For Authors For Bloggers Beck Valley Books is an influential book review site and book tour host - Book Reviewer Yellow Pages A dream to work with, professional, helpful beyond measure plus working with her is one of the best things I've done to promote my eBook - author Lisa Consiglio Ryan I love working with you - you're kind, encouraging and effective! Thanks for all you do for all of us authors! - author Kaira Rouda I knew I had met someone who would handle my books like they were her own. Truly a pleasure doing business with you! - author Melissa Foster Your service and perseverance to assure that the tour ran smoothly enabled its success. I cannot express my appreciation enough - author Joyce Strand Amazingly organized, efficient and stays on top of the details. Her professionalism is outstanding, communication skills unparalleled and she's even rather adept at hand-holding when it is necessary - author Barbara Boswell Brunner Thanks so much to you and all of your wonderful reviewers! I've had phenomenal success from this blog tour - author Delia Colvin

Wednesday, August 31, 2011

Richard and Judy Book Club - The Autumn Reads are here!



The Autumn Reads are here!


Following on from the success of the previous Summer Book Club, Richard and Judy in partnership with WHSmith have selected another 8 books for you to enjoy. After wading through a long list and plenty of debate the final selection has been made and we think you'll be as excited by them as we are. As always the list is a mixture of new authors and some slightly more established names, with a plethora of different genres selected.

Richard and Judy will be focusing on a different book every fortnight and will start this series with Megan Abbott's The End of Everything. The other books that make up the reads are; The Particular Sadness of Lemon Cake, Aimee Bender; The Black House, Peter May; Left Neglected, Lisa Genova; Dark Matter, Michelle Paver; Jamrach’s Menagerie, Carol Birch; Everything and Nothing, Araminta Hall and Next of Kin, David Hosp. For more details on each of the books, head over to the dedicated page for the Autumn Reads.

Dick Cheney autobiography heaps praise on Tony Blair


Dick Cheney, vice-president to George W Bush, pays tribute to 'one of America's closest and best allies in the war on terror'

He may or may not welcome it, but Tony Blair has had lavish praise heaped on him by the uber-conservative of US politics, Dick Cheney.

In his autobiography published on Tuesday, the self-declared Darth Vader of the Bush administration pays tribute to the former Labour leader. Not only was Blair America's greatest ally during the Bush years, says Cheney, but his speeches about the "war on terror" were some of the most eloquent he had been privileged to hear.

George Bush's friendship and closeness to Blair have been well documented, but the position of his vice-president, who earned a reputation for secretiveness while at the White House, has been less clear until now.

In the 565-page In My Time, Cheney is unrepentant about the most controversial decisions taken by the White House, from the waterboarding of Guantánamo Bay detainees to the invasion of Iraq.

Recalling a trip to Europe in March 2002, a year before the invasion of Iraq, Cheney says: "I began my trip with a stop in London to visit one of America's closest and best allies in the war on terror, British prime minister Tony Blair. I have tremendous respect for Prime Minister Blair," Cheney writes. "He is a Labour party liberal and I am a conservative Republican, and we didn't always agree on strategy or tactics. But America had no greater ally during our time in office. His speeches about the war were some of the most eloquent I've been privileged to hear."

Meeting at Downing Street, Cheney, an early advocate of invading Iraq, said a decision had not yet been made, but invasion was on his mind: "The president wanted to be absolutely clear that if he decided to go to war, we would finish the job. We would remove Saddam Hussein, eliminate the threat he posed and establish a representative government."

The vice-president even made phone calls to lobby Tory MPs on Blair's behalf. On the eve of the crucial Commons vote in 2003 that authorised the war in Iraq, he writes: "At the request of the British, I had called a number of the Tories, including Iain Duncan Smith, the Conservative leader. He was, on this issue, a rock of support for Blair."

In his memoir, A Journey, Blair praised Cheney, although he said Cheney was wrong to ignore the role of ideas, rather than simply military might, in defending the US. Blair wrote: "He believed, in essence, that the US was genuinely at war; that the war was one with terrorists and rogue states that supported them ... of course, this attitude terrified and repelled people. But ... I do not think it was as fantastical as conventional wisdom opined."Cheney writes that on some things he differed from the former Labour leader. Blair wanted resolution of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict to be a priority; Cheney was sceptical: "I was not as confident as Blair that solving this crisis would take the steam out of the terrorist threat."

