BOOKS OF LOCAL INTEREST NEW INTO STOCK
See also a list of DVDs and videos
of local interest (click here)
* = local
author
The Book Case supplies information about all new titles which
have a connection with Calderdale to Calderdale Libraries Service. The Book
Case welcomes information about any title which is written by any author with a
connection with Calderdale either as a resident or as a past resident and any
title which has any reference to Calderdale. Please email the details to
bookcase@btinternet.com.
May 2010
Things I Wish I'd Known - Linda Green,* £6.99 A
new novel from the successful Todmorden-based author. Faced with the stark
contrast between the glamorous dreams of her fifteen-year-old self and the
present, Claire Cooper is forced to make some life-changing decisions. What
happened to the handsome footballer husband, the high-powered law job and the
beautiful Georgian townhouse she had her heart set on all those years ago?
March 2010
Savage Gods, Silver Ghosts: In
the Wild with Ted Hughes - Ehor Boyanowsky (c.£18.50)
Ehor Boyanowsky became friends with Ted
Hughes through their shared passion for fishing, and this is a portrait of Ted
Hughes the outdoorsman via their joint fishing expeditions in British Columbia.
Available now in Canada, but not in the US or here till 1st March
apparently.
January 2010
Falling through Clouds - Anna
Chilvers* (£7.99)
From a Hebden Bridge author, the story of a
young man plagued with nightmares after being held hostage in Iraq and his
relationship with 22-year-old student Kat as they summer in Cornwall. "Anna's
prose is razor sharp, her dialogue pitch perfect. This, her fine first novel,
weaves a tale that moves effortlessly through light and darkness. It's a
serious page turner, moving, witty and thoroughly engrossing." - Lesley
Glaister.
December 2009
A Calder Valley Christmas - DVD by Nick Wilding*
(£12.99) From well-known local film-maker Nick Wilding, a classic
mixture of archive film (including the snow of 1947), reminiscences, hilarious
anecdotes and old traditions, on DVD. Culminates in Colden School children
singing "Christmas in Hebden Bridge". To be launched at Hebden Bridge Picture
House, 3rd December, 7.45 for 8.15pm
November 2009
Letters of Ted
Hughes, ed. Christopher Reid (£14.99)
At the outset of his career Ted Hughes
described letter writing as 'excellent training for conversation with the
world', and he was to become a prolific master of this art which combines
writing and talking. This selection begins when Hughes was seventeen, and
documents the course of a life at once resolutely private but intensely attuned
to other lives (including both adults and children): a life pared down to
essentials and yet eventful, peripatetic, at times publicly controversial. Now
in paperback at 784 pages.
Remains: The Elmet Suite by John Reeman & the Ted
Hughes Suite by Lawrence Killian, performed by the Todmorden Orchestra
(CD: £8.00). The Elmet Suite is inspired by five Ted
Hughes poems ("Remains of Elmet", "Football at Slack", "In April", "The Weasels
We Smoked Out of the Bank" and "There Come Days to the Hills". The Ted
Hughes Suite is a descriptive piece celebrating the poets life: "His
Youth", "Affairs of the Heart", "The Poet Laureate". Attractively
presented CD commissioned by the Elmet Trust, with explanatory notes.
John Hodgson's Textile Manufacture in Keighley: a facsimile
reprint (£19.95) This detailed account of the contemporary
textile industry in and around Keighley in 1879 is reissued in a pocket chunky
hardback, with a new introduction and index by industrial historians Gill
Cookson and George Ingle, with a selection of old photos.
Happy Christmas Hammy the Wonder Hamster - Poppy Harris,*
£4.99 From a Mytholmroyd-based author, the second in a charming
series from Puffin about an unusually brilliant hamster.
The Inshallah Paper - Andrew Trimbee,* £15.00 A
Halifax-born author who has worked on the Halifax Courier, Northern Echo, Daily
Mail, Times, Daily Telegraph and East African Standard tells how he set up the
first English-language newspaper in Bahrain. The pages of this extraordinary
odyssey are crowded with everything from sex-mad expatriates, a ghost and a
mermaid to an encounter with the veteran foreign correspondent who felled Max
Schmeling. The Bahrainis themselves, gentle and generous, provide the backdrop
for this revealing insight into a way of life largely gone, from the coffee
ritual at the palace to crafts of yesteryear.
The Shepherd Lord - George Peter Algar, £9.99
Historical novel set in Yorkshire, about Henry Clifford, the young
aristocrat brought up in Skipton Castle, who was raised as a simple shepherd
during the Wars of the Roses. The same story is told in Phyllis Bentleys
"Sheep May Safely Graze" for children, currently out of print.
A Useful Spelling Handbook For Adults - Catherine Taylor,*
£5.99 From the Norland-based Dyslexia Coordinator at Calderdale
College, a useful little book aimed at adults who struggle with spelling. She's
also the author of "A Useful Dyslexia Handbook for Adults".
Precious Moments by Susie Field,* £5.95 A third
book of short stories from ex-Brighouse Girls'Grammar School pupil Susie Field,
who's now the vice-president of Huddersfield Authors' Circle.
The Law Family of Todmorden and the Upper Calder Valley,
16th-20th centuries by Frank T Haylett, £20 258-page A4 book
tracing the Law family from the early 1500s on Langfield up to the present day,
with the lives of about 2500 people associated with the Law family. There's an
accompanying family tree in a separate A4 booklet (included in price).
October 2009
The Celtic Revolution: in search of 2000
forgotten years that changed our World - Simon Young*
(£14.99)
Shows how the Celtic Empire ruled the world
from Spain to Egypt for two thousand years in a way that drew the blue print
for today's Europe. The author grew up in Hebden Bridge so it gets a mention,
as does Mankinholes.
Conquest: The English Kingdom of France 1417-1450
- Juliet Barker*
(£20.00)
Author of the best-selling AGINCOURT,
Juliet Barker now tells the story of the dramatic years when England ruled
France at the point of a sword. Henry V's second invasion of France in 1417
launched a campaign that would put the crown of France on an English head. Only
the miraculous appearance of a visionary peasant girl - Joan of Arc - would
halt the English advance. Yet despite her victories, her influence was
short-lived: Henry VI had his coronation in Paris six months after her death
and his kingdom endured for another twenty years. When he came of age he was
not the leader his father had been. It was the dauphin, whom Joan had crowned
Charles VII, who would finally drive the English out of France.
Life Class - Glyn Hughes*
(£12.50)
From the prize-winning local author, a
5,000 line autobiographical poem covering his beginnings as a worshipper of
nature, later an organic gardener (before this was fashionable), living in
cottages on the Pennines, and also some years in Greece. It covers his
rural working-class roots and three marriages. The result is a
magnificent poem by a major poet, one that is notable for its keen attention to
the natural world and accounts and circumstances of a life lived to the
full.
Shirley Craven and Hull Traders: Revolutionary
Fabrics and Furniture 1957-1980 by Lesley Jackson* (£20 at The
Book Case)
Shirley Craven was the most gifted textile
designer of her generation, specialising in big bold abstracts, and this big
colourful book celebrates her remarkable achievements at Hull Traders, the
Trawden-based textile company. The accompanying exhibition will be touring the
country until January 2010, and will be coming to the Bankfield Museum in
Halifax. Lesley Jackson is a writer, curator and design historian based in
Hebden Bridge.
Jimmy Mac, Prince of Inside Forwards - Dave
Thomas (£17.95)
The story of Burnley and Northern Ireland
icon Jimmy McIlroy. Profusely illustrated book telling th story of this "magic"
footballer.
From Where I Was
Standing : A Liverpool Supporter's View of the Heysel Stadium Tragedy - Chris
Rowland (£9.99)
An eyewitness account and
analysis of the Heysel Stadium disaster of May 1985 as the 25th anniversary
year approaches. The author lives in Mytholmroyd/Hebden Bridge.
Deadly Focus -
Bob and Carol Bridgestock* (£10.99)
From a retired Calderdale detective and his
wife, an exciting first novel about the abduction of a young girl and the hunt
for a serial killer, set in "Harrowfield" ("definitely Yorkshire but could be
Halifax or Huddersfield") and investigating officer Jack Dylan.
A Dales High Way
companion - Tony and Chris Grogan (£9.99)
A 90 mile walk across the glorious high
country of the Yorkshire Dales, from Saltaire to Appleby - explore its rich
history, geology, wildlife and culture, and return with a breathtaking train
ride along England's most beautiful railway. Lots of colour photographs.
Austin Mitchell's
Grand Book of Yorkshire Humour (£7.99)
Hundreds of "guaranteed fully organic"
Yorkshire jokes and sayings from the Sowerby-based popular politician.
Owt, Nowt &
Summat: a toast to all Tykes – Len Markham (£6.99)
Following Ee Up Lad!, a further romp
through the lush gardens of Yorkshire dialect and character.
Almost a Lifetime - Vikki Egerton*
(£9.99)
Vikki Egerton is based in Luddenden, and
this is her autobiography, covering her Royal Artillery service in the war, and
her work as a librarian, teacher and author. She is now in her 90s.
Landscape Photographer of the Year, Collection 03
(£25.00)
A big beautiful book of colour photos,
including Nigel Hillier's stunning view of Hebden Bridge in winter, which was
one of the winners.
Cracking On: poems on ageing by older women - ed.
Joy Howard (£10.00)
This new anthology explores all aspects of
ageing, from losing parents to confronting the inevitability of our own deaths.
Here are poets facing up to life, with a recognition of its transience,
absurdities, triumphs and disasters, in the spirit of taking it on the chin.
Keighley-based editor, whose previous work includes "A Twist of Malice" and
"Exit Moonshine".
September 2009
Timmy the
Tug - Ted Hughes* & Jim Downer (£12.95)
A children's poem lost for over fifty
years. Written in the mid-1950s to accompany his friend Jim Downer's story
about Timmy the Tug, the poem recounts Timmy's escape from his moorings and
subsequent adventures on the high seas.
Summat
A'Nowt - Steve Murty * (£9.95)
In this fascinating and personal insight,
Steve Murty looks at the history of the Calder Valley and the
surrounding area over the centuries covering, amongst many other
topics, hand-loom weaving, child labour and
domestic fashions. Born and brought up in the Township of Stubb,
Mytholmroyd, he focuses on the development of this ancient hamlet,
its people and properties, within the context of the events that took
place around the valleys.
Gone Walkabout- Anna
Carlisle, new ed. (£6.95) The bestselling book of
local walks now out in a substantially rewritten and updated edition, with new
maps!
Darwin in Ilkley - Mike Dixon;
Gregory Radick (£12.99) In 1859 Charles Darwin
“took the water cure” in Ilkley and wrote to his friend T. H.
Huxley 'I am here hydropathising and coming to life again after having finished
my accursed book'. Over the next weeks, in between fresh-air walks, cold-water
baths, and time with his family, he began to prepare for the publication of
"On the Origin of Species".
John Kettley's Extreme
Weather (£17.00) Todmorden-born weatherman John
Kettley looks back on many varieties of extreme weather ranging from the
atrocious winter of 1963 through to massive floods and scorching summers. His
personal involvement with the 1987 hurricane fiasco features
extensively.
Building with Straw Bales: A
Practical Guide for the UK and Ireland - Barbara Jones, 2r.e.
(£12.95) From the Todmorden-based straw bale pioneer, a fully
revised and updated edition of this practical book. Straw bale building is a
radically different approach to the process of building.
Albert, the Lion
and the Monkey by Chris Aspin (£4.99)
In Chris Aspin's latest book of quirky
verse and prose, Albert finally gets the better of the lion, Simple Simon
dispenses wisdom, and other strange happenings abound! Published by Royd Press
at The Book Case.
Sing
Shenandoah for Me - John Sugden (£9.95)
The author, a prize-winning poet, was
originally from Huddersfield and this nicely produced novel is set in 1960s
West Yorkshire. As long as his patients don't trouble him Jack has a secure
future as a psychiatric nurse. When his reputation as a ladies' man brings him
and Linda together, how much better could life get?
Angel Try - Alice
Bell (£9.99)
From a Mytholmroyd author, a novel that's
part family history saga, part ghost story, telling the tale of a West
Yorkshire clan pulling itself up by its bootstraps. Set in the Calder and Aire
Valleys and beginning before the Industrial Revolution, when it was a treat to
afford treacle for your porridge!
August 2009
Albert's
Ark - Frederick A Crampton,* £11.99
From a Holywell Green author, a first novel
set in 2014 - a mercenary and his wife convert a redundant oil tanker into a
small-holding and run it with a group of like-minded people to get away from
the corruption of modern-day living.
A Place
Like This - Jill Robinson,* £6.95
The long-awaited third book of the
popular Berringden Brow series, set not too far from Hebden Bridge. Heroine
Jess is helping to run a neighbourhood advice centre, where the clients
include asylum-seekers, a trafficked young woman, a heart-broken husband, and a
man with evil spirits in his house. Jess tries valiantly to help everyone,
while contending with the erratic life-style of her son, who has embraced
freevarianism and plastered Hebden Bridge with graffiti. Friends also need
her support - but who will help Jess? Meanwhile, why is widowed Norah living in
a dog kennel, who has stolen the aspidistra, and will Jess's colleague Nick
really be sent to prison for conspiring to make a false passport?
Books and CDs from Dr Eden P Fazel*
Dr Eden Fazel, who is
based in Hebden Bridge, is the founder of Survive and Thrive and firmly
believes in DIY coaching, psychology and therapy: these books are essential and
exciting reading for anyone who wants to take their physical and emotional
health into their own hands. See
http://www.surviveandthrivecoach.org.uk/
Books
Anger: A Very Healthy
Emotion - £6.99 Anxiety: A Very Vital Emotion - £5.99 DIY
Coaching: Drawing Your Life Plan - £6.99 Emotional Wisdom:
Understanding Natural Emotions - £8.99
Free Emotional Expression:
The Art of Openness - £3.99 Growing From Weakness To Strength -
£6.99 Growing Out Of Guilt - £4.99 Growing Out Of The Blues
- £3.99 Healing Emotional Injuries - £3.99
Audiobooks Anger: A Very Healthy Emotion -
£14.99 (3 CDs) Anxiety: A Very Vital Emotion - £11.99 (2
CDs) DIY Coaching: Drawing Your Life Plan - £12.99 (2 CDs) DIY
Psychology: Taking Charge Of Your Emotional Health - £14.99 (3 CDs)
Emotional Wisdom: Understanding Natural Emotions - £8.99 (1 CD) Free
Emotional Expression: The Art Of Openness - £8.99 (1 CD) Growing From
Past Hurt Towards Future Harmony - £14.99 (3 CDs) Growing From
Weakness To Strength - £9.99 (1 CD) Growing Out Of Guilt -
£8.99 (1 CD) Growing Out Of The Blues - £8.99 (1 CD)
Growing Out Of The System - £8.99 (1 CD) Making Love Bigger Than
Fear: Growing Healthy Relationships - £11.99 (2 CDs) The Art Of
Jumping The Leaps Right - £11.99 (2 CDs)
New
in from Amberley Publishing (Alan Sutton reborn):
Haworth through Time - Steven Wood and Ian
Palmer, £12.99
Nicely presented
then-and-now photographs with brief information. It's hoped there'll be a
Hebden Bridge equivalent.
By Hazel Wheeler, £12.99 each
The Milliner's Apprentice:
Girlhood in Edwardian Yorkshire
Living on Tick: Tales from a
Huddersfiield Corner Shop between the Wars
The Diary of a Young Wife,
1953
From the author of Half
a Pound of Tuppeny Rice, three more illustrated books on life in Deighton
and Huddersfield in times past.
Yorkshire Murders and Misdemeanours - Stephen
Wade, £12.99
Major crimes in Yorkshire
alphabetically presented, from the Middle Ages to 1961. Stephen Wade recently
took part in a Hebden Bridge Library authors' event.
The
Burnley FC Miscellany - David Wiseman , £12.99
Burnley Football Club come
from the smallest town ever to win League Division One and the FA Cup. But this
book is mainly about Burnley 'off the record'. Here you can read some of the
odd, quaint and quirky things that have been part of the past 125 years of
Clarets history.
July 2009
The
Selfish Genius: How Richard Dawkins Rewrote Darwin's Legacy - Fern
Elsdon-Baker,* £8.99
Dawkins has used his position to publicly
attack 'unreason', in the form of organised religion, pseudo-science, or new
age folly. This polarised representation of science is potentially fuelling the
feud between Darwinism and Creationism. Hebden Bridge-based author Fern
Elsdon-Baker, a rational pro-science atheist and specialist in the history and
communication of evolutionary theory, finds Dawkins' influence distinctly
worrying. She argues that Dawkins is publicly misrepresenting science as a
whole and asks - is Dawkins really acting to popularise science or to
popularise Richard Dawkins?
Yelp! - Liz
Almond,* £9.99
From the Hebden Bridge-based poet, a
collection of poems about regeneration, recuperation, reclamation and retreat,
in which the poet reflects on visits, both literal and virtual, to remote parts
of Greece, Andalucia and Southern India. Rituals of travel are at the heart of
Liz Almond's work; and travel, in her poems, can start anywhere: through a
computer screen offering access to a satellite view of continents, to a pencil
hovering like a bee at the start of a poem about a zoo for husbands. Departures
and arrivals, free exchanges of words at the border controls of language - all
these feed into poems that embody a rich and sensual sense of cultural
difference, an understanding of the scale and fragility of our planet.
Yorkshire
Dales Textile Mills - George Ingle, £9.99
It's mostly forgotten
these days that there was a thriving textile industry in the Yorkshire Dales
from the late 18th century onwards. George Ingle, the author of "Yorkshire
Cotton", has located and describes over seventy textile mills in the Dales,
with many illustrations. George gave a talk to Hebden Bridge Local History
Society on the mills of the Dales earlier this year. Published by Royd Press at
The Book Case. NOW IN STOCK.
June 2009
Hardcastle Crags,
Past and Present - Ray Riches* and Peter Thornton*: DVD, £12.99
This welcome new DVD about the local beauty
spot was launched at 2pm at the Little Theatre on 6th June. NOW IN STOCK AT THE
BOOK CASE!
Last Mad Surge of
Youth - Mark Hodkinson, £8.99
From the locally-based national sports
writer, a novel about a washed-up alcoholic rock star who after a string of
humiliating public incidents summons an old friend to ghost write his
autobiography. Together they reflect on fame, addiction, girls and everything
that ever went wrong. Published by Pomona of Hebden Bridge. Now in stock.
Mary Towneley
Loop Guide, 2e
Full colour photos and relevant local
information within this comprehensive pocket sized book of the Loop ensure it
is an appropriate guide for horse riders, cyclists and walkers alike. Second
edition has a couple of minor alterations.
They're All
Foreigners Abroad! - Stuart Wright,* £7.99
From an ex-Halifax author, now resident in
Spain, a light-hearted inventory of Brits on holiday abroad. Let's be honest,
we Brits are not difficult to take the mickey out of whilst on our hard-earned
holidays!
Landscapes in
Watercolour - Paul Talbot-Greaves,* £7.99
From the well-known local painter and
writer, the latest of his instruction books on watercolour painting. This
practical and inspirational guide, in a handy sketchbook format, is aimed at
the practised beginner. By working with just a few materials and focusing on
the key techniques it is possible to achieve successful, realistic landscape
paintings in no more than half an hour. And for those artists who already have
a little painting experience, learning to work more quickly enables them to
free up their style and paint more spontaneously.
Stone Tree -
Gyrthir Eliasson, trans. Victoria Cribb, £7.95
Published by Mytholmroyd publishers Comma
Press, and translated from the Icelandic, a collection of stories set on the
shores or in the lava fields and mountains of Iceland, each one a study in
self-exile.
The following books on ghostly Halifax are
available direct from GM Productions in Halifax at
http://www.gmproductions.tv/. Prices include postage. Most of the books are
spiral-bound A4.
Union Cross: History & Times of the Inn
(£6.00) Dark secrets of the past at the Union Cross Inn, Halifax
Disturbing Halifax (£8.00) There is so
much history in Halifax that people do not know about.
A house with a past - Boothtown House
(£6.00) A 1600s house with a history, renovated from being derelict
to present day modernisation.
Haunted & Alternative Halifax
(£8.00) Welcome to haunted Halifax in West Yorkshire, where so many
buildings have come and gone over the years, many of them haunted.
Kershaw House (£7.00) I have had the
pleasure of filming here for many years, and finding out the history of this
Elizabethan inn.
Haunted Halifax (£8.00) This book
specialises in the haunted side of Halifax.
Portman and Pickles, Halifax (£7.00)
The Old Silent Inn & its Infamous Past
(£8.00) The story & history of the coaching inn where
Bonnie Prince Charlie is said to have stayed, with reports of ghost
investigations.
May 2009
All Points North - Simon
Armitage, £8.99
A welcome return (revised and expanded) for
this account of growing up in the north of England.
Ted Hughes (Faber
80th Anniversary Edition) - poems selected by Simon Armitage ,
£8.00
Beautiful gift hardback edition with
striking hawk print cover.
