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LOOKING AT THINGS DIFFERENTLYTHE WONDER OF UNEXPECTED FRIENDSHIPIn this delightful take on an unlikely friendship, artist and writer, Seona Calder, invites us to embrace our differences while celebrating what we have in common.Written in and lavishly illustrated in a style that is easily accessible to young children or early readers, this book helps with hard-to-explain concepts, such as difference and diversity.Throughout, the beautiful sea greens and blues in the paintings contrast with the warmer caramel colours of the land, evoking a sense of two worlds meeting. The illustrative style is wonderfully nostalgic of classical children''s tales, and will draw a smile from even the most cynical amongst us.
Will A Killer Go Free?THE DISCOVERYThe discovery of the naked and mutilated body of a young man in a Scottish loch sends shockwaves through the local community.THE BROKEN MANWhen DCI Grant McVicar is tasked with finding the killer, it’s not the obvious choice. Tragedy has thrown him into turmoil, and he returns to work, a troubled man. And to make things worse, he finds his newly-appointed Detective Sergeant an enigma he can’t resolve — is she there as his assistant or his babysitter?THE ENEMYWhat starts out as a fairly straightforward investigation soon turns nasty, leading McVicar and his team into the dark world of a notorious Glasgow crime family. McVicar has encountered them before and his need for vengeance is at war with his need to bring them to justice. He’s determined to uncover the truth, but the force of his hatred starts to cloud his judgement, and those around him begin to question his fitness for duty.
THE SCHOOL SHOOTER WHO DIDN’T SHOOT Growing up an autistic loner, Thomas Campbell’s schooldays were a living nightmare of bullying and abuse that saw him in psychiatric care by age 8. The target of entire classrooms, he developed a lifelong hatred of all things educational. This hatred – the shared thinking of the school shooter – has gifted him with a unique insight into the slaughter we are witnessing in our schools now. Written from the perspective of the classroom avenger, it explores their distorted thinking and reveals the ‘socially acceptable’ evils that provoke such a lethal response. ‘In this angry, tender, and extraordinary work, Thomas Campbell writes with fierce immediacy from the cultural ultra-violet of the Asperger spectrum, allowing us a crucial glimpse into the emotional gulag to which we thoughtlessly sentence thousands daily, and perhaps moderating our disingenuous surprise when another awkward loner takes an assault rifle to class for Show and Tell. Written with a lucid honesty, unafraid of its own unavoidable subjectivity. Comics and Columbine is the slap in the face that we badly needed and deserved, delivered in a clear and ringing voice from the white-hot heart of the experience. It is a voice that we ignore to our considerable loss, and at our considerable peril. Campbell has written what in my opinion is a beautiful narrative about an irredeemably ugly subject. I really cannot recommend this vital and necessary book too strongly.’ Alan Moore, Author of Watchmen/V for Vendetta/ From Hell
Science is everywhere, our medicines, our transport, what we eat and drink. Like it or not, we can't make real progress without it. There's just one dilemma ... What if there are profound problems with all aspects of scientific theory and methods?Could it be that the idea of universal laws underpinning reality is a falsehood and, as a result, we need more and more scientists, and more and more computing power, to produce greater and greater elaborations of our theories to make them fit inconvenient experimental data? We're being forced to break science down into smaller and smaller sub-specialities, each with ever more divergent theories applicable only to one speciality and not applicable to others. Rather than an underlying unity we are finding only disparity and greater complexity. What's worse, scientists are routinely having to resort to completely untestable concepts, such as many more spatial dimensions and infinite universes, to 'explain' our reality. Throughout the history of science, reputable figures in science and philosophy have been casting doubt on some of the central assumptions of science and its various disciplines.For the first time, we have a book that dares to summarise these profound concerns in a way that is accessible to the general reader, who lacks a scientific background. It also provides a warning to Mankind of the risks we run by not acknowledging the, often, hollow foundations on which science is built.
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