentlemen with
an abnormally high sex drive.
Now he finds himself crammed into a sewer, twenty yards from a
lot of heavily armed people who want to kill him. Worse still,
he takes his orders from two homicidal maniacs, one called the
Charge of the Light Brigade 'a victory for common sense', and
the other is called Darling. |
|

|
From the
best-selling author of The First World War and
Intelligence in War comes the most up-to-date and
informed study yet of the Iraq War.
John Keegan, whom the New York Review of Books
calls the best historian of our day, now brings
his extraordinary expertise to bear on perhaps the
most controversial war of our time. In exclusive
interviews with Secretary of Defense Donald
Rumsfeld and General Tommy Franks, John Keegan has
gathered information about the war that adds
immeasurably to our grasp of its causes,
complications, costs, and consequences. |
|

|
James Gleick has long
been fascinated by the making of science -- how ideas
order visible appearances, how equations can give
meaning to molecular and stellar phenomena, how
theories can transform what we see. In Chaos, he
chronicled the emergence of a new way of looking at
dynamic systems; in Genius, he portrayed the wondrous
dimensions of Richard Feymnan's mind. Now, in Isaac
Newton, he gives us the story of the scientist who,
above all others, embodied humanity's quest to unveil
the hidden forces that constitute the physical world. |
|

|
Volume 2 of the
eagerly-awaited follow-up to Christopher Lee's
highly-acclaimed and award-winning BBC Radio 4 series.
BBC Radio 4's monumental history of Britain picks up
the story of the British Empire at the point where the
American colonies have become the United States of
America with their triumph over General Cornwallis and
the British army at Yorktown in 1781. |
|

|
The bestselling audiobook of
the acclaimed BBC1 series, described as 'Brilliant' by the Daily
Mail.
Taking its listeners on a breath-taking journey from open
lifeboats in Atlantic gales to the cockpits of burning
fighter-planes, and through cities devastated by the Blitz,
FINEST HOUR recreates the terror, the tragedy and the triumph of
the Battle of Britain.
Sir Derek Jacobi narrates this powerful account of the events of
1940, told through the diaries, letters and memories of the men
and women who lived, loved, fought and died during this terrible
yet inspiring year. |
|
|
|