The
Adventures of Molly - Mary Nevins*, £9.50
From a Halifax author, a
children's book aimed at 4-7-year-olds, about a little girl who feeds a robin
through the cold winter and learns the importance of nature.
Yorkshire Geology -
Paul Ensom, £22.50
A big colour illustrated hardback
account of the 540 million years of Yorkshire's geological past.
Footpaths for Fitness:
West Yorkshire - Peter Young, £7.99
20 graded
circular routes, ranging from just over a mile to 8 miles in length, and
including the Hebden bridge area.
The Final Interview:
Studs Terkel - Peter Devine*, £5.00
Hebden
Bridge-based Peter Devine interviewed the legendary historian and broadcaster
in 2005. Studs Terkel died last autumn at the age of 96.
Alice Longstaff
historical postcards, 35p ea.
We're now stocking postcards
of some of Alice Longstaff's extraordinary collection of historical photographs
of the area.
Not Ready Yet! written
and illustrated by Tamsin Walker*, £5.99
Cheerful
picture book with a rhyming story about a little boy who has an exciting time
going camping with his mum and her partner Fran - but he's always too busy
doing something to do the next thing! Hebden Bridge-based author and
illustrator.
Cool Canals - Slow
Getaways and Different Days, £14.99
Different, eco
and budget-conscious things to do on the inland waterways, including a chapter
on Hebden Bridge.
April 2009
Recital - An Almanac - John
Siddique*, £12.99
"On love, loss and hope, these poems are
imbued with a beautiful, tender melancholia." Forthcoming from SALT - click
here for more details. John
Siddique was Poet in Residence for Blackpool in 2008, and this year will be Los
Angeles Writer in Residence.
Tender -
Mark Illis *, £8.99
A new novel from Hebden
Bridge author Mark Illis, telling the story of an ordinary family trying to
cope with life, and each other, revisiting the family on key occasions over
thirty years and seeing things from different points of view.
We're hoping to
have a joint launch of "Recital" and "Tender". Details to follow.
The Richard
Matthewman Stories - Ian McMillan and Martyn Wiley, £8.99
From Hebden Bridge publishers Pomona, the
stories of a Yorkshire miner who has moved south. The stories were originally
broadcast as a series on Radio 4 and a new instalment has been written
specially for the book. Ian McMillan is well known as a broadcaster and
performer.
We'll Trace the Rainbow - Jean Brown,
£17.00
From the author of "We'll see the Cuckoo".
Jean Brown likens her life to the Pennine hillside on which the Brown family
has lived for forty years. Their sixteenth-century farmhouse was bought in
1929, rescued from ruin and finally covenanted to The National Trust in
1987. It tells the story of Jean Brown's experiences with children on holiday
in the Hebrides.
We'll Blow
with the Wind - Jean Brown, £17.00
More about the Pennine hill farm, Currer
Laithe.
Birdwatching Walks in the Yorkshire Dales - Brendan Threlfall,
£7.95
Well designed walks is set in gorgeous
countryside where there is also every chance of seeing some of the birds which
abound in the area. Both novice and experienced birders can enjoy the dippers
at Aysgarth, or great spotted woodpeckers in Grass Woods, as well as the rarer
black grouse, wood warbler, pied flycatcher and nightjar, to name but a few.
With helpful guide maps, interesting bird and habitat information, travel hints
and a bird reference section.
March 2009
10
Reasons Not to Fall in Love - Linda Green*, £6.99
A novel set in Hebden Bridge, from the
Todmorden-based author of "I Did a Bad Thing". Jo, a local TV news reporter,
returns to work after a lengthy maternity leave, only to find that her new boss
is her ex. Then she meets Dan, an enigmatic man who lives on a canal boat ...
Linda was at The Book Case on Saturday 7th March signing copies of her
book..
City of Lists -
Brigid Rose, £8.99
From a local author, a novel set in a
dystopian future where contemplation is illegal. Big anxious Neeve and
beautiful withdrawn Valentine struggle to shake off their state-imposed
psychological fetters with the help of unrepentant law-breaker Lol. One of the
novel's themes is the threat posed to shallow capitalist society by Eckhart
Tolle's ideas.
The Mixenden
Treasure - John Billingsley*, £6.00
A true tale of magic in 16th-century
Yorkshire from the well-known local historian and folklorist. Stand by for an
exciting tale of treasure, demons, Oberon and a motley crew of priests,
commoners, a "cunning-man" and gentlemen who set out on a nasty February night
to claim the Mixenden Treasure from the demon that was sitting on it!
Exit Moonshine -
Coming Out and Carrying on - Joy Howard, £6.50
From the Keighley-based editor of "Twist of
Malice", ten years in the life of a lesbian-come-lately. Joy will be presenting
three contributing poets from the popular "Twist of Malice" anthology at Hebden
Bridge Library on 28th March, 1.45-2.30pm.
Second Bite - Joy
Howard, Hilary J Murray and Gina Shaw, £3.00
Poems by Older Women - these are from the
West Yorkshire group of Second Light, a national network of older women
poets.
Pearls of
Light - Julie Rose Clark*, £5.95
Words and pictures to enlighten us and
guide us toward the new consciousness of love and light.
Shafted: The
Media, the Miners' Strike and the Aftermath - ed. Granville Williams,
£9.99
From the Campaign for Press and
Broadcasting Freedom, a look back at the miners' strike and in particular at
the media and the miners. Authors include locally-based Peter Lazenby,
President of the Trades Club and Industrial Correspondent of the Yorkshire
Evening Post.
Reichian
Growth Work: melting the blocks to life and love - Nick Totton* & Em
Edmondson, £12.99
Revised and updated edition of this body
psychotherapy classic. Nick Totton has written a number of books on
psychotherapy and lives in Mytholmroyd.
February 2009
An
Artist in the Dales - Keith Melling, £19.50
From landscape painter Keith Melling, a
hardback book of glorious paintings, drawings and wood engravings of scenes of
the Yorkshire Dales and further afield, including the well-known painting of
Heptonstall and Stoodley Pike.
January 2009
Halifax Pubs - Stephen Gee,
£12.99
An illustrated tour of the most interesting pubs,
inns and taverns of Halifax with lots of old photos.
In the Image of
Love - Peter Coles* (£8.00)
To celebrate Peter and Enid Coles' Golden
Wedding in 2008, a collection of poems on wide-ranging subjects including local
people and scenes, illustrated with colour photographs.
Hope Street -
Hebden Bridge WEA members* (£4.75)
First collection of poems from Hebden
Bridge WEA poetry class, meeting at Hope Baptist Church.
Ted Hughes -
Terry Gifford (£14.99)
Clear and detailed discussions of Hughes'
poetry, stories, plays, translations, essays and letters; includes new
biographical information, and previously unpublished archive material,
especially on Hughes' environmentalism; provides a comprehensive account of
Hughes' critical reception, separated into the major themes that have
interested readers and critics; offers useful suggestions for further reading,
and incorporates helpful cross-references between sections of the guide. Part
of the "Routledge Guides to Literature" series.
Shepherdess
- Brian Crowther * (£9.99)
A well-researched tale of life and love set
in the Lakes and the Dales of the 1850s. The author lives in Greetland and is a
retired lecturer with many years of involvement with the Duke of Edinburgh's
Awards and the Scouts; he has owned border collies for forty years. Lots of
info on shepherding!
Ray of Hope
(CD) - Tony Pye* (£10.00)
Guitarist Tony Pye from Northowram recorded
this CD to raise money for the liver research charity Rays of Hope to thank the
Leeds teaching hospitals for his two transplants. Tunes include Andrew Lloyd
Webber and Bond themes.
December 2008
Men at Odds - Guy
Meyler* (£16.99)
From a Hebden Bridge author, eighteen
engaging short stories examining universal themes of the human condition and
the inevitability of human frailty - many of which have less of a twist in the
tale than a barb!
Swanny:
Confessions of a Lower League Legend - Peter Swan and Andrew
Collomosse* (£17.99)
Hebden Bridge sports journalist Andrew
Collomosse has helped the former Burnley, Hull, Leeds and Port Vale defender
tell his story.
Mourning Ring:
Bronte related poems by Ian M Emberson* (£3.00)
From the Todmorden-based poet, a book of
poems relating to the Bronte sisters, their lives and the landscapes which
influenced them.
Cheers! A History
of Hostelries in the Upper Calder Valley - Issy Shannon*
(£6.95)
Lavishly illustrated book about all the
pubs between Colden and Luddenden with photos past and present, fascinating
facts and gory details. Expected in time for Christmas.
Exploring West
Yorkshire's History - Nigel A. Ibbotson (£16.99)
A journey through West Yorkshire that
examines its rich history through contemporary colour photographs. Well-known
historical sites and lesser-known quirky places of interest.
Dementia
Diary - Poems and Prose - John Killick* (£9.95)
From a Hebden Bridge author renowned for his
work with people suffering from dementia a book of poems and prose based on his
experiences with people living with the condition and poems based on
transciptions of their speech.
A
Rough Path near the Holly Tree - Rosemary Stevenson
(£17.50)
A story about the Hollinrakes and related
familes around Todmorden, West Yorkshire, from 1558 to 2008. The related
families are Astin, Haigh, Shackleton, Hartley, Travis, Hackett, Greenwood,
Marshall, Taylor, Kershaw and Lord. Seventeen years' worth of research with
lots of photos and original documentation. (£17.50)
No Nay Never 2 - a Burnley FC
Anthology - Dave Thomas* (£14.99)
More about the fascinating world of Burnley
Football Club ("No Nay Never Vol 1" has sold out!). Todmordeb-born Dave Thomas
has spent years researching key moments in the club's story and its stars. Now
in stock.
Russians
Don't Land Here - Dave Thomas* (£9.99)
Entertainingly commemorates 125 years of
Burnley FC. Includes "Things to do in Burnley when there's no football."
Relief - L E Butler*
(£9.00) Debut novel from an American-born Todmorden
author, a former dancer, telling the story of a young American widow,
who is a painter, and a ballet girl in the Bohemian world of 1912 Venice. The
author will read from the novel at The Pulse Cafe Bar in Water Street,
Todmorden, on Wednesday 21st January at 6pm
D-I-Y Coaching:
drawing your life plan - Dr Eden P Fazel* (£5.99)
Anger: a very healthy emotion - Dr Eden P Fazel* (£3.49)
Growing Out of
the Blues - Dr Eden P
Fazel* (£5.99) Dr Eden
Fazel, who is based in Hebden Bridge, is the founder of Survive and Thrive and
firmly believes in DIY coaching, psychology and therapy: these books are
essential and exciting reading for anyone who wants to take their physical and
emotional health into their own hands. See
www.surviveandthrivecoach.org.uk
November 2008
Some Girls'
Mothers - ed. Anne Caldwell (£8.99)
Do daughters step into their mothers'
shoes? How does this central relationship color women's lives? The tales in
this anthology address these questions with honesty and vigor, weaving humor
and warmth into the telling of small but significant tragedies. Local authors
include Clare Shaw and Char March.
Small Town
Saturday Night: More Pop Music Memories of the Halifax in the Sixties 2- Trevor
Simpson (£16.95)
Another look at the dance halls, groups an
music festivals from 1954-1970. Includes Donovan, Lulu, Screaming Lord Sutch -
and the Mytholmroyd group, Jay West and the Sinners! Published 20 November.
Helen of Four
Gates - Ethel Carnie Holdsworth (£20.95)
A facsimile reprint of the 1917 novel about
hard times in the Pennines, the 1920 silent film of which was shot around
Hebden Bridge.
The Fastest Man:
Steeple Jack's Adventures in Lancashire - Chris Aspin
(£4.95)
During the 1850s, James Duncan Wright, a
Scotsman who had settled in Ramsbottom, astonished vast crowds in Lancashire by
hurtling down on ropes from factory chimneys and tall masts at more than 100
miles an hour. Illustrated, with visits to Preston, Burnley, Padiham,
Failsworth, Bury and more, entertainingly reported from contemporary newspaper
accounts.
Lancashire's Forgotten Heroes - Stephen Barker and
Christopher Boardman (£18.99)
8th (Service) Battalion, East Lancashire
Rgiment in the Great War. The soldiers came from Manchester, Liverpool,
Burnley, Darwen, Preston, Nelson, Bolton, Colne, Accrington and Oldham - their
everyday lives are described and the actions in which they fought examined. The
book takes us from the initial euphoria of recruitment, through initation into
trench warfare to the battles of the Somme, Arras and Passchendaele.
The History of
Ingleton - John Bentley (£21.00 hardback, £15
paperback)
The story of a unique Yorkshire village.
Detailed illustrated history of Ingleton from the Brigantes on, with in-depth
chapters on aspects such as law and order, schools, inns, agriculture, mills,
collieries, transport, river names - and stories, personalities and old
customs!
October 2008
Infamous
Lancashire Women - Issy Shannon* (£12.99)
The well-known local journalist follows up
her entertaining illustrated book about wicked women of Yorkshire with a
companion volume on Lancashire!
TAG - Stephen
May*(£8.99)
From the director of the Ted Hughes Arvon
Centre at Lumb Bank in Heptonstall, a darkly humorous debut novel involving a
gifted but unpredictable teenage girl and a teacher who's a recovering
alcoholic who meet at a residential course for talented youth in Wales.
Necropath -
Eric Brown* (£7.99)
Science fiction meets crime noir, as Jeff
Vaughan, jaded telepath, employed by the spaceport authorities on Bengal
Station, discovers a sinister cult that worships a mysterious alien god. We
follow Vaughan as he attempts to solve the murders and save himself from the
psychopath out to kill him. From a local author who is also a Guardian
columnist.
The Ted
Hughes Trail in Crimsworth Dean - the Elmet Trust, Donald Crossley*, Nick
Wilding* & Lesley Alston* (£2.50)
This colour illustrated booklet with
sketchmap takes you on a circular walk from Midgehole visiting places
significant in some of Ted Hughes' poems, many of them from Elmet.
Portrait of the
Pennine Hills - John Morrison (£14.99)
From the ex-local author and
photographer, 144 pages of atmospheric colour photos. including some very nice
and new local ones. Now finally in stock.
Priestley's Wars - Neil Hanson
(£16.99 at The Book Case)
Written with the cooperation of Priestley's sons, this book
opens with Priestley's account of his enthusiastic enlistment in 1914 and
continues with his letters from the Somme, which mark the beginning of his
transformation into a campaigner for peace and disarmament; there are copies of
his "Postscript" radio broadcasts from WWII, and the book ends under "the
shadow of the Bomb" - Priestley was a co-founder of CND.
The Atlas of the
Real World: Mapping the Way We Live - Daniel Dorling; Mark Newman; Anna
Barford* (£29.95)
366 cartograms cover a vast array of
subjects, providing a definitive reference on how regions and countries compare
in resources, production, consumption, and more. Sophisticated software
combined with comprehensive analysis of every aspect of life represents the
world as it really is. Anna Barford lives in Hebden Bridge.
A Twist of
Malice: Uncomfortable Poems by Older Women - ed. Joy Howard
(£8.00)
A collection of work by 36 contemporary
poets exploring the darker side of the female imagination. Here are poems that
disturb and disconcert but also gleam with humour and delight in subversion.
Grey Hen, the publishers, are West Yorkshire-based, and several poems by local
authors are included.
Solid &
Drift Geology Map (77) - Huddersfield (£12.00)
We're now stocking these maps from the
British Geological Survey, showing the distribution of various types of rock
and deposits. This one goes from Hebden Bridge to Dewsbury and Bradford to
Emley.
Small Town
Saturday Night: Pop Music Memories of the Halifax in the Sixties 1- Trevor
Simpson (£15.00)
Cliff Richard, Dusty Springfield, Rolf
Harris and a host of other stars - they all appeared in Halifax and this
well-illustrated and entertaining book by local author Trevor Simpson gives
details.
September 2008
The Adventures of Tom Leigh - Phyllis
Bentley (£5.95)
First young Tom, newly
arrived in the Calder Valley from Suffolk in 1722, loses his father; then he
himself is threatened when as a weaver's apprentice, he uncovers a crime. The
third of the popular Halifax author's historical novels for young people that
we are publishing and the furthest back in time. This one involves
tenterfields.
Fanny Eliza
Johnson: A Thoroughly Modern Victorian Headmistress, Bolton High School for
Girls 1888-1893 - Veronica Millington (£6.99)
A story of the founding of
Bolton High School for Girls and one of its early Headmistresses at a time of
great social change. It includes many quotations from Miss Johnson's logbook
detailing complaints and visits from parents. To be launched later this month.
To order direct from Bolton School, send £7.99, which includes postage to
Mrs L Frew, Librarian, Bolton School Girls’ Division, Chorley New Road,
Bolton BL1 4PB. For further information telephone 01204 840201 or email:
lfrew@girls.bolton.sch.uk
The Art of Being
Dead - Stephen Clayton* (£7.99)
From Hebden Bridge publishers Blue Moose, a
visceral and edgy novel set in a bleak Northern English town in the late 1960s
- "Rhinehart's Dice Man transferred to the North West of England". The
author, who lives locally, is a founder member of the Lancashire band Tractor
which were championed by the late John Peel. The book will be launched at
Machpelah Mill on Saturday 6th September at 6pm.
Halifax and
Calder Valley Memories (£12.99)
From True North in Halifax,
photographs and descriptions of scenes in Halifax, Elland, Brighouse, Hebden
Bridge and Todmorden from Edwardian times on, covering events, street scenes,
the war years, royal visits, the shops, leisure and transport.
The Joy of No Self - Mandi
Solk*
From local healer Mandi Solk, reflections
on the Nondual nature of everything. There's a meeting on Non-duality at the
Hope Centre in Hebden Bridge on October 4th, 2-5pm.
Radiants - Glyn
Hughes (£2.00)
Little booklet with
quiet and perceptive poems mostly about aspects of
nature.
Lancashire's Sacred Past -
Linda Sever (£14.99)
From Prehistory to the Viking Period -
monuments, buildings, copses, stone circles and early churches. We're waiting
to see which geographical areas are covered.
Before the
Mast: In the Grain Races of the 1930s - Geoffrey Sykes Robertshaw* and Elvin
Carter (£12.99)
More than 70 years ago Mytholmroyd-born
Geoffrey Robertshaw was an able seaman on the tall ships during the 12,000 mile
voyage between Australia and Falmouth. During the four month voyages he took
photographs and kept a personal log and these have now been edited into a
fascinating book by relative Elvin Carter, with a stunning collection of Mr
Robertshaw's photos of daily life on a square rigger complete with storms!
August 2008
"Discover
Hebden Bridge" - Town Centre Trail (£2)
From Hebden Bridge Local
History Society and Hebden Bridge Walkers' Action, a colourful new guide to a
45-minute walk around the town, giving details of points of interest and
photographs of the same scenes in times gone by. The trail is accessible by
wheelchair.
Made in Yorkshire
- Tony Earnshaw (£25.00)
A glorious celebration of all the feature
films shot in the county from the inception of film to the present day,
including in-depth accounts of more than 30 movies. With a foreword by the
Oscar-winning screenwriter Ronald Harwood, whose film The Dressser, shot in
Bradford, York and and Halifax, features prominently.
Other Beasts - Sarah Corbett*
(£7.99)
The first half of this new
volume is devoted to poems that re-create scenes from a youth haunted by
trouble, but redeemed by a strong attachment to the beauties of nature. The
latter half focuses on in-depth and often scary narratives of other lives,
while closely identifying with survivors of trauma.
A Load of New
Rubbish by Chris Aspin (£4.99)
New from our own Royd Press
and Rossendale-based historian Chris Aspin, light-hearted verse reflecting on
the absurdities of modern life, with a Grand Opera included! The cover picture
was done by Book Case member of staff Simon Manfield.
John Ramsbottom - A Victorian Engineering
Giant by Robin Pennie* (£9.95)
This
well-illustrated book about Todmorden-born John Ramsbottom is publshed by the
Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway Society and will be launched in Todmorden onm
16th September.
Waiting for the
Other Shoe - Maggie Handsley* (£7.99)
The story of a family turned upside-down by
the adoption of a child with Reactive Attachment Disorder, a first novel from a
Huddersfield-born author now based in Halifax. Her knowledge of damaged
children came from witnessing the struggles of a friend who adopted one, and
from her years in teaching.
July 2008
The Yorkshire Water Way 2 - South Pennines
and Peak District - Mark Reid (£3.99)
A 62-mile walk between Ilkley and Langsett, via Haworth, Hebden
Bridge and Marsden. Instructions, line drawings and sketch maps.
Cross-Stitch
Countryside Collection - Carol Thornton*, Claire Crompton, Caroline Palmer and
Lesley Teare (£18.99)
Eight detailed cross stitch designs capture
moments of timeless tranquillity, including one of our local canal and a West
Country harbour from Book Case member of staff and artist Carol Thornton. Each
major design has a collection of matching keepsake gifts to make.
Teach Yourself
Creative Writing - Stephen May* (£9.99)
From the director of Lumb Bank Creative
Writing Centre in Heptonstall, a guide to unlocking your creativity, finding
your voice and choosing a genre of writing that suits you best. Fourth
edition.
