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Books published by The Conrad Press

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  • - Social change, incompetence and sleaze push Labour to the brink
    by Reg Race
    £12.99

    A non-fiction book about the UK Labour/Labor Party, with a strong author biographical element

  • - An Anglo-Saxon mystery
    by Ian Walford
    £9.49

    A historical thriller set in Anglo-Saxon Britain

  • - A story of hope against anorexia
    by Stephanie Shott
    £9.49

    A memoir about living with and beating anorexia

  • - My diaries recording the four wild years of an American President
    by Jim G. Sitch
    £9.49

    An irreverent diary by a British writer of Donald Trump's presidency

  • by Simon Gregory
    £9.49

    'The Rattling Cat' is a rip-roaring tale of smuggling in the late eighteenth century on the coast of Kent. The young hero, Miles, becomes involved with colourful characters and exciting escapades in the cutthroat town of Deale.Miles Papillion has been sent to stay with his uncle, landlord of the Noah's Ark, a hostelry with a dubious reputation. He is swiftly embroiled in the search for a smugglers' tunnel that is guarded by a ghostly skeleton. This involves him in alarming situations: being held up in a coach by a highwayman, almost drowning while swimming from a bathing machine, escaping down the revolving sail of a windmill and leading an rescue on the Goodwin Sands. His loyalties are challenged when he befriends the local inhabitants ~ saints and sinners ~ each, in some way, connected with the 'Wicked Trade'.

  • by Ronald Austin
    £9.49

    A novella set in the Seychelles at the time of independence

  • - Hilariously daft insights into the daily struggles of the pandemic
    by Lady Dawn Annandale
    £9.49

    A lively and humorous diary of the Covid pandemic lockdown

  • by Iwo Zaluski
    £9.49

    A thrilling nineteenth-century historical saga of love, war and loss as Poland struggles for freedom from Russian domination.On the Side of Good is Book One of a pan-European trilogy charting the fortunes of the Samojarski dynasty. In 1813 Teofil Samojarski returns from the Napoleonic Wars to Sarenki, his run-down spa in the foothills of the Carpathian Mountains, and sets about its development. The story follows his own fortunes and those of his children, Julek and Franciszka, as they embark on their separate lives across a Europe replete with religious conflicts, passions and romance.

  • by Robert Whiting
    £9.49

    Beautiful and conceited Alicia Matcham leads us through an intriguing web of deceit in search of a killer who is, bizarrely, welcomed by her family. This exciting, gripping crime novel is full of suspense and delivers a thrilling final twist.Saturday 10 June 1933, and one of Charles's Whitten's bridge players collapses at the table, apparently from natural causes. Charles's youngest daughter Patty is convinced it's murder and pleads with her sister Alicia - a party girl with connections - to help discover the truth. Their brother William is a penniless drunkard, their mother ingenuous, Patty naive, their father Charles all bluff and bluster and then there is John the seductive butler. It feels as though Alicia is in one of the new Agatha Christie murders: there were four people in the card room, surely one must be the murderer?

  • by Susan Haven
    £9.49

    Romantic and intriguing, this story draws the reader into mystery and danger with a thrilling and surprising ending.Inheriting a ranch in Wyoming from an unknown cousin called Willard, Sandy Carson goes to investigate. On meeting Kyle, the sexy ranch foreman outside town, their instant attraction is mutual, but having expected to inherit the ranch himself, Kyle is shocked to discover Sandy is the owner. Unable to keep his hands to himself when Sandy responds, it isn't long before things intensify. With Willard and Mary's headstone indicating they had been parents, what secret is hidden in the barn's locked attic and why does Sandy get abducted?

  • by Antony Johnson
    £9.49

    She hates him. He doesn't understand her. Alice and Robbie: two youngsters forced to step reluctantly fast towards adulthood and marriage. Layered, lyrical, atmospheric: this is a book to engage and enthrall older children, young adults and those of any age who like to adventure in Tudor England.In 1520s England, Alice, twelve years old, daughter of impoverished Sir Lionel and Lady Catherine, is to be married to Robbie, the fourteen-year-old son of an up-and-coming family of Bristol merchants. Sir Lionel, together with Robbie's father, is seeking to nudge King Henry into supporting exploration and enterprise in distant, just-discovered lands. However, unexpected opposition suddenly threatens not only their plans, but also their lives.

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