Later that year, Blair, Bush and the then US secretary of state, Condoleezza Rice, discussed a plan to get UN weapons inspectors back into Iraq. Cheney, known for his bluntness, writes: "I didn't buy it. It seemed fanciful to me."

Nor did he support Blair when in January 2003 the PM pushed for a second UN resolution. Cheney thought it was a mistake, and says "going to the UN again would make us look hesitant and uncertain". The resolution never materialised.

He regards the invasion as justified, seeing Iraq as a nexus between terrorism and weapons of mass destruction. "With the benefit of hindsight – even taking into account that some of the intelligence we received was wrong – that assessment still holds true," he says.

In the book, Cheney devotes many of the photographs to shots of himself with his grandchildren and tells anecdotes about his dog, Dave. But that does little to soften his image as an uncompromising conservative. In his final chapter, he sums up with a declaration of patriotism. "I am a firm believer in America and its work in the world … We have stood firm in the face of evil and defied history in the selfless way we have done it. Instead of seeking empire, we have sought freedom for others."







  • guardian.co.uk,




  • Madonna's Sex most sought after out-of-print book




    Madonna, pictured in July in New York. Photograph: Justin Lane/EPA

    Madonna's explicit book Sex is once again America's most sought after out-of-print title of the year, according to BookFinder's annual report.

    The graphic coffee-table book, featuring – in the words of BookFinder, "photos of the Material Girl, without the material" – has been one of the most popular out-of-print titles in the US for years and a collector's item since it was first published in 1992. "Since Madonna is never one to do something twice, and the fact that the once highly controversial book is less edgy than it once was leads us to guess that Sex will remain out of print," predicted the book search engine, a subsidiary of AbeBooks, last year.

    BookFinder has tracked the most searched for out-of-print titles in America over the last 12 months for its annual report, which sees romantic suspense author Nora Roberts's novel Promise Me Tomorrow come in second. The prolific author has "actively persuaded her loyal fanbase to avoid this early novel for years", said BookFinder, with a used bookshop likely to be "the only place you will find this title" these days.

    Out-of-print titles by Stephen King, Johnny Cash, Ray Bradbury, Carl Sagan, CS Lewis and Philip K Dick also appear on the list, with more esoteric offerings also flying high: knitting supremo Alice Starmore's Tudor Roses, featuring "sweater designs inspired by the Tudor royals", was also much in demand, while Sarah Bradford's 1989 biography of George VI, The Reluctant King, "shot into steady demand" following the success of the Colin Firth film The King's Speech, said BookFinder.

    Alison Flood guardian.co.uk

    Tuesday, August 30, 2011

    Rare Books added today to www.beckvalleybooks.co.uk


    Rare Books added today to http://www.beckvalleybooks.co.uk/

    Bacharach, A L The Musical Companion - A Compendium For All Lovers of Music

    Calvert, Michael Prisoners of Hope

    Gilson, Charles Through The German Hordes

    Hay, W T Through My Telescope - Astronomy for all

    Hutton, Len Cricket Is My Life - Signed by Author

    Paleologue, Maurice Tragic Empress - The Story of Elizabeth of Austria

    Spalding, E H Piers Plowman Histories - The Social History of England from 1485 - 1936 - Book V

    Villaespesa, Francisco El Alcazar De Las Perlas - Tragedia En Cinco Actos Y En Verso - Biblioteca Sopena

    Sunday, August 28, 2011

    New Recipe Book from Angela Hartnett

    The most successful female chef in the UK today (she balks at this, but it's true), Angela Hartnett learned her trade standing shoulder to shoulder in some of the country's finest kitchens, often for 18 gruelling hours at a stretch, with Gordon Ramsay and Marcus Wareing. She won her first Michelin star in 2004 for her work at The Connaught, was awarded an MBE for services to the food industry in 2007 and now owns and runs the much acclaimed Murano in London's Mayfair. Not bad for someone 'the boys' thought would last two weeks at best in the Ramsay kitchen environment known as 'Vietnam'.