Narrowboat Dreams by Steve
Haywood (£7.99) "A cantankerous old git" travels by
traditional narrowboat from Banbury to "the trendy affluence of Hebden Bridge,
West Yorkshire's answer to London's ciabatta belt". He's rude about
Huddersfield and Mytholmroyd and has an exciting time in a pieshop in
Brighouse. (£7.99)
Around and About
Yorkshire 1 (DVD) (£5.99)
Three Peaks Fell Race, Rescuing Ilkley
Moor, Restoring York Minster, Denby Dale Walk, Yorkshire Flat Caps, Whitby's
Penny Hedge, Knaresborough's Hidden Treasures - and Gervase Phinn talks to
Geoff Druett about his formative years in Rotherham. 110 minutes.
Around and About
Yorkshire 2 (DVD) (£5.99)
Auction Marts, Pork Pie Championship, the
"Tom Puddings" of Goole, wooden shops, agricultureal shows (Otley, Great
Yorkshire, Bingley, Malham, Kilnsey and Nidderdale), Giggleswick and the carved
rocks of Ilkley Moor with Gavin Edwards. 115 minutes.
Ladies of the
Night by Barbara Green* & Jean Wilkinson (£9.99)
A snapshot of how the real district nurses operate in the
modern day - a long way from the beloved but outdated lady on the
bike!
Barbara Green is a retired
registered general and psychiatric nurse, a state certified midwife and
qualified district nurse based in Brighouse; Jean Wilkinson has worked in
district nursing for over twenty years as a nursing auxiliary.
Postcard Yorkshire
(DVD) (£4.99) A 35-minute journey through Yorkshire's
most inspirational scenery with narration and music, on a colourful DVD
packaged to look like a big postcard.
June 2008
Growing up in
Sowerby ... and more - Jean Illingworth* (£9.99)
The ancient hilltop
village of Sowerby with its fine Georgian church can be seen for miles around.
Jean Illingworth’s engaging history weaves her own memories with the
recollections of others in her local community to reveal a rich and detailed
picture of the life and character of this “very special” place.
Ndae's Promise - Jill Hopkins*
(£5.99)
This book for
children by Halifax-based journalist Jill Hopkins was tested on the pupils of
Heathfield School, Rishworth, and their enthusiastic reviews appear on the back
cover. The story is about a swallow who migrates across Africa and to the
Island of Smoke.
Huddersfield Narrow Canal: a towpath guide -
Dr Bob Gough (£4.99)
Nicely produced,
sturdy and colourful guide to what you might see along the towpath of
Huddersfield Narrow Canal. From Huddersfield Canal Society. Spiral bound.
The
Romans Came This Way - by Norman Lunn, Bill Crosland, Bonwell Spence and
Granville Clay, pub. Huddersfield and District Archaeological Society
(£12.99)
The story of the
discovery and excavation of a Roman Military Way across the Yorkshire Pennines.
The fascinating story of how a dedicated group of amateur archaeologists found
themselves challenging all the accepted theories of where and how the Roman
army built a major military way across the Pennines. A4, many colour photos and
maps, CD with extra info.
Fire Horses - Mark Piggott
"Fire Horses" views
England over the last 25 years, from small town to the grimy metropolitan
underbelly, through the eyes and lens of one deeply troubled individual and his
complex relationships with his childhood friend and the women in his life. Mark
Piggott grew up in Hebden Bridge and will be taking part in the Ted Hughes
Festival in October.
Anatevka - Joseph Krasniansky
(£9.50)
"From Russia with Love. And
Death." A first novel from an author based in Hebden Bridge.
Rhyme and
Storytime - Kathleen McBurney* (£6.99)
Verses, thoughts and memories with colour
photos from a Halifax great-grandmother. This collection includes Ackroydon
Model Village, Halifax Borough Market, Banksfield Museum and more!
May 2008
Two football books this
month!
A Century of Stars: Hebden Royd Red
Star AFC 1908-2008 - Peter Thomas* (£4.00)
Hebden Royd Red Star AFC, under its various
names, is the oldest continuously-existing club in the Halifax League and
celebrates its centenary in October this year. This colourful new book is full
of memories, interviews, anecdotes and photographs, and now in
stock!
Foul Play
- Tom Palmer* (£5.99)
Danny is obsessed with two things: football
- especially City Football Club - and investigating crimes. So when England and
City footballing hero Sam Roberts is reported missing the day after Danny saw
him being taken, blindfolded, into the bowels of the City FC stadium late at
night, he's determined to get to the bottom of it. But is Danny getting into
something he can't handle? From the Todmorden based writer and
reader-developer, an exciting new story for young football fans, published by
Puffin.
In Search of
Thinking: Reflective Encounters in Experiencing the World - Richard Bunzl*
(£10.95)
What are our memories and feelings? What
are ideas? What is the nature of time? How do our thoughts connect with the
world at large? Is freedom of thought an illusion, or a possibility worth
striving for? Hebden Bridge-based writer and musician Richard Bunzl addresses
some of the oldest and most fundamental philosophical questions. Published by
Rudolf Steiner Press and to be launched Sunday 8th June at the Rudolph Steiner
centre, Macpelah.
The Scent Trail: A Journey of
the Senses - Cecilia Lyttleton* (£7.99)
Follows one woman's journey
across the world as she explores the magic and history behind the ingredients
of her own bespoke perfume. Now in paperback. Author lives in Hebden
Bridge.
The Old and the
New: A History of the Two Heptonstall Churches (£1.50)
Illustrated pamphlet from Hebden Bride
Local History Society with full information on the two churches and a nice
picture of the old one as it was.
Mud, Toil and
Tears - Irene F Priestley (£6.00)
Tells the story of Bleakholt Animal
Sanctuary 1967-9 from the point of view of one of the kennel maids during two
difficult years in the Sanctuary's early history. The Sanctuary is on a
hillside overlooking Ramsbottom and the Rossendale Valley and is one of the
largest of its kind in the northwest of England. Lots of illustrations,
including colour ones, and lively detail! The sanctuary has enthusiastic
support in Hebden Bridge and Mytholmroyd, and all proceeds are going to the
Sanctuary.
Halifax and the
Calder Valley - Railway Memories 11 - Jack Wild and Stephen Chapman
(£13.95)
Back in print! Celebrates the glorious time
when Calderdale's railways carried top link expresses, Saturday excursions
packed with holidaymakers bound for Blackpool, and a seemingly endless process
of freight - when Heckmondwike, Cleckheaton, Brighouse and Ripponden all had a
place on the railway network, when trains left Halifax for Bradford and
Keighley "over the Alps" and Sowerby Bridge, Mytholmroyd and Mirfield were
important railway centres. And takes us up to more recent years.
April 2008
Ned Carver in Danger - Phyllis
Bentley* (£5.95)
The second of our reprints of the respected Halifax novelist's
exciting historical novels for young people - a 13-year-old boy starts work at
a Calder Valley cropping shop in 1812 just as his friend's mill-owning father
introduces the cropping frames that will put his skilled companions out of
work. Ned's sympathies are with the Luddites who
plot violence.
A Century of Stars: Hebden Royd Red Star AFC 1908-2008 -
Peter Thomas* (£4.00) Hebden Royd Red Star AFC, under its
various names, is the oldest continuously-existing club in the Halifax League
and celebrates its centenary in October this year. Full of memories,
interviews, anecdotes and photographs, and hopefully out later this month.
Farewell Britannia: A Family Saga of Roman Britain - Simon
Young* From brilliant young ex-Hebden Bridge historian a
multi-generational family, part Roman, part Celtic (invaders intermarrying with
natives) to tell the dramatic story of 400 years of Roman rule in Britain. Now
in paperback. (£8.99)
Milltown Memories - back issues
(£2.50 or £2.80 each)
We're delighted to have in stock copies of
the Upper Calder Valley quarterly magazine featuring aspects of local
history and old photographs: a list of contents can be found at
http://www.milltownmemories.org.uk/.
We don't have issue 2. Milltown Memories ran from 2002 to 2006
Facsimile Mill Rules poster of
1851 from Waterfoot Mill, Haslingden, £1.00
21 rules laid down for the Hands, covering
lateness, untidiness, damage, Talking, behaviour in the Necessaries, Oaths and
insolent language, Smoking and especially personal cleanliness: “The
Masters would recommend that all their workpeople Wash themselves every
morning, but they shall Wash themselves at least twice every week, and any
found not washed will be fined 3d for each offence.”
British Orchids: A Site Guide - Roger Bowmer*
Author lives in Littleborough. A handy reference to the locations of the 51
species of wild orchid native to the British Isles; each one is covered
individually, with a brief description of its habitat and natural history, and
an explanation of its botanical name, with two colour photographs, and artworks
provide details of specific points of interest. A full listing of sites gives
national grid references for easy location, and there are complete listings of
the relevant Wildlife Trusts responsible for each site.
March 2008
The Backbone of England: Landscape and Life on the Pennine
Watershed - Andrew Bibby*, photos John Morrison (£20) Hebden
Bridge-based journalist Andrew Bibby walks the route of the watershed in
England that separates the water flowing westwards to the Irish Sea and the
Atlantic from the water heading towards the North Sea and explores various
aspects of the area's history, ecology, geology and culture, and meets many of
the people whose lives are shaped by the landscape. Ex-Hebden Bridge John
Morrison supplies atmospheric colour photos. To be launched in Hebden Bridge
just before Easter.
Collected Poems for Children -
Ted Hughes*
Paperback version. The book is presented by
reading age, beginning with poems for younger readers and working up to
Hughes's material for young adults. Illustrated by Raymond Briggs.
(£9.99)
February 2008
Hebden Bridge: a short history
of the area - Peter Thomas* (£5.99)
As Royd Press, we're delighted to be
publishing an updated and revised version of a very readable history of the
area first written by local author Peter Thomas back in the 1970s!
Poetry in the Making - Ted Hughes*(£9.99)
A
reissue of his 1967 publication which accompanied his broadcasts to schools.
The purpose throughout is to lead on, via discussion of the poems, to some
direct encouragement to the children to think and write for themselves. He
makes the whole venture seem enjoyable, and somehow urgent.
The Future Control of Food: A Guide to International
Negotiations and Rules on Intellectual Property, Biodiversity and Food Security
- ed. Geoff Tansey*; Tasmin Rajotte (£18.99) The first
wide-ranging guide to the key issues of intellectual property and ownership,
genetics, biodiversity and food security - "the best single summary of the
political choices facing food and agriculture policymakers that has been
written in this decade". Hebden Bridge-based writer and consultant Geoff Tansey
is working for a fair and sustainable food system.
A Cotton-Fibre Halo: Manchester
and the Textile Districts in 1849 - Angus Bethune Reach, ed. Chris Aspin
(£7.95)
Companion to our "Fabrics, Filth and Fairy
Tents" which covered the West Yorkshire textile districts, Angus Bethune
Reach's graphic reports on Manchester, Ashton-under-Lyne, Oldham, Egerton,
Macclesfield, Middleton and Saddleworth with many interviews. Published by Royd
Press at The Book Case.
One Autumn: work, family life and Rugby League in the 1990s -
Geoff Lee* (£9.95)
Last in a series of four novels on the general theme of Northern
working-class life in the Rugby League heartlands in the second half of the
twentieth century, from a former Halifax draughtsman. 1992 and 1993 were tough
years in the south Lancashire town of Ashurst.
Speech with Humans - Clark
Coolidge & Glen Baxter (£9.99)
Arc Press of Todmorden have published an
unusual book, , in which American poet and jazz drummer Clark Coolidge and
Leeds-born surrealist cartoonist Glen Baxter collaborate in a quirky
combination of text and pictures.
January 2008
Transactions of
the Halifax Antiquarian Society 2007 (Vol. 15, new series) - (ed.) John A.
Hargreaves,* £15.00
The new edition includes: The location and
operation of demesne cattle farms in Sowerby graveship c. 1300 - Nigel Smith;
The room numbering system of the Halifax Piece Hall, 1778-2007 - Peter W
Robinson; Benjamin Rushton: handloom weaver, radical agitator and nonconformist
preacher - John A Hargreaves; Trade union activity in the Halifax area,
1800-1960 - W L Horsfall; The experience of Oweniste Socialism and
anti-Socialism in Halifax, 1829-1845 - Simon J Cross; Demagogues or debaters? A
study of Halifax Chartist speeches reported in the Halifax Guardian
and the Northern Star between 1838 and 1839 - Sheila Graham; The
Twentieth Century remembered: Arnold's Odyssey, 1917-18 - Peter Thomas; Halifax
during the Second World War: the struggle for victory 1940-45 - Derek Bridge;
De-industrialisation in Calderdale and the changes it made in local employment,
1921-91 - Stuart Noble and Brian Burkett.
Two Marriages by Glyn Hughes*
(£7.00)
From the prize-winning local author, a long
autobiographical poem in two sections, the first of Hughes’s books to be
illustrated by the writer himself who began his career at art school. NOW IN
STOCK:
Enkelit CD
(£12)
From the sensational locally-based
upper-voice group who performed so memorably at Square Chapel last year, their
first CD. They sing contemporary vocal music primarily from Finland, strongly
influenced by folk traditions and characterisd by beauty and melancholy. See
their website at http://www.enkelit.org.uk/. The leader, Richard Pomfret, is
Todmorden-based.
December 2007
Twenty More Parish Poems -
Geoffrey Whiteley* (£4.00) From a local author and
ex-English teacher, more poems inspired by memories, local scenes and Biblical
references.
November 2007
Todmorden Hippodrome : 100 Years of
Theatre, 1908-2008 - Freda and Malcolm Heywood*, £19.95 hb,
£14.95 pb Celebrating the first hundred years of this popular
Edwardian theatre! The book is packed with narrative, information, pictures,
production photos and reproduced advertisements and programme covers telling
the theatre’s story from the glory days of music hall to the present day.
More than 200 pictures, many of them in colour.
Ted Hughes: Selected Translations,
ed. Daniel Weissbort (£12.99) A broad selection from Hughes'
numerous translations, together with hitherto unpublished material (versions of
Paul Eluard and of Yves Bonnefoy), and excerpts from essays and
letters.
Looping the Loop DVD and video -
Peter Thornton* and Ray Riches*, £12.99
A journey on the Mary Towneley Loop in the
South Pennines, a 48-mile circular spur off the Pennine Bridleway. Using
ancient packhorse trails and bridleways, it visits hidden villages and hamlets,
taking you through spectacular scenery, across wild moorland and into green
wooded valleys. 78 mins.
Calder Valley
Offcuts
These are based on Leslie
Goldthorp*'s historical lectures in the 1970s, transcribed by Mrs
Irene Mallinson, and are £2.50 each unless otherwise stated. Since June,
the following titles have been published:
4. Overseers of Highways - Roads and
Turnpikes
5. John Wesley's visits to
the area (£1.50)
6. The Cragg Vale
Coiners
7. The Rochdale Canal and
the Coming of the Railway
8. Conditions in the
Textile Factories in 1833, Part 1
9. "Tyrants and Hypocrites" - the local
fight against child labour (Conditions in the Textile Factories Part 2);
Interview with a Handloom Weaver; the Typhus Epidemic in Heptonstall Slack
1843-4.
The Yorkshire Church Notes of Sir Stephen Glynne, ed.
L.A.S. Butler, £30 Yorkshire Archaeological Society, vo.
159. Sir Stephen Glynne (1807-1874) was one of the greatest church enthusiasts
of his time, visiting over 5500 churches in England and Wales, and making
careful notes and sketches of their architecture, plans and furnishings. His
particular interest lay in the Gothic style, and in High Church principles, as
his notes make clear. This volume contains architectural descriptions of 400
Yorkshire churches and abbeys compiled during his many visits. Interesting in
their own right, they also provide an extremely accurate and valuable record of
the fabric and fittings before their removal in restoration or the total
demolition of churches. An introduction places Sir Stephen's life and work in
the wider context of developing architectural and ritual scholarship. The text
is accompanied by 250 contemporary water-colours and drawings, the majority
from record sources and published for the first time. Together they provide a
significant contribution to the study of Yorkshire church architecture at a
time of rapid change.
The Best of John
Hartley: an account of his life and "The Clock Almanack" - John
Waddington-Feather, £6.99
Born in Halifax in 1839, John Hartley was
well-known for his Yorkshire dialect poetry and prose, published in his "Clock
Almanack". This book includes some of the best as well as a biography and a
glossary of Yorkshire words.
Foul Deeds and Suspicious Deaths Around Rochdale - John
Cole, £12.99 Takes the reader on a journey into the dark
secret side of Rochdale's long history - from crimes of brutal premeditation to
crimes born of passion and despair, with ghosts, skulduggery, forgery,
betrayal, highway robbery and public executions thrown in for good measure.
October 2007
A Village Childhood - Gertrude M. Attwood, nee Ogden
(£12)
A personal recollection of
Mytholmroyd and Hebden Bridge in the 1920s and '30s. Gertrude looks back at
those early years and describes how they influenced her life. Sumptuously
illustrated, with lots of fascinating detail about everyday life.
The Deafening Sound of Silent Tears: the Story of Caring
for Life - Juliet Barker*, £8.99 From the renowned local
historian and biographer, a celebration of the 20th anniversary of the
Leeds-based charity Caring for Life, who help vulnerable young adults make a
new start.
Eye Rhymes: Sylvia Plath's Art
of the Visual - ed. Kathleen Connors; Sally Bayley (£25)
A side of Sylvia Plath that is scarcely
known: her serious involvement in the visual arts from a very early age. She
moved between art-making and writing constantly, integrating their elements
with ease and pleasure. It was only at the age of 20 that she decided to leave
fine art behind her as her chosen career, and opt for the written word. Eye
Rhymes presents a magnificent range of Plath's art, most of it seen in print
for the first time: childhood sketches, illustrated diaries, portraits, rich
modernist and expressionist paintings, fashion images, photographs, and
more.
Letters of Ted Hughes, ed. Christopher Reid
(£30) At the outset of his career Ted Hughes described letter writing
as 'excellent training for conversation with the world', and he was to become a
prolific master of this art which combines writing and talking. This selection
begins when Hughes was seventeen, and documents the course of a life at once
resolutely private but intensely attuned to other lives (including both adults
and children): a life pared down to essentials and yet eventful, peripatetic,
at times publicly controversial.
Lost Railways of South and West Yorkshire - Gordon Suggitt
(£10.99) The story of the railway age in South and West
Yorkshire, beginning in 1755. Includes Bradford and Oxenhope.
September 2007
Gold Pieces - Phyllis
Bentley* (£5.95)
Hilltop handloom weaver's son Dick Wade is pleased to find a boy
of his own age to play with, but is he a true friend? Whose is the injured dog
found on the moors? And who is flooding the area with clipped and forged coins,
bringing the London authorities in with their questions and house searches? A
gripping story based on the real history of the Cragg Vale Coiners, giving a
fascinating insight into life in the Calder Valley and the local weaving
industry over 200 years ago.
Antiquarian Yorkshire Books on
CD-rom:
"The History and Antiquities of Halifax", "Ancient Halls
in and Around Halifax" and "Halifax Courier's Almanack
1937" - 3 books on one CDrom - Rev. John Watson, Arthur Comfort and
Halifax Courier - £15
"Todmorden" 4 books on one
CDrom - John Travis - £12
"The Yorkshire Coiners & Old
and Pre Historic Halifax" - H. Ling Roth - £12
"The
Northowram Nonconformist register", "Oliver Heywood's Diaries" (4 Volumes) and
"Northowram, its History and Antiquities" - 6 books on one CDrom - J
Horsfall Turner and Mark Pearson - £20
"The History of
Brighouse, Rastrick and Hipperholme" and "Independency at
Brighouse" - 2 books on one CDrom - J Horsfall Turner - £15
"Halifax, Families and Worthies", "History of Halifax" and "Halifax
Guardian Almanack, 1908" - 3 books on one CDrom - J Horsfall Turner,
John Crabtree and Halifax Guardian - £15
Over the Land - John Killick*
(£10)
Hebden Bridge-based John Killick is best
known for his work on communication with people with dementia and has broadcast
on BBC Radio. This collection contains 23 poems inspired by the Scottish
landscape with images from pastel drawings and oil paintings by a young
Edinburgh artist, Alison McGill. Exclusively available in Hebden Bridge from
The Book Case, and post free.
August 2007
Infamous Yorkshire Women - Issy
Shannon* (£12.99)
From the well-known local journalist, a
collection of remarkable women with Yorkshire connections - ranging from Queen
Cartimandua of the Brigantes to Mary Newall of the Cragg Vale Coiners. Nicely
presented and well illustrated.
Fabrics, Filth & Fairy
Tents: The Yorkshire Textile Districts in 1849 - Angus Bethune Reach, ed. Chris
Aspin (£6.99)
In 1849 Scottish investigative journalist
Angus Bethune Reach toured the textile areas of the West Riding to report on
the condition of the working class for the Morning Chronicle (which
also published Mayhew's famous London reports). Reach visited Huddersfield,
Dewsbury, Batley, Halifax, Bradford and Leeds; he praised some employers
(Holdsworth's in Halifax, Marshall's in Leeds) but also found filth, squalor,
extreme poverty, lethal working conditions and official apathy. His reports and
the words of the people he spoke to bring to life how the glory days of the
Yorkshire textile industry felt from the underside. Royd Press's first
publication.
