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Author: Homewood, Stephen & White, Stuart Chant-Sempill
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC

This is the vivid and openly critical examination of events surrounding the sinking of the "Herald of Free Enterprise" at Zeebrugge in March 1987. Assistant purser Stephen Homewood gives an eyewitness account of the tragedy, his survival and the manner in which he helped others to safety.
Author: Barrie Pitt
Genre: Antiquarian, Rare & Collectable
Publisher: Cassell & Company Ltd

A first edition hardback narrative of the Royal Navy's raid, April 23rd, 1918, which sought to choke off the German U-Boat threat to allied merchant shipping.
Author: Stephen Homewood, Stuart M. White
Genre: History
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC

This is the vivid and openly critical examination of events surrounding the sinking of the "Herald of Free Enterprise" at Zeebrugge in March 1987. Assistant purser Stephen Homewood gives an eyewitness account of the tragedy, his survival and the manner in which he helped others to safety.
Author: Jerry White
Genre: History
Publisher: Bodley Head

A unique look at London during World War I, seen through the eyes of the people who lived there. 11pm, Tuesday August 4, 1914: with the declaration of war, London becomes one of the greatest killing machines in human history. Hundreds of thousands of soldiers pass through the capital on their way to the front; wounded men are brought back to be treated in London’s hospitals; and millions of shells are produced in its factories. The war changes London life forever. Women escape the drudgery of domestic service to work as munitionettes. Full employment puts money into the pockets of the London poor for the first time. Self-appointed moral guardians seize the chance to clamp down on drink, frivolous entertainment, and licentious behavior. As the war drags on, gloom often descends on the capital. And at night London is plunged into darkness for fear of German bombers and Zeppelins that continue to raid the city. Yet despite daily casualty lists, food shortages, and enemy bombing, Londoners are determined to get on with their lives and flock to cinemas and theaters, dance halls, and shebeens, firmly resolved not to let Germans or puritans spoil their enjoyment. Peopled with patriots and pacifists, clergymen and thieves, bluestockings and prostitutes, Jerry White’s magnificent panorama reveals a struggling yet flourishing city.
Author: John Christopher
Genre: Reference
Publisher: The History Press

The Zeppelin airships, from conception to fiery destruction In the 1930s the silver Zeppelins ruled the skies, crossing the Atlantic on a regular basis with a style and elegance never seen before or since in air travel. The rigid-framed leviathans were the brainchild of elderly Count Zeppelin, and when the German people rose in popular support for his cause, his airships rode a wave of national pride. From the aerial bombers of World War I, Zeppelins were reinvented as the way for the rich and famous to travel. With the embryonic aircraft of the time barely able to hop the Atlantic they were set to rule the airways—until the fiery destruction of the Hindenburg put an end to that dream. In many ways the tale of what might have been, this book by an expert in lighter-than-air flight offers insights into this fascinating aircraft.