    In her new book, A Taste Of Home: 200 Quick and Easy Recipes by Angela Hartnett, out this month, Angela takes time out from fine dining, drawing inspiration from her childhood experiences of home cooking with her Italian grandmother, to give us a quick weekday supper bible that we could all do with in our lives.
    Angela, congratulations on the book – what do you hope people get from it/say about it?
    I suppose that everything in it is quite accessible and do-able. There are one or two more complicated dishes in there, but hopefully people will find it very approachable.
    If you had to choose one recipe from the book to represent you, which one would it be and why?
    Something quite simple – maybe the seared steak with rocket (recipe below).
    It's well documented that you put in horrendously long hours while establishing yourself within the Ramsay empire. Is life a little easier these days now that you're your own boss?
    Not really, no. I did put in the hours and still do, but even before I owned Murano, if I wanted time off, I took it. I'm still in the restaurant every day, but that's where I want to be.
    You're the most successful female chef in Britain – do you feel a responsibility to 'bring on' other female chefs?
    If someone comes for a job at the restaurant I go for whoever is the best person for the job and wouldn't hire someone just because they're a woman. Having said that, I think it's good to have a balance in the kitchen: at Murano there are four or five female chefs out of a total of 12 people in the kitchen and that's a good balance.
    Which are your favourite restaurants to go to if ever you have an evening off?
    José on Bermondsey High Street – I went there for tapas this weekend and it was great. Also Zucca, again on Bermondsey High Street, is great. Then there are the classic places – J. Sheekey, St John Bread & Wine – there are so many great places – you do well to get a bad meal in London these days.

    What are your go-to quick and easy suppers if it's just you at home?
    Just something really simple like a bit of roast chicken and some salad.

    What's the best meal you've ever eaten and where did you eat it?
    Jean Georges in New York, that was amazing. I was also at Noma recently and that was brilliant. Then there are meals I've had at the local trattoria with family and friends – it's not always about the food being fancy, it's often about who you're with.
    Do you enjoy your tv work or would you prefer to spend the day in the kitchen?
    I don't particularly want to be on tv all the time, I don't crave that, but it's good to have a balance. And it definitely helps in terms of bookings!
    If you had to eat the same meal every day for the rest of your life, what would it be?
    Roast chicken and potatoes – I love chicken. It would have to be a nice chicken though, not a battery one. I wouldn't have pudding, I'd have cheese.
    If you weren't a successful chef what other job might you be doing?
    I'd love to be a forensic investigator – I think what they do is amazing; being able to look at a crime scene and tell how and when someone was murdered – I think that's incredible.
    Angela's new book, A Taste Of Home: 200 Quick and Easy Recipes by Angela Hartnett, from which the following recipe is taken, is published by Ebury Press and is out now, priced £25.

    By Helen Costello, Jul 31, 2011
    AOL My Daily

    Thursday, August 25, 2011

    Books stolen by Nazis to be returned

    Berlin library to return books confiscated from Germany's Social Democrats during the Third Reich, among them an edition of The Communist Manifesto thought to belong to Friedrich Engels

    Books stolen by Nazis to be returnedBerlin library to return books confiscated from Germany's Social Democrats during the Third Reich, among them an edition of The Communist Manifesto thought to belong to Friedrich Engels


    German socialist Friedrich Engels. Photograph: Time & Life Pictures/Getty Image

    Almost 70 books stolen from the Social Democratic party by the Nazi regime will be returned in a ceremony at the end of August, Berlin's Central and Regional Library has announced.
    The books, which include an 1883 English edition of The Communist Manifesto thought to come from the library of Friedrich Engels, who wrote the original with Marx, were confiscated by the Nazi party. The Social Democrats, Germany's oldest political party, was outlawed after the Nazis came to power in 1933.

    The return of the books on 31 August is part of a larger project by the Berlin library to rehome Nazi "loot". In April, it gave 10 books and three journal volumes back to the Jewish Community of Berlin.