Power in the Landscape:
water-powered mills in the Upper Calder Valley (£5)
Colour-illustrated pamphlet from Hebden
Bridge Alternative Technology Centre with the history of watermills in the
area. 48pp, colour and b-&-w illustrations, nicely produced.
Woodenface - Gus Grenfell
(£5.99) The author is aka ex-Hebden Bridge resident Gus Smith. Meg is
a Maker, pouring life into the wooden dolls she carves. Accused of witchcraft,
she flees to Halifax, only to find her father in jail, facing death by the
gibbet. Desperate to save him, she must first learn what being a Maker really
means. Local history and folklore combine in a compelling debut novel full of
magic and suspense. Ages: 9-12 yrs
July 2007
Spirit of Yorkshire - John Morrison
(£4.99) From the well-known ex-local author and
photographer, a neat little hardback book of colour photographs from all over
Yorkshire. No pictorial book about Yorkshire is complete without a picture of
Stubbings School and this one is no exception! Now in stock.
Curiosities of West Yorkshire - Robert Woodhouse
(£12.99) A guide to the remarkable and curious sites to be
seen in West Yorkshire, including a few around our way.
Chelp and Chunter: how to talk
Tyke - Ian McMillan (£5.99)
From the Brontes and James Herriot to the
Arctic Monkeys, Yorkshire has a rich culture reflected in its dialect. Discover
the origins of many well-known phrases and learn a few more!
The Scent Trail - Celia
Lyttelton* (£15)
“A Journey of the Senses.” A
travel memoir and vividly-drawn portrait of today's exotic world of perfume.
Entering the heady, exotic world of oils and essences at a bespoke
perfumer’s, the author (who lives in Hebden Bridge) was transported from
a leafy London square to a place of long-forgotten memories and sensory
experiences and felt compelled to trace the origins, history and culture of the
many ingredients that made up her unique perfume.
June 2007
Pennine Perspectives: Aspects of
the History of Midgley - Midgley History Group, ed. Ian Bailey, David Cant,
Alan Petford and Nigel Smith (£18)
Launched at Midgley Pageant
on 30th June, and two-and-a-half years in preparation, this splendid
well-illustrated book covers many aspects of Midgley’s past, from
pre-history, through to medieval times, the Victorian era and the early
twentieth century. Topics include religion, railways, Murgatroyds’,
quarrying, farming, self-help, housing, pubs, leisure, riots, geology and
folklore. The whole of the ancient township of Midgley is
covered, including Midgley Moor, Luddenden, Luddenden Foot and Mytholmroyd
as well as the village. It has 352 pages, hardback with over 160 illustrations
of photos, maps & archive documents.
Helix - Eric Brown* (£7.99) From local
author and Guardian columnist Eric Brown, an SF adventure about a group of
human spacers who find themselves in a very strange star system, and the aliens
who live there. Eric's book for younger readers, An Alien Ate Me for
Breakfast, was published earlier this year.
Pennine Way: Edale to Kirk Yetholm - Keith Carter
(£11.99) Second edition of this Trailblazer publication.
Includes itineraries for all walkers, whether walking the route in its entirety
over one or two weeks or sampling the highlights on day walks.
The March and the Muster - Frank McManus
(£7.99) From Todmorden Labour Councillor Frank McManus a
daybook and commonplace book with thoughts, observations, quotations or poems
for each day of the year.
A Laureate's Landscape: walks
around Ted Hughes's Mytholmroyd - John Billingsley (£4.50)
Engrossing and informative illustrated
booklet that takes us around the area in which the ex-Poet Laureate grew up and
which inspired some of his most memorable work. The relevant poems are referred
to (but not quoted! - the copyright is closely guarded) in the text. Local
historian John Billingsley has led many Ted Hughes walks around Mytholmroyd,
and here is a permanent memento - or a good substitute if you are unable to
take part.
Three Waymarked Walks from
Hebden Bridge (50p)
A colourful folded leaflet with
instructions and maps for visiting Hardcastle Crags avoiding the road,
Heptonstall and Stoodley Pike.
A History and Guide to the Parish
Church of Hebden Bridge, St James the Greater (£2) Members of
the Church and Local History Society produced this little nicely-illustrated
booklet with a history of the church, built in the 1830s and guide to some
features still to be seen. The 1933 centenary booklet was used as a basis.
Profits to the church.
Mind Control: the ultimate revelation - David Shuttleworth
(£7.99) From a Keighley author and publisher, "the book
Derren Brown wanted to ban!" Highly praised book with twelve mind control
effects as used by stage hypnotists.
NW15: the anthology of new
writing No. 15 - the British Council (£9.99)
Including Hebden Bridge-based poet John
Siddique! See his website at http://www.johnsiddique.co.uk/
Calder Valley
Offcuts
A new series of local historical pamphlets
published by Royd Press at The Book Case, based on Mrs Irene Mallinson's
transcription of Leslie Goldthorp's lectures in the 1970s. Available so far
are:
1. The Normans and Medieval
Times in the Calder Valley, £2.50
Three pamphlets
on aspects of life in the 17th and 18th centuries as gleaned from the local
Township books. The original source material quoted in these notes can be found
amongst the township holdings held at West Yorkshire Archive Service,
Calderdale. For further information please contact
calderdale@wyjs.org.uk/
2. Law & Order: Constables,
Punishments and Prison (£2.50)
3. Overseers of
the Poor - Paupers, Doctoring, Apprentices, Bastards and Workhouses; &
Churchwardens (£2.50)
In
preparation:
4. Overseers of Highways
- Roads and Turnpikes
5. John Wesley's visits
to the area
6. The Cragg Vale Coiners
The Bronte Connection - Ann
Dinsdale (£6.95)
From the Collections Manager at the Bronte
Parsonage Museum, a collection of 43 photographs associated with the Brontes'
lives and works, with dates and information. Published by Hendon in Nelson.
A Guide to the Historic Haworth
& the Brontes - Mark Ward, Ann Dinsdale and Robert Swindells
(£5.99)
A new edition of an entertaining and
informative guide to Haworth and the surrounding moor, written as a series of
four walks with illustrations and lots of historical information. Also from
Hendon of Nelson.
Romantic Wycoller: a haunt of
the Brontes - E W Folley, photographs Charles Green (£2.99)
At a special price, a facsimile reprint of
a book first published in 1949. Covers the history of Wycoller Dene and Hall,
the arrival of the Cunliffes, the Bronte connection and local legends, with a
surmise that Ferndean Manor of "Jane Eyre" was based on Wycoller. Many b&w
illustrations.
May 2007
Folk Tales from Calderdale, Vol.
1 - John Billingsley* (£7.50)
The eagerly-awaited collection of tales
from the moorlands of the Upper Calder Valley - the first of a projected series
on the folklore of Calderdale by the well-known local historian. The Witches of
Eagle Crag, the Cliviger Boggart, the Bride Stones, the Eve Stone, Stoodley
Pike, Great Rock, Tom Bell's Cave, the Miller's Grave and Churn Milk Joan are
included.
Rune - Michael Conneely* (£8.99)
Another magical and visionary novel from the local spiritual teacher - Cathal
decides to seize the magic of the Runes on his 14th birthday and together with
Lucy sets out to save the Nine Worlds. A powerful re-telling of Norse
spirituality and Ragnarok.
April 2007
L. S. Lowry: A Life - Shelley Rohde*,
£25.00 To coincide with the 30th anniversary of Lowry's death, this
fascinating biography includes extracts from private letters which have come to
light since Lowry's death and facsimile reproductions of major exhibition
catalogues.
Ariel: the restored edition - Sylvia Plath,
£9.99
The draft of "Ariel" left behind by
Sylvia Plath when she died in 1963 is different from the volume of poetry
eventually published to worldwide acclaim. This facsimile edition restores the
selection and arrangement of the poems as Sylvia Plath left them at the point
of her death. In addition to the facsimile pages of Sylvia Plath's manuscript,
this edition also includes in facsimile the complete working drafts of the
title poem "Ariel" in order to offer a sense of Plath's creative process, as
well as notes the author made for the BBC about some of the manuscript's
poems. Pre-amble by Frieda Hughes.
Farewell Britannia: a family saga of Roman Britain - Simon
Young, £14.99 at The Book Case From a former Hebden Bridge
man who "wears [his] considerable learning lightly", a historical novel telling
the dramatic story of 400 years of Roman rule in Britain via a Roman-Celtic
family saga.
Rambles of a Pennine Way-ster -
Richard Pulk, £9.99
One man's account of the Pennine Way, which
of course includes the local section - he's not very enthusiastic about our
gradients.
Drive and Stroll in West
Yorkshire - Ron Freethy, £7.99
20 short walks, incorporating eating
places, that you can drive to, with b&w photos.
March 2007
Wordsworth: a Life in Letters -
ed. Juliet Barker*, £12.99
Reissue as a Penguin
Classic of this selection by award-winning local author from the poet's letters
and autobiographical fragments, showing him as a rebel, a radical, a devoted
family man and a revered patriarch.
I Did A Bad Thing
- Linda Green*, £19.99
"Sarah Roberts used to be good. Then she
did something bad. Very bad. Now, years later, she's living a good life,
working as a local newspaper reporter and living with her saintly boyfriend
Jonathan. ... Until Nick walks back into her life. And suddenly, what's good
and bad aren't so clear to Sarah any more." The author, a freelance journalist,
lives in Walsden with her husband and young son.
February 2007
Poems from a Northern Soul -
John Siddique*, £6.95
Through poignant homecomings cinematic
street scenes and candid portraits, this poetry collection aims to take the
reader to the limits of human experience.
Heart in My Head - John S
Peart-Binns*, £16.99
A Biography of Richard Harries. The first
biography of the Bishop of Oxford, written with his full approval, using
personal papers and interviews. 'Throughout his life, ministry and episcopate,
Harries has explored the reasonableness of Christianity. He has not abandoned
orthodox belief to fit the current climate, and presents a mature vision of
Christian faith which can meet contemporary criticism.'
Exploring Oxenhope: where to go
and what to see - Reg Hindley, £9.99
Nine walks or rides around the former
milltown in its surprisingly varied "highland" setting, with much detailed
historical information along the way. Maps and b-and-w photos.
Heartsease - Judith Blaydes*, £15.00
From an ex-Halifax librarian, a family saga set in the Calder Valley against
the backdrop of the moors, Sowerby Bridge and the Great War.
Hebden Bridge Treasure Hunt on Foot,
£2.99 An attractive new version of this quirky walk around
town. There's also a chance to win "buried treasure" by solving the baffling
puzzle inside the front cover!
January 2007
The Backpacker's Guide to the New Spirituality by
Michael Conneely*, £9.99 A magical child has been conceived
in the modern west. A new spiritual form has been born out of Hinduism,
Buddhism, the Pagan religions of Northern Europe, Shamanism, utopian community
and astrology. This reforging of ancient traditions gives us new spiritual
tools: ritual, meditation, tantra, body-energy-work, trance and vision; we find
new beauty and power in what it means to be a woman or a man. Local astrologer
and counsellor Michael Conneely reports on this spiritual revolution, based on
the findings of a five-year field study in Glastonbury, now a world-wide centre
of pilgrimage.
Believe in the
Sign - Mark Hodkinson*, £9.99
From a respected national
sports writer based in Hebden Bridge, a collection of pieces taking an in-depth
look at football, with interviews (including Paul Gascoigne), the darker
side of the game and his love-hate relationship with Rochdale FC. Published by
Pomona of Hebden Bridge.
Transactions of
the Halifax Antiquarian Society 2006 (Vol. 14, new series) - (ed.) John A.
Hargreaves,* £15.00
This year's issue contains:
The landscape history of Erringden Park from the 12th to 20th century - J A
Heginbottom; A History of Cripplegate - John H Patchett; James Crossley
(!800-1883) in Halifax: 'The learned boy', 1800-1817 - Stephen Collins; Chapel
Culture: Methodists at King Cross, 1803-2007 - Lewis Burton; Joseph Horsfall
(1818-1889): transformation from handloom weaver to cotton manufacturer,
1857-1873 - W L Horsfall; The People's park (1857-2005) - J G Washington;
Halifax houses between the wars, 1919-1939 - Merial Evans; Halifax and the
Second World War: the prelude to war and defensive precautions, 1937-1940 -
Derek Bridges; The Twentieth Century Remembered: a 1920s and 1930s boyhood -
Eric Webster; Reviews: "Images of England, Brighouse and District" by C. Helm
& "Seeing It Through" by Peter Thomas (see below) - John Hargreaves;
Enquiry & research; Reports for 2005; Obituary: Eric Webster.
Ideas Above Our Station - ed. Ian Daley,
£8.99 Someone is waiting for a train - or a bus, or an
aeroplane. They are alone. For company, they are carrying a book of stories:
what would be the perfect read for them to find there? Fifteen writers have
risen to the challenge, including two local authors, Penny Aldridge and
Daithidh Maceochaidh.
December 2006
Heptonstall: A
Village of Memories - Nick Wilding, DVD, £14.99, 1h22m
New from the Excalibur
stable, a DVD devoted to Heptonstall: who is the strange and beautiful carving
in the far corner of the old St Thomas-a-Becket Church, and what disturbing
discovery was made in the loft above it? How did the old dialect affect
communication with those from the south, and how did the original Church organ
survive the anti-popish onslaught by soldiers of Elizabeth I? "Heptonstall,
Village of Memories" embarks onto a fascinating journey into the past and
brings to life many tales from long ago, with the usual mix of strange facts,
quirky reminiscences and archive stills and video.
Valley Shadows:
short stories by Bill Marsden, poems by Peter Coles, £5.00
The latest in the
entertaining Shadows series with photos, poems and anecdotes.
Yorkshire Lives
and Landscapes by Ian Emberson*, £12.99
The county and its people
exploredby the local poet, playwright and artist in a series of gentle
anecdotes such as: Life in a small village, Asian dancing in Huddersfield,
walking the Pennine Way, the choral singing tradition, even gardening and
studying local history.
Todmorden Buses: a Century of
Service by Ralph Wilkinson*, £8.95
To mark the centenary of the establishment
of Todmorden's municipal bus service, this book covers the history of
Todmorden's passenger transport over the last hundred years, with links over
the Pennines to Bacup, Burnley, Keighley, Littleborough, Oxenhope and Rochdale,
and with particular emphasis on the all-Leyland fleet with its dark green and
cream livery. The author is a native of Todmorden.
Benjamin Rushton, Handloom Weaver and Chartist by John
Hargreaves*, £5.00 From well-known local historian Professor
Hargreaves, the story of a Halifax local hero who struggled for justice for the
handloom weavers from the time of the Peterloo Massacre in 1819 until the final
years of Chartism in the 1850s.
Burnley Boys - P J Fyles, £9.99 A novel
about Peter Frank Heaney and his mates growing up on the back streets of
Burnley in the 1970s: the boys stumble through a male-dominated world of
boyhood, encountering superstition violence, racism and death, getting by with
the only weapon at their disposal - humour.
November 2006
Selected Translations by Ted
Hughes*, ed. Daniel Weissbort, £20
A broad selection from his numerous
translations, with unpublished material, and excerpts from essays and letters.
The present volume selects from his versions from a wide variety of ancient
texts - "The Tibetan Book of the Dead", "Aeschylus", "Euripides", "Ovid",
"Seneca", "Racine" - and equally from a range of twentieth-century European
poets and dramatists.
Discovering Calderdale Part 2 (video & DVD) - Peter
Thornton* and Glyn Lee*, £12.99
This
addition to the series starts in Todmorden, moves on to Cornholme, Lumbutts and
Mankinholes climbs to Stoodley Pike, then continues through Mytholmroyd,
Sowerby, Warley, Ripponden and Elland. The commentary is by Glyn Lee and
photography - including aerial shots - by Peter Thornton. Due for release on 4
Nov. Part 1 covered Norland, Midgley, Luddenden, Cragg Vale and Walsden.
Todmorden Album 4 - Roger Birch*
(£20)
This long-awaited fourth album provides a
further fascinating insight into a century of life in Todmorden. The book
contains 229 black and white photographs selected from private collections,
family albums and picture archives, with detailed and informative captions.
The Tribe - Michael
Conneely*(£9.99)
The Magic Land - Michael Conneely*
(£8.99)
Two new novels from local
spiritual teacher Michael Conneely - The Tribe is the story of Liam's
passage to manhood, the development of his spiritual vision, and his people's
progress to meet their destiny; in The Magic Land, Martin leaves his
loveless home, where his father only cares about exam results and career, and
goes to live on a protest site formed to protect a Bronze Age stone circle,
where he finds happiness for the first time.
Look for the Silver Lining - Stephen
Lockwood*(£15) Tells of growth from a difficult childhood
into adulthood - a book of landscapes, both internal and external, and of how
nature can preserve us in the face of the increasing contingencies of modern
life.
Sculpture Trail at Hebden Bridge 1995-2005 - Liza Blezard
and Paula Chambers (£15) Colour photos of the best of the
(sadly now finished) annual sculpture trail at Hardcastle Crags, with artists'
statements.
Bitch Lit - ed. Maya Chowdhry and Mary Sharratt
(£8.99)
A smart and subversive celebration
of female anti-heroes - who take the law into their own hands
and refuse to be victims - with stories by two local authors.
The Last Coiner - Peter Kershaw (£6.00)
The story of the Cragg Vale Coiners in graphic novel version, linked to a
potential film.
The Brontes at Haworth by Ann Dinsdale
(£20) Life for the Brontes in 1840s Haworth, and their
novels and poetry in the context of their surroundings - with images from the
Haworth archives, drawings by Charlotte and Emily, and photos by Simon
Warner.
Cassini Historical Maps: Leeds
and Bradford (104) & Blackburn & Burnley (103) (£6.49
each)
A new series - Victorian
maps printed to coincide with the modern Ordnance Survey map areas. We also
stock the Godrey Edition Old Ordnance Survey Maps of Hebden Bridge and
Mytholmroyd 1905, £2.20 each.
Heritage Cartography - Map of
Todmorden 1844 & Map of Hebden Bridge 1851 (£8.50 each)
Yorkshire Customs and
Traditions, vol. 1 (DVD) (£14.99)
Filmed this year, presents Yorkshire
customs from across the county. West Yorkshire is in particular
represented with the Bradford Race Walk, Hepworth Plague Feast, Saddleworth
Brass Band Contest and the Dock Pudding Championship in Mytholmroyd.
Organisers and participants provide the voice-over. Each custom is
presented individually (ranging between 5 and 10 mins) on this 85 mins
film.
The Father of the Brontes: his life and work at Dewsbury
and Hartshead - W W Yates, ed. Imelda Marsden (£14.99)
Facsimile edition of this biography of Patrick Bronte first published in 1897 -
W W Yates was by profession a journalist and editor of the Dewsbury Reporter,
but his passion was the novels and lives of the Brontes, and in the early 1890s
helped in the campaign to found The Bronte Society and establish the Bronte
Museum. Mrs Marsden has made additions to the original W W Yates book from her
research into the Bronte family, including details of Patrick Bronte's niece,
Rose Ann Heslip, who is buried at Whitechapel Church in Cleckheaton. Proceeds
from the book go to Holly Bank School at Mirfield, for severely-disabled young
people, which was originally Roehead School attended by Charlotte Bronte.
Full Spectrum: inspired healing
for the 21st century - Leigh O'Regan* (£20)
From a Hebden Bridge author, a powerful
synthesis of transpersonal psychology, quantum physics, eastern spirituality,
philosophy and vibrational medicine, using self-selective non-intrusive
tools.
The A-Z of Christmas - Arnold Kellett
(£12.99) Only "local" in the sense that the author is
well-known for his Yorkshire Dialect books, and lives in Knaresborough - but
the content of this cheerfully red book ranges through time and place.
October 2006
If You Fall: It's a New Beginning - Karen Darke*,
£9.99 A few years ago, former Mytholmroyd resident and Calder High
School pupil Karen Darke was on a rock-climbing expedition on sea cliffs in
Scotland. She fell, and was paralysed. This is Karen's story about coming to
terms with her loss of movement from the chest down and regaining the will to
live. Out of her disability comes strength to embrace, challenge and transform
it into an opportunity to learn and grow. It is also about the borderline
between body and spirit. Karen is drawn into the world of faith healing and
spirit surgeons in the Brazilian jungle. Combining wheels with wilderness,
Karen escapes the city and embarks on an evermore daring series of adventures
by hand-cycle, ski and kayak. Karen's story is inspiring and energizing; it
will help everybody who reads it to respond positively, to overcome adversity,
and to strive for their dreams.
Don't Wear It On Your Head, Don't Stick It down Your Pants
- John Siddique*, £4.95 A book of poems for young people
with a great cover! A celebration of who we are: the good stuff, our amazing
senses, language, love, gossip and cheese.
