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Heaven Cracks, Earth Shakes
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 296

Heaven Cracks, Earth Shakes

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2012-01-03
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  • Publisher: Basic Books

When an earthquake of historic magnitude leveled the industrial city of Tangshan in the summer of 1976, killing more than a half-million people, China was already gripped by widespread social unrest. As Mao lay on his deathbed, the public mourned the death of popular premier Zhou Enlai. Anger toward the powerful Communist Party officials in the Gang of Four, which had tried to suppress grieving for Zhou, was already potent; when the government failed to respond swiftly to the Tangshan disaster, popular resistance to the Cultural Revolution reached a boiling point. In Heaven Cracks, Earth Shakes, acclaimed historian James Palmer tells the startling story of the most tumultuous year in modern Chinese history, when Mao perished, a city crumbled, and a new China was born.

The Militia Boy
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 200

The Militia Boy

This is the autobiography, memories and impressions of a boy born in 1918 in the poorer district of a large Lancashire city. His childhood and early youth were spent unaware of the awful poverty and deprivation of the hungry thirties, which were coloured by the spectre of mass unemployment, social degradation and abject misery. The clouds of war had been building up from 1935 and the Spanish Civil War was a prelude to the final holocaust of 1939. On his twenty-first birthday, in July 1939, his passport into manhood was getting conscripted into the armed forces among the newly recruited militia and he became a militia boy. For over six years, these militia boys served in every theatre of war from Narvik to Dunkirk, the deserts of North Africa, Sicily, Burma, Singapore and Malaysia, India, Iraq and Syria, Crete, Italy and Germany. They even witnessed the final disregard of human life in the charnel houses of the concentration camps of Europe. This story is dedicated to all those militia boys who were unfortunate to be born at the wrong time and who gave over six years of their manhood in the hope that the world would become a better place to live in. James Palmer, June 1980

The Bloody White Baron
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 230

The Bloody White Baron

Roman Ungern von Sternberg was a Baltic aristocrat, a violent, headstrong youth posted to the wilds of Siberia and Mongolia before the First World War. After the Bolshevik Revolution, the Baron - now in command of a lethally effective rabble of cavalrymen - conquered Mongolia, the last time in history a country was seized by an army mounted on horses. He was a Kurtz-like figure, slaughtering everyone he suspected of irreligion or of being a Jew. And his is a story that rehearses later horrors in Russia and elsewhere. James Palmer's book is an epic recreation of a forgotten episode and will establish him as a brilliant popular historian.

An Elegy on the death of Mr. James Bristow, late Fellow of All-souls. [By Edward Palmer.]
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 12
Into the Weird: the Collected Stories of James Palmer
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 408

Into the Weird: the Collected Stories of James Palmer

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2014-05-13
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  • Publisher: Unknown

This volume collects all of the new pulp and weird fiction of James Palmer (2014 New Pulp Award nominee for Best Short Story) to date, including work from such popular anthologies as Gideon Cain, Blackthorn: Thunder on Mars, and Monster Earth. Within these pages you will find everything from weird menace tales in the style of Robert E. Howard and H.P. Lovecraft to swashbuckling sword and sorcery to far flung future science fiction. Action heroes rub elbows with strange creatures as:A 40's private eye must retrieve a powerful magic ring before it falls into the hands of the local mob.A daring space ace confronts a cosmic mystery aboard a derelict starship.A young journalist must fend off a frightening alien invasion threatening his small town.A sword-slinging Puritan stalks a fallen angel in witch-haunted Colonial America.An American general fights evil on a post-apocalyptic Mars.All this and more await you in...Into the WeirdOver 400 pages of pulse-pounding pulp action from the editor and co-creator of Monster Earth and Betrayal on Monster Earth!

Views in Wimbledon. Sketched and Engraved by W. J. Palmer
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 36

Views in Wimbledon. Sketched and Engraved by W. J. Palmer

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 1863
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  • Publisher: Unknown

None

Minds of the Empire
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 432

Minds of the Empire

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 1995
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  • Publisher: Unknown

None

Specification of James Palmer Budd
  • Language: en

Specification of James Palmer Budd

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 1857
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  • Publisher: Unknown

None

The Death of Mao
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 213

The Death of Mao

The Death of Mao opens in the summer of 1976, as Mao Zedong lay dying and China was struck by a great natural disaster. The earthquake that struck Tangshan, a shoddily built mining city, was one of the worst in recorded history, killing half a million people. But the Chinese Communist rulers in Beijing were distracted, paralysed by in-fighting over who would take control after Chairman Mao finally died. Would Mao's fanatical wife and her collaborators, the Gang of Four, be allowed to continue the Cultural Revolution, which had shut China off from the world and reduced it to poverty and chaos? Or would Deng Xiaoping and his reformist friends be able to take control and open China up to the market, and end the near permanent state of civil war? James Palmer recreates the tensions of that fateful summer, when the fate of China and the world were in the balance - as injured and starving people crawled among the ruins of a stricken city. 'The best account of Mao's last year that we have . . . It deserves to be a classic of modern Chinese history.' John Simpson

The Apocalypse in the Early Middle Ages
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 269

The Apocalypse in the Early Middle Ages

This groundbreaking study reveals the distinctive impact of apocalyptic ideas about time, evil and power on church and society in the Latin West, c.400–c.1050. Drawing on evidence from late antiquity, the Frankish kingdoms, Anglo-Saxon England, Spain and Byzantium and sociological models, James Palmer shows that apocalyptic thought was a more powerful part of mainstream political ideologies and religious reform than many historians believe. Moving beyond the standard 'Terrors of the Year 1000', The Apocalypse in the Early Middle Ages opens up broader perspectives on heresy, the Antichrist and Last World Emperor legends, chronography, and the relationship between eschatology and apocalypticism. In the process, it offers reassessments of the worlds of Augustine, Gregory of Tours, Bede, Charlemagne and the Ottonians, providing a wide-ranging and up-to-date survey of medieval apocalyptic thought. This is the first full-length English-language treatment of a fundamental and controversial part of medieval religion and society.