    "We have a project searching for books in our library which were stolen in the Drittes Reich by the Nazis from Jews or institutions such as the Social Democratic party," said Dr Annette Gerlach from the Berlin library. "We have a very great project to look for the traces in the books. We have to look into 200,000 books."

    Alison Flood guardian.co.uk

    Stephen King launches leftwing radio show


    Author's new talkshow, hosted by the Green party's Pat LaMarche, aims to stall right's domination of airwaves and make people 'a little bit angry'

    Stephen King is hoping to "make some people a little bit angry" with a new, left-leaning morning talk show which will offer a counterbalance to the proliferation of conservative American radio hosts.

    "We're a little to the left, but we're right," the bestselling horror author said at a rare press conference announcing the new show. To be hosted by Pat LaMarche, a Green party vice-presidential candidate in 2004, and former reporter Don Cookson, The Pulse Morning Show will air on the King-owned radio stations WZON 103.1 FM and 620 AM from 12 September on weekday mornings and online at zoneradio.com.

    "We're going to try to be informative. We're going to be provocative. We're going to be amusing, and we're going to try to be a positive community force," King told reporters at the press conference, according to local paper the Bangor Daily News.

    LaMarche said the show would be targeting politicians who bully Maine residents – in particular those struggling with the welfare system. "There's an awful lot of bullying going on out there right now [and] nothing is more fun than standing up to a bully," she said. "We want you to laugh all the time because if you don't, you'll cry."

    "We'd like to burn some feet once in a while – make some people a little bit angry," King added. "There are some people who deserve to be taken to the woodshed from time to time."

    Stephen King launches leftwing radio showAuthor's new talkshow, hosted by the Green party's Pat LaMarche, aims to stall right's domination of airwaves and make people 'a little bit angry'
    Alison Flood guardian.co.uk

    Tuesday, August 23, 2011

    Author of the Month - Clive Cussler


    This months Author of the Month is Clive Cussler on our Beck Valley Books website.
    

    New Section on Website



    You can now find all our Beck Valley Books guides, facts and fun sections all in one place on our website, take a look 

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    Bond, Michael Paddingtons Cookery Book

    Cornwell, Bernard Death of Kings

    Cussler, Clive The Race

    Diffenbaugh, Vanessa The Language of Flowers - A Miscellany

    Emden, Richard van The Quick and the Dead - Fallen Soldiers and Their Families in the Great War

    Huntford, Roland Race for the South Pole - The Expedition Diaries of Scott and Amundsen

    Ross, Jonathan Turf

    Sandford, Christopher Houdini and Conan Doyle

    Smith, Wilbur Those in Peril

    Tolkien, J R R The Art of the Hobbit

    Tolkien, J R R The Pocket Hobbit - 75th Anniversary Edition



    Monday, August 22, 2011

    Author Lee Child wins top crime award


    Author Lee Child, who is behind the best-selling Jack Reacher series, has won the novel of the year award at the Harrogate Crime Writing Festival.


    Child has sold 50 million books around the world and Tom Cruise is to play Reacher in a major Hollywood film.

    Speaking after the ceremony, he hit out at "snobbery" surrounding crime novels.

    "The literary writers are seeing lots of people reading us and relatively few people reading them, and they're cross about it," Child told BBC News.

    Real name Jim Grant, he has written 16 books about the former military policeman who roams the US, combating crime rings and conspiracies.

    The author, who started writing after being fired from his job as a presentation director at Granada Television in 1995, recently became the first British author to sell a million e-books for Amazon's Kindle reading device.

    His book 61 Hours won the Theakstons Old Peculier Crime Novel of the Year Award on the opening night of the festival on Thursday.

    It beat other shortlisted entries by Mark Billingham, SJ Bolton, Stuart MacBride, William Ryan and Andrew Taylor.

    The veteran author PD James, 90, was at the event to accept an outstanding contribution accolade.

    Baroness James, who wrote the Adam Dalgliesh detective novels, told the nominees: "You won't win the Booker [Prize] I'm afraid. But don't worry about that. "But you will be bringing entertainment and relief from the problems of the world to millions of people."