Halifax Passenger Transport from 1897 to 1963: trams,
buses, trolleybuses - Geoffrey Hilditch, £27.50 Geoffrey
Hilditch remembers seeing a series of lights climbing into the night sky in
1931 - this was a tram or bus climbing to Southowram against the backdrop of
Beacon Hill. In 1954 he was appointed head of the Engineering Department of
Halifax Passenger Transport and when he returned as General Manager in 1963, he
decided to put together a history before it was too late. 336 pages, 220
illustrations, hardback with printed endpapers and dustjacket.
Hannah Hauxwell's Winter Tales (DVD),
£12.99 Not too far afield - this DVD combines "Too Long a Winter" and
"A Winter Too Many" when Hannah was living at Low Birk Hatt Farm in North
Yorkshire.
September 2006
Anthills and Stars - Kevin
Duffy*, £7.99
From new Hebden Bridge publishers Blue
Moose, a novel set back in 1968 when the Permissive Society was arriving in a
grey northern town 20 miles east of Manchester in a multi-coloured VW camper
van. The scene is set for a clash between laid-back hippy offcomer Solomon and
his neighbour, a beige-dressing resident matriarch. Long-term Hebden Bridge
residents may think this all sounds rather familiar ...
The Bridge Between - Nathan
Vanek, £7.99
The author, a well-known Canadian yogi and
guru, muses on the lessons learnt from returning to Canada after 25 years in
India, with insights into the contrasts between the two countries. Another Blue
Moose publication.
Ghosts and Gravestones of
Haworth - Philip Lister, £8.99
Join local guide Phil Lister as he takes
you on a tour of Haworth's dark and ghostly side: meet the ghost of Room 7 at
the Old White Lion, the Grey Lady of Weavers Restaurant, and Ponden Hall's
harbinger of doom, Old Greybeard. Tour the famous graveyard, in use for over
700 years ago and believed to house over 40,000 souls! Rediscover the Haworth
of the Brontes, the blackened-stone buildings, washed by Pennine rain, the
ginnels and alleyways of a forgotten time, overcrowded candlelit cottages,
woolcombers, weavers, clogs, poverty and pride.
Sycorax - J B Aspinall,
£11.95
In the credulous squalor of Medieval
Yorkshire, a peasant girl is accused of being a sorceress and the tale is told
many years later by a flawed monk at Byland Abbey (now Ampleforth). A satire on
patriarchal prejudice and superstition.
Straight Ahead - Clare Shaw*, £7.95
First collection from a local poet - firmly based in the social and physical
landscape of northern England, the poems capture intimacy, loss, fragmentation
and delight, and follow the trajectory of a life through childhood, breakdown
and love.
August 2006
Circular Walks along the Pennine
Way by Kevin Donkin, £12.99
A series of fifty circular walks along and
around the route. All of them can be accomplished in a day; all of them finish
where they started. Completing the Pennine Way in one go will inevitably mean
missing some of the best views, as the weather will certainly descend sooner or
later to obscure the landscape. The walks included in this guidebook were
adopted by the Countryside Agency for its 40th anniversary celebration of the
Pennine Way, with an event entitled 'Walk the Way in a Day' held on 24 April
2005.
July 2006
Agincourt by Juliet
Barker*, paperback, £8.99
Now in paperback, this brilliant narrative
by a local prize-winning author commemorates and analyses a canonical battle in
British history. Agincourt took place on 25th October 1415 and was a turning
point not only in the Hundred Years War between England and France, but also in
the history of weaponry. Azincourt (as it is now) is in the Pas-de-Calais, and
the French were famously defeated by an army led by Henry V. His stunning
victory revived England's military prestige and greatly strengthened his
territorial claims in France. "Agincourt" was serialised on Radio 4.
Yorkshire Post Calendar 2007
(£5.50)
New format and featuring Yorkshire recipes
as well as colour photos of the county.
Moods of Yorkshire - John Morrison
(£14.99) The many faces of Yorkshire from moors and valleys
to coast, and from great houses built with slave-trade money to back-to-backs,
all captured in John Morrison's stunning photos.
Hebden Bridge Treasure Hunt on Foot
(£2.99) New edition in booklet form of this walk around town
visiting places of interest, historical and otherwise.
June 2006
Deliciously Dales
- Sally Scantlebury and Rebecca Roberts (£6.99)
Colour-illustrated book of local food
trails around the Dales, introducing some of the finest producers and outlets
from the region.
Student Guide to Sylvia Plath - Marnie Pomeroy
(Greenwich Exchange Student Guide), £9.99 Interested readers
can see how Plath's prose relates to her poetry. "The Unabridged Journals",
where Sylvia practised her craft, stand without the poems. "The Bell Jar" and
the short stories are the result of the practice that went into the "Journals",
illustrating stages in Sylvia's career as well as aspects of herself.
Millstone Grit by Glyn Hughes* (£3.95)
We're delighted to have back in stock some copies of the 1985 Pan edition of
this local classic.
Textile Voices: A Century of
Mill Life - Olive Howarth & Tim Smith
(£12.95)
An updated edition of this acclaimed
collection of oral history and over 100 photographs of mill life in
twentieth century Bradford. Click
here for a
selection of photographs.
CalderCask Real Ale Guide
– CAMRA (£2.99)
Covers
all the pubs, clubs and hotels in Halifax and Calderdale that sell real
ale.
May 2006
Rebel Girls: their Fight for the Vote - Jill
Liddington* (£14.99) Rejecting the deadening conventions of
their Victorian elders, the rebel girls demanded new freedoms and new rights.
They took their suffrage message out to the remotest Yorkshire dales and
fishing harbours, to win Edwardian hearts and minds. 16-year- old Huddersfield
weaver Dora Thewlis on arrest was catapulted onto the tabloid front-pages as
Baby Suffragette. Her life was transformed. Dancer Lilian Lenton waited till
her twenty-first birthday - then determined to burn two buildings a week until
the Liberal government granted women the vote. Rebel Girls shows how this
daring campaigning shifted from community suffragettes to militant mavericks.
And includes Hebden Bridge's very own Lavena Saltonstall of Unity
Street!
L S Lowry - Shelley
Rohde* (£18)
A new illustrated biography of the artist.
The author, who lives in Cragg Vale, met Lowry several times, and collections
of his letters were made available to her.
Her Husband - Diane Middlebrook
(£7.99)
Ted Hughes married Sylvia Plath in 1956, at
the outset of their brilliant careers. Plath's suicide six and a half years
later, for which many held Hughes accountable, changed his life, his closest
relationships, his standing in the literary world and brought new significance
to his poetry. In this biography of their marriage, Diane Middlebrook renders a
portrait of Hughes as a man, as a poet and as a husband, haunted - and
nourished - his entire life by the aftermath of his first marriage. Middlebrook
presents Hughes as a complicated, conflicted figure: sexually magnetic,
fiercely ambitious, immensely caring and shrewd in business. She argues that
Plath's suicide, though it devastated Hughes and made him vulnerable to the
savage attacks of Plath's growing readership, ultimately gave him his true
subject - recreating himself for posterity through his marriage to Sylvia Plath
and his struggles within his own historical circumstances. New paperback
edition.
Moortown Diary - Ted Hughes (£8.99)
Updated version of Ted Hughes's acclaimed Devon farming sequence, 1979 and
1989.
Green Networks of the Dales -
Colin Speakman (£10.99) From the originator of the Dales
Way, twenty linear walks of 12-25 miles designed to appeal to the serious
walker who wants to leave the car behind - they all tie in with public
transport. With
photos and maps.
Homer's Odyssey - Simon Armitage*
(£14.99) "The Odyssey" is a book of changes, and Simon
Armitage's retelling of Homer's epic quickens and revitalizes our sense of it
as oral poetry: as indeed one of the greatest of tall tales. His version
bristles with the economy, wit and guile that we have come to expect from one
of the most individual voices of his generation.
Odsal Odysseys: the history of
Bradford Rugby League - Phil Hodgson (£19.99)
The glory years and dramatic
transformations in fortunes since the original Bradford club was formed in
1863, becoming in turn Bradford, Bradford Northern and Bradford Buls, the
reigning Rugby League world champions.
A History of the Lord Nelson (Luddenden) - J. A.
Heginbottom (£3.00) Published in 1991, this little booklet,
illustrated by Abigail Edgar, gives the history of the Luddenden pub and its
local connections.
Four Fathers - Tom Palmer* (ed.), John Siddique*, Ray
French and James Nash (£8.99) Four sons reveal the bonds
that exist between themselves and their very different fathers; then turn the
tables and consider their own roles as fathers and father figures. Mixes memoir
with fiction. Tom Palmer is Todmorden-based, and the poet John Siddique lives
in Hebden Bridge.
Pocket Pub Walks in West Yorkshire - Keith Wadd
(£4.99) From the chairman of the West Riding Ramblers'
Association, 15 walks, max 7-8 miles, encompassing Ilkley Moor in the north to
Holme in the south, and Lumbutts and Hebden Bridge in the west to Fairburn Ings
in the east. Instructions, sketch maps, photos, recommended pubs, convenient
size.
L S Lowry Edition MEMORY card game
(£9.99) In a nice clunky box, a Lowry version of Kim's Game,
featuring details from seventeen of his works. Put together by local author
Shelley Rohde, who is the author of two books on Lowry.
Brass Castles: West Yorkshire New Rich and Their Houses
1800-1914 - George Sheeran (£14.99) The West Yorkshire
families who grew rich through commerce and industry during the Industrial
Revolution used their newly acquired wealth to build houses and gardens that
were markedly different from those of older landed and commercial families.
"Brass Castles" is the first book to explore these nineteenth-century mansions
as a group in their own right and examines the urban as well as the rural homes
of ninety-two of the wealthiest "New Rich" families.
Magical Cross Stitch - pub.
David & Charles (£18.99)
Hebden Bridge textile designer and Book
Case member of staff Carol Thornton is one of the contributors to this new book
on cross-stitch. The front cover features one of Carol's designs, "Phoenix
Rising".
The Brontes' Haworth - S R
Whitehead (£6.95)
The place and the people the Brontes knew.
Drawing on previously unpublished material, this book explores the physical and
social fabric of Haworth at the time the Brontes lived there. With over eighty
early photographs, portraits and diagrams.
April 2006
The Laughter of Foxes: A Study of Ted Hughes - Keith Sagar
(£18.50) Second revised edition of the first study to survey
the whole of Hughes's achievement. Includes extracts from Hughes's letters to
the author, a detailed chronology of his life and work by Anna Skea, and the
first publication of the background story of "Crow".
Dr. James Graham's Celestial Bed
- Gaia Holmes* (£7.95) From a Luddenden-born poet a
debut collection which digs beneath the surface of mundane urban
life to reveal a remarkable seam of exoticism. Her carnival of characters
- bingo callers, burger sellers, critical theorists - are all cast from
the least expected places but, rejuvenated by Gaia's verse, find a new voice
and a new ability to captivate.
The Playroom - John Connor
(£5.99)
Another thriller about Bradford-based DC
Karen Sharpe from a locally-based senior criminal lawyer with the Crown
Prosecution Service. In this one, the daughter of a Bradford judge is
kidnapped.
Local Routes: touring England by
Bus, Boat and Train: the North Country - Jean Morris (£7.95)
Six flexible tours, each about a week long,
around the North of England, by bus, boat and train, with public transport and
accommodation info as well as activities and history.
March 2006
Milltown Memories No 15 - Spring 2006
(£2.80) Sadly this is the last issue but the publishers will continue
as part of the Pennine Heritage organisation to which the Alice Longstaff
Gallery Collection has been gifted. This issue focuses on floods in the Calder
Valley - with some splendid photos, Sir Bernard Ingham looking back on his
early days in journalism, a Todmorden bus crash in 1921, events of 1896, and an
index to issues. The website address is
www.milltownmemories.org.uk
and e-mails should be sent to info@milltownmemories.org.uk
New Freedom to Roam Guides from Andrew
Bibby*, £8.99 each:
Wharfedale and Nidderdale: The
Southern Yorkshire Dales
Wensleydale and
Swaledale: Northern Yorkshire Dales
Three Peaks and
the Howgill Fells by Sheila Bowker, ed. Andrew Bibby
North York Moors by Judy Armstrong,
ed. Andrew Bibby
Andrew Bibby, The Book Case and Francis Lincoln will be launching
the books at Mooch Wine Bar, Market Street, Hebden Bridge, 6.00-7.00pm on
Monday March 6th. All welcome!
Shaking Hands with Michael Rooney - Tom Palmer*,
£2.99 “It’s a book aimed at reluctant readers
between eight and 11, as well as older children who haven’t learnt to
enjoy reading. I called him Michael Rooney as a composite of Michael Owen and
Wayne Rooney. I couldn’t get permission to use a real footballer’s
name and it sounds better than Wayne Owen. It’s the story of a boy with a
hand tremor who overcomes his fear of collecting the Golden Boot prize for
scoring the most goals in his league.” From the Todmorden-based
Co-Ordinator for the Reading Partners project.
All-Terrain Pushchair Walks:
Yorkshire Dales - Rebecca Terry, £7.95 30 tried and tested
pushchair walks – including routes by river sides, high-level moorland
rambles, and strolls around the many country estates, castles and abbeys. All
the walks are graded – from simple low-level strolls to more ambitious
moorland stomps. Each comes with a simple at-a-glance key making walk selection
easy; there’s a map and route description for each walk and information
on refreshments and changing facilities.
Nicholson Guide to Waterways 5: North-West & the
Pennines (£12.99) New edition.
Oxford Companion to the Brontes - Christine
Alexander Comprehensive and detailed information about the lives,
works, and reputations of the Brontes, aiming to evoke the milieu in which they
lived and worked and revealing the complex interrelation between their lives,
writings and times. (£14.99)
Todmorden Travellers - E. M. Savage
(£2)
"A snapshot of what life was like for
some of the intrepid travellers to the New World" - including Canada,
Australia, American and New Zealand. I'd been wondering why when I typed
"Todmorden" into Google Earth it took me to Ontario - blame the Helliwells!
Kafka in Bronteland - Tamar
Yellin (£9.99)
Thirteen stories from a Haworth area
author, giving voice to a rich mix of characters living outside traditional
patterns of identity, in a world of complex migrations and tumultuous change.
In the title story, a Jew and a Muslim cast adrift in a Yorkshire landscape
find momentary sisterhood over a copy of the Koran.
180 Not Out - A pictorial
history of cricket in Halifax, Huddersfield and District: Vol.1: Calderdale -
Dr Peter Davies & Rob Light (£10)
A product of a two-year project designed to
preserve and celebrate the rich cricketing heritage of Calderdale and Kirklees
and provides a fascinating insight into the history of local cricket in West
Yorkshire. The other two volumes are on North and South Kirklees.
Northern Earth 105 (£1.95) Of
particular local interest this month, this issue has an illustrated article by
Dr Eddie Cass on the Pace Egg Play.
Peter Pegnall: Foul Papers (£5.95) A
new collection from the local poet - "a poetry of pain and loss, decay in the
secretive lives of fearful souls who must put on a bold face, tell a joke and
blank out their hidden terrors". Also back in stock Through the Rock
(£7.00) and Broken Eggs (£5.95)
February 2006
All-Terrain Pushchair Walks:
West Yorkshire - Rebecca Terry and Rebecca Chippendale,
£7.95 Pushchair-friendly routes in the spectacular country side
around Keighley, Bradford, Leeds, Halifax, Huddersfield and Wakefield.
There’s wood land, moor land, canals, parks, and walks with a train
journey in the middle – visiting Ilkley Moor, Hardcastle Crags,
Hebden Bridge and the River Wharfe.
AD 500: a Journey through the Dark Isles
of Britain and Ireland - Simon Young*, £8.99 From a former Hebden
Bridge man, and now in paperback, a novel written as a practical survival guide
for the use of civilised visitors to the barbaric islands of Britain and
Ireland. The Romans have left, and the islands are now fought over by Irish,
British Celts, Picts and Saxons. It is a dangerous world, full of tribal war
and social pitfalls. Cheviot bandits, bizarre forms of Christianity, boat
burials, peculiar haircuts, human sacrifice, poetry competitions, slave
markets, the legend of King Arthur - these are the realities of life in the
sixth century AD.
The Brontes (Authors in Context)
- Patricia Ingham
Shows how the Brontes’ works reflect
the preoccupations of the age in which they lived and address the burning
issues of the day: class, gender, race, religion, and mental disorders; how
film and other media have reinterpreted the novels for the twenty-first
century. Includes a chronology of the Brontes, suggestions for further reading,
websites, illustrations, and a comprehensive index. (£7.99)
From local
publishers Pennine Pens:
A Kink of a Life - Paul Goodchild,
£8 Autobiography of a child of the '40s from a dysfunctional
family who went from an orphanage to the Sex, Drugs and Rock 'n' Roll of the
'60s, travelled widely and met all sorts of famous people, from Chuck Berry to
the Dalai Lama.
January 2006
Orchid - Deborah Wales, £6.99 From a
Rochdale author, a "chilling yet disturbingly erotic thriller from the dark
side".
December 2005
L. S. Lowry Card Games: Child's
Play, £5.99; Quartet, £7.99 From
local author Shelley Rohde, who wrote "L. S. Lowry: a
Biography", two card games based on details from Lowry's paintings. The
"Child's Play" cards are regular card size and the game is a version of Happy
Families - you collect animals or mills or whatever. "Quartet" has larger cards
and the players collect all four of a series - when put together you see the
whole picture.
Rembrandt: An A-Z - (ed.) Shelley Rohde*,
£16.99 Celebrating the 400th anniversary of Rembrandt's
birth: 140 colour illustrations.
Country of the Broad Acres: a History of Yorkshire - David
Hey, £24.00 The history of Yorkshire is more varied than
that of any other English county. Lavishly illustrated account from the Stone
Age through the Bronze Age, Angles, Vikings, Normans, Reformation, Civil War
and onwards, explaining the effects of the developments on each of of the
Ridings - and the influence of upper Calder Valley farmsteads on family names
(Ackroyd, Murgatroyd, Midgley ...) The author has ancestors from all three
Ridings! Initial info on price was incorrect - apologies
Yorkshire's Picture Post, £14.99 Over
250 images taken from the Yorkshire Post's photographic archives depicting
Yorkshire in all its seasonal glory.
Pilgrims from Loneliness - Ian Emberson*,
£9.99 From the Bronte Society, an interpretation of "Jane
Eyre" and "Villette"
From Halifax publisher Mark
Metcalf:
The Night Shift -
Ian Newton (£4.99) Six episodes of sit-com from Ian Newton
of "Dustbingate". The world of the night shift worker is a strange place indeed
and it breeds its own crusty characters who find the darkness and the absence
of the bosses an excuse to have some real fun.
Radical and Revolting: The English
Working Class (£2.50) Nine chapters deal with episodes of
revolt in English working class life from the Diggers to the 21st century.
From Hebden Bridge publishers Pomona:
Zone of the Interior by Clancy
Sigal, £9.99 "First UK publication of the classic and
controversial novel which defined, described, and indeed was, a radically
profound moment of madness."
A fictional account of his experiences and
experiments in drug-taking and consciousness alongside R D Laing in the 1960s.
Laing himself was unhappy with the book and it was banned until his death.
Mean with Money by Hunter Davies, £9.99
Mean With Money, inspired by Hunter Davies’ well-loved column in The
Sunday Times, is wilfully short on practical advice but offers instead good
humour and much-needed empathy as we face the corporate horror of high-handed
and indifferent financial institutions.
November 2005
Milltown Memories 14:
Winter 2005, £2.80
Sad news - this is to be the penultimate
issue - although the publishers have exciting new plans in the pipeline. This
issue has a centre-spread of a pre-clearance Bridge Lanes and a panoramic view
of Old Town, plus Christmas Past, John Travis of Todmorden, the Heptonstall
Players, the snowy winter of 1947, ghosts at Broadbottom and more.
Seeing It Through (Halifax and Calderdale during World
War II) - Peter Thomas*, £10.00
A major local event,
this book brings together local memories and photographs from the War years,
beginning with "That Fateful Broadcast". Look out for the picture of Savile
Park under the plough to Dig for Victory! NOW IN
STOCK.
Dancing Out of the Dark Side - Glyn Hughes*,
£8.95
A welcome return to print with his first book of
poetry for over twenty years, to be launched at Artsmill Gallery on 12th
November, 7-9pm.
Bronte Ways Video/DVD, Part 2 -
Ray Riches & Peter Thornton, £12.99 ea. A walk on the
Bronte Way from Haworth via Top Withins ("Wuthering Heights") and Wycoller
Village ("Jane Eyre") to Gawthorpe Hall (home of Charlotte Bronte’s
friends the Kay-Shuttleworths).
Halifax Corporation Tramways -
Eric Thornton & Stanley King, £17.99
Illustrated history of this traditional
double-deck tramway system, from the late 19th-century launch through their
spread to the surrounding area (including Hebden Bridge) to their demise in
1939, with a melancholy poem in the Courier. "Halifax is in the shadow of the
Pennines so many routes were steep, greatly adding to the interest," say the
publishers. With maps, photos and route details.
First Ever Vegetarian/Vegan
Guide to Yorkshire - Mary & David Brown, £2.00
Lists shops, cafes, restaurants, clubs and
B&Bs all over Yorkshire, including the Calder Valley.
