Motor Boat & Yachting - April 2026

Motor Boat & Yachting - April 2026
Motor Boat & Yachting - April English | 116 pages | True | 67.8 MB

Motor Boat & Yachting is 's best motor boating magazine. It's also the oldest, with a dating back to 1904. Our long experience makes our boat tests the most authoritative in the and means our technical coverage is without equal. Each month we cover the best new boats on the market, cruising areas that are both and inspirational, and the latest boating developments and training. Core editorial focuses on boats up to 80ft, but we also venture beyond the 80ft barrier in our monthly Custom Yachting pages.

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Old Glory - March 2026

Old Glory - March 2026
Old Glory - March English | 204 pages | True | 71.7 MB

If you love the spectacle of immaculately-restored old machinery, or are fascinated by Britain's rich and transport heritage, Old Glory is the magazine for you! In vivid detail it brings back all the sights and sounds of yesteryear. Glorious showman's engines belt out the amperes to drive historic fairground rides; pairs of mighty steam ploughing engines turn the soil; steam rollers make up roads once more; tram wheel flanges squeal through town and streets; colourful working narrowboats ply the canals; dray horses deliver good ale to the pubs; vintage tractors cough into life; stationary engines turn over tirelessly and the commercial vehicles we used to know take to the road again. This magazine covers these magnificent steam engines that once powered this nation. Whether you're interested in the latest news, stories of steam engines saved from obscurity, upcoming events or detailed features on the of these wonderful machines you'll find it in Old Glory.

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Dark History of London - 1st Edition - 12 February 2026

Dark History of London - 1st Edition - 12 February 2026
of London - 1st Edition - 12 February English | 132 pages | | 148.0 MB

London was famously the muse of Charles Dickens, who described the as a "magic lantern" - in reference to image projection that were the precursors to cinema projectors. Dickens used this metaphor to express how the city fed his imagination. Yet magic lanterns, while capable of projecting photographs, paintings, or even animations, displayed only a fleeting and often distorted version of the truth.
In the Victorian , these devices were used in the form of horror theatre known as phantasmagoria, where frightening images of ghosts, demons, and skeletons were projected to captivate audiences. Perhaps Dickens - an avid social commentator - was also alluding to something deeper: that in a city like London, everything is not exactly as it seems.
Beneath the façade of this magnificent metropolis, once the epicentre of the British and now a modern-day economic hub, lies something more sinister. It is a city built on turmoil, drenched in the blood of war, plague, poverty, and devastation - a place forever haunted by its history.
So let us uncover the heinous heritage swept beneath the nation's proverbial rug and delve into the macabre mysteries and sordid secrets festering beneath the capital's crowded streets.

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