The objective of Computeractive is to provide ‘Simple Clear Advice In Plain English’ on all matters of technology. Computeractive writes about technology issues facing general readers in their day to day life.
Combining the best celebrity news and gossip with compelling real-life stories, Closer gets close to the heart of the story and brings you the truth behind the headlines. Also includes: TV listings, puzzles, beauty and body advice, destiny and more! Perfect for a coffee-break read, or to download and enjoy on the move… All the latest celebrity news and real-life stories!
BLADE magazine is the world’s #1 knife publication, covering all aspects of the industry: knifemaking, how-to’s, collecting, legislation and knife rights, and much more. Inside each issue you’ll find: Coverage of the hottest and most collectible handmade knives and their values Complete listings of the industry’s most important shows and events Knife collecting tips from the experts The most up-to-date knife legislation info.
Best Magazine – is a weekly magazine for women who want to stay up to date and entertained, with true life stories, the latest tips on how to lose weight and look good, how to cook for all the family in 15 minutes, reliable health advice and inspiration for your household, and showbiz news and gossip. Covering a great variety of issues, Best has everything a busy woman needs to keep fit, happy and healthy while running her home.
Bella is a classic woman’s weekly lifestyle magazine to rival Best, Woman, and Woman’s Own. It combines insightful, often shocking true life stories with practical style and lifestyle tips and advice, as well as celebrity gossip. With a true understanding of the modern woman’s needs, Bella magazine is all you’ll want to read, all day long. Or do you have a story you want told? Submit it to Bella magazine, and get your spot in the limelight.
BBC Music Magazine is a must for anyone with a passion for classical music. Classical music connoisseurs and new enthusiast alike will enjoy the fascinating features and reviews of over 120 new works in every issue.
BBC Good Food Middle East is a must have for everyone who loves cooking, eating and dining out. It’s full of mouth-watering ideas for quick everyday dishes, inspirational entertaining and every recipe you’ve ever dreamed of – all devised to save you time and effort. Every month, we highlight top restaurants and hotels in the UAE to ensure that our food-loving readers are clued up on where to go and what to eat.
The the most comprehensive monthly source of news and information on bank notes and all related fiscal paper. Each issue of Bank Note Reporter includes market values, calendar listings, news briefs, price guides, historical articles on paper money and why certain notes were created. Reports on the people, events and history that have contributed to this hobby make for fascinating reading. For both the new enthusiasts and the veteran collectors.
American Whiskey Magazine brings you up to date features, interviews, tastings and more from the world of Bourbon, single malts, grain and wheat. Whatever your whiskey preferences, we are sure to have something for you.
Everywhere today, we are urged to “connect.” Literary critics celebrate a new “honesty” in contemporary fiction or call for a return to “realism.” Yet such rhetoric is strikingly reminiscent of earlier theorizations. Two of the most famous injunctions of twentieth-century writing―E. M. Forster’s “Only connect . . .” and Fredric Jameson’s “Always historicize!”―helped establish connection as the purpose of the novel and its reconstruction as the task of criticism. But what if connection was not the novel’s modus operandi but the defining aesthetic ideology of our era―and its most monetizable commodity? What kind of thought is left for the novel when all ideas are acceptable as long as they can be fitted to a consumer profile?
Historical writing has shaped identities in various ways and to different extents. This volume explores this multiplicity by looking at case studies from Europe, Byzantium, the Islamic World, and China around the turn of the first millennium. The chapters in this volume address official histories and polemical critique, traditional genres and experimental forms, ancient traditions and emerging territories, empires and barbarians. The authors do not take the identities highlighted in the texts for granted, but examine the complex strategies of identification that they employ. This volume thus explores how historiographical works in diverse contexts construct and shape identities, as well as legitimate political claims and communicate ‘visions of community’.