    Earlier this year, author Peter James, chairman of the Crime Writers' Association, said a Booker judge told him "hell would freeze over before a popular crime writer wins the Booker Prize".

    Asked whether crime fiction was subjected to snobbery from the literary establishment, Lee Child said: "There definitely is. Not among the mass of the readers, obviously, because they're reading us and not them."

    Child said he was "thrilled" that Tom Cruise would be taking the role of Jack Reacher in the film One Shot, which starts shooting in September.

    Some fans have complained that Cruise, who is 5ft 7in (170cm) tall, is not the right person to play the 6ft 5in (195cm) Reacher.

    "It's completely impossible to literally transfer the page to the screen," Child said. "Ironically, to capture the feel of a book on the screen, you have to change almost everything about it.

    "People think we should have had an actor that looks more like Reacher is described in the books.

    "First of all there aren't any such actors, so it's much more a question of which actor has the talent and screen presence to create what Reacher does on the screen, and that really comes down to finding the actor with the most talent."

    Last month, Child became the fifth author to pass a million sales in the Amazon Kindle store.

    He said he did have concerns that the rise of electronic alternatives to paper books could cut off an important outlet for new authors.

    "This business is absolutely populated by a whole bunch of wonderful people - booksellers, bookstore owners - who are going to suffer, and that's very sad," he said.

    "These people are very passionate and they created the new authors. All the writers at the festival got our start because a small handful of brick-and-mortar retailers got passionate about our books, talked to their customers face-to-face and spread the word.

    "And it is uncertain how that mechanism going to be replicated in the future."

    The festival continues until Sunday and includes appearances from authors including Martina Cole, David Baldacci, Linwood Barclay and Dennis Lehane.

    It is taking place at the Old Swan Hotel, where Agatha Christie was found after going missing for 11 days in 1926.

    From BBC News

    Sunday, August 21, 2011

    Christopher Robin's Devon bookshop to close


    The bookshop set up by the real Christopher Robin to escape a family feud and hide from the unwanted fame of his father's Winnie the Pooh stories is to close.
    It was 60 years ago that Christopher Robin Milne left London for Dartmouth on the south coast of Devon to open the Harbour Bookshop, seeking refuge from a faltering writing career, bitterness at his father and his mother's disapproval at his choice of wife.

    But while the store succeeded in allowing Milne to begin a new life, its current owners, Rowland and Caroline Abram, are now being forced to close it to make their own escape – both from rising rent and falling sales.

    The sad end for the bookshop mirrors the emotions that led to its founding. Though his childhood as the son of author AA Milne had initially been happy, Christopher Robin Milne came to be teased and bullied for his innocent portrayal in his father's stories, and grew angry at newspaper articles about him.

    Those frustrations eventually boiled over in his late twenties – later leading him to write he sometimes felt his dad "had got to where he was by climbing upon my infant shoulders, that he had filched from me my good name and had left me with nothing but the empty fame of being his son".

    From The Independent

    Thursday, August 18, 2011

    Rare books added today to www.beckvalleybooks.co.uk

    Rare books added today to http://www.beckvalleybooks.co.uk/

    Brewer, Ron Donkey Man


    Ewing, Juliana Horatta The Story of a Short Life

    Head, Victor A Triumph of Hope - The Story of the National Farmers Union Mutual Insurance Society Limited

    La Photolith Photographies En Couleurs - Exposition Internationale Des Arts Et Des Techniques Appliques A La Vie Moderne Paris 1937 - Album Officiel

    Read, Herbert English Prose Style

    Service, Robert W Songs of a Sourdough

    Steedman, C M The Childs Life of Jesus

    Friday, August 12, 2011

    Books added today to www.beckvalleybooks.co.uk


    Books added today to http://www.beckvalleybooks.co.uk/

    Bennett, John The Cromwell Street Murders - The Detectives Story

    Borrows, Bill The Hurricane - The Turbulent Life and Times of Alex Higgins

    Brown, Dee Bury My Heart At Wounded Knee

    Carr, Alan Look Who It Is ! Alan Carr - My Story

    Cussler, Clive Blue Gold

    Cussler, Clive Flood Tide

    Gallagher, Bryan Barefoot in Mullyneeny - A Boys Journey Towards Belonging - LIMITED EDITION