The Summer the Dictators Fell -
Glyn Hughes*
Short stories set in Greece in 1974-5 - to
be launched at Yorkshire Sculpture Park, Bretton Hall, Wakefield, on 17th
December.
Pandemonium in the Pennines - Kathryn Summersgill,
£5.99
From a Keighley author, a "humorous chronicle of
extraordinary events with an unpredictable climax" - including two guinea pigs
eating the church's commemoration hassocks.
From Halifax great-grandmother Kathleen
McBurney*, an ATS veteran of the Second World War, three books at
£6.95 each: Bend the Bough Gently, a collection of
reminiscences from the pit disaster that took her father, through her ATS
experiences, to the deaths of her husband and mother; and Little
Gems and Poems with Little Gems, which recall special
moments, special people and special sights.
The Outlaw Robin Hood: His
Yorkshire Legend - Barbara Green*, £4.99
A reissue of this booklet f rom the founder
member of the Yorkshire Robin Hood Society, claiming Robin Hood back from
Nottingham. History of the legend, maps and local references. See
www.robinhoodyorkshire.co.uk
Cards from local artist Lynn Breeze*, Star Baby
and Snow Baby, based on pictures from her new books,
"My New Baby" and "My Day Out", £1.50 each
October 2005
Collected Poems for Children by Ted Hughes*,
£16.99
illustrated by Raymond Briggs
Collects,
for the first time, four decades of Hughes's children's poems, from Meet My
Folks! (1961) to The Mermaid's Purse. illustrated by Raymond
Briggs, with two hundred original illustrations, the book is presented by
reading age, beginning with poems for younger readers and working up to
Hughes's material for young adults.
Yorkshire Greats: the county's fifty finest - Bernard
Ingham, £19.99
Sumptuous colour-illustrated hardback on
Yorkshire characters ranging from Guy Fawkes to Alan Bennett.
Agincourt by Juliet Barker*,
£20
In this landmark study, prize-winning
author Juliet Barker draws upon a huge range of sources to give a compelling
account of the battle, when on a rainy October day in 1415 against all the
odds, 9,000 exhausted English men claimed victory from an army of 20,000. She
also looks behind the action on the field to paint a portrait of the age,
moving from the ambition of kings to the dynamics of daily life in peace and
war.
That's the Forecast: the Best and Worst of Yorkshire
Weather - Paul Hudson, £10.99
The region's weather at its
most stunning with lots of photographs.
The Prize by John Siddique,* £7.95
First full collection of poetry from Hebden based poet, currently the Poet in
Residence for Commonword and BBC Manchester. His subjects range widely and he
has worked with young offenders and psychiatric patients. His webpage can be
found at
http://www.johnsiddique.co.uk/ and
for a recent interview published in the Guardian, go to
http://society.guardian.co.uk/publicinquiry/0,14099,1099079,00.html
Untold Stories - Alan Bennett,
£20
Alan Bennett's first major collection since 'Writing
Home', a compendium of some of his finest and funniest writing from the last
nine years, including significant unpublished work. Also in double CD form,
Parts 1 & 2, at £12.99 each.
Yorkshire in
a Crombie - Craig Bradley*, £6.95 When the author inherited
his Uncle Jim’s coat, it smelt of the past, full of flat caps, muck and
brass. This book asks what Yorkshire is today.
Craig is Reader in Residence for Calderdale
Libraries. Go to http://www.craigbradley.com/crombie.html for
more info. (£6.95)
The Letters of the Reverend Patrick Bronte, ed. Dudley
Green, £16.00
First ever complete collection of his
surviving letters, some never before published. This book helps rehabilitate
the Reverent Bronte's reputation and reveals a very human side to this
misunderstood man.
A Portrait of Bradford - John
Morrison*, £12.99
From the well-known local photographer, a
collection of stunning colour images of Bradford to make Bill Bryson eat his
words.
My First Tooth - My New Potty - My Day Out - My New Baby -
Lynn Breeze*, £3.99 each
Colourful board books about these
big experiences!
Together Again - Willy Irvine with Dave Thomas,
£17.99 Willy Irvine was a star goal-scorer with Burnley in
their glory days, but after he broke a leg against Everton he was never the
same, drifting into lower leagues with Preston, Brighton and finally Halifax.
He touched bottom with a suicide attempt and now works part-time for Burnley
FC. This is the story of his life.
Wonderwall - ed. Anthony Cropper & Ian Daley,
£8.99
Including a story, "Rich Tea and Custard Creams" by
Todmorden author Penny Aldred, who won first prize in the Northern Echo/Orange
short story competition in 2004.
September 2005
Centenary Souvenir Booklet of the Hebden Bridge Literary
and Scientific Society 1905-2005, £3.00
The Lit & Sci
celebrates its first hundred years with some relevant extracts from
Milltown Memories and historic Hebden Bridge photos not published
before.
Weird Calderdale - Paul Weatherhead*, £7.99
Strange and incredible events from the Calderdale area, ranging
from UFOs in Todmorden to a vampire infesting Robin Hood's grave near
Brighouse. New revised edition with two new chapters and substantial
updates.
August 2005
Milltown Memories 13: Autumn 2005, £2.80 This
issue celebrates 100 years of Hebden Bridge's excellent Literary and Scientific
Society, pays tribute to the late and much-missed Lloyd Greenwood, visits Slack
and Catholes Stones, objects to Mytholmroyd Station 1871, traces William Holt
Greengrocers back to its roots on Market Street 125 years ago, revisits Keep
Fit (including bloomers) through the years and also includes the Little
Theatre, a murder on Wadsworth Moor, a handdrawn picture of the opening of
Todmorden Town Hall and a striking b-&-w photo of Keith Astin descending
steps at the bottom of Birchcliffe in 1962.
Owl's Supper by Jacki Reed* (£5.65) Lovely
colour-illustrated story for young children by local teacher and headteacher
about a short-sighted mouse out alone in the dangerous woods when Owl is out
hunting. First of a series: this one deals with safety, loyalty and
friendship.
July 2005
Collected Poems of Ted Hughes* (£16.99) This
massive work now in paperback - 1376 pages. Delayed at printers, but due late
August. Now in stock.
Silent Woman: Sylvia Plath and Ted Hughes - Janet Malcolm
(£8.99) New edition. Examines the biographies of Sylvia Plath,
with particular focus on Anne Stevenson's controversial 'Bitter Fruit', to
discover how Plath became the enigma of literary history, and how the legend
continues to exert such a hold on our imaginations.
Pendle Calendar 2006 - Alastair Lee (£8.99)
Panoramic photographs of the Pendle area in calendar form.
The What? Where? Guide to South & West Yorkshire
(£3.50) 56-page colour booklet to the main towns and their
attractions, colour-coded and mentions The Pace Egg Play and Hebden Bridge
Festival, as well as the Little Theatre, Picture House, Trades Club and
Alternative Technology Centre, etc. in the case of HB. And geographically
covers an area spanning Todmorden, Ilkley, Tadcaster, Doncaster and
Rotherham.
Hebden Bridge Calendar, 2006 - Geoff Boswell*
(£4.50) Twelve colourful and atmospheric views of the area from
well-known local photographer and room to write your notes.
Ramblers' Association Book of Kiddiwalks - 70th Jubilee Edition
(£5.99) Thirty short Family Rambles in and near West Yorkshire,
including five around Calderdale. This revised edition contains some of the old
favourites but also a selection of new walks. Kiddiwalks are short circular
walks from 1.5 to 4 miles with lots of interest for small children.
Recollections of the Brontes - George Sowden (£3)
Personal recollections of the Brontes by theVicar of Hebden Bridge, first
published 1894, republished by Ian and Catherine Emberson.
Sinner Saved by Grace - Michael Haslam* (£8.95)
The title of Michael Haslam's new poetry collection comes from the inscription
on a lonely and isolated gravestone the the poet came across while walking on
the moors above his home in the Calder Valley.
History of Hauntings in Halifax - Linda Francis (folder
with CD of photos, £7.50) For other publications from Haunted Truths,
click here.
June 2005
Pennine Way - Tony Hopkins, £16.99
This
year sees the 40th Anniversary of the Pennine Way. This is a large format,
illustrated celebration of Britain's most famous long distance footpath. The
background text provides the reader with information on landscape, flora,
fauna, agriculture, rural life along the path and the history of the Pennine
Way.
White Stuff - Simon Armitage* Felix and Hannah are
happily married, living somewhere in the Pennines, but there is a sadness in
their lives - they've been trying to have a baby for five years with no luck.
(£7.99)
The Other Ariel, ed. Lynda K Bundtzen, £9.99
Sylvia Plath's second collection 'Ariel', published posthumously in 1965,
received superb reviews and became one of the best-selling books of poetry
published in the 20th century. What is less well known is that the poems it
contains are not the ones Plath herself selected when she assembled her
manuscript. This book compares Sylvia Plath's original typescript to the
published version.
Hebden Bridge publisher Pomona (www.pomonauk.co.uk) have two titles by
Barry Hines (Kestrel for a Knave) coming out: The Price of
Coal (£9.99), first published in 1979 when Britain still had a coal
industry, and adapted for TV by Ken Loach, and Looks and Smiles
(£9.99), a gritty social commentary about teenagers growing up in the
late 1970's and early 1980's in a working class suburb of Sheffield.
May 2005
Milltown Memories 12: Summer 2005, £2.80 The
summer issue seasonally includes holiday excursions in times past with photos,
royal celebrations, the orphans of Luddendean Dean, old Todmorden, memories of
Martin Parr and two more of his splendid local photos, events of 1932,
Henpecked Husbands, the fire at St Peter's, Walsden, pigeon fanciers, and the
history and conversion of Pecket Well Mill.
Electric Edwardians: the Films of Mitchell & Kenyon, DVD,
£19.99 A second and more comprehensive selection of highlights
from the 'Mitchell And Kenyon Collection' of films of everyday in Edwardian
Britain under five distinct themes. This collection is close to that shown at
Hebden Picture House and films include: "Tram Ride into Halifax 1902", Youth
and Education: Audley Range School, Blackburn (c1904), Blackburn (1905),
Morecombe Church Lads Brigade (1901), Birmingham University degree day
procession (1901. Workers: Lumb and Co leaving the Works, Huddersfield
(1900), Pendlebury Colliery (1901), Lord Elswick Works, Newcastle on Tyne
(1900), Glebe Mills, Hollinwood (1901), Parkgate Iron and Steel Co, Rotherham
(1901), North Sea Fisheries, North Shields (1901), Cunard Vessel at Liverpool
(1901). High Days and Holidays: Whitsuntide Fair at Preston (1906),
Manchester Band of Hope Procession (1901), Blackpool Victoria Pier (1904),
Leeds Athletic and Cycling Club carnival (1902), Dewsbury v Manningham (1902),
Sedgwicks Bioscope Show Front (1901), Accrington v Church Cricket Match (1902),
Halifax Catholic Procession (1905), Burnley v Manchester United (1902),
Sheffield United v Bury (1902), Preston Egg Rolling (1901). Plus items not
listed above. 30th May.
suelawty - rock - raphia - linen - lead,
£12.50
From local textile artist Sue Lawty a book of
fantastic colour photographs of her work with textures, published by Bankfield
Museum.
Body Shots to the Heart - Phil McGrath* (£5.99)
Autobiographical novel from Halifax ("Trufax") ex-boxer about local boy Tyrone
Fallon about to confront the British Featherweight champion but also fighting
his own past and the ghost of his father.
Addict - Stephen Smith (£6.99) Autobiography of a
London East Ender who started thieving as a teenager, was sent to an asylum by
his parents and got into drugs and crime. He ended up sleeping on the streets
of Mixenden and St John's, Halifax, where he remembers the local people as
being kind and practical, eventually helping him back to London and a stable
life. The book sold well on its first release in the 1990s and it's now going
to be filmed, partly in Halifax, by Andy Serkis of Gollum fame.
Haworth: a History - Steven Wood, £7.99 Haworth
is mainly known for its association with the Brontes, but this book looks at
other aspects of its history, its former farming, textile and quarrying
industries, its houses, shops, inns, churches, reservoirs and gasworks,
19th-century popular beliefs, and some less well-known aspects of the Brontes
connection.
April 2005
AD 500: a Journey through the Dark Isles of Britain and Ireland
- Simon Young*, £13.99 at The Book Case From a former Hebden
Bridge man, a novel written as a practical survival guide for the use of
civilised visitors to the barbaric islands of Britain and Ireland. The Romans
have left, and the islands are now fought over by Irish, British Celts, Picts
and Saxons. It is a dangerous world, full of tribal war and social pitfalls.
Cheviot bandits, bizarre forms of Christianity, boat burials, peculiar
haircuts, human sacrifice, poetry competitions, slave markets, the legend of
King Arthur - these are the realities of life in the sixth century AD.
Railway Moods: the Keighley & Worth Valley Railway - Mike
Heath, £12.99 Photographic journey highlighting the diversity of
the landscape, the effect of the changing seasons and weather, and the various
events associated with the railway. The railway is of course also famous for
its association with the original film of The Railway Childrenby E.
Nesbit. To commemorate the 100th anniversary of the book, Jenny Agutter is
visiting Haworth Park on 1st May to raise money for the Cystic Fibrosis
Trust
March 2005
British Railways Past & Present: Yorkshire, the West
Riding, Part 1 (No. 48) - John Hillmer & Paul Shannon
(£15.99) One of a series of books featuring photographs of railway
locations taken several decades ago and comparing them with the same scene
today. This one covers Halifax, Bradford, Huddersfield, Leeds, plus Skipton,
Airedale, Wharfedale, Dewsbury, Harrogate and York.
One Summer: Romance, Redundancy and Rugby League in the 1980s -
Geoff Lee* (£8.95)
Third in a series of four novels on the general theme of Northern
working-class life in the Rugby League heartlands in the second half of the
twentieth century, from a former Halifax draughtsman. This one's set in the
fictional town of Ashurst on the old South Lancashire coalfield, just before
the 1984 miners' strike. The main character is from Mytholmroyd.
Yorkshire's Great Houses - Sir Thomas
Ingilby(£19.99)
Pennine Way North, Central and South maps (£9.95
each)
Each map covers a section suitable for a comfortable week of
walking. Includes day walks. Waterproof, with accommodation and service
info.
Ted Hughes Reading His Poetry (Double CD)
(£12.99)
Hebden Bridge Treasure Hunt on Foot, £2.99 This
little pack consists of 25 clues to take you on a 2-hour stroll around town
getting acquainted with some of the less-familiar local history as well as old
favourites! Answers supplied in a sealed envelope.
The Lost World of Mitchell & Kenyon - ed. Vanessa Toulmin
(book), £15.99
The Lost World of Mitchell & Kenyon
(DVD), £19.99 Between 1900-1913, filmmakers Sagar Mitchell and James
Kenyon, based in Blackburn, roamed the country filming the everyday lives of
people at work and play. Discovered some seventy years later, the film,
discovered and restored by the BFI, includes footage of Halifax amongst many
other northern areas. The book contains essays from leading historians covering
film history, popular entertainment, the seaside, transport and the social and
economic context of Edwardian Britain, providing a vivid commentary on the
collection of films.
Heptonstall Trail - Pennine Heritage & HB Local History
Society (£1.95) Now available again in a new edition, a
walk around Heptonstall with information on historical points of interest, with
map and photos old and new.
Remnants of a Youth Club - Alice Cachjeka (£7.99)
Not strictly local, as Burnley-based, but two of the authors worked at Mons
Mill! Features on the Guardian's Readers' Books of the Year page at
http://books.guardian.co.uk/booksoftheyear2004/story/0,15602,1381091,00.html,
which calls it "a true story of how five friendships formed and developed. It
starts in the early 1950's, graphically depicting life in a poor East
Lancashire town and how they coped in leaner times. It follows the girls'
friendship through their teenage years and beyond." It's got its own website at
http://homepage.ntlworld.com/guardiansofavalon/remnants.htm
The "author"'s surname is an amalgam of the first letters of the women's
Christian names.
February 2005
From Hebden Bridge author Andrew Bibby, three Freedom to
Roam Guides at £7.99 each:
South Pennines and Bronte Moors
Forest of Bowland with Pendle Hill and West Pennine Moors, and
The
Pennine Divide: Walking the Moors Between Greater Manchester and
Yorkshire.
Produced in association with the Ramblers' Association, they offer
an introduction to the area: its landscape, history and natural history; 12
free-range rambles, graded for difficulty; a full-page 4-colour OS map for each
walk; plus points of interest, practical info and a guide to public rights of
access. Launch on 4th March - more info when available.
Milltown Memories 11: Spring 2005, £2.80 The
spring edition features Knur and Spell, which looks a bit violent, Alice
Longstaff, Todmorden 109 years ago, the Moderna Drama Society, Nazebottom
Baptist Church, Martin Parr's wonderful local photos in the 1970s, holidays in
Hardcastle Crags in the 1940s, and lots more.
Calder Valley Pace Egg Play video, £10
Documentary plus recordings of two versions of the Calder Valley
Pace Egg Play in 2004, researched and produced by a group of young people at
Calder High School. Includes interviews with one of the leading experts and
some of the performers.
Leeds & Liverpool Canal Part 1 video, £12.99
"A heavy duty canal, not for the faint-hearted." This video covers the Eastern
section from Leeds to the summit tunnel at Foulridge.
Easy Read West Yorkshire Street Atlas, £12.99
Extra-large scale, covering streets, courts, alleys, houses and estates as well
as the main roads, and with enlarged maps of Bradford, Halifax, Leeds and
Wakefield city centres.
Licensed to Sell - Andrew Davison*, Geoff Brandwood and Michael
Slaughter, £14.99 From English Heritage, a book celebrating
traditional pubs throughout Yorkshire, including The Three Pigeons and the Big
6 in Halifax. One of the authors is from Sowerby Bridge, and the foreword is by
Bill Bryson.
Yorkshire Villages - Bernard Ingham (£8.99) Now
in paperback, a photographic portrait.
January 2005
From Todmorden author and illustrator Dan Crisp, four new
board books with die-cut holes for babies to peep through: Where's That
Cat?, Where's That Duck?, Where's That Fish? and Where's That
Monkey?, £4.99 each.
December 2004
A Race through Time (video/DVD) - Nick Wilding,* DVD
£12.99, video £9.99 From the "Tale of Two Towns" team, Hebden
Bridge and Mytholmroyd's first road movie - a high-speed fast-film car journey
from Cragg Vale to Heptonstall Road shot in 1947 by Kenneth Crabtree with
members of the Literary & Scientific Society, placed alongside a modern
version shot in autumn 2003. The film also includes archive photographs and
commentary and memories from Lloyd Greenwood, Doris Hurst, Donald Crossley and
Clara Manning who died last year at the age of 103. Due 9th
December.
Cornerstones of Calderdale - Glyn Lee, £4.00
Potted histories of all the major settlements of the Calder Valley, from
Halifax to Walsden, with photographs.
Out of the Shadows in the Calder Valley - Bill Marsden &
Peter Coles, £5.00
Humorous and thoughtful stories and
poems from the well-established partnership, with illustrations.
The South Pennine Ring (video/DVD), DVD £19.99, video
£12.99 The Ring, which also includes The Ashton Canal, Sir John
Ramsden's Canal and the Calder & Hebble Navigation, takes us across the
Pennines from Central Manchester to Huddersfield, follows the Calder Valley to
Sowerby Bridge, and brings us back across the Pennines to Manchester. 57
minutes.
Talli's Secret - Julie Noble, £6.99
Cassie
Edwards survived the car accident which killed her sister and crippled their
father. She's having a bad time at school, too, because she's dyspraxic and
dyslexic - but then she visits Haworth Parsonage where she meets the strange
Talli ... The book is based on Juliet Barker's biography of the Bronte sisers
and is raising money for the Dyslexia Institute and the Dyspraxia Foundation.
"All the Brontes had bad handwriting and spelling and no punctuation until
their late teens!" says the author's 12-year-old son, and you can find out more
at www.tallissecret.com
November 2004
Alice's Album - the Story of a Hebden Bridge Photographer's
Studio - Issy Shannon* and Frank Woolrych,*£10.95 The illustrated
story of Alice Longstaff and her studio, and of Crossley Westerman who founded
the studio in the early 1890s.
Milltown Memories 10: the Upper Calder Valley Captured on
Camera, £2.80
Winter issue with a 1960 photo of Midgley
schoolchildren enjoying the snow. Contents include 200 years of the Rochdale
Canal, an article from Donald Crossley on Ted Hughes, with photos, extracts
from a book of local historical snippets published in 1896, memories of the
Post Office, butchers and Japanese chicken-sexers, a 1946 plan to modernise
Todmorden, snow scenes, the Uttleys, a most unusual Royal Couple from 1925, and
more!
Portrait of Leeds - John Morrison* £12.95
Affectionate and revealing photographic survey of of the local author and
photographer's home city.
Ariel (restored edition) - Sylvia Plath, £14.99
The draft of Ariel left behind when Sylvia Plath is different from the volume
of poetry eventually published to worldwide acclaim. The restored facsimile
edition shows the selection and arrangement of the poems as Plath left them at
her death, and also includes the complete working drafts of the title poem and
notes the author made for the BBC about some of the manuscript's poems.
Sylvia's daughter Frieda Hughes explains the difference between this version
and that edited by her father Ted Hughes in a Foreword.
Bronte Ways Video/DVD, Part 1 - Ray Riches* & Peter
Thornton*, £12.99 ea. A walk on the Bronte Way from Oakwell Hall
("Shirley country") to Haworth, with live interviews and spectacular scenery.
52 mins. Part 2 will explore Haworth and "Wuthering Heights" country more
fully, then proceed to Gawthorpe Hall via Wycoller Village ("Jane Eyre")
Discovering Calderdale, Part 1 - video/DVD - Glyn Lee* & P
J Thornton*, £12.99 each A journey through some of the most
interesting towns and villages of Calderdale, including Norland, Midgley,
Luddenden, Cragg Vale and Walsden
Thrumhall Greats - Robert Gate (£12.99) Halifax
Heroes 1945-1998: Halifax have enjoyed and suffered wider extremes of success
and failure than most clubs. This book gives at least a page plus b&w photo
of 100 notable Thrum Hallers from the post-WWII period. The author is a native
of Halifax and a Thrum Hall faithful for 42 years.
Weird Calderdale - Paul Weatherhead* (£7.99)
Strange and incredible events from the Calderdale area, ranging from UFOs in
Todmorden to a vampire infesting Robin Hood's grave near Brighouse.
October 2004
Pennine Pioneer: The Story of the Rochdale Canal - Keith
Gibson, £16.95
Follows the life of the Rochdale Canal, from its success to its
abandonment, and tells of the more recent battle for its preservation.
Killer Catchers - Andy Owens* and Chris Ellis
Tells how some of Britain's wickedest murderers were finally
tracked down, using recent advances in forensic techniques, especially in the
fields of psychological, psychic and DNA profiling.
September 2004
South Pennines Explorer Map OL21, £6.99 New
edition including up-to-date information on Access Land.
Brief Candle - Kate Pennington, £6.99 From Ilkley
author Jenny Oldfield, a novel for teenage readers about the Bronte sisters as
seen through the eyes of Tabitha Ackroyd; young Emily meets a servant lad who
becomes her inspiration for Heathcliff.
Scary Shorts for Hallowe'en - Kathryn Brennan,*
£6.99 From a Halifax author, a collection of true contemporary
ghost stories from across Britain in support of Breast Cancer Campaign.
August 2004
Milltown Memories 9: the Upper Calder Valley Captured on
Camera, £2.80 2nd birthday issue includes the two churches of
Heptonstall, Thornber & Finney chicks and eggs, the navvies' encampment
Dawson City, Caldene Bridge, the 1954 Mytholmroyd flood and a preview of
"Alice's Album" (see above).
Gone Walkabout: 24 Walks in the Upper Calder Valley - Anna
Carlisle, £6.00 From local publishers Pennine Pens, a collection
of 24 walks which have appeared in the Hebden Bridge Times and
Todmorden News. The walks are designed for the moderately and supremely
fit, and are graded for distance and difficulty.
Baptisms at the Chapels of Heptonstall and Cross Stone in the
Parish of Halifax, £12.50 per vol. Heptonstall 1594-1812, Cross
Stone 1678-1837. Four vols. A-F, G-J, K-Stancliffe, Stand-Y (Marriages and
Burials also available)
Creepy Crawly Calypso - Tony Langham, £9.99 Jump
and jive with this band of insects to the creepy crawly calypso beat! From
spiders to fireflies, butterflies to centipedes, the illustrations match the
Caribbean spirit of the rhyming text, which introduces children to ordinal
numbers. A CD of calypso music is included with the book.
Blackpool Highflyer - Andrew Martin, £10.99
Whodunnit set in Edwardian Halifax and on the railways of the time. Mentions
the Courier!
Bronte Country, Lives & Landscapes - Peggy Hewitt,
£12.99 Updated illustrated version of a book first published in 1985,
full of stories and reminiscences from people who have lived and worked around
Haworth. Introduction by local author and Bronte authority Juliet Barker.
July 2004
Branwell Bronte's Barber's Tale - Chris Firth,
£6.99 Was Branwell Bronte really the author of Wuthering
Heights? Literary historical novel from Whitby author.
South Pennine Walks - Jack Keighley, £5.99
Spiral-bound handwritten and illustrated with hand-drawn maps, 30 circular
walks, from 4 to 8.5 miles.
June 2004
Marriner's Yarns - George Ingle (£9.95) The story
of the Keighley Knitting Wool Spinners
Tackler's Tales: a humorous look at Lancashire - Geoffrey
Mather (£7.95)
We'll See the Cuckoo - Jean Brown (£17.00) First
of a series of books about a Pennine hill farm, Currer Laithe.
May 2004
Milltown Memories 8: the Upper Calder Valley Captured on
Camera, £2.80 With some authentic "railway children" posing on a
Blake Dean railway engine, the summer issue covers Dawson City and the building
of the Walshaw Dean reservoirs - plus the railways involved - Valley's
agricultural societies and shows, the Lord Brothers Mill explosion and Co-op
fire in Todmorden, Geoffrey Coning, Lloyd Greenwood, Mons Mill and lots more.
We're also reminded of two important anniversaries this year - the bi-centenary
of the Rochdale Canal, to be covered in a later issue, and the 150th
anniversary of Heptonstall Parish Church.
Moods of the Bronte Moors: exploring the Moors and Mills of the
South Pennines - John Morrison*, £12.95 Another sumptuous book of
photographs, this time closer to home. There's a prize for anyone pictured in
the book who turns up at the launch!
Cloth Caps and Cricket Crazy: Todmorden & Cricket 1835-96
by Freda, Malcolm & Brian Heywood*, £16.00 The fortunes of
Todmorden Cricket Club from 1835, including financial crises, riots, a players'
strike, intense rivalries with Bacup, Burnley andRochdale, a visit by W G Grace
and matches against the United England and All England elevens. All thanks to
John Fielden! With 130 photographs, maps and reproductions of original
documents.
Mytholmroyd Heritage Walk - Mike Darke*
Five walks with
lots of history, photos and sketchmaps. Revised version of booklet first
published 1987. (£2.95)
Pennine Way, £10.99 Britain's best-known National
Trail winds for 256 miles over wild moorland and through quiet dales following
the backbone of Northern England, and crossing three National Parks - the Peak
District, the Yorkshire Dales and Northumberland. Scale just under 1:20,000
(8cm or 3 1/8 inches to one mile. With colour photos, maps and plans
Cougars Going Up! - ed. David Kirkley, £7.99
Keighley Cougars Rugby League 2003 Yearbook
The Day the Sun Went Out - John Billingsley*, £2
Accounts of the 1927 Eclipse as seen from Yorkshire and the Pennines.
Originally published as a background to the 1999 total solar eclipse.
Iron Roads North of Leeds, £5.99 Leeds to
Morecambe, Settle to Carlisle and Leeds-Harrogate-York. Illustrated guide to
scenic rail routes.
Huddersfield: the Corporation Motorbus Story - Peter Cardno and
Stephen Harling, £13.50 For the first time ever, the story of
Huddersfield buses, with numerous illustrations and pages of colour photos.
Landscape format.
Hebble - D. Bentley, K. Healey & N. Harris
(£16.95) Illustrated guide to the stormy history of "one of the best
loved of all the many Yorkshire operators". Services to Heptonstall &
Blackshawhead began in the 1920s and by the 1950s the company was running to
Scarborough and even Blackpool.
Walking the Animals - Carola Luther*, £6.95 From
a Triangle author, born in South Africa. This is her first published collection
and "brings together inner and outer landscapes, the wet skies of the Pennines
and the drought of the South African lowveld; landscapes of loss, landscapes of
longing."
April 2004
The Owl and the Crag Rat - Marc Chrysanthou* et al,
£5.95 This anthology of climbing poetry reworks well-known poems by
Eng Lit greats in "acts of creative plagiarism".
Pennine Bridleway: Derbyshire to the South Pennines ,
£12.99 Britains first purpose-built long-distance bridleway,
from Buxton to the east of Hebden Bridge, where it splits to form the Mary
Towneley Loop.
Yorkshire: The Sinister Side, Book 1, 1850-80 - Steve Jones
Stories from the annals of Yorkshire crime, with contemporary
illustrations and photos. Maybe you'll find a black sheep in the family!
Love Songs - Crass From Hebden Bridge publishers
Pomona, a collection of poetry from a rural collective based in Essex
1977-1984.
Sum Total - Ray Gosling
From Hebden Bridge publishers
Pomona, an autobiographical novel by the broadcaster and journalist, first
published when he was 21.
March 2004
The Pace-Egg Plays of the Calder Valley
- Eddie Cass, £6.99
The pace-egg play is similar to other forms of English traditional
drama, but uniquely, it occurs at Easter, rather than Christmas. This book
supplements Dr Cass's The Lancashire Pace-Egg Play in that it deals with
the one area of west Yorkshire in which this Easter play was widely known. It
covers the history of the play in the Calder Valley and outlines the story of
the revival of the play. Schools were vital to the revival and continuance of
the tradition, notably the Midgley School in the 1930s and in the 1950s, Calder
High School. The Midgley pace-egg play, which has traceable, personal links
into the nineteenth century, is discussed at length. The book also considers
the revival of the play at Heptonstall where, on Good Friday, large crowds come
to witness one of west Yorkshire's most popular calendar customs. Texts of both
plays are included.
Dr Eddie Cass is an Honorary Research Fellow at the National
Centre for English Cultural Tradition at the University of Sheffield, part of
the James Madison Carpenter Collection Project team, and a member of the
Traditional Drama Research Group.
Foul Deeds & Suspicious Deaths In and Around Halifax -
Stephen Wade (£9.99)
Tales of violence and death from the sixteenth century until
recent years.
It's Water Under the Bridge - Mollie E. Sunderland
(£4.00)
The story of flooding in Mytholmroyd incorporating the history of
Mytholmroyd Bridge; all proceeds to Guide Dogs for the Blind. Many
photographs.
Cragg Vale: a Pennine Valley - Stephen Welsh,
£4.95 Back in stock, this history of settlement and conquest from
prehistoric times to the 20th century.
February 2004
Milltown Memories 7: the Upper Calder Valley captured on
camera, Spring 2004: £2.80
The Co-op's beginnings in
Todmorden and spread to Charlestown and Hebden Bridge; memories of the Co-ops
of Midgley, Mytholmroyd, Blackshawhead and Heptonstall; Digging for Victory in
Walsden; Rock 'n' Roll at Nickie's; and a wonderful picture of a milk-donkey
near Mytholmroyd.
Phoenix by John Connor* (£9.99)
The story of West Yorkshire Detective Constable Karen Sharpe's
investigation into the killing of a policeman and police informer on moorland
above Halifax. John Connor is a Crown Prosecution barrister who has worked in
Halifax, Bradford, Leeds and London.
Sex, Gender and Power - Professor Michael Smith*
(£7.95)
"The Enigma of the Public House" - examines the place of the pub
in society and the different meaning it has for men and women.
January 2004
Her Husband: Hughes & Plath - a Marriage - Diane Wood
Middlebrook (£20.75)
Ted Hughes was a young man and already something of a literary
star when he married Sylvia Plath. When she committed suicide severn years
later, he became the executor of the substantial body of her work which had
made her a powerful political icon - and cast a shadow over Hughes's career and
reputation. In this fresh approach, Diane Middlebrook looks at Hughes's poetic
capabilities, ambitious literary career and its inflection by the reputation of
his dead wife, draw on interviews and his unpublished letters and papers.
Transactions of the Halifax Antiquarian Society (2004)
£12.00
Including the opening of Halifax Town Hall by the Prince of Wales
in 1863, the Patchetts of Midgley, the diary of Halifax piano-maker Henry
William Pohlmann, and Mons Mill, Todmorden.
December 2003
Milltown: an Unreliable History - John
Morrison*(£5.95) - the story of a small characterful community in the
South Pennines. Can a small gritstone town have too many juice-bars?
Halifax - John A Hargreaves, £20 The definitive
history back in print, updated and expanded.
Sing No Sad Songs - Christian Thompson* Second in the
PI Chris O'Brien series
Sons and Lodgers - Jill Robinson, £6.95 More
comic relief from the author of Berringden Brow. All Jess wants is a
quiet life. All her friends want is somewhere to stay ...
Video: A Walk on T'Long Cut : a journey on the Leeds-Liverpool
Canal from Leeds to West Marton - Ray Riches and P J Thornton;VHS
£12.99 Focuses on the Aire Valley section of the longet man-made
waterway in Britain. Includes the Bingley Five Rise Locks, Skipton, East
Riddleston Hall, Kirkstall Abbey and Salts Mill, plus interviews.
November 2003
Milltown Memories 6: the Upper Calder Valley captured on
camera, £2.80 Cragg Vale features prominently with articles on
the Hinchliffes and Cragg Hall; also covered are Wilson's Bobbin Mill in
Cornholme, memories of Old Gate and Market Street in Hebden Bridge, Eastwood,
two strange deaths, and icicles in Hardcastle Craggs.
Making of the West Yorkshire Landscape - Anthony Silson
(£9.99)
How West Yorkshire's landscape has changed since the area emerged
from under a sea some seventy million years ago.
Wordsworth: a life in letters - Juliet Barker*
(£9.99)
Now in paperback, Wordsworth's progress from rebellious schoolboy
to radical poet to revered patriarch - in his own words, from letters and
autobiographical fragments selected by prize-winning local author.
The Fan - Hunter Davies (£9.99)
Collection of hilarious and well-observed pieces on football
originally published in The New Statesman. Hebden Bridge publishers
Pomona's Christmas lead title.
Weather or Not! - Paul Hudson & Bob Rust
(£9.99)
Highs & lows of Yorkshire weather with dramatic pictures of
storm, flood, drought and snow.
West Riding Steam 1955-1969 - a pictorial diary by Robert
Anderson (£12.95)
208 previously unpublished photographs of 78 classes of steam
locomotives around Halifax, Leeds, Bradford, Huddersfield, and further afield
in West Yorkshire.
October 2003
Collected Poems of Ted Hughes (£40 hardback)
"The Dreamfighter" & Other Creation Tales
In
one volume, the creation stories from the 1960s through till 1995, illustrated.
(£14.99)
The Old Stones of Elmet - Paul Bennett (£13.95)
"A total guide to the archaeology, folklore and geomancy of the
ritual stone sites in an old Yorkshire kingdom", foreword by Aubrey Burl.
Catalogues with photos and sketches many of the old stone sites of Elmet,
including Todmorden, Mytholmroyd, Luddenden, Hebden Bridge, Blackshawhead and
Halifax area.
Wintering - Kate Moses
Fictional account of the last months of Sylvia Plath's life, based
on the "Ariel" poems. (£7.99)
The Letters and Diaries of Kathleen Ferrier - editor
Christopher Fifield (£25, increasing to £30)
Marking the 50th anniversary of the Blackburn-born contralto's
tragically early death. Kathleen Ferrier "was a mix of extreme modesty and
self-determined ambition, and a mischievously blunt sense of earthy Lancastrian
humour".
Canals of the Aire and Calder Navigation
This pictorial history demonstrates how the Calder became one of
the UK's most successful inland waterways. £9.99
One Spring: Romance, Rock 'n' Roll and Rugby League in the
1970s - Geoff Lee* (£8.95)
Back in stock from former Halifax draughtsman "a vivid and
humorous account of working class life at home, work and play" - set in an
engineering drawing office with a main character from Mytholmroyd! The book was
enjoyed by the Huddersfield Daily Examiner, Yorkshire Evening Post and
Stan Barstow. Others in the series are One Winter and in the pipeline
One Summer taking us into the 1980s. Also available at The Book Case are
the same author's Bamford: Memoirs of a Blood and Thunder Coach, fondly
remembered by Halifax Rugby League supporters (£9.95) and Wars of the
Roses: a history of Lancashire v Yorkshire Cricket Matches
(£16.95).
The Great Bev by Robert Gate* (£14.95)
The rugby league career of Brian Bevan. Author is from
Ripponden.
I, George Nepia by George Nepia and Terry McLean
(£13.95)
Autobiography of a Rugby legend - perhaps New Zealand's greatest
ever Rugby Union player, who played for Halifax in the 1930s.
Martin Parr Postcards (£14.95)
In a solid box, 45 postcards representing the photographer's work
including several Hebden Bridge and Halifax ones.
Back in stock: Peter Brook in the Pennines (£12) and
In and Out of the Pennines Even (£20): he "paints the Pennines in
all their brutal beauty."
Historical Atlas of North Yorkshire - ed. Robin A Butlin
(£20 paperback)
Not strictly all that local - Skipton is about as near as it gets,
but very nicely produced with loads of maps covering everything from population
change through geology, ancient woodland and managed rabbit warrens to lead
mining and jet. Lots of photos too.
September 2003
Forgotten Landscape - Alastair Lee (£12.99)
From Burnley-born photographer and climber Alastair Lee, a books
of colour photographs focussing on the stunning natural beauty found in the
Burnley, Pendle and Ribble Valley areas. Gets as near to us as Widdop,
"possibly the most beautiful place in the UK, if not Europe". For sample pics
go to http://www.posingproductions.com/ where you can also watch a 360-degree
panoramic view of bouldering at Widdop if your computer's up to it!
VIDEOS
"Walks around Calderdale": from Pennine Country
Productions, a series of four videos of historically-based local walks, 50 mins
ea., £11.99 each -
1. Historic Villages and Hilltop Views (Mytholmroyd, Cragg
Vale, Boulderclough, Luddenden, Midgley)
2. Woodland Crags and Secluded Valleys (Hebden Bridge,
Hardcastle Crags, Crimsworth Dean, Pecket Well, Old Town)
3. Ancient Townships and Waterside Mills (Heptonstall,
Slack, Colden Valley, Blackshaw Head, Jumble Hole Clough)
4. Pennine Town and Packhorse Trails (Todmorden, Langfield,
Lumbutts, Mankinholes, Lobb Mill, Cross Stone, Whirlaw Rocks)
August 2003
Milltown Memories 5:the Upper Calder Valley captured on
camera, £2.50
First Birthday
Issue! Featuring a "Where Is It?" quiz. Articles include 100
years of Mytholmroyd parades, Temperance in the Calder Valley, a Heptonstall
murder, Lady Royd's and Midgley Schools, George VI, Mons Mill and smallpox, a
tribute to Colin Spencer, the 1912 Charlestown rail crash and more, including
many photographs from the Alice Longstaff Collection..
Sylvia Plath: A literary life - Linda Wagner-Martin
This study examines the way Plath made herself into a writer.
Close analysis of Plath's reading and apprenticeship writing both in fiction
and poetry sheds considerable light on Plath's work in the late 1960s. This
updated edition discusses of the aftermath of Plath's death including the
publication of her "Collected Poems" edited by Ted Hughes which won the
Pulitzer Prize for Poetry in 1982. Biographies of Plath are examined along with
the publication of Hughes's "Birthday Letters". A chronology maps out key
events and publications both in Plath's lifetime and posthumously. Due 29 Aug
2003. £14.99
July 2003
A Pennine Saunter Around Hebden Bridge by Glyn Lee*
Expected mid-July, this £3.00 book will take you on a
historic walk through Hebden Bridge, Hardcastle Crags, Crimsworth Dean, Pecket
Well and Old Town
Hebden Bridge Calendar 2004
Twelve colour photos of the town and surroundings from Geoff
Boswell (£3.95)
The Death & Life of Sylvia Plath - Ronald Hayman
"Not a conventional biography, this book offers an explanation of Sylvia
Plath's death in 1963. The author looks back on Plath's life in an attempt to
offer an objective account of why she killed herself, and discusses her life
with her husband Ted Hughes. This brand new edition will bring the story full
circle, as it includes the publication of 'Birthday Letters', the death of Ted
Hughes and Elaine Feinstein's biography of him, along with Erica Wagner's book
'Ariel's Gift', and the Al Alvarez autobiography which includes new material.
Contains previously unpublished photographs." (£7.99)
Nature's Domain: Anne Lister and the Landscape of
Desire
This new book on eccentric Halifax lesbian landowner Anne Lister
by local historian Jill Liddington follows Anne Lister's return to
Shibden Hall in 1832 with her dreams of high society shattered after she is
betrayed by another woman. (£7.50)
Northern Voices: Our Urban Environment, No. 1 (Summer/Autumn
2003)
New Northern libertarian bi-annual journal, published in Hebden
Bridge. First issue ranges from the on-site death of Simon Jones in Shoreham
and urban decay in Burnley to art in Stalybridge. (£1.20)
A Man of Stone: his life and loves - Jack Wood*
Novel set in Victorian Yorkshire, from former Haworth joiner,
undertaker and builder, now aged 80. Foreword by Peter Harland, ex-Telegraph
& Argus and Sunday Times. (£14.99)
June 2003
Rule of Night by Trevor Hoyle
Back in print, a gritty novel about people having a bad time in
Rochdale in the 1970s, published by new Hebden Bridge publishers Pomona. They
are also regional representatives for people like Robbie Williams and the Red
Hot Chili Peppers ....
Footnote by Boff Whalley
- who's also a founder member of Chumbawamba! Also published by
Pomona of Hebden Bridge, this is the true story of a boy from Burnley
reconciling Mormonism and punk rock, industrial courtesy and political
insurrection - and how his pop group Chumbawamba finally made it big.
Forget You Had a Daughter - Sandra Gregory
(£6.99)
"Doing Time in the Bangkok Hilton". Sandra Gregory of Halifax
served seven years of a 22-year sentence imposed by a court in Thailand, after
being caught smuggling 87 grams of heroin through Bangkok airport in 1993.
Initially she faced the death penalty. She spent four and a half years in the
notorious Lar Yao women's prison - dubbed the Bangkok Hilton - before being
repatriated in 1997 to serve the rest of her sentence in Britain. She was freed
in July 2000 after being granted a royal pardon by the King of Thailand.
Saddleworth Villages (£14.95)
New from Saddleworth Historical Society, nicely illustrated
hardback on Delph, Denshaw, Diggle, Dobcross, Grasscroft, Lydgate &
Roughtown, Greenfield, Springhead and Uppermill.
May 2003
John Morrison*, he of Milltown Trilogy infamy, has a
new humorous book, Dawdling Through the Dales - out. It details a
walk from the house, in Leeds, where he lost his virginity, to the shores of
Lake Windermere. (£12.95).
Milltown Memories No. 4, Summer 2003
(£2.50)
With a 1920s charabanc full of people in hats on the cover, this
new issue covers Tommy Stansfield the Master Builder, the Nudger Inn that
preceded the Woodman, Todmorden's & Gauxholme's railway viaducts, lark
singing competitions, the 1947 mudslide at Cornholme, holiday fun at Slack,
Hardcastle Crags and the Hawden Hall Holiday Camp (with a picture of Billy Holt
with Trigger), Luddenden undertakers Patchetts, the late Jack Uttley (with a
super photo of the Buttress), St. George's Square in times past remembered by
Lloyd Greenwood, a visit to Hebden Bridge by Liszt in 1840, Eastwood and the
chopping down of Callis Woods for the war effort remembered by Arthur Robinson,
the story of Ashley House aka Linden House, now Angeldale, a recipe for roasted
rhubarb - and the Pace Eggers and Moderna models of last season's issue named,
plus much more, including many photographs from the Alice Longstaff
Collection.
April 2003
The Lancashire Pace-Egg Play - Eddie Cass
A Social History. A detailed study of the origins of the different
components of the Pace-Egg Play as we know it today and the different versions
on record. Rochdale is the nearest place to the Calder Valley to be discussed;
the Calder Valley version is mentioned, but there's a new book in the pipe-line
about that! Published by the Folk-Lore Society. (£13.95)
South Pennine Ring map New canal cruising map
from Geoprojects showing the Huddersfield and Rochdale Canals and connecting
waterways, with information for boaters including locks, bridges and warnings
of difficult places, recommended craft dimensions, useful phone numbers, a
history of the canals, local places of interest and cross-sections.
(£4.75)
Supernatural Pennines - Jenny Randles
Now in paperback, this colour-illustrated look at strange
phenomena at work in the moors and valleys of the Pennine hills - "one of the
most haunted places on earth". (£11.99)
Yorkshire Encounters - Lin Watts
The author has chosen seven of the landscapes of Yorkshire and
devotes one chapter to each, travelling from North Yorkshire via Haworth and
Wensleydale to York. Colour illustrated. (£15.99)
March 2003
Milltown Memories 3
This issue covers the Midgley Pace Egg Play, Moderna, the postmen
Uttleys of Heptonstall, Slack Cricket Club, the eccentric Curate Crabtree of
Todmorden and world roller-skating champion Arnold Binns, completes the series
about Alice Longstaff, and has articles by Bill Marsden and Lloyd Greenwood. As
always, there are splendid old photos. (£2.50)
The Tournament in England 1100-1400 - Juliet
Barker*
Local acclaimed biographer's first book, on the first emergence of
the tournament in England, with its political, social and military implications
- including its propaganda value - to its demise for technological reasons in
the 15th century. It's being re-published in paperback with eight new pages of
colour plates. (£16.99)
The Wages of Spin - Bernard Ingham *
A first hand account of how spindoctoring developed, from Sir
Bernard who spent 24 years as a press officer for Labour and Conservative
governments, the last eleven of them as Margaret Thatcher's chief press
secretary. (£18.99)
Winter's Edge - Lorenzo Dali*
Novel from Halifax-born author, set on present-day Haworth moors,
with echoes of Wuthering Heights. (£4.95)
Over the Hills and Back for Tea - Christine Delves and
Mary Atkinson
From the South Pennine Packhorse Trails Trust, a guide documenting
a maze of ancient tracks and highways within 30 miles of Hebden Bridge and
Haworth. (£4.99)
I Haven't Unpacked - William Holt*
Autobiography of the famous self-educated Todmorden character who
saw active service in the First World War at the age of 16, travelled through
Spain, Canada, Japan and China, sold coal in Yorkshire, tried to start a new
religion, became a revolutionary, organised the unemployed, was imprisoned
after a mass-march on Leeds Town Hall, started motor libraries in England, ran
the Franco naval blockade, and returned to his looms. He then rode his horse
Trigger through Europe for over a year, sleeping in the open. This book was
first published in 1939, but these editions are 1960s, with covers to match!
(Hardback £3.00, paperback £1.50.)
February 2003
Nicholson Guide to the Waterways 5: North West and the
Pennines (new edition) £9.99
Pennine Way South (new edition) (£12.99)
January 2003
Seen on the Packhorse Tracks by Cliviger
historian Titus Thornber *published by the South Pennine Packhorse
Trails Trust.
With colour and b&w illustrations, it
tells the history of the packhorse tracks and how they coped with different
kinds of terrain, and examines the features still visible today - bridges,
causeways, guidestoops and marker posts. £15.00 paperback.
Songs of the Ridings: the Yorkshire Musical
Museum, collected by Mary and Nigel Hudleston,
transcribed, compiled and annotated by Mark Gordon & Richard Adams with
Nigel A. Hudleston. (£25.00) Chunky A-4 spiral-bound collection
of Yorkshire songs converted from recordings of up to 50 years ago ("some of
the singers were practically drowned out by mooing cows and bleating lambs!").
with 22 categories ranging from "Farming and the Land" and "Work and Industry",
to "Folk and Calendar", "Political" and "Women's Revenge", and including songs
from Todmorden, Bradford and Burnley.
Don't Cry Nanna - Heather Coupland A family's
struggle to survive the harsh Pennine winters (Marsden) and daily life of 1950s
Yorkshire, seen through the eyes of a child. £7.99
Bethany - Freda Kelsall* A play covering
the last weeks of Jesus's life and his relationship with the two sisters and
brother living at Bethany outside Jerusalem. performed to mark the first
anniversary of September 11th 2001. (£6.00)
December 2002
Annals of Todmorden
1552-1913
A record of people, events and
circumstances from earlier times Compiled by Dorothy Dugdale
from Todmorden and Hebden Bridge Historical Almanacks Full of
fascinating detail, including visits by John Wesley and road-building in the
earlier records and a rich and varied community life in the Victorian period,
with brass bands, picnics, pigeons, canaries, cricket and days out amongst
other occupations. Getting knocked down by trains and horses-and-carts and
drowning also seem to have been common occurrences.(£19.95)
Watergrove: a history of the valley and its drowned
village - Allen Holt
Pictorial record of the lost hamlets on the
moorlands above Wardle, destroyed or submerged by Rochdale's biggest reservoir
in 1938. (£10.99)
Eclipse of the Son - Roy Shepherd*
A collection of poetry in six parts: "Unclouded Glass", "Unbroken
Spirit", "String of Pearls", "Knell of Heaven", "Afflicted in Armley" and
"Tailpiece".
November 2002
Wordsworth: a life in letters - Juliet Barker*
Newly transcribed from the manuscripts, with previously
unpublished material for almost 600 letters and journals. Acclaimed local
author. (£25.00)
Wells of West Yorkshire - Valerie Shepherd,
(£4.99)
Todmorden Album III - Roger Birch*
Now at amazing price of £6.00, Roger Birch's third
collection of old photos of Todmorden.
King Charles' Mine - Titus Thornber
Historical novel based on the history of the Thieveley Lead Mine,
Lancashire, 1627-1635. A commission of King Charles I took it over but the men
from London were unable to cope with the complications. Now £3.99.
Letters to Ted - Daniel Weissbort (£8.95)
A collection of poems in memory of the late Poet Laureate. The two men
met as students in the 1950s and co-founded Modern Poetry in Translation
in 1965.
Two Weavers: Two Ways - Sue Lawty* and Meira Stockl
(£10.00)
Colour illustrated catalogue of their exhibition at the University
Gallery, Leeds. Sue Lawty's postcards also available.
Luddenden Saga: a brief history of a Yorkshire Village -
Vikki Egerton* (£7.99)
Based on the narrative used in the village's celebration of the
Millennium, with b&w photographs.
The Calder and Hebble Navigation - Mike Taylor
(£12.00)
The River Calder rises in the Pennines north of Todmorden,
receives the Hebble Brook at Salterhebble and reaches the Aire & Calder
Navigation at Wakefield. It was made navigable in the 1770s and became part of
the Mersey-Humber trade routes. By the 1940s it was in decline, but commercial
traffic continued till 1981 when shipments to Thornhill Power Station ceased.
The book contains numerous black and white illustrations of canal boats,
furniture and activity along the navigation.
A Walk on t'Cut: a Transpennine Journey on the Rochdale
Canal (video £12.99; DVD or US-compatible video
£14.99) A walk along the Rochdale Canal from the centre of Manchester
to Sowerby Bridge, showing the changing landscapes, industrial features, boats
and wildlife, with interviews and aerial views. From Ray Riches* and P J
Thornton.
The Anatomy of Canals: the Mania Years - Anthony Burton and
Derek Pratt (£16.99)
Vol. 2 in the series, covering the 1790s to the 1820s when most of
the UK's canal network was constructed. Chapter 7 is on "Manchester and the
North", including the Ashton Canal, Rochdale Canal (with a special mention for
Stubbing Wharf pub) and Huddersfield Canal, amongst others. B&w photos.
Milltown Memories 2:the Upper Calder Valley captured on
camera, £2.50 The second issue covers Alice Longstaff's
early years, Lloyd Greenwood and Hebden Bridge Station, cinemas of the Upper
Valley, snow, hippies, Home Rule for Mytholmroyd, a death on the moors and
more, and includes photos of the original Stoodley Pike, the demolition of
Bridge Lanes, and Stansfield View.
Ee Up Lad! A Salute to the Yorkshire
Dialect - Len Markham, ill. Richard Scollins (£5.95) A feast
of linguistic fun including a Yorkshire view of nursery rhymes and well-known
scenes from English history, superbly illustrated by Richard Schollins, plus
dictionary.
Pennine Dreams: the story of the Huddersfield Narrow Canal
Keith Gibson, £16.99
How and why the canal -
which has the longest, deepest, highest canal tunnel in the British Isles - was
built, and how it was restored. B&w illustrations.
Amanda
Dalton* is one of the authors featured in Comma: anthology of short
stories, ed. Ra Page, £9.95
A new collection of Black Performance Poetry (book and CD),
Moving Voices edited by Martin and Asher Hoyles, includes work by
John Lyons* (£16.99)
October 2002
The Cat and the Cuckoo - Ted Hughes, ill. Flora
McDonnell (£10.00)
Illustrated collection of animal poems for younger readers.
September 2002
Milltown Memories: the Upper Calder Valley captured on
camera, £2.50
The new quarterly local history journal with photographs from the
Longstaff Collection and articles of local interest. The first issue has
articles on Alice Longstaff, the Cragg Vale Coiners' murder, Todmorden buses,
Buttress Brink, and more, with some lovely old advertisements.
August 2002
Ted Hughes - the Life of a Poet - Elaine Feinstein,
£8.99 A biography of the former Poet Laureate and an exploration
of his marriage to Sylvia Plath. The author argues that they were both flawed
geniuses and that the truth about the failure of their marriage must
incorporate her fragility and his recklessness.
Collected Poems - Sylvia Plath, £16.99
All her mature poetry from 1956 to 1963. Won 1981 Pulitzer Prize for poetry.
New edition.
Selected Poems - Sylvia Plath, £8.99
New edition of selection made by Ted Hughes.
Universal Home Doctor - Simon Armitage, £12.99
Poems that range from the rain forests of South America to the deserts
of Western Australia set against the landscape of the human body. First new
collection for five years.
July 2002
Yorkshire Surnames 3: Halifax & District by George
Redmonds, £3.60
Fascinating account of the origins of Greenwood,
Sutcliffe, Akroyd, Gaukroger, Murgatroyd, and many others. Also Vol.
1: Bradford & District and Vol. 2: Huddersfield &
District
Building with Straw Bales: a practical guide for the UK and
Ireland by Barbara Jones*, £9.95 Author lives in
Todmorden and founded the women's roofing firm Amazon Nails, which has now
become a specialist training, advice and consultancy for environmental
building, especially using straw bales.
The Home Crowd by Graham Kershaw,
£9.99
Novel set around Stoodley Pike and Todmorden,
by Australian emigre from Rochdale.
That Which Does Not Kill You by Christian Thompson*,
£15.99 at The Book Case. Debut thriller, set in Bradford and
concerning a wise-cracking kung fu Private Investigator.
Forget You Had a Daughter: doing time in the Bangkok Hilton
by Sandra Gregory*, £16.99 Halifax author tells the story of
how she was arrested smuggling heroin for a stranger and sentenced to 25 years
in prison, first in Bangkok, and then in the UK. She was pardoned by the King
of Thailand in 2000. She hopes this chilling account of her experiences will
stop others from doing the same.
Supreme Self-Confidence in 150 Days - Jim Byrne*,
£23.95 From a Hebden Bridge Rational Emotive Behaviour Therapist
and Counsellor, a comprehensive self-training manual, "Becoming Your Own
Counsellor, vol. 2".
The Shut Drawer by Liz Almond*, £6.95 Her
first full-length collection of poetry
June 2002
Aspects of Calderdale, ed. John Billingsley*,
£9.99 Subjects covered include Early Prehistory, External
decoration on 17th-century houses, Ted Hughes, Alice Longstaffe, and the impact
of modern technology.
Todmorden Book of the Dead by John Morrison*,
£4.95 From the author of the infamous Milltown Trilogy
and Men are from Mytholmroyd, , a further volume designed
to upset people at the upper end of the valley, in an unpretentious place
where people still point at aeroplanes.
Ted Hughes: Beginner's Guides series - Charlie Bell,
£5.99
Aimed at anyone needing a clear but
intelligent guide to Ted Hughes, useful to adult learners returning to
literature, A-level and undergraduate students and the general public. Contains
a biography and advice on how to tackle his poetry, investigates his themes and
major works and also some modern critical approaches including ecocriticism and
ecofeminism. Concludes with a "Where To Next" chapter. Expected late
June.
Giving Up: the Last Days of Sylvia Plath by
Jillian Becker, £5.00 paperback, £10 hardback . A memoir
from a writer who knew her during her last few months.
Voices from a Silk-Cotton Tree by John Lyons*,
£6.95. In this new collection, his third, he mines a rich vein of
childhood memories and experiences of Trinidad and Tobago, where he grew up.
"The silk-cotton tree is a place of haunting energies, secret lives and
experiences of people who have died, a powerhouse of personal histories
whispered on the wind."
The Witch Bag by Sarah Corbett*, £6.95.
New collection of poems by local author.
May 2002
Charles Horner of Halifax by Tom J. Lawson
(£45) - celebrating the life and work of the local jeweller, who
worked in Hebden Bridge through the 1850s and 1860s before setting up shop in
Halifax. The book contains information on the company pattern and price books,
oral history from employees and over 600 illustrations.
The Minute Taker's Handbook by Lee Comer*
and Paul Ticher. (£9.95) Published by the Directory for Social
Change, it gives guidance to all aspects of minute-taking.
April 2002
The Person in Social Psychology by Viv Burr*
(£9.95). It challenges the assimption that the person has an
already-existing nature which becomes subject to the influence of social
environment.
Craft and Art - the Business by Elizabeth White*
(£9.99) Author is owner of the giftshop Past and Present on Crown
Street, and business editor for The Craftsman magazine.s Covers all
aspects of the craft business for anyone wanting to convert a hobby into a
livelihood.
Reckless by Sue Mayfield* (£4.99)(Hodder
Bites series) A new novel for teenagers. Author acknowledges the
help of drama students from Brighouse High School who role-played scenes from
the book. The main character, 15-year-old Josh, is sporty and daring but
irresponsible.
Cobbles, Candles and Clogs by Margaret Duffield*
(£15.00) Memoirs of a Halifax nurse who lived through World War II,
with poems and photographs
March 2002
On Ilkley Moor - the story of an English Town by Tim
Binding (£8.99) Interesting and well-researched book It includes
historical, geographical and travel-book aspects.
Todmorden Antiquarian Society's pamphlets Stoodley
Pike (£2.50), Walsden - A Century of Change
1780-1880 (£1.50), Walsden Words: how we used to live and
speak (£1), Todmorden Cameos (£5.50),
The Development of Todmorden 1700-1896 (£3.50) and Portrait
of a Town: mid-19th century Todmorden (£2.50).
February 2002
The Twentieth-Century String Quartet edited by Douglas
Jarman* (£10.95) "The first - and as yet only - volume to give an
overview of the development of the String Quartet in the twentieth
century."
UMMA - Poems from Three Recent Commissions by John
Siddique* (£3.00) Book includes poems from the film "Home from
Home", based on photos and oral histories of British Pakistanis, and poems
based on his time as Writer in Residence at HMP Wetherby. It costs .
Poems by Liz Almond* included in Reactions 2: New
Poetry, published by pen&inc, University of East Anglia, at
£7.95.
January 2002
The Office of Nostalgia by Roderick Ogley* of
Calderdale Amnesty (£3) His first book of poetry at the age of 72.
The title is , and it costs available at The Book Case.
Berringden Brow - Memoirs of a Single Parent with a
Crush by Jill Robinson (£6.95) A local humorous book : about
"the struggling but still optimistic middle-aged women of Berringden Brow" -
Bridget Jones' elder sisters! It's published by Pennine Pens..
December 2001
Ten Years of Woodcraft Folk in Hebden Bridge
(£1.00) An assortment of reminiscences from members. It costs
£1 and is on sale at The Book Case.
Put Your Hands Together by Daniel Bath*
(£4.95) An attractive collection of progressive pieces and exercises
for new pianists. Includes pieces such as "Slidin' Blooze" and "Hurdy-Gurdy
Dance", as well as hints for practice.
Manchester & Leeds Railway - The Calder Valley Line
by Martin Bairstow* (£10.95) Reissue of the popular book, first
published in 1987, with 32 extra pages; tells the story of the local railway
from first plans in the 1830s right up to today. Photographs, maps, diagrams
and drawings. . See below for details.
Beastly Bites by John and Jackie Eames*
(£4.99) A humorous alphabet about the eating habits of animals! from
The Book Case
Feather and Bone by Gus Smith* (£8.99) A
dark fantasy set on the Northumberland moors. Gus lives in Crimsworth Dene and
will be known to many as a writer of SF, folk musician and Chairman of the
Ecology Building Society
Chasing More Shadows in the Calder Valley by Bill
Marsden* and Peter Coles* (£5.00) Follow-up to their previous
popular venture Chasing Shadows.
Life in Pictures "Extracts from a Visual Diary" by Mike
Barrett* (£5.00) A spiral-bound mini-collection of pictures from
his exhibition on show at Studio Gallery, Hangingroyd Lane.
The Hepton Singers - Live at Square Chapel CD
- The Hepton Singers (£5.00).
Introduction to Politics and Society by Shaun Best*
(£17.99). For students and lecturers, published by Sage
Publications.
Hebden Bridge Heritage Trail (0.99p) A walk
around Hebden Bridge with information on aspects of its history. Colour
photos.
Yorkshire Villages/Yorkshire Castles by Bernard Ingham,
£11.99 ea or £20 for both: Photographic histories by native
son.
Yesterday's Yorkshire: a Celebration of the Industrial West
Riding - Terry Sutton, £17.99 Beautifully illustrated
portrait of the West Riding at a time when it stood poised between its
industrial heyday and a new less certain future.
Calderdale Way (Walking Country) - Paul Hannon
(£3.99) 48-page booklet with guide, outline maps, sketches,
points of interest
Ted Hughes: the Life of a Poet by Elaine Feinstein
(£20) The first biography.
Collected Plays for Children by Ted Hughes
(£6.99) Collects six plays suitable for performance by children,
including The Pig Organ, never before published. The others are The
Coming of the Kings, The Tiger's Bones, Beauty and the Beast, Sean, the Fool,
the Devil and the Cats, and Orpheus.
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