Thank you to all of our readers who sent along their lunar photos as part of this summer's "Shoot the Moon" contest! Browse the beautiful submissions below, and don't miss our latest amateur astronomy title The New Moon.
Ayelet Haimson Lushkov, the author of Magistracy and the Historiography of the Roman Republic, offers an inventive look at the concept of leadership in the Roman Republic: through parallels with the 2014 English cricket team.
Tim Faley, the author of The Entrepreneurial Arch, explains why we need new entrepreneurs, why a system for building entrepreneurship is missing, and how we can foster one through education.
Alastair Horne, Communities And Social Media Manager, reports from Day One of the 2014 Frankfurt Book Fair.
Gael McDonald, the author of Business Ethics: A Contemporary Approach, discusses the issues raised in her textbook, as well as the plethora of accompanying resources that have been developed to support...
The celebrated collection of Ben Jonson's work is now available in digitally. The publishers give you an insight into this colossal undertaking.
The study of history has changed. Instead of examining centuries and millennia past and studying huge swathes of global history, the discipline has gotten microscopic, rarely tackling more than a few years...
It is strange that there were very few biographical notices of one of the world’s greatest typographer-printers for more than a hundred years after his death. Interest was rekindled in the twentieth century by the 1907 biography by Ralph Straus and Robert K. Dent (printed by Cambridge University Press but published by Chatto and Windus) and Josiah H. Benton’s work, which we have just reissued.
In this video Tim Faley, author of The Entrepreneurial Arch, discusses the concept of ‘the arch’ and how it can help develop entrepreneurial skills. Illustrated with various real-world examples,...
Those of you who enjoyed the list of books Beckett read in his spare time during Volume 2 will be delighted to know he kept up his voracious reading habits from 1957 to 1965. He was reading everything from classics like Dante to the much-discussed authors of the moment like Pasternak. He didn't enjoy them all, but he certainly had an interesting take.
Campbell McLachlan, the author of Foreign Relations Law, discusses the policies of foreign relations law in four Commonwealth nations. Read More ?
Explore the paradox of the unexpected hanging in this exclusive excerpt from Knots and Borromean Rings, Rep-Tiles, and Eight Queens, a new collection of Martin Gardner's writing on classic puzzles and games.