    Graimes, Nicola The Gluten Wheat and Dairy Free Cookbook

    Matar, Hisham In The Country Of Men

    Swayze, Patrick Patrick Swayze and Lisa Niemi - The Time of My Life - The Autobiography

    Tolkien, J R R The Children of Hurin

    Turner, Brian A Yorkshire Lad - My Life with Recipes

    West, Nigel MI5

    Wright, Clarissa Dickson Spilling The Beans

    

    Wednesday, August 10, 2011

    REAL BOOKS V ELECTRONIC VERSIONS

    REAL BOOKS V ELECTRONIC VERSIONS
    Why REAL BOOKS should be kept alive!!
    HEAD AND HEART REASONS


    HEAD


    To stop the world turning into electronic robots

    Not having to look at computer screens day and night, less straining on eyes

    Electronic versions are hard and cold

    No power needed to read real books

    Ability to read real books anywhere - bath, beach, around children.....

    If you drop and damage an electronic version you loose everything

    Being able to loan real books to friends without the worrying about damage

    More electronic waste when new upgrades come out which in turn means more damaging components to the land

    The cost of electronic versions

    Fashionable accessories now available for real books

    To stop real books becoming a distant memory from the past



    HEART


    The sheer beauty of full bookshelves or bookcases in rooms

    Beautiful book cover designs and being proud of owning something so desirable

    The unique history old books hold themselves

    The touch, the feel, the smell - Lets face it - Sat curled up in front of the fire with a good computerised screen - just doesnt have the same ring to it, does it?

    There’s nothing so real as to turn a page with your fingers

    Conversations created when you notice books on your friends shelves that you have also read

    The joy of looking round summer fetes, carboots for that special book

    The mission of finding really rare books and succeeding, the feeling is tremendous

    The hobby as a book collector



    TWO QUOTES THAT SAY IT ALL........


    A room without books, is like a heart without a soul.

    Books are the quietestand most constant of friends; they are the most accessible and wisest ofcounsellors, and the most patient of teachers. ~Charles W. Eliot

    

    Books added today to www.beckvalleybooks.co.uk


    Brooks, David The Story of Richmond 1946

    Carr, Aurdrey Climbing The Stairs - Growing up in Richmond, North Yorks

    Chapman, Vera Around Northallerton - The Old Photographs Series

    Collard, George A Yorkshire Christmas

    Forster, Bill Ripon Cathedral - Its History and Architecture - Signed Copy

    Ghent, Julia Remembering Richmond

    Joy, David The Dalesman - A Celebration of 50 years

    Mee, Arthur Yorkshire North Riding - The Kings England

    Megginson, Irene A Little Less Mud - More reminiscences of a Yorkshire Farmwife

    Megginson, Irene A Little Less Mud - More reminiscences of a Yorkshire Farmwife

    North Yorkshire Federations of Womens Institute The North Yorkshire Village Book

    North Yorkshire Federations of Womens Institutes North Yorkshire - Within Living Memory

    Riordan, Michael From Middle Ages to Millennium - Northallerton Grammar School and College 1322 - 2000

    Riordan, Michael Northallerton - A Second Selection - Britain in Old Photographs

    Riordan, Michael Northallerton - Britain in Old Photographs

    Riordan, Michael Northallerton - The Photographic Collection

    Sugden, Marian Yorkshire Moors and Dales

    

    Thursday, August 4, 2011

    Rare books added today to www.beckvalleybooks.co.uk


    Rare books added today to http://www.beckvalleybooks.co.uk/

    Ashford, Daisy The Young Visitors or Mr Salteenasplan

    Gordon, W J Nuttalls Standard Dictionary of the English Language

    Grierson, H J C The Poems of John Donne

    Martin, Henry R Rowdy Rhymes - Gathered from many gay minstrels

    Smith, Rev James The Believers Daily Remembrancer or Pastors Evening Visit

    Various Farmer and Stock Breeder Grassland Handbook - The Standard Work on Profitable Grass

    Wynne, Gladys Architecture Shown